Let's get started
Let me show you how simple it is using readily available materials, Electric Quilt and your computer.
In the detail at left, I used pictures placed inside a heart shaped frame and then printed the photos to use in the Healing Hearts quilt
I'll show you how to get the photo into your computer, how to get the picture into Electric Quilt, how to print photos onto fabric that is then ready to be used in your next quilt.
Quick Tutorial
Using the new image worktable: Part 1

The default circular symmetry aetting
With a new background colour
same settings
Get your Electric Quilt 7
on Amazon
Electric Quilt 7
List Price: $189.95
The best version of EQ yet!
Features galore, but the new image editing features are the greatest fun!
Tutorial: Photos into Electric Quilt 4,5 or 6
Part 1

What you'll learn
to design a place mat with a picture from your trip
You will learn how to:Get the photo into your computer
Get the picture into Electric Quilt
Print photos onto fabric
Use the image to trace in EQ for a quilting stencil (or applique templates)
Photos from camera to quilt
A How To
My book, A Moment In Time, co-written with my daughter Angela, tells how to use photos on your quilts — how to get them into the computer and how to use different products to print them on fabric.Since the book was released, an award winning product has reached our shores and I have been playing with it. Called Color Plus fabric, it is extremely simple to use and the hand of the fabric is beautiful after printing.
Also since then, Electric Quilt has started to sell its own fabric for printing images onto. (See the Amazon section above.)
I am going to show you how to design a quilt or applique pattern in EQ from your scanned or digitally taken photo.
Getting the picture into the computer
Camera or scanner
Picture taken with a digital camera
Set the camera to take the best quality photo if you are going to print onto fabric. Photo paper for your printer is a bit forgiving, but fabric is already textured, so you need the best shot possible.
Once you have taken your picture, you need to either plug in the USB cable and connect to the computer, or take the little memory card out of the camera and plug it into the port on your printer or your computer.
Usually the software that brings the images in will load automatically. Save the picture(s) as your software directs you — often in My Pictures, in a dated folder.
Photographic prints
Using your scanner if you have one, scan the photo at 300 dpi. Save it as a tiff file, so that it prints at the best resolution for your fabric.
If you don't have a scanner, and you want to use an old photograph, you can take a picture of the photo with your digital camera.Edit the picture in the image editing software that you like best.
I use Adobe Photoshop®, but you may have CorelDraw!® or PaintShop Pro®, or whatever came with your camera or scanner. There some very good free image programmes available on the Internet, such as Picasa from Google, or GIMP.
Resize the image
If you have used a digital camera, then the image is probably about 20 inches wide, and a 72 dpi jpeg, and should be resized to be the size you would like to use on the project.
In my little quilt, I wanted to use an A4 sized piece of fabric, so I changed the resolution to 300 dpi (best output for printing), and made the size 71/2in by 10in. I then saved it as a tiff for printing.

Left: Fan palms at Captain Billy's Landing, Qeeensland
What to do to resize it
Because all image editing programmes are so different, I won't show you what I did, but I'll explain where to look.
You need to find a command in the menu that will let you scale or resize your image. Start by using the help file — click Help or press the F1 key on the keyboard — and search for Resize image.
Follow the instructions for your own software.
Getting the picture onto the fabric
Print it out

Just sit the fabric in the paper tray in the normal fashion and use a plain paper setting. Set the output for best quality and print.
Peel off the backing paper after printing and rinse the fabric in cold water for 10 seconds, and let dry.
When the lawn I used was dry I pieced it into the quilt and was really surprised at the soft 'hand', and the vibrancy of the colour. Compared to all the other products I have tried, this fabric picture was the softest, and simplest.

I have not tried (to date) the fabric in the photo, which is one of The Electric Quilt Company's fabrics for printers.
They have several fabric types, and as the rest of their products are always top-drawer, I suppose this is too.
Where you get it
You can get what you need on Amazon
Getting the picture into EQ
4 or 5 or 6 to trace
This is all you will need in EQ for tracing.
Note: If you have EQ6, you can bring in a jpg file.

1. Start EQ.
2. Start a new project and go to the Block Worktable.
Block > New Block > Patchdraw.
3. Block > Import for tracing.
4. Browse to where you saved your picture as a bitmap, click on its name, and click on Open.
EQ will then drop the picture into the worktable.
Note: EQ6 has changes in this area - Jan T
Resize the image to fit the block space

Notice that there are now three tabs on the bottom of the screen.
Click once on the image and hover the mouse to the top left corner until the cursor changes to a diagonal double headed arrow.
Click again over the arrow and, holding down the left mouse button, drag the corner down towards the bottom right hand side of the screen.
If your picture is rectangular, then change the block drawing board size to suit.Continue to click and drag to resize until the block fits into the block outline on the screen.

Before you begin the tracing process, please go to the exercise called Drawing an applique dove on page 180 for EQ5 and 134 for EQ4 in the Design Cookbook, or pages 99-100 in the EQ6 manual, to familiarise yourself with the tools you need to trace a picture.
Once you have done that exercise, you can begin your tracing of your photo.
Start to trace
your photo

Using the skills you learned in the dove exercise (page 180 in your Design Cookbook), reshape the patch until it represents the part of the photo you are tracing.
Once you have achieved the first patch, you can save time by cloning that one to make more of the same and edit them to suit your photo.
Click on the Select tool at the top of the toolbox on the right hand side, click on the patch and right click. Choose Symmetry > Clone.
I have moved my duplicate (clone) out to the side of the block so it is easier for you to see.
Using the Select tool, click on the new cloned patch and move it over the next area you want to trace and edit that patch to suit.

Continue until you have the whole block traced.
If you have difficulty seeing where the lines or nodes are, you can turn the photo off and on by clicking on the little 'cactus' icon at the bottom of the right hand toolbox.The background patch for the block is there by default, and if it is to be used as a quilting stencil or applique motif, that wouldn't be desirable. You will need to remove it.

Using the Select tool again, click on the line at the edge of the block and press the delete key on your keyboard. Save the block.
Note: In EQ6, you can draw motifs direct, with no background. Use this if you have that version.
Design your quilt
the fun part!
From the top menu
1. Worktable > Work on Quilt
2. Quilt > New Quilt > choose your style from the list.
Mine was Custom (Country) Set

3. On Layer 1, using the Set tool from the right hand side toolbox, lay out your quilt. In EQ5 you can use a photo as a block. (See page 162 in the Cookbook). In EQ4 you need to place a blank block as a placeholder. Drag out your block to the size you want and position it with the Adjust tool.
4. Go to Layer 3 (Quilting Stencil layer), drag out the new block you traced. I used mine twice, rotating one.
Now for the best part!
To print the stencil

1. Using the Select tool, click on the stencil block. A highlight will appear around the selected block.From the main menu, choose File > Print> Block.
2. Select Size from Quilt (one of EQ's best features!) > Print Style > Quilting Stencil > Preview.

The printer will print as many sheets as needed for the design to be the exact size you need for your design.
(In EQ5 and EQ6 blank sheets will not print.)
3. Print on tracing paper and pin onto the quilt to stitch on, tear away after stitching and ...
Wow!
Some lenses
with Jan T's helpful tips and tutorials
Did you learn much?
What was your most enlightening part?
Tell us what you thought.
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Stazjia
Sep 28, 2010 @ 4:30 am | delete
- Putting photos on to a quilt is a fabulous idea and you've explained how to do it very well. Lensrolled and blessed by an Angel.
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JanTUB
Sep 28, 2010 @ 5:25 am | delete
- Thanks for the nice comments, and the lovely blessing.
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marsha32 Sep 1, 2010 @ 10:27 pm | delete
- we made a quilt for our pastor when he retired...one of the members took lots of memory photos from his 12 years with us and put them on fabric...it's was a great quilt....which made him cry...which made us all cry.
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JanTUB
Sep 1, 2010 @ 11:13 pm | delete
- Could we see a pic?
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JanTUB
May 18, 2009 @ 8:51 pm | in reply to Pastiche | delete
- Thank you. It's fun designing with EQ.
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Jan T
quilter, quilt tutor, quilt writer
My Lenses
This So Crafty page written by
JanTUB
I have been quilting for more than a quarter of a century. (Sounds much longer than 25 years.) That's me in my studio in 2006.
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