Difficulty Level – Beginner. There are a lot of steps to this quilting design – stitch a triangle, stitch inside and quilt a curve to the point, tear drop shape, then curve back down to the opposite side, then echo (if desired) and stitch your next triangle. This might take a few tries to memorize, but remember this is just like memorizing writing letters in cursive. Once you remember the steps, quilting Inverted Lilies should be no problem!
Design Family – Echoing. Some easier designs to help you practice free motion quilting Inverted Lilies are Trippy Triangles and Electric Pulse. And if you find quilting this just feels like pulling
teeth, remember that some designs are trickier to master when you’re first starting out. Try out a few designs from the Free Motion Quilting Project and focus on quilting the one that feels the most natural and easy to you.
Where to Quilt It? – Inverted Lilies is a design that will work anywhere on your quilt, with one caveat – this is probably not the easiest to quilt in super tight, tiny areas. Like around the swirly vines of my strawberry quilt. These areas are tight, hard to keep consistent and would give me a headache to quilt with Inverted Lilies.