Skip to main content

Longarm Quilting in Oregon

13 services across 7 cities.

Albany (3)

Corvallis (1)

Hillsboro (2)

Medford (1)

Portland (2)

Redmond (3)

Tigard (1)

Also explore in Oregon

Longarm quilting fits into a wider quilting ecosystem. Oregon also has these QuiltMap directories:

Top cities for longarm quilting in Oregon

The Oregon cities with the most longarm services. Drop-offs and shipping arrangements vary by provider — check each listing for details.

Albany
3 services
Redmond
3 services
Portland
2 services
Hillsboro
2 services
Corvallis
1 service
Tigard
1 service
Medford
1 service

Combine shops and longarmers in one trip

Many quilters drop off a top with a longarmer at the start of a trip, hit a few shops while it's being quilted, then pick up on the way back. The Trip Planner builds multi-stop routes across shops, longarmers, retreats, and guilds in one map.

Plan a Oregon trip →

Common questions about longarm quilting in Oregon

How many longarm quilters are in Oregon?

QuiltMap lists 13 longarm services in Oregon across 7 cities. The count includes solo home-based quilters, full-time studios, and shops that offer longarm as part of a broader business. Updated continuously as new providers list themselves.

How much does longarm quilting cost in Oregon?

Pricing varies widely. Edge-to-edge patterns are typically priced per square inch (~$0.02–$0.06/sq in as of 2026 — varies by quilter, region, and complexity). Custom quilting is more, often quoted per quilt after consultation. Most providers in Oregon share pricing on their listing or via a quick phone call.

What's the difference between edge-to-edge and custom quilting?

Edge-to-edge (E2E) uses a single repeating pattern across the whole quilt — fast, consistent, and budget-friendly. Custom quilting designs each block or sashing individually, often with ruler work and free-motion. Custom takes much longer and costs more, but the result is one of a kind. Most longarmers in Oregon offer both.

Can I ship my quilt to a Oregon longarmer?

Many longarmers accept mail-in quilts from anywhere in the country. Each listing's description usually mentions whether they take ship-in orders. If not, the contact info is the fastest way to confirm. Round-trip shipping typically adds $30–$60 to the total cost depending on quilt size and destination.

My favorite Oregon longarmer isn't listed. How do I add them?

Use the Submit a Listing form to add a missing longarmer. Submissions are reviewed quickly and then appear in the directory. Home-based quilters absolutely welcome.

Don't see your local longarm quilter?

Help your fellow quilters by adding it to QuiltMap.

Add a listing