Longarm Quilting in North Carolina
22 services across 19 cities.
Angier (1)
Cary (1)
Chapel Hill (1)
Clayton (1)
Durham (2)
Eden (1)
Franklin (1)
Harrisburg (2)
High Point (1)
Hillsborough (1)
Leland (1)
Mint Hill (1)
Monroe (1)
Nashville (1)
Raleigh (2)
Rockwell (1)
Wake Forest (1)
Weaverville (1)
Wendell (1)
Also explore in North Carolina
Longarm quilting fits into a wider quilting ecosystem. North Carolina also has these QuiltMap directories:
Top cities for longarm quilting in North Carolina
The North Carolina cities with the most longarm services. Drop-offs and shipping arrangements vary by provider — check each listing for details.
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 North Carolina trip →Common questions about longarm quilting in North Carolina
How many longarm quilters are in North Carolina?
QuiltMap lists 22 longarm services in North Carolina across 19 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 North Carolina?
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 North Carolina 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 North Carolina offer both.
Can I ship my quilt to a North Carolina 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 North Carolina 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