The guide
Harp space vs throat space: what it is, how to measure, and why the claims disagree
The most important number on a quilting machine is the one manufacturers publish most sloppily. This page defines it precisely, shows you how to measure it yourself in 60 seconds, and explains the rounding games — so the database numbers make sense.
The definition
Harp space (= throat space) is the opening between the needle and the vertical pillar of the machine, measured as width (needle to pillar, along the bed) × height (bed to the underside of the arm). It is the hole your rolled-up quilt must repeatedly pass through while you quilt the middle of it.
The two names mean the same thing. “Harp” describes the shape of the opening; “throat” is the older trade term, still standard among longarm and quilt-frame makers. This site says “harp” first because it is unambiguous — “throat plate” means something else entirely (the needle plate).
How to measure your machine (60 seconds)
- Width: drop the needle to its lowest point. Lay a ruler on the bed from the needle to the inner face of the pillar. That horizontal distance is the harp width.
- Height: stand the ruler vertically on the bed next to the pillar and read the distance to the underside of the arm.
- Write both down with the units and, if you share them, photograph the ruler in place — that is the standard of evidence we ask for before a “community-measured” value enters the database.
Why claimed ≠ measured
Three mechanisms produce the discrepancies you'll see in our data:
- Different reference points. Some makers measure needle-to-pillar; others measure from the presser-foot ankle or the edge of the needle plate, which adds fractions of an inch.
- Marketing rounding. Janome publishes 8.8″ × 5.5″ for the 1600P-QC and HD9 — and markets “nearly 9″ × 6″”. Dealers then advertise a “9-inch arm”. Each step is defensible; the sum misleads.
- Regional inconsistency. The Juki TL family is the canonical case: US retailers publish 8.5″ × 5.9″, Juki Australia publishes 203 × 112 mm (8″ × 4.4″) for the TL-2200QVP Mini of the same casting, and dealer marketing says 9″. Same aluminum, three numbers.
This is why every figure in the database carries a source link and a grade (A = manufacturer, B = dealer/retailer, C = community), why we keep a separate “community-measured” field, and why that field stays empty until someone shows us a tape measure. No number is ever invented to fill a cell.
Does more harp always win?
No. Harp width trades against price, weight, and what the machine can otherwise do. A 21″ frame longarm quilts kings effortlessly and cannot piece a single block; a 13.5″ Janome M7 does both but costs as much as a used car; an 8.5″ Juki TL does 95% of what most quilters need at a fraction of the price. The honest question isn't “how much harp can I afford?” but “what is the biggest quilt I actually make, how often, and what does that need?” — which is exactly what the 3-question picker asks.
Gear that effectively adds harp room
Before upgrading a machine for one quilt a year, know the cheap workarounds: a large extension table (flat support means less drag, so the roll moves easier), quilting gloves, a pool-noodle roll instead of a fold (thinner bulk through the harp), and quilt-as-you-go construction (you never pass more than one section through the machine). None of them adds an inch; all of them make your existing inches work harder.
FAQ
Are harp space and throat space the same thing?
Yes — both name the opening between the needle and the machine's vertical body. “Harp” comes from the shape of the opening; “throat” is the older sewing-trade term. Quilt-frame makers and longarm brands tend to say “throat”; quilting forums use both interchangeably.
How do I measure harp space correctly?
Width: lay a ruler along the bed from the needle to the inner face of the machine's pillar. Height: measure vertically from the bed to the underside of the arm. Measure at the needle, not at the widest gap, and note that some makers measure from the presser-foot ankle instead — which inflates the number.
Why do claimed harp numbers differ from measured ones?
Three reasons: makers measure from different reference points (needle vs foot vs bed edge), marketing rounds up (8.8″ becomes “nearly 9″”, then a “9-inch arm”), and regional subsidiaries publish different conventions — Juki's US retailers list the TL casting at 8.5″ × 5.9″ while Juki Australia lists 8″ × 4.4″ for the same family.
How much harp space do I need for a queen-size quilt?
Comfortably: 9″+ of width. Workably: 8″+ with a well-basted quilt rolled tightly (a pool noodle helps). For king-size quilts, 10″+ makes life reasonable and 15″+ (sit-down longarm) makes it pleasant. Height matters too — a 4.4″-tall harp chokes on a thick roll long before the width runs out.