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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Quilt Market roundup

I’ve been home from Quilt Market in Portland, Oregon since early Monday morning, and I'm still exhausted. I don't think it is the time zone difference or the fact that I had a bad cold and sinus infection. I think it was the hundreds of quilt shop owners, publication editors, pattern designers, fabric designers and fabric company representatives, quilt and fiber artists that I talked with. The thousands of products and patterns and fabrics I saw. And all the sights and sounds and ideas my brain was trying to absorb during my stay at Market.

I was there to find out what quilt shop owners were looking for; to try to ascertain trends; to schmooze and network; to find out about new products; to find new markets for my quilt patterns; and to talk to magazine editors and book publishers. Right now, I still make most of my living doing graphic design work, but I'd love to make art quilts and quilt patterns my livelihood, since it is already my passion. Going to my first Quilt Market was a big step toward this goal.

For those of you who have never attended a Quilt Market (put on by Quilts, Inc. every fall in Houston before International Quilt Festival and every spring in a different U.S. city), here’s the lowdown. Quilt Market is a wholesale trade show. To get in, you have to present credentials proving you are a teacher, quilt shop owner, pattern designer, etc.

All day Thursday, they offer a Schoolhouse Series, where you can shift to a different room every 15-30 minutes and find out what is new from fabric designers, teachers, pattern designers, etc.) Some give away goodies (products or totebags). That night, they have Sample Spree, where attendees have the chance to buy fabric and products from a LOT of companies, often at wholesale prices. It is a madhouse. Last Sample Spree, there was apparently a fist-fight, according to Karey Bresenhan, who asked us all – in her wonderfully genteel Texas manner – to be ladies (and gentlemen) this year. Karey created Quilt Market in 1980.

On Friday, Saturday and Sunday, you can get into the exhibit hall, where everybody who is anybody in the quilt world is hob-nobbing with everyone else. You see hundreds of faces you recognize from TV and magazines. It is a big, happy quilt universe under one roof. You can also take short classes from excellent nationally-known teachers.

Okay. I'm taking a deep breath here and will try to recount some of what I experienced. Obviously, I could write for the next month and probably not cover it all.


Pokey Bolton, editor of Quilting Arts magazine, and her husband were both warm and welcoming when I stopped in to see my piece “Home Planet” (up at the top right in the photo above) hanging with the other pieces going into the 2008 Quilting Arts Calendar. My work will grace the April calendar page, to celebrate Earth Day, of course! I am so excited that my work was chosen; the other pieces are all exceptional.


Kathy Mack of Pink Chalk Studio and I met through the Quilt Designers Yahoo Group, and met for the first time in person at Market. Somehow we managed to run into each other three times (despite the pandimonium), so we must be destined to know each other. My mom declared that the way we greeted each other the first time, it looked like we were long lost friends. Check out her very funny observations about Market on her blog.

I did my best to advance her career (not that she needs any of my help!) by gushing about her talent and her beautiful patterns to everyone I met at Market. She has a beautiful “Mail Sack” pattern coming out soon. Kathy is a fast-rising star in the quilt/fabric world. I'll be able to say “I knew her when...”


At Market, taking a class is a great way to re-energize your creative soul, center your psyche and rest your aching feet. We all had a ball stamping and doing rubbings in Rayna Gillman's class with bubble wrap, construction fence sections, Cedar Canyon’s rubbing plates and Shiva Paintstiks, and fabric paints. Rayna has a new book coming out this summer from C&T Publishing (they make so many great fiber arts books!) called “Create your own hand-printed cloth,” and I'm going to pre-order it very soon. Rayna blogged about her Market experience, too, and included some cool shots of Portland, so check it out.

I had never been to Portland and I really loved it. This is a city that truly embraces art and artists. Gorgeous scenery, amazing restaurants, inspiring architecture, fascinating street life. My mom and I didn’t have much time for sight-seeing, but we did go to the Chinese Garden (spectacular) and the Saturday Market, chock full of art and handcrafts. And we ate Thai, Chinese and Peruvian in between snacking and re-caffeine-ating ourselves at a multitude of local coffee shops.

I took a class on Angelina with Betty Blais of Embellishment Village that was also very interesting, but forgot to get her photo! I learned some new Angelina techniques from her that I will be adding to my Creative Surface Design class, and discovered some new ways to use Angelina film (also called Textiva), which I had recently purchased.


The Crafter's Workshop booth had the coolest stencils that I found out about in Rayna’s class and loved so much that I ran straight out after class and bought some. They make some very contemporary stencils that you can use with paint or Shiva Paintstiks to create wonderful texture on fabric.


Now here's something I'm really excited about. I had never heard of Stewart Gill products until I wandered into the Creative Textile Zone’s booth. There I met Sally Richards (left), who will be distributing their products in the U.S.; Rebecca Gill (center), the textile artist who helped create them with her husband; and Dorothy Adam (right), a North Yorkshire artist who demonstrated how to use them. I am hooked. They have a very soft hand, even when dry. They are fairly viscous, and stay where they are put, but can be diluted into lovely color washes. They are acid free and archival. They are heat-settable and washable. Oh, and they have stamps and stencils to die for. I ordered a bit of everything and am eager to try them out once they arrive. Soon, pleeeeeease!

Stewart Gill is based in Fife, Scotland, near the University of St. Andrews, where I spent my junior year of college. Note the tartan wrapped around the three wonderful ladies in the photo above.


I got to meet Maggie Walker, who has long been one of my quilt heroines for her spectacular needle-turn designs. Here’s one of the roosters that grace a pattern she was debuting this market. She does roosters like no one else! I love her new sea shell design, too. She is very sweet and kind, and gave me good advice and contacts.


Laurie Simpson and Polly Minick of Minick & Simpson are quilters (Laurie) and rug hookers (Polly) extraordinaire who have designed some of my favorite traditional lines of fabric for Moda. In fact, I'm working now on finishing up a queen size quilt that uses their “Prairie Paisley” line, introduced last fall. Their “Winter” line is new this Market.


Here’s how Moda/United Notions had my “Tulip Bag” and “A Dozen Hearts” pattern samples displayed (they are the pink items in this photo). Moda’s booth is one of the loveliest, largest and busiest booths at Market. I was told to not even try to get near their space at Sample Spree during the first half hour, and it was mobbed. They were giving away huge vintage-looking market tote bags (free with a purchase) and I REALLY wanted one, but I could not get close enough to shop.


This is me with Morna McEver Golletz, publisher and editor of The Professional Quilter magazine, standing in front of my art quilt, “Harbinger’s Hope.” Professional Quilter is a valuable resource for anyone involved in the business of quilts. I am a Professional Quilter subscriber, and responded to Morna’s request for quilts to hang in her booth, then brought “Harbinger’s Hope” stufffed in my suitcase to her in Portland. I also attended her most informative lecture on marketing via computer e-mails and blogs. Thanks for everything, Morna!


Melissa Averinos will debut her first line of fabric called “Sugarsnap” for Free Spirit in August 2008. I love what I’ve seen of it so far. Melissa wins my prize for most creative business card I picked up at Market (and I came home with about 200!). It is a 6x16" screen-printed piece of fabric (see photo below) that lists her job title as "designer/artist/good listener.” (She was. I was there talking to Jeffrey Prescott of Westminster Fibers, for a long time, and she did listen.)



Melissa took some fantastic photos of some of the Westminster Fibers/Free Spirit designers’ booths and posted them on her blog, so you’ll want to check it out for sure. She was very sweet, despite being rather under the weather.


The kind, sweet, funny and sincere Artgirlz were a blast. The Artgirlz are Rhode Island artists Allison and Tracy Stilwell. They were recently featured in Cloth Paper Scissors magazine. I asked for a photo opp in an effort to snuggle up to these two, hoping that some of the incredible creativity they simply ooze would rub off on me. They were happy to oblige.

I have been buying and loving their wool felt beads, pewter charms, and stamps since I discovered them at International Quilt Festival in 2006. At this Market, I discovered their new felt purses called Big Bags, which I absolutely MUST HAVE NOW. You can see some of their products and find out more about them on their blog.


Going into Cindy Taylor Oates’ booth was like sinking your teeth into a sugary sweet cupcake! Cute to the max. Cindy says she has been designing patterns for 28 years (seriously, she can't be that old!) and orders for her little Cupcake Pincushions, Retro Aprons book, and Little Retro Aprons for Kids (a new book of aprons for children) were selling like hotcakes when I was in her booth. In between, she gave me some valuable advice. Thanks, Cindy!

Cindy’s blog shows off her work and illustrates her incredible talent for displays and merchandising.


Debra Lunn of Lunn Fabrics shows off a quilt made from her glorious new line of batiks for Robert Kaufman’s batik division called Artisan Batiks. For this quilt, you cut up their new fabric (designed with 1-inch-wide stripes) on the diagonal, then sew the strips down on a foundation fabric to keep the bias from going wonky. Yep, that’s it. The fabric does the work for you. Cool.

I met Debra and her partner, Michael Mrowka, at their Lancaster, Ohio, studio during the Studio Art Quilt Associates 2007 conference. (It is their fault that the zipper on my suitcase popped during my flight home. I could not resist their delicious batiks and hand-dyeds.) Debra gave a very interesting slideshow of how they work with craftsmen in Java to make the batiks. They spend two to three months of the year working there, in collaboration with local craftsmen.


Jacqueline de Jonge of Be Colourful had some spectacular quilts in her booth, all pieced and handquilted by her. Her patterns are intricate, and most feature undulating triangles and circles. As the name of her pattern company suggests, her designs are also very bright; she has a fantastic sense of color.

Okay, that's it for now. I may remember more later!

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

I’m in!

Just got the word today that my piece, “Home Planet,” is going to be in the 2009 Quilting Arts Calendar! I am over the moon! All the winners are going to be displayed at Quilt Market later this week. (I can’t show it to you now because we are all sworn to secrecy until the calendar comes out!) I'm going to market tomorrow, so I won't be posting for a while, but I’ll have lots to write about when I return.

You can read Quilting Arts editor Pokey Bolton's comments about choosing the winners on her blog, www.quiltingartsblog.com

“Harbinger’s Hope” will be displayed in the Professional Quilter booth, too! And I have samples of two of my new patterns (”The Tulip Bag” and ”A Dozen Hearts”) in the Moda/United Notions booth.

For those of you who don’t know, Quilt Market is held twice a year, once in the fall before the International Quilt Festival in Houston, and once in the spring in a location that changes. This year it is in Portland, Oregon. It’s the place to be to find out what’s new in the quilting world, which is now a $3.3 billion industry annually. (Wow!) I’ll get to see all the new fabric lines, tools and notions, and meet lots of other designers, quilt/fiber artists, quilt shop owners, fabric manufacturers and pattern distributors. I’m looking forward to seeing a lot of the people I’ve met online in quilting-related groups.

Friday, May 9, 2008

House Rules


I created this piece, “House Rules,” for Quilting Arts magazine’s 2009 calendar competition, but it was not selected, so I can show it to you now. (My other entry, “Home Planet,” is a finalist!)

I had a lot of fun making this piece. For years, I've had a list of rules of the house posted on my refrigerator for my children (and, let’s face it, for me, too... we all need a little reminding once in a while to act like decent human beings!) I decided to make it into a little quilt. It features my daughters and our dog, Sophie, and a stylized version of our house. I fused Angelina fibers to make the rays around the sun, and positioned her smiling down on the kids, holding hands and smiling (yeah, like that actually happens!). That's the BIG RULE, the "Golden Rule" -- Do unto others as you would have them do unto you -- paraphrased by me, arching over the sun. And those dots around the sun are French knots done with varigated perle cotton.


I wrote out the words using a Pigma pen. The house, heart, sun and kids are all done 3-D, pillowcase turned and then appliqued to the background, so they really stand out from the surface. Sophie is done in needle-turn applique. I used water-soluable wax pastels on the girls to make them look like they were done by kids with crayons. Then I did big chicken scratch embroidery all over to quilt it. It was very fun.

I’m going to frame this piece and hang it in my kitchen. Want one of your own, featuring your own kids and pets? I'd love to discuss a commissioned piece with you!

Moo!



I'd been hearing from some of my online quilty friends about “Moo cards” and decided to give them a try. I have business cards, but wanted something fun with images of my quilts to pass out at Quilt Market in Portland next week. I ordered some of their "minicards" and they came yesterday (in about a week), and they are the cutest thing!

You can upload up to 100 of your own color photos, crop them, and add 6 lines of text for the back. The minicards are about half the size of a business card, and come in a cute plastic box. I also ordered a handy holder for them (see below) that can go on a key chain. They are inexpensive and really fun.

They also do greeting cards, postcards, sticker books, and notecards. You can find out more at www.moo.com.

Moo!

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

SAQA One-Foot Square Auction


I am a member of Studio Art Quilt Associates (SAQA), and am proud to be participating in the second annual online auction called “One-Foot Square.” Members were asked to create a 12" square piece and donate it to the auction. It is a major fund raiser for SAQA; last year’s auction raised more than $27,000. The auction will begin Nov. 10.

My donated piece, “Varigated,” is shown above (detail shot below).

You can see the pieces already donated by clicking here. My piece will show up here in the next week or so.

SAQA is a non-profit organization whose mission is to promote the art quilt through education, exhibitions, professional development and documentation. It now has more than 2,000 members from around the world.

If you are an art quilt lover, please consider purchasing a piece to benefit SAQA. I'll post more details on this blog as the auction gets closer.


“Varigated”
12" x 12"
cotton fabric, fusible web, batting, cotton thread, fabric dye, water-soluable wax pastels.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Announcing “Pink Petal Party”


We have a name! A few weeks ago, I asked readers of my blog to help me pick a name for my pink and green quilt, which I am going to be marketing as a block-of-the-month pattern. I got so many wonderful names, and it was hard to pick. After narrowing the list down to the 20 or so I liked best, I googled the remainder to find the most original one (I didn’t want to name it something that was already widely used).

Meg, a reader and “stitch chick” from California, suggested “Petal Party.” I‘m going to add “Pink” to that. When you're doing alliteration, you might as well go all the way, right? Check out the beautiful work Meg is doing on her blog, Craft Adventures of Stitch Chick.

As soon as I finish my current block-of-the-month patterns, “Bohemian Bouquet,” I'll start working on and releasing the patterns for “Pink Petal Party.” The block above is ”Poppies.”

Thanks, Meg!

The Four Pieces Project


This is the latest project I've been working on for the Pandoras, a group of four art quilters dedicated to thinking (and working) "outside of the box." For this project, we all chose a 4x6" photo, blew it up by 400% to approximately 16x24", and then cut it into four pieces about the same size (in my case, 6x16"). Each person in the group got a different piece.

I took a photo of ferns a few years ago while visiting my best friend in New Hampshire, and thought using it would be a great exercise in value and texture. (You can see my slice of the photo below, above my quilted piece.) It is made with fused fabric, painted with Jacquard textile medium to pull out the highlights and shadows, then stitched. I used a pillowcase turn, because a binding would be distracting once I get the other pieces back and put the whole thing together. I'm probably going to stitch them together on the back, and then either mount them on canvas, or just hang them up using a rod.

The Pandoras decided that we would stick with the basic colors (in this case, green) but we were free to use what ever techniques and materials we wanted. Creativity is encouraged, but we have to stick with the outlines of the basic image fairly closely, because all the pieces have to go back together, like a puzzle, at the end. All of my pieces are due back at our May 12 meeting, and I can't wait to see them! For the next three months, we will work on the other members' photos.



Here's a detail shot:

Friday, April 25, 2008

Jolly Jabber Idol Contest

My entry in the Jolly Jabber Idol Contest ("The Tulip Bag") won second place! A darling "Layer Cake dress" by Shannon Ford won first place, and Carol Lewis' "Mary Engelbreit Bib Apron" won third place. Hope you had fun looking at the entries and voting.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Musings



I’ve been meaning to post about something that happened about a month ago, the day I made this sketch. I have not really sketched anything for months, if not years. I keep reading about how important it is to have a sketchbook, and I believe it is important, but I just don't seem to find (or make) the time to sketch. So at one of my younger daughter’s soccer practices, I took some paper and a felt-tip pen and sketched the townhouses and trees in the distance. The results were not too great, but I was having fun.

As practice was finishing up, my older daughter came over to look at what I was doing, and gasped in surprise. “Oh my gosh, mama, you can draw like an artist!” she exclaimed. I was dumbfounded. Somehow, this crude sketch was more “art” to her than my work hanging on our walls at home. She sees me working everyday. I call myself an artist (although this is a fairly recent development that has taken place in the last few years). Yet my daughter only really thought of me as an artist when I drew on paper.

“How is this sketch more ‘art’ than my art quilts?” I asked my daughter, and she couldn’t find a good answer. I spent a few minutes explaining that art was not defined by the medium, nor limited to something done on paper.

On the Studio Art Quilt Associates Yahoo group, there has been much discussion lately on whether we should still be calling ourselves "art quilters" due to the stereotype that still exists that quilters are grannies making bedcoverings. There is talk of redefining our image, rebranding, marketing approaches.

When I designed my business cards, I chose to call myself a "quilt artist," and I still think of myself that way, because I started out as a quilter. I suspect that if I had started out by being educated as an artist, worked in another medium and moved to fabric and thread, I would call myself a fiber or textile artist today.

And while I can understand why so many of us are fussing about this issue, there's another part of me that thinks, "who cares?" I am reminded of the bizarre incident where the musician named Prince decided he was renaming himself using an unpronounceable symbol he created. Newspapers and magazines did not have this symbol to print in stories about him, and radio and TV announcers could not pronounce the name, and were forced to refer to him as "the artist formerly known as Prince." How absurd! Even if we call ourselves something different, does that change who we are, what we do, or what we create? Maybe. Maybe not.

In my mind, what we need to do is to continue to educate people that works made in fabric, threads and fibers can be art, to enter and participate in the art world as well as in the quilt world (which has mostly supported us), and to keep on keeping on...

Thursday, April 17, 2008

I'm a 2009 Quilting Arts Calendar Finalist!


I'm a finalist in the 2009 Quilting Arts Calendar competition! I am feeling very thrilled and honored tonight.

According to Pokey Bolton, editor of Quilting Arts magazine, they received 243 entries from around the globe. The theme was “Celebrating Home.” I entered two pieces, and “Home Planet” made the first cut. I can’t show it to you yet, because all the works are kept under wraps until a later date.

My quilt “The Bluest Eye” was a finalist and Judges’ Choice winner last year.

From here, the piece goes to Quilting Arts headquarters, where the judges will decide on the 13 pieces to grace the cover and monthly pages of the calendar.

Participating in this competition has been a really good experience for me, since it encouraged me to try new techniques and materials that I might not have tried otherwise. And working this small (12" x 12") is fun.

Here’s the list of all of the 2009 calendar finalists. Congratulations to all of them, and to everyone who participated.

Linda Aavedal
Natalya Aikens (both quilts)
Judy Alexander
Christine Alexiou
Polly Bean (“Home: Nest is Best!”)
Marianne Bettinger
Donna Clauer
Susan Conaway
Michelle Dobrin (both quilts)
Janet Davis
Cait Gordon
Tone Haugen-Cogburn
Linda Johnson
Susan B. Knapp (“Home Planet”)
Marisa Landa-Love
Susan Mayfield
Sylvia Naylor (both quilts)
Deb Nichol
Wen Redmond (both quilts)
Linda Weinstein

Please vote!


FatQuarterShop.com, a fabulous online fabric and pattern company, is having a competition, and my pattern “The Tulip Bag” is an entry in it. My friend Grace also has an entry, a darling table topper quilt called ”Simply Spring.”

The idea was to create a craft or quilt using the Simplicity fabric line by 3 Sisters for Moda Fabrics. There’s some mighty cute stuff here!

You can see all the entries and vote on their blog, the Jolly Jabber, here: http://fatquartershop.blogspot.com/

Monday, April 14, 2008

Bohemian Bouquet Block #4


Here’s Bohemian Bouquet Block #4. It is a thistle to celebrate my Scottish heritage (we have McKee and McDanel in my family, and my husband has Armstrong on his side, and he claims to be related to Robert Burns, Scotland's favorite son). My version (needleturn on a black background) is above. My friend DeLane’s version is below, on a cream background. She fused her appliqué and did satin stitch around it. I love the fabric she used for the big leaves; it makes them look even more prickly! Patterns for the entire Mystery Block of the Month series are available on my website, www.bluemoonriver.com. (Each pattern is released on the 15h of the month.)

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Woo-hoo!


I found out tonight that “Harbinger’s Hope” won Best of Show - Large Quilt, Best Use of Color, and a blue ribbon in the Professional Art Quilt category at the 2008 Charlotte Quilters Guild show!

The show is wonderful, and there are lots of great vendors, so if you live in the area, don't miss it. It’s at the Fletcher School, 8500 Sardis Road, Friday, April 11 and Saturday, April 12 from 9 to 6, and Sunday April 13 from noon to 4.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Help me name this quilt!


Help! I'm at a loss to name this quilt! Send me your ideas. If I pick your name, I'll send you two of my patterns; you can check them out on my website, www.bluemoonriver.com. (The block-of-the-month patterns all count as separate patterns.)

This quilt features 16 applique blocks done in shades of pink and green. I'm doing needleturn applique, but it could be done with fusibles. It is all done except for the borders, which have similar applique to the sashings, and will be scalloped. After I finish the borders, I'm going to hand quilt it. I'm hoping to have it all done later this year so I can offer the patterns in 2009.

So put your thinking caps on and send me your best ideas (in the comments section), please! I'll decide on the winning name and post the winner here on May 1, 2008.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Nudity in art

As artists, I think we all need to speak out when art is censored. Here is a case I found particularly objectionable, especially since I am trained as a journalist and taught that the right to free expression (whether in words or images) is critical to the democratic process.

The Virginian-Pilot, the newspaper in Norfolk, Va., holds a competition for high school art students each year. This year, the student artist originally named first place did not receive her prize. It was taken away by newspaper executives who rejected two winners chosen by the first jurors because the work involved nudity.

The first judge selected Nancy "Beth" Reid's painting, a self portrait in which she is crouching, unclothed, but with no private parts visible.

The second judge selected a ceramic sculpture of a pregnant nude torso by Jasmine Childs. It was also rejected.

Local art lovers are raising $1,000 to give to Reid to make up for her lost prize winnings.

You can read the full story here, on The Virginian-Pilot's website:
http://hamptonroads.com/2008/04/art-lovers-raise-money-teen-who-lost-student-gallery-title

And you can leave a comment after you read the story.

Denver National Quilt Festival acceptance


I got news earlier this week that my quilt “Harbinger’s Hope” was juried into the Denver National Quilt Festival, to be held May 1-4, 2008. I'm not going to be able to attend the Denver show, so if anyone out there is going, please write afterward and let me know how you liked the show. I attended Mancuso's Mid-Atlantic Quilt Festival earlier this year, and it was wonderful. Don't miss the Fiber Force exhibit curated by Lisa Chipetine of Studio Art Quilt Associates (SAQA); it features cutting-edge fiber art, and is a knockout!

For more information on Fiber Force: A Futuristic Approach, go to Lisa Chipetine's website.

I've made the decision to go for the first time to Quilt Market in Portland this May. Quilt Market is a trade show for those who make and sell quilting products and services. I'm hoping to learn more about how to market my quilt patterns, and about general trends in the quilting world. It will also be an opportunity to meet other designers, quilt shop owners, fabric company reps, etc. I realized yesterday that I am about to publish my 25th quilt pattern!

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Violets and poems

One of the benefits of not using a chemical weed control product on our yard (which at this point is mostly weeds and moss!) is the lovely violets that are carpeting some of the shadier spots in the yard this spring. As a child, I used to pick bouquets like this one for my mother. So violets always make me think of her, and of these poems by Emily Dickinson, one of her favorite poets (and mine, too!)



Spring is the Period
Express from God.
Among the other seasons
Himself abide,

But during March and April
None stir abroad
Without a cordial interview
With God.

– Emily Dickinson



I held a jewel in my fingers —
And went to sleep —
The day was warm, and winds were prosy —
I said “’Twill keep” —

I woke — and chid my honest fingers —
The Gem was gone —
And now, an Amethyst remembrance
Is all I own —

— Emily Dickinson

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Greta’s Bohemian Bouquet


My friend Greta McCrea is doing my Bohemian Bouquet patterns in completely different colors than I used, and it is fabulous! She showed me her blocks last night, and today sent me this photo of two of them completed. It is so fun for me to see how people are making my designs their own through their color choices.

If you are making Bohemian Bouquet and have photos, please send them to me via e-mail and I will try to post them here. To see my blocks (done on a black background) and my friend DeLane’s blocks (done on a cream background), click here
and here and here.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Tulip Bag


Here is my newest creation, the Tulip Bag! I used the Simplicity fabric line by 3 Sisters for Moda. The bag is 14" high, and is lined, with lots of pockets inside. I'm going to use mine as a purse, but it is big enough to use for a tote if you prefer. The front also has a large pocket perfect for your keys, so they don’t get lost inside.

There’s a Bag-E-Bottoms acrylic base (size D) in the bottom, so it sits flat and doesn’t tip over. (If you don’t know about Bag-E-Bottoms’ great products, visit www.bag-e-bottoms.com.) I use them in all my fabric bags, and they are fabulous!

The Tulip Bag pattern will also include directions for the little cell phone carrier, which can loop around the purse strap (there’s Velcro under the button on the front, so it’s easy to attach and detach it).

The pattern will be available on my website, www.bluemoonriver.com, by the end of March.

Quilting featured on CBS’s “Sunday Morning”


So did you see "Sunday Morning" on CBS today? They did a segment on the International Quilt Festival, and interviewed Karey Bresenhan, the director of the festival, and Ricky Tims.

There was only a short bit from the indomitable Bresenahn, one of quilting’s grande dames, and a kind, generous and amazing woman. Too bad. Most of the segment focused on Ricky Tims in his Colorado studio, and footage of him meeting and greeting and teaching at Festival. He did a good job of explaining how quilting is changing, and Karey pointed out that quilting is nearly a 4 billion dollar industry annually. Plus nice footage of the festival, and of the gorgeous quilts, both traditional and contemporary.


There was some of the same old, ”Wow! These quilts don’t look anything like what grandma used to make!” which I suppose is to be expected. Overall, it was a great segment that I think will interest many and open some eyes. All good things for quilting!

I do have to admit that the feminist in me was a bit put off that CBS found one of the handful of prominent quilters who are male to feature. I take pride that it is primarily woman who have taken quilting from craft to fine art, whether they make traditional quilts or art quilts.

Don't get me wrong... I think it is fabulous that men are quilting, too. The more, the merrier! And as a journalist, I recognize that a man who wins awards for quilting is more newsworthy than a woman who does, because he is more rare. But gosh, they didn't even use Hollis Chatelain's name when they talked about and showed her "Hope for our World,” which won Best of Show and $10,000 in Festival 2007! Ouch!

Friday, March 14, 2008

Bohemian Bouquet Block #3


Here’s Bohemian Bouquet Block #3! My version (needleturn on a black background) is above. My friend DeLane’s version is below, on a cream background. She fused her appliqué and did satin stitch around it. (And yes, hers is reversed!)Patterns for the entire Mystery Block of the Month series will be available on my website, www.bluemoonriver.com. (Each pattern is released on the 15h of the month.)

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Cool shoes



It’s almost spring, and lately I’ve had a yen for some cool arty shoes. I saw some fun Converse One Star tennies at Target a few days ago, but none were in my colors, so I bought a pair in white and painted them. I mixed some Jacquard Textile Medium in sky blue and grass green and slathered it on. Now I’m using some varigated Perle cotton to embroider them.

“What are those?” my pre-teen daughter asked yesterday, with a fair amount of disdain in her voice, after spotting them on my cutting table where I’d left them to dry. “You are so weird!”

Yep.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Kathy Mack of Pink Chalk Studio


I'm feeling very honored this morning because I just found out that one of my favorite bloggers, Kathy Mack of Pink Chalk Studio, just tagged me (again)!

Kathy has a wonderful contemporary style that shines through in everything she designs, and she is a really nice person, too. The only reason I didn't tag her was that she'd already been tagged, and I thought I had to pick new people to tag!

Kathy's blog is a wonderful and insiring read, full of beautiful photos, quilts, knitting, sewing and craft ideas.

She also has an Etsy shop where you can buy her handmade goodies (be warned; they sell out fast!) She sells her patterns on her website.

Thanks, Kathy!

Monday, March 10, 2008

Free pattern coming soon!


I have designed a block for a free quilt pattern called “Exuberance” offered through Cotton Spice. The quilt has a combination of applique and pieced blocks; mine is a foundaton-pieced block (number 13), and will be available on the Cotton Spice website later this month. The quilt has 12 applique setting triangles and 13 pieced blocks, all by different designers.

If you don't know about Cotton Spice, you should! It is a website offering an online quarterly magazine for quilters that includes regular columns, a quick project, quilt fiction and quilt designs complete with instructions and templates. Here is “Exuberance” so far (my block will be number 13):