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Image stolen–anyone read Chinese?

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

Well, in browsing my site meter today I discovered something potentially disturbing: MY postcard, the springy flowers one on a Chinese website! The good news is that it DOES show a link to my site, but the fact is they didn’t contact me for permission to copy the image or blog about it. I have asked them to remove it from their site (after random clicking on hotlinks in Chinese script I came across one in Roman letters that said “about Baidu” and that had a contact page).

Does anyone out there read Chinese? If so, would you be willing to go to this link and tell me what it says? If it were someone else’s blog, I wouldn’t be concerned, but there is so much theft of artwork and it appears to be a company website. Fascinating….it is a company that is traded on the Nasdaq, and seems to be about internet services. Anyway, IF they are simply showing that they can provide services, then I’m OK with them placing the picture (free advertising? in Beijing?), but it does concern me. Thanks!

The Frayed Edges, October 2006

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

I’m tired but happy…we had a wonderful day yesterday at Kate’s house. Yes, it was another FUNDERFUL Frayed Edges Day! We started with rain on the way there, but even so it was a beautiful late autumn drive down Route 24, which runs along the western side of the Kennebec River (I sure hope I’ve got the name right…gulp). I crossed the river in Randolph/Gardiner, then drove down to Bowdoinham to Kate’s.

We talked about our group show in July 2007 at the Camden library, and worked out some details for a group piece that we are planning (minor things like sizes of the small pieces, subject matter, that sort of thing!)….then, since we last met it was Hannah’s birthday and then mine, so we had a surprise gift exchange. Here’s my goodies, including things which Deborah (our ex-pat member living in the furnace of Dallas) sent…on time of course! See Deborah…you are with us even when you’re not!

Kate gave me the cutest little guy angel pin she made, with an antique safety pin on the back. Kath made a felted wool pocket, complete w/ith curly rovings and sparkling nearly-but-not hidden beads and a 1947 vintage McCall’s magazine…what a hoot and treasure! Hannah gave me an adorable felted snowman, and Deborah sent a fiber postcard, notebook and some hand-painted cloth. YUMM! Wonderful, thoughtful, creative friends. Maine is, as the saying goes, the way life should be…filled with friends!

And here’s the postcard I made for Hannah. She loved a photo I took of the baby birdies in the porch rafters this July, so I made her a card of them!

Here are more of Hannah’s snowmen on Kate’s new table…can you believe she scored this one at the recycling shed? Sheesh…that woman finds more treasures at the dump!

AND, she made these rabbits, which Kate had to test out on a fairy shelter she made with her kids:

As usual, lunch was a feast. Before that, we had muffins and banana nut bread courtesy of Hannah and me. Lunch was Kate’s Rosemary Foccacia (sp?) and Squash and Leek soup (using, she told us, 3/4 of her entire crop of leeks….better luck next year?), salad (me) and finished with an incredible apple pie from Kathy. YUM!

As we were sitting around at lunch, I noticed this fabulous lock on Kate’s trunk…isn’t it awesome?

And to end the day….after I got home….Eli, age 8, came trooping in with his latest garden / woods find: a salamander. SHUDDER! It’s a boy thing. I’m not a boy! Shudder! EEEK! But it was cool. And Eli was asked to return him to someplace safe and damp. Quickly.

My Favorite Quilt Shop

Sunday, October 22nd, 2006

….is Maine-ly Sewing, which regular readers already know. FINALLY, I remembered to take pictures, inside and out! This way, you can see why I love this store so much…first, it is an old house, reportedly haunted (check out this link to read the story). This picture is taken from Route 1 (the Atlantic Coast Highway, the old north-south highway that runs up the East Coast of the United States from Florida to Maine).

This past summer, Marjorie Hallowell painted the house a cheerful yellow, added new siding (and discovered in the process there was no insulation…in Maine!…that was fixed!). Alas, the chimneys leaked and had to go, which means the old woodstove in the store’s largest room had to go too. Of course, that means more room for good stuff so I’ll live without the wood heat {grin}. There are two entrances: the ramp (good when rolling a sewing machine in for class) and the stairs into what used to be the screened in porch. Here’s a view of the porch, looking toward the door:

When you turn the corner into the door of the main house, you look right and see Marge (here) or Stacy (her wonderful daughter in law who is also a fabulous mechanic and repairs the Janomes!) at work at the cutting table, under the stained glass quilty window:

Here’s another picture looking towards the parking area:

Standing at the opposite end of the cutting table, you can see more thread…heaven! Also beads, doo-dads, buttons……YUM!

You’ll notice that Marge even has quilts on the ceiling! (and a corner of that cool quilty skylight).
If you turn back toward the entrance, you look toward the bathroom (in this picture, the blue and white quilt is on the door), the classroom is on the right, and another room of fabrics is on the left. Notice all those quilts on the ceiling…everywhere!!!! And old hand-hewn beams, too….

Here’s a look in the same direction, but on the other side of the center display of fabrics:

This is the doorway into the “front room”, which houses the more “solid” fabrics, batting, patterns, some sale items and other assorted good things:

Just above the door is this quilt with Laurel Burch fabric…how Marge makes so many samples is beyond me! But she sure does!

This view is from the doorway to the front room:

And this view is from the other end (where there is another door to the stairs that lead up and to the classroom). I didn’t take pics of the upstairs, but Marge has sale fabrics up there on one side, and the longarm and office area on the other. Yes, they also custom quilt tops!

And it’s always fun to see what’s on the wall in the classroom. Marge has a fantastic color sense, and has an entire store of great fabrics from which to pick. When things are slow, she sews in the classroom! She has made a lot of spectacular Asian-influenced quilts lately (like that blue and white one currently on the bathroom door, above), and this one is in progress…can’t wait to see it done!

This quilt, on the ceiling near the door from the ramp entrance, is made of Asian-inspired florals and black…dramatic!

Obviously, since I teach there, I’m affiliated. But Marge gave me my first teaching job, and is a great friend and supporter. She is SO encouraging, and is everything you want in a shop owner. If I ask her if she’d be interested in carrying a product, she’ll say “PLEASE tell me…I need to know what you want and like!” and she’ll give it a try, even if it means setting up a new account with a new wholesaler.

Best of all…she sells via internet, too….so if you aren’t lucky like me, who lives in easy driving distance (35 minutes door to door!), you can still drop in and shop! Hope you enjoyed the tour,
Cheers, Sarah

Today’s Fiber Postcard Class

Saturday, October 21st, 2006

Today we had a gas at Maine-ly Sewing in Nobleboro, Maine. There were just two students in the class…

normally I don’t do classes that small, but since going to Houston is just around the corner and being able to pay for hotel and food is a good thing, I decided to give it a go. I’m SO glad I did! Elizabeth and Karen were my students, and what wonderful ones there were! Scroll all the way down to see more of their work!

I taught them a bunch of tricks and techniques. The hotlinks are mostly to Dick Blick, a website that I’ve used and this is reputable, that supplies artists and could be a serious Visa Accident waiting to happen. You have been warned! The techniques included:

*Fusing a chunk of Wonder Under (or whatever brand of fusible web) to the back of a chunk of fabric from which you then free-form cut shapes

*Fusing leftover bits and strips of fabric to a chunk of Wonder Under—like fitting together the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. That way you can use all those too-large-to-toss, too-small to really use pieces of fabric. Keep the fused bits in a box or bag, and you have a ready-to-go stash of fusible for postcards and other small projects.

*making freezer paper stencils

*using freezer paper st encils with Shiva Paintstiks (regular and irridescent) or fabric paint (Jacquard, Lumiere and Setacolor Transparents today)

*doing rubbings over rubbing plates with the Paintstiks–I bought mine at Festival from Laura Murray, but she has a great online store, too…check this out for a direct link to the page with the rubbing plates on them, or start at her home page.

*playing with Angelina fibers

*leaf prints

Creating your own compositions, too, then stitching them, and finally couching (sewing) yarn to the edges to finish them instead of the typical quilt bindings or satin stitching! I’m glad we were few…don’t know how many students I could help well in this sort of class!

Elizabeth and Karen are both new to quilting, and they did FANTABULOUSLY well! Elizabeth wanted to do a picture (from memory!!!) of a saddle-back ridge near her home here in Maine. She also hunts, and brought with her some incredibly gorgeous Wood Duck feathers which she ended up using as trees on her postcard. Here she is during the composition phase:

The photos just don’t do her finished composition justice….angelina for the sunset sky, the hills and feathers….look at the colors in the first photo for a better idea of what they really look like.

Karen got many postcards begun…trying a bit of everything. She has three daughters, and wanted to send each one a card with a tree: one is angelina fibers, one is stenciled, one is a leaf-print! Then she took some leftover strips and fused them up into this wonderful abstract composition. Last weekend, she took my machine quilting class…her first time doing machine quilting…she is brand new and says “I don’t quilt.” Fiddle faddle! She’s a quilter NOW…this is great!

Also, at long last, I finally remembered to take pictures of the shop!!!! Tomorrow I’ll do a post about my favorite quilt store: Maine-ly Sewing!

Teaching Schedule Oct. 2006 to March 2007

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006

The NEW class schedule is ready! In the coming months I’ll be teaching machine quilting, machine applique and my newest class, Fine Finishes. Learn how to make perfect bindings, then learn fun variations. If you would like me to teach a class to a group, drop me a line by replying to this message, or visiting the contact me page on my website. I’d love to set something up. And to find out why this quilt is up here, read to the bottom!

To register for a class, contact the store where it is held directly. Maine-ly Sewing is at 207-563-8445. Cote Brothers is at 782-5922:

2006:
Oct. 21–Postcard Workshop, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro
Oct. 28–Machine Quilting, Cote Brothers, Auburn
Nov. 11–Janome Totebag, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro
Nov. 18–More Machine Quilting with Decorative Threads,
Cote Brothers, Auburn
December 7 (Thursday)–Janome Totebag, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro

2007:
January 20–Machine Applique, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro
January 28 (Sunday)–Machine Quilting, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro
February 4 (Sunday)–Janome Totebag, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro
March 4 (Sunday)–Machine Quilting, Maine-ly Sewing, Nobleboro

I hope to add some classes at Cote Brothers in Spring…let me know what you’d like!

Also, some wonderful news. I’ll be published four times this fall! The Fall/Holiday Janome International Digest, available here will feature my totebag pattern. My quilt Autumn Borealis was included in the Exhibit Catalog for the Carrefour Europeen du Patchwork, known also as Val d’Argent, the big quilt show near Strasbourg, France, as one of four quilts from the “Changing the World One Thread at a Time” exhibit. I’ll scan the cover and the page with my quilt in a day or two to share with you all! Talk about a surprise!!!

The Tide is Hire, is a quilt that will be in the wonderful Viking Masterpieces exhibit in Houston, and will be in the show catalog “Imagine That.” I can’t wait until I can share it with you…in about three weeks! And last but definitely not least, I will have five journal quilts (!!!) in Karey Bresenhan’s new book Creative Quilting: the Journal Project Book., which can be pre-ordered here . WOW!

I guess hard work pays off {GRIN!}!