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Archive for the ‘Maine’ Category

Birch Pond Landscapes class

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

After years of hinting to me that her customers would love a landscape class, I finally agreed to teach one at Maine-ly Sewing (www.mainelysewing.com) in Nobleboro, Maine.  (Contact the store to sign up, etc.)   The class will be Saturday, Feb. 28th, from 10-4 !

Birch Pond, Summer

Birch Pond, Summer

As usual, I figured why make one quilt when you can make two…. So I made the fusible applique quilt two ways, autumn and summer.  I am so pleased with the results that I think I’ll do the four seasons, write it up as a pattern and sell it…let me know what you think?   The pattern is actually quite easy, finishes about 22×25 inches (depending on your border and your final composition of the scene…there is definitely fudge-room here!).  PS–photos are clickable for a slightly larger view.

I did easy quilting so that beginning quilters and machine quilters won’t feel intimidated…I PROMISE, it really is easy to do the quilting on these patterns even when you are new to it!  Here is a detail photo:

Birch Pond, Summer, Detail

Birch Pond, Summer, Detail

Initially I did the autumn version… I just love the glorious colors of Maine in Fall.  However, given that Fall is behind us, and it has been winter for quite a while, Marge and I decided to use the Summer version (hope is eternal!  It WILL come again!) to advertise the class.  But, I wanted students to see that they can make the quilt in many ways.  Frankly, I kinda think it would be fun to do it another time in totally wild colors, like plum and turquoise and mango and lime…. wouldn’t that be a hoot?  Anyway, here is a more realistic, autumnal version:

birchpondclass004

And a detail of the Autumn version; note that I did the leaf canopy two different ways… in summer I used the twist-and-chop way to cut chunks, for autumn I used the slice it into confetti method!

Hope you like the quilts, and hope to see some of you in class!

Birch Pond, Autumn, detail

Birch Pond, Autumn, detail

Teaching in Houston!!!

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

A large envelope arrived from the International Quilt Festival folks in Houston yesterday; despite its size, I figured it had to be a sorry, no thanks.  WRONG!   I am teaching in Houston this coming Fall!!!!!!!!  I am elated beyond belief… it has been quite the effort to float down to be able to reach the keyboard LOL!

After I met yet another deadline I checked to see when applications were due…it was in six days!  So I quickly put together everything (I had last year asked on my blog for letters of recommendation and received several…thanks Betty, Jan, Mathea and Rebecca for your help!) and overnighted it ($16 well spent!) to Houston to make the deadline for certain.  Well, yesterday I received the results, and will have four days of teaching (I wanted 3 or 4):

Monday, October 12,
Fine Finishes (bindings and edge finishes)

Tuesday, October 13,
Machine Applique Three Ways
(the Blue Gingko pattern)

Wednesday, October 14
Tame Fiddly, Fussy Threads for Machine Quilting
(the More Machine Quilting class)

Thursday, October 15
Chunk and Jigsaw Fusible Applique–
total fun!  fabric postcards plus

    The classes will be in the Janome machine classroom (yeah!) except for the Wednesday class, which will be in the BabyLock classroom…better go find a BabyLock dealer and see how their machines are set up!

    I’ve set it up to do small kits for the classes, as that makes it a lot easier for both the students and teachers.  They get what they need that is unusual (they are asked to b ring their own fabric, batting, etc….usual items) like crisp interfacing, water soluble paper, fancy threads, that sort of thing.

    So, now I’m going to go eat breakfast (Irish oats and a banana) and float again!  THEN, after I finish a project to submit for consideration for the 2009 Quilting Arts Gifts issue (comes out before the holidays) and get that mailed off, I need to start getting my set-up done to use the video camera and digital projector in my teaching.  I actually signed up for a Jan Krentz workshop this may tho I pretty much never do traditional piecing any more just so I can watch how she teaches.  She’s coming to Maine in May at the invitation of the Pine Tree Quilt Guild, and I can’t wait!

    Journal Quilts and Journals for Quilters, a lecture

    Sunday, February 1st, 2009

    Yesterday I had a grand time!  It was my first chance to get to Augusta (Maine) for the quarterly statewide meeting of the Pine Tree Quilt Guild.  Better yet, I was the featured speaker, and debuted my lecture on Journal Quilts and Journals for Quilters.  The lady who invited me to speak said I should plan on 100-150 attendees, so I brought 150 handouts… and we ran out!   So I am going to post the contents of my handout here, at the end of this message.  Feel free to select and copy that section to print out at home!

    Also, I realized I have never added my 2007 and 2008 journal quilts to my website, so I have done that today, too.  I have shared these journal quilts on the blog before, but here they are again.  The first quilt is Windows of Hope, picturing a little girl in the rubble of bombed out Tokyo circa 1946:

    windowsofhope450

    I’ll add the detail photos to the galleries along with technique information, otherwise this blogpost will be miles too long! (addendum:  I realized I never blogged about my 2008 journal quilts…eeek!  So I’ll do that in the next week or two….)  The next journal is Ancient Earth, which didn’t make it in to the juried 2008 Journal quilt exhibit, but I love it nonetheless.

    And finally, Aslan’s Song, also made for (but didn’t get in) to the 2008 Journal quilt exhibit.  Details about the title and techniques are in the gallery section.   Click on the title for the link.

    Last but not least, here is the handout from the Journal Quilts lecture:

    The Journal Quilts and Journaling for Quilters
    with Sarah Ann Smith

    Websites:

    www.quiltart.com
    www.sarahansmith.com
    www.quiltingarts.com
    www.dickblick.com
    www.mariaelkins.com
    www.beadjournalproject.com

    Books:
    •    Creative Quilting: The Journal Quilt Project, Karey Patterson Bresenhan
    •    Art Quilt Workbook, Jane Davila and Elin Waterston
    •    The Decorated Page, and The Decorated Journal, Gwen Diehn
    •    Journal Revolution, Rise up and Create, Woods and Dinino
    •    Quilters Playtime, Dianne Hire
    •    Thinking Outside the Box, Sandi Cummings
    •    Quilting Arts magazine
    •    Cloth Paper Scissors magazine

    Ideas for journal quilts and journals:

    •    Beautiful things
    •    What have you collected?
    •    Things that make me mad!
    •    Places you’d like to go / see / visit
    •    Good smells
    •    Favorite foods
    •    Quilts I’d make if I had the skills and time
    •    Song titles/lines/phrases
    •    Quotations
    •    Make 100 stamps
    •    Flowers
    •    Groceries
    •    If I looked in your closet, what colors would I see?
    •    Favorite clothes/shoes you had
    •    Who inspires you?
    •    Tell me something good that happened to you today!
    •    Cut  fabric swatches and write why you like them
    •    Pictures from a  magazine ..why do you like them?

    •    Focus on….

    Line Circles Numbers Letters Leaves Colors…..
    Bugs you love/hate (or animals, or birds)
    Maps…your home, your town, your mind, an imaginary planet….
    Favorite books
    Hubcaps, or how to fill a circle….
    Artists you admire (Matisse!  Van Gogh!)
    Your friends’ best qualities

    What you need to journal:      a notebook, a pen or pencil, and an eraser!  Awake helps, too…
    Optional:  glue stick, camera, pens, watercolors, waterbrush

    Be Inspired!  Journal, quilt, and make art!!!!

    It’s DONE! and It’s COLD!

    Friday, January 16th, 2009

    I cordially invite you to join me in a totally uninhibited MAJOR snoopy dance, but first, a break for a local weather report….

    This is what our weather station said this morning when we got up (and when the boys had to go out to the bus stop):

    2009-01-janblog320

    Yes, folks, that is FIFTEEN BELOW ZERO, here in usually-balmy Camden, Maine.  It hasn’t been this cold here in five years, and although it isn’t unheard of, it is rare.  Fortunately, the wind wasn’t blowing.   And you should (or perhaps not) see/feel the static electricity with 9 percent indoor humidity.  I made the mistake of leaving my earbuds in from my iPod while pulling a polar fleece neck gaitor off the other day…static, right into the cords into my ears.  UNfun!

    But now, for the cause for CELEBRATION! what you see below is TWO YEARS of work!

    2009-01-janblog322

    The binder on the right is the completed manuscript and CD ready to be mailed in the box (behind it) to AQS (folder in the center holds the contract).  The binder in the back left is my earlier working copies, and the overflowing binder on the left is my final working draft plus ALL the illustrations/samples that aren’t real quilts.

    Just in case this isn’t enough for you (it wasn’t for me), here’s another view…. and for the record, thanks to an error in Word (which has a *(^&*%^&*@ mind of its own) which caused me to re-print 40 pages, I used nearly 400 sheets of paper and  one and a half extra-capacity black ink cartridges (those things cost $23!!!!! EACH) just to print the stuff in the binder on the right.  My last ink bill for two black and three color (cyan, magenta and yellow) cartridges was $86!  Anyway….lookit all that paper!

    2009-01-janblog321

    As I wrote to my editor upon returning from FedEx, I am ABSURDLY ELATED!  Then I cleaned off my worktable, where a large stack of batiks, used for book samples, has lived for the past two years.  I am grateful to AQS for being so understanding about the delays in submitting the manuscript (first Joshua’s accident, then Paul’s shoulder surgery, then mom’s move and decline).  And now it is IN!   Here’s to hoping they don’t cut too much.  I can live with cutting projects easily, but I want so much for the “meat” to stay in the book…. stay tuned!

    Turn, Turn, Turn

    Thursday, January 1st, 2009

    January is named after the Roman God Janus, the god of doorways and gates who looked both forwards (into the new year) and backwards (into the last year).  I for one am glad the tumult of the past 20 months is over, both the personal “stuff” and the major worldwide economic and political nightmares.  I’m hoping that things will take a turn for the better, and am really hoping our local schools will have the kids watch Barack Obama’s swearing in ceremony.  No matter what your political persuasion, this is a historic moment for us in the U.S. and, because of our role in the world, for the world too.   It IS  a time for hope, and a time for change.
    Luminaries on Christmas Eve 2008

    In Camden, Maine, where I live they have an annual fundraiser called Light a Luminary.  Kids and service organizations around the town bag up sand, candles, and waxed white paper bags with a sheet of instructions that are sold for $5.  Proceeds benefit LOCAL charities.   On the instructions, they have the day to light your luminaries…Christmas Eve, with rain/snow dates in case the weather isn’t cooperative.  This year, we lit ours on Christmas eve and I managed—thanks to propping my camera next to a tree trunk—get this shot of our driveway and home.

    And in closing, Pete Seeger’s lyrics based on Ecclesiastes:

    To everything (turn, turn, turn)
    There is a season (turn, turn, turn)
    And a time for every purpose, under heaven

    A time to be born, a time to die
    A time to plant, a time to reap
    A time to kill, a time to heal
    A time to laugh, a time to weep

    To everything (turn, turn, turn)
    There is a season (turn, turn, turn)
    And a time for every purpose, under heaven

    A time to build up,a time to break down
    A time to dance, a time to mourn
    A time to cast away stones, a time to gather stones together

    To everything (turn, turn, turn)
    There is a season (turn, turn, turn)
    And a time for every purpose, under heaven

    A time of love, a time of hate
    A time of war, a time of peace
    A time you may embrace, a time to refrain from embracing

    To everything (turn, turn, turn)
    There is a season (turn, turn, turn)
    And a time for every purpose, under heaven

    A time to gain, a time to lose
    A time to rend, a time to sew
    A time to love, a time to hate
    A time for peace, I swear its not too late

    HAPPY NEW YEAR !