Quilts for Colorado Fire Victims

Sewing in the time of COVID-19 – Week 34

Many of you have contacted us, wanting to donate quilts to Colorado Fire Victims. We have just joined with the Colorado Quilt Council (CQC) and the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum (RMQM) in an effort to collect and distribute quilts to the 300 families who lost their homes in our terrible wildfires.

New and never-used quilts can be dropped off at the museum in Golden, eQuilter in Boulder and Ruth’s Stitchery in Colorado Springs. Having led a quilt drive in the past for fire victims, flood and hurricane victims, I would humbly request that you give Twin, Double or Queen size bed quilts for these families.

We will place our 2 donation bins at the front door where you can drop off 1-5 quilts at a time. Please understand that during the current Covid spike, we will NOT be opening the front door to receive the quilts face-to-face. The bins are regularly disinfected, and quilts will be brought inside as you depart.

Please drop off in our bins during business hours Monday through Friday, 8 am to 5 pm. If you need to schedule a night or weekend drop-off, please contact me directly to make arrangements. You can ship quilts to us, or to the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum in Golden.

If you or your guild wish to drop off a larger number at eQuilter, contact me directly for bulk drop-off at my studio back door.

This week our local Niwot/Gunbarrel community newspaper ran this lovely article about our Face Mask collaboration with local sewing volunteers. MANY THANKS to all of you who received our donated fabrics, and brought back or donated Face Masks earlier this year. We are so grateful to be able to partner with all of you who stepped up to the challenge.

Re our ‘Curbside’ Pickup –

Due to Covid, and especially during the current spike, please understand that we will not be communicating face-to-face through our front door when you come to pick up orders. BRING YOUR CELL PHONE and call the number posted on our front door, and we will place your package just outside the door, then you can approach and pick up your package *after* the door closes. We want to keep our staff safe so we can remain open as an essential business, and everybody here can continue to receive a paycheck. Thank you for understanding.

with Hope for the Future,
Luana and Paul

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eQuilter supports COVID-19 mask-making efforts

By Kristen Arendt 

https://www.lhvc.com/story/2020/11/04/news/gunbarrel-business-equilter-supports-covid-19-mask-making-efforts/5832.html

Photo by Anne Hsu Gibson

On March 5, 2020, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment’s public health laboratory confirmed the first presumptive positive COVID-19 test result in Colorado.

What followed is well known to Coloradans, but looking back to March, there are some behind-the-scenes heroes from the early months of the pandemic who deserve some added thanks, namely the volunteers and organizations who helped support early mask-making endeavors in local communities.

When COVID-19 cases were first on the rise, demand quickly outran supply for masks and other PPE, especially for healthcare workers, first responders and essential front line workers.

Later that month, the Volunteer Engagement and Donations management staff under the Boulder County Emergency Operations started the Boulder County Mask Project to meet the rising need for masks.

Boulder County Community Services estimates that since the project began, volunteers have donated more than 6,000 hours totaling $188,500 in contributions. A huge part of the program’s success can be attributed to Gunbarrel business, eQuilter, owned and operated by Luana and Paul Rubin.

The Rubins are no stranger to charitable work. Since eQuilter’s inception in 1999, it has contributed to charitable organizations around the world, donating 2% of all sales. To date, they have raised over $1.7 million for charity.

When the needs for masks in Boulder County increased drastically in the spring, Luana Rubin said they saw a large need in the community that eQuilter was able to fill.

“At the beginning of the pandemic, it was a really crazy time. Everyone was trying to figure out how they were going to respond and how bad the pandemic was going to be,” she said.

Near the start of the pandemic, eQuilter was granted special permission from the governor’s office to stay open as an essential business. During a time when a lot of other fabric stores and quilt stores around the country had completely shut down, eQuilter’s online business became an important source of fabric for people around the nation sewing masks for their communities.

Luana Rubin, eager to find ways to help locally, got in touch with the Boulder Emergency Task Force.

“At the time, we had connected with a Facebook group called the Boulder Mask Makers, and we were giving away tons of fabric every day,” she said.

The eQuilter warehouse set up a secure bin outside the building’s front door and filled it with fabric and elastic every morning. By the end of the day, the bin would be completely empty, taken by volunteers sewing masks for the community.

“So in the midst of that, we did connect with the Boulder County Emergency Task Force, and their project was so big that I said, don’t come to the bin in front, let me just put together boxes of fabric to give to you,” said Rubin. That fabric ultimately helped the volunteers of the Boulder County Mask Project sew over 19,000 masks.

“Our goal is to give as much fabric as possible to those who are making masks. And as long as it’s being done to give away, to help people in need, to help front line workers, not just medical workers, but all those people who are out there having to interact with the public, we’re really thrilled to be able to donate fabric and elastic,” she said.

When asked how many masks she thought had been made from donated fabric, Rubin said, “That’s hard to answer. It’s obviously thousands of yards of fabric and elastic. We didn’t really keep track, we just kept putting it out there as there was such a desperate need in the community.” She was unsure of an exact number, but estimated somewhere in the range of 50,000 masks had been made.

In addition to working with the Boulder Mask Makers and the BCMP, Rubin said eQuilter also helped provide masks to the State Department and to Boulder Community Health.

“The State Department, through the governor’s office, would come and pick up 300 masks each week. I would go over and drop off boxes of several hundred masks, every week, to the hospital,” Rubin said.

Much of the credit goes to the group of volunteers who sewed the masks, who Rubin called the “mask fairies.”

“There are still a few of them whom we haven’t identified. There were people who would come, take fabric, go home, make masks, and then come and leave them in the drop-off bin, and never identify themselves,” she said.

Since March 21, the BCMP alone has delivered 19,320 homemade cloth masks to over 70 local organizations, specifically supporting marginalized, high-risk community members during the pandemic. Over 84 people volunteered their time to create the handmade masks for children, youth, and adults.

For Rubin and the rest of the eQuilter staff, this very important local effort was just one part of a much bigger job to fulfill customer orders around the nation.

“We had customers all over the country who were making surgical gowns and surgical caps, not just the masks. So we had a huge demand. All of this was going on at the same time. It was absolute madness. I was working 75 hours a week. Restocking fabric was really difficult. Our buyers were working overtime. Everybody was working overtime at the warehouse,” said Rubin, who compared the feeling of those months to a war-time effort.

eQuilter normally employs around 24 people, but its staffing to 38 people during the height of the pandemic. There are currently around 34 full-time employees, plus the Rubins.

“That was the other half of what was going on here, keeping our business open so that we could supply all the people who desperately needed these supplies,” said Rubin.

At present, Rubin said the pandemic-related need has slowed although it is still a significant portion of eQuilter’s business. “That part of our business is up for sure, but it’s not as crazy as it was early in the year. Everybody knew that this was a special moment in time, and people needed these supplies, and we were going to do our best to help,” she said.

On a weekend when Rubin would normally be attending the International Quilt Festival in Houston, Texas, an annual event that regularly draws upwards of 60,000 people, she said the important thing this year is that all her employees and their families are safe and well.

“Our staff has just been incredible through all this. We’ve been observing all the safety protocols very strictly since March. We just got slammed with a tsunami wave of people who were buying for the pandemic. Many of our staff gave up their weekends or worked late into the night. We have a great team who stepped up to the challenge,” said Rubin.

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Free eQuilter Pattern – Peaceful Garden

Some days you just want to smell the flowers, listen to the babbling brook, cross the footbridge and sit in a pew to pray or meditate.This week’s exclusive eQuilter Free Quilt Pattern leads you into a lovely peaceful scene where you can rest and reflect on what is most important in life.

This candelit chapel is glowing with a warm light. The colors of the sky and golden windows are reflected in the gentle stream. Cherry blossoms, Hydrangeas, Snapdragons and Daisies fill this scene with color. We’ve set more Hydrangeas in the border, pieced with a Stonehenge texture, and a Hoffman Hand-Dye.

To make this 51″ x 68″ quilt design, you will start with a 24″ x 44″ panel, and then add the coordinates. This would be a much appreciated holiday gift, with the promise of Spring flowers bringing joy to the Winter months.

…from the ‘Peaceful Garden’ collection by Dona Gelsinger for Timeless Treasures.

Don’t miss the popular ‘Pretty in Pink‘ and ‘Backyard Songbirds‘ quilt patterns!

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While We Wait….

The heart of man is very much like the sea,

it has its storms, it has its tides

and in its depths it has its pearls too.

– Vincent van Gogh

with hope for the future…
Luana and Paul

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Free Pattern – Moonlight Serenade

Shimmering dragonflies hover over Water Lilies on a Moonlit pond,
in this week’s Free Quilt Pattern. This elegant quilt design is peaceful and soothing, just perfect for a bedroom or meditation space.

To make this 55″ x 55″ quilt design, you will use one large central scenic panel, and two coordinating block panels. Add in gold metallic Dragonflies and Lilypad coordinates, and a Twilight Blue Hand-Dye, and you will be entering the magical time after dusk when the moon is a sparkling reflection on gently rippling waters.

…from the ‘Moonlight Serenade’ collection by Kanvas Studio for Benartex.

Don’t miss the popular ‘Timber Gnomes‘ and ‘Jungle Giraffes‘ quilt patterns!

Order the pattern as configured, or customize it to your liking with any of our thousands of fabrics. Just place your desired fabrics in your Wish List, and these fabrics will appear in the Fabric Selector below the pattern.

Click Here for a Video Tutorial of the Free Pattern Designer.
Download Instructions for the pattern at the bottom of the pattern designer page.

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Turn Back the Clock – Daylight Savings Ends Tonight

Sewing in the time of COVID-19 – Week 33

Wow, many of you agreed that Chocolate Therapy goes well with Quilt Therapy! We sold out this week, so we restocked and added more flavors to our special Winter 20/21 curated selection of Artisan Chocolates.

Don’t forget to “Fall Back” and put your clocks back tonight, so you can sleep an extra hour. I don’t know about you, but I could sure use that extra hour.

Tomorrow is celebrated as The Day of the Dead (Dia de Muertos) in Mexico. It is a beautiful celebration to pray for and to remember friends and family members who have died. People go to cemeteries to be with the souls of the departed and build private altars containing the favorite foods and beverages, as well as photos and memorabilia, of the departed. The intent is to encourage visits by the souls, so the souls will hear the prayers and the comments of the living directed to them. (Wikipedia)

Over the years I have been exposed to more of the traditions, artwork, and colors of this celebration. The Marigolds, the Sugar Skulls, the Papel Picado (paper cutouts) and bottles of Tequila are left as offerings, and these have all been expressed through fabric designs over the years. You can see what we still have in stock in our collections now – Day of the DeadFrida Kahlo and Latinx Culture.

You may recall that one of the exhibits eQuilter sponsored in Houston last year, was the Altar Offerings exhibit curated by Jane Tenorio-Coscarelli. In this year of great loss caused by the pandemic, I imagine many of you are making these types of memorial quilts. Every stitch is a prayer.

Wishing you a peaceful and hopeful Election Day.

with Hope for the Future,
Luana and Paul

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Free Quilt Pattern – Venetian Bouquet

We finally got this luscious collection back in stock so we wanted to rush
this exclusive eQuilter Free Quilt Pattern before we run out again! The first time we got this Kaufman group all the main designs sold out in 48 hours, so if you want this DON’T DELAY.

To make this 52″ x 68″ quilt design, you will use the central digital-printed panel, plus 7 ‘Venice’ coordinates, and a cream hand-dye. It will be difficult to cut up this gorgeous fabric, but the results are worth it! Don’t forget to add in some matching threads and maybe a chocolate bar or two, which are also selling out like crazy!

…from the ‘Venice’ collection by Christiane Marques for Robert Kaufman Fabrics.

Don’t miss the popular ‘Timber Gnomes and ‘Wild Tiger Eyes‘ quilt patterns!

Order the pattern as configured, or customize it to your liking with any of our thousands of fabrics. Just place your desired fabrics in your Wish List, and these fabrics will appear in the Fabric Selector below the pattern.

Click Here for a Video Tutorial of the Free Pattern Designer.
Download Instructions for the pattern at the bottom of the pattern designer page.

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The Year of the Gnome

Have you ever been in such a magical place out in Nature, that you just *know* there must be elves, fairies or gnomes around you? Have you ever put your hands on the trunk of a tree that is older than your great-grandparents, and seems to vibrate with a quiet wisdom?

Have you ever been in the Stockholm Airport, and seen rows and rows of Tomte Gnome souvenirs, begging to be taken home? Somehow there is a connection between these 2 things…

Backtracking a bit, one of the places I’ve been that seemed very magical, was the mountains and ancient forests of New Zealand. After all, that’s where Peter Jackson filmed The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Even the city parks with their huge ancestral trees seem to glisten with enchantment. This photo is from the Botanic Gardens in Christchurch, and this is a tree I have sat beneath on both of my visits to New Zealand. This wide trunk held a tree with such vigorously spreading branches, that it felt like I was under the roof of a house when I sat on that Victorian park bench.

Quilters have always loved fairy fabrics, and the Tolkien books and movies have inspired elf fabric, but this year has been The Year of the Gnome. Did the Tomte Gnomes escape from Sweden and populate the countryside in North America? Tomtes (or Nisse in Norway) are solitary, mischievous sprites, protecting farms, barns, animals and children from harm. They all seem to have tall pointy hats and long white beards. Tomte is also the Swedish name for Santa Claus.

Gnomes have sparked the imagination of children for generations. Remember the 1967 move “The Gnome Mobile”? No? Maybe you remember “Gnomeo & Juliet” from 2011.

At the Rubin House we’ve been collecting ridiculous gnome lawn ornaments for several years. First we got the classic garden gnomes, then we progressed into Star Trek Gnomes, who now guard our front door. (Kirk Gnome & Spock Gnome) If a family member won’t say what they want for Christmas, guess what they are getting? When guests arrive the kids used to groan and roll their eyes over the Guardian Gnomes, which always put a special twinkle in my eye during the holidays.

Back by popular demand, the ‘Timber Gnomies‘ collection is back in stock this week. As always, we hope this brings you a smile today.

with hope for the future…
Luana and Paul

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Free eQuilter Pattern – We The People

As we approach our very important US election, this week’s Exclusive Free Quilt Pattern is a celebration of the rights that Americans hold so dear, which includes the right to VOTE!

This 57″ x 65″ quilt design features a digital panel with a collage of patriotic images, including “The Declaration of Independence” by John Trumbull. The 24″ x 44″ central panel also includes the Preamble to the Constitution, an American Eagle, and a rippling American Flag as a backdrop. This wall hanging is a beautiful display of patriotism, and would also be deeply appreciated as a Quilts of Valor gift.

…from the ‘We The People’ collection by Timeless Treasures.

Don’t miss the popular ‘Timber Gnomes‘ and ‘Wild Tiger Eyes‘ quilt patterns!

Order the pattern as configured, or customize it to your liking with any of our thousands of fabrics. Just place your desired fabrics in your Wish List, and these fabrics will appear in the Fabric Selector below the pattern.

Click Here for a Video Tutorial of the Free Pattern Designer.
Download Instructions for the pattern at the bottom of the pattern designer page.

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Quilt Therapy + Chocolate Therapy = Happy Face

Sewing in the time of COVID-19 – Week 32

This week I am feeling grateful for fabric and chocolate to get me through 2020.

Thanks to our friends and customers who have called and written to express concern about the fires in Boulder and around Colorado. As of this weekend we are getting a respite, as a big snowstorm is on its way. These explosive firestorms have been quite shocking, because they have spread very quickly. The air quality has been bad for awhile now, with smoke from the West coast, the Southwest, and now we have huge plumes of smoke from our own Colorado forest fires in the mountains. We know many of our quilter friends and our family friends who have had to evacuate from the numerous fires. I just heard that a mountain quilt guild lost its shed where they stored all their sewing supplies for their charity quilt program. My beloved Rocky Ridge Music Center (where I went to summer music camp in the 70s, and my kids have gone over the last 15 years) was under mandatory evacuation as of early this morning.

As a result of these layers of stress, I decided this week to bring back an old eQuilter tradition – offering a curated selection of premium imported Chocolate Bars in the cold weather season. I mean, what better to get you through the fires, the hurricanes, the pandemic, and the election? (when quilting is not quite enough)

If you follow me on my personal Facebook page you may know that I’ve been doing ‘research’ in a local bookstore’s online Chocolate Club (as part of my own pandemic self-care) and so have been introduced to the fine art of chocolate tasting which is like wine tasting. You don’t just bite into the chocolate. No, you open the wrapper, inhale the various levels of fragrance, then you snap off a small piece and let it slowly melt in your mouth. Then you discuss the different layers of tasting notes that unfold, right down to the ‘aftertaste’ when it has all melted away. It is what I call my Chocolate Meditation. It does not work with cheap grocery store chocolate. I have one square of premium imported chocolate after work or after dinner, and then I can go sew or draw or write, with a clear head.

Over the years we’ve had a few giggles about the things our customers order with their chocolate. My favorite customer order was 10 chocolate bars and 1 spool of thread. Don’t worry, we won’t tell! But please do not order if you live in a warm climate. It will melt in the package. And that would be a terrible waste of good chocolate. Not to mention what it does to the spool of thread. Ha.

They are predicting a foot of snow in the high country where the fires are burning, so fingers and toes are crossed here. This storm is coming down from the North, so thanks Canada!

Many thanks to the ladies at Create Whimsy, who published this profile interview about my creative life.

with Hope for the Future,
Luana and Paul

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