This 53″ x 62″ has a Hoffman digital panel, Hoffman coordinates (Tooled Leather and Belt Buckles) and a Hoffman Hand-Dye. The asymmetric stars are a little bit of that rebellious wild spirit that explored the West.
As always, you can trade out the Cowboy theme coordinates for other themes, like Cowgirls, Native American themes, or small scale Horse coordinate prints. (See the 3 categories below – Cowboys, Horses, and Southwest)
Our unique eQuilter Pattern Designer allows you to put fabrics in your Wish List, then they will appear under the pattern and you can play around and substitute colors or redesign with different coordinates. Just drag-and-drop and see how much fun you’ll have making your own version of this gorgeous Horse-themed quilt!
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.
I hope you caught the
Midweek Creative Nudge on Wednesday. If not you can review on our blog! I
posted a link to some inspirational
photos of art in China, and told about our visit to Sophie’s orphanage.
As always, we thank you
for supporting our business and our charity program, which is approaching a
total of $1.6 million given to these 7
organizations. At a time when so many children are living in perilous
times, and so many endangered species and wilderness areas need our support,
rest assured that together we ARE making a difference!
My big news this week is that I will be giving my power point lecture
‘International Quilt Trends’ at the Pour l’Amour du Fil quilt festival in
Nantes France on Friday April 26. (Not sure what time yet.) If you are
attending this beautiful show, I hope that you can come to see my presentation
there, where I will show quilt images and talk about trends from quilt exhibits
in Houston, Canada, Mexico, Tokyo and QuiltCon.
Of course I will photograph this quilt exhibit and share this experience with
you on my photo pages
and our eQuilter blog and newsletter.
Right now I am resting up for a short busy trip to the Tokyo Quilt Festival, so
I can take photos of the best quilts, and share them with all of you! You can
see photos from my previous trips to Japan on my photo page.
Registration is open for Cindy
Lohbeck‘s Shibori, Ice-Dyeing and Ombre Dye classes this summer. Lynn
Koolish will be here teaching a CQC class next month, and we have Jean Wells
coming to do a FRCQ workshop here in April. Our classroom is buzzing – join us
for one of our CQC, FRCQ, or eQuilter workshop events in 2019!
A sea turtle glides through the reef with sunlight glittering through the waves above, and colorful fish fill the bottom of this finely-detailed panel from our own exclusive line of digital prints.
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.
This week I am editing my photos from China and slowly posting more on my photo pages. One of my image folders is “Chinese Art” because everywhere I go, I take photos of art, design and color that are inspiring to me. (And hopefully you too!) This is a collage of photos I took in a big tourist Cloisonne factory store (with their permission) and Asian fabrics that we have in stock now. I am just crazy about these jeweltones and Asian design motifs!
Our industry is going through a drought of Asian fabrics. Since Kona Bay closed, other vendors have also cut back on Asian fabrics. Those gorgeous Japanese prints with delicate metallic outlines and traditional mums, peonies, cherry blossoms, and koi fish ….are seldom produced these days. Apparently our industry went through a period of over-saturation and the manufacturers cut way back…but now there is hardly anything!
When we started eQuilter in the basement of our home, we started with 2 categories: Asian prints and colorful batiks from Bali. Because of my background living and traveling in Asia, I had an affinity for these beautiful fabrics. I still do! So we continue to stock every beautiful Asian collection that we can find. If you are a serious Asian fabric collector, you are probably like me….I can never have enough of these exquisite fabrics!
So here is my weekly visual inspiration for you, on one of my favorite topics. I’ve been talking to our suppliers and asking them to give us these lovely fabrics again. In the meantime if you are an afficionado like me, you know I’ll be aggressively stocking every gorgeous Japanese, Chinese, and other Asian motif that I find.
Next week I’ll be flying to Tokyo to photograph the Quilt Festival again, so we’ll be talking about Chinese and Japanese art for a few weeks! I save up my miles all year long so I can make this trip. Now that we have direct flights from Denver to Tokyo, it is SO much easier to indulge in this annual inspiration.
If you’d like to see my photos from previous years, you can browse my quilt albums on this page. (Scroll down to find Tokyo Quilt Festival 2018, 2017, etc.)
You’ll also see several segments on our video page, where I visit Quilting Arts TV to talk about trends at the Tokyo show and other quilt shows around the world. Enjoy!
Sincerely, Luana and Paul
****************
eQuilter Classroom & Travel Calendar: Jan 24-29 – Luana @ Tokyo Quilt Festival Feb 9 – Charity Sewing Day – eQuilter Classroom – Please RSVP! Feb 14-16 – ‘Love Your Mother‘ exhibit at Mexico Quilt Festival in Mexico City Feb 20-23 – QuiltCon – Nashville TN Feb 24 – Lynn Koolish for CQC – in eQuilter Classroom Mar 28-30 – ‘Love Your Mother‘ exhibit at Spring Quilt Festival in Chicago Apr 1 – Quilting Arts TV, Cleveland Apr 12-14 – Jean Wells for FRCQ workshop – in eQuilter Classroom June 27-30 – Jane Tenorio-Coscarelli workshop – eQuilter Classroom July 11-14, 2019 – Cindy Lohbeck – Shibori, Ice-Dyeing and Ombre Dyeing Workshops @ eQuilter 4 Classes $50 each – $80-$100 Materials Fee
Share Post:
Posted inJapan, Travel, Trends|Comments Off on Creative Nudge – Crazy for Asian
This 66″ x 76″ pattern makes a cozy lap quilt for your retired engineer, or an eye-catching wallhanging for someone who dreams of being a conductor. Your Junior Engineer can use this as a small bed quilt!
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.
As I write to you
today, we are finishing up another Charity Sewing Day with a fantastic group of
ladies who not only show up to sew quilt tops, but they take them home to
finish, and bring them back the next month! We got so many quilts back today
that we are going to do another shipment to fire victims in California. If you
live in our area and wish to drop off a quilt for this next shipment, contact
Wendy in Customer Service on Monday so we can save space for your quilt!
Our old friend Mark Lipinski has just gone through a scary surgery episode, and
has come home from the hospital. We are sending him prayers and good wishes for
a strong recovery. My stepbrother has a similar issue, and is on dialysis
waiting for a 2nd kidney transplant. I admire the courage embodied in those who
deal with these challenges, just taking life one day at a time.
My Rocky Mountain Poison quilt has finally come home after traveling for 3
years in the ‘Water is Life’ exhibit, which started out at the United Nations
in Geneva. I know so many of you saw it in Houston and in the Mancuso shows,
and museum exhibits, but it is great to show it to friends in an intimate
setting and see how its message still has an impact.
This last week I have just been trying to catch up after the China trip, so I
am still trying to finish posting photos and updating the travel blog! Watch
for my Midweek Creative Nudge Wednesday morning, for a continuation of this
travel story.
Registration is open for Cindy Lohbeck’s Shibori, Ice-Dyeing and Ombre Dye
classes this summer. Lynn Koolish will be here teaching a CQC
class next month, and we have Jean Wells coming to do a FRCQ workshop here in
April. Our classroom is buzzing – join us for one of our CQC, FRCQ, or eQuilter
workshop events in 2019!
To make this 62″ x 77″ quilt, start with our own digital printed Fractal design, then add the super-realistic Rock and Wood Paneling digital prints. Mix in some Stonehenge and Hoffman Hand-Dyes and you get this stunning design, which works as a coverlet or small bed quilt. Makes a beautiful wall-hanging too… to bring that Nature vibe into your home.
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.
Today I want to share with you the highlight of our trip to China. Many of you have written to me asking about Sophie’s return to her orphanage. It was profoundly emotional, especially for Sophie, because she has never visited any orphanage before. She lived there from the day she was found (at 2 days old) until I came to China to adopt her. (8 months old)
These days there are hardly any healthy babies waiting to be adopted. Most of the kids abandoned and living in the orphanages have physical and/or mental disabilities…also known as Special Needs kids. As you can imagine, these kids are less likely to be adopted, but there are still loving families who seek out these children to adopt. I have been told by an American doctor that the areas with the most pollution and industrial toxins, have the highest percentages of kids born with these problems…up to 30%-40%…but fortunately China is now starting to take action to clean the air, water, and land.
First we visited the new orphanage and the babies and young children living there. Sophie fed, played with, and held several of these children. I know she will never forget these children, because I can never forget the kids I have met in orphanages. The little boy who could not sit up or walk, who showered her face with sweet kisses when she held him, I know will be in her heart forever. When she put the boy down and we had to leave the room, she wept for those children who will never have a family. However the nannies were wonderfully tender and caring to these children, the kids and facilities were clean, and they were being fed a very nutritious meal when we arrived.
We know it can’t be this kind of care for all orphans and homeless children around the world, so we continue to focus on helping these kids living in neglect and poverty, through our charity programs – with Altrusa, Mission of Love, and Engineers Without Borders. Again, we thank you so much for your support of our business and our charity programs, so we can continue to help those in need.
The other part of the story is when the staff went with us to visit her ‘finding place’ – the place she was found when abandoned. In her file was the letter written by the policeman who found her and brought her to the orphanage. What a precious document! Then we piled into 2 cars and drove around looking for this building.
We arrived at a dilapidated old building, and the staff said “Oh no this can’t be right” and they walked away to talk to people on the street to find out where was the building. She was found at the gate of a village community center building. As Sophie and I stood alone in front of this building we were both having the same feeling – got teary-eyed – and agreed that this was indeed the right place. After awhile the staff came back and said – Yes! – this was the village community building! It was old and crumbling, due to be demolished soon. So if we had waited any longer to visit, it might not be there.
I will continue to add to my Travel Diary here, and I have uploaded photos from our day at the orphanage on my photo page. We just got back late Sunday night so give me a few more days to catch up!
Sincerely, Luana and Paul
****************
eQuilter Classroom & Travel Calendar: Jan 12 – eQuilter Charity Sewing Day – Please RSVP Jan 24-29 – Luana @ Tokyo Quilt Festival Feb 14-16 – ‘Love Your Mother‘ exhibit at Mexico Quilt Festival in Mexico City Feb 20-23 – QuiltCon – Nashville TN Feb 24 – Lynn Koolish CQC Workshop @ eQuilter Mar 28-30 – ‘Love Your Mother‘ exhibit at Spring Quilt Festival in Chicago
July 11-14, 2019 – Cindy Lohbeck – Shibori, Ice-Dyeing and Ombre Dyeing Workshops @ eQuilter 4 Classes $50 each – $80-$100 Materials Fee
Share Post:
Posted inCharity, Travel|Comments Off on We’ll Never Forget
The large Star blocks are set on point with a lacy White-on-White Butterfly background print, that really makes the multicolor flowers ‘pop’ out. This 53″ x 53″ square quilt design makes a lovely lap quilt, wallhanging, or table cover for Teatime.
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.
It’s our last night
in China, and we celebrated by going to hear the Old Jazz Band at the Peace
Hotel on the Bund in Shanghai. For our last 48 hours in China, we took a
nighttime cruise along Pudong and the Bund, visited a Childrens Art Palace, the
French Concession, the China Art Palace (Museum), Yu Gardens, Confucian Temple,
and had a beautiful meal at a contemporary vegetarian restaurant.
Sophie’s visit to her orphanage a few days ago was … emotional. We spent the
day visiting the children who live in the new orphanage building, visited the
old orphanage site, and the place where she was found at two days old. Then we
bought a new washing machine for the orphanage, plus some toys for the kids.
Sophie held and played with several of the babies and toddlers, all with
special needs (health issues) and her interactions with those kids touched her
very deeply. There was one small very sweet boy who we found laying in a crib,
who could not walk. She picked him up and gave him a kiss on the cheek, and
then he showered her with kisses and called her ‘sister’. She met a nanny who
had cared for her, the lady who chose her Chinese name, and the doctor who
examined her when she was found and brought to the orphanage at 2 days old.
They called her by her Chinese name – QinXin – which is now her middle name.
They treated her like a celebrity, a prodigal daughter, and everyone cried when
we had to say goodbye. It was really quite a profound experience. The director
was grinning the whole day, and made us promise to keep in touch. It was very
hard to say goodbye at the end of the day.
We get home late Sunday night, and I’ll be back in the office some time Monday.
Thanks for joining us on this two-week journey to Sophie’s roots. In a few
weeks I’ll be flying to Tokyo to photograph the quilt festival there. It is my
honor and pleasure to be able to share these experiences with you. Thank you
for your support of our business and our charity program, which includes
donations to Altrusa to help orphans in China with health issues.
sharing your Passion for Fabric…
Luana and Paul
Share Post:
Posted inTravel|Comments Off on Returning from China