ABBA, Broncos & Bears

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Despite the fact that the Denver Broncos are in the Super Bowl on Sunday, I am still making plans to be creative in the afternoon, then drive to see Mamma Mia in downtown Denver while the streets are empty. A friend's husband is the lighting director and since it is Super Bowl Sunday, I got excellent seats for the last night of the show. Sophie is my partner in Abba-ness, and it will be hard for us not to join the cast in singing our favorite tunes. Several years ago we went to a Mamma Mia SingAlong showing of the film here, and it was all women of course. At the end everyone got on stage and danced to the final party scene…some in Abba costumes. Ha!

Anyway – Go Broncos! – hopefully when we emerge from the theater there will be
a spontaneous victory celebration on the streets of Downtown Denver. If
not…we'll drink a cup of coffee to honor the Seattle Seahawks.

Superbowl Sunday is known for being one of the most productive days for
quilters who are not football fans. However I must admit, instead of the
Pregame Show, we'll be watching the Puppy Bowl on Animal Planet…while doing hand-applique on our Hawaiian quilting projects.
It's a good time to shop online too! (*Bwa-ha-haaa!*)

I continue to post more photos from the Tokyo Quilt Festival, as I add the artists' names to the
images. I am posting photos of the quilts that I think are most unique, most
inspiring, and of course most GORGEOUS! I hope you enjoy the selection of
amazing quilts that I am sharing with you. If you know someone else who is
posting Tokyo Quilt images, please urge them to include the names of the
quilters in their postings. We hope to see more of these quilts in person here
in the US, but we want them to know how much we value the
efforts of all the individual artists
. Thanks – pass it on!

I have signed a contract to lead a group on a Polar
Bear
tour to Churchill Canada, Oct 14-19 this year. We are in the process
of putting the details on a webpage, but since space is very limited, please
contact Customer Service to be emailed right away when details are set. We've
had a lot of interest so please let us know if you just can't wait for the next
newsletter!

We also wanted to let you know that Mission of Love just returned from another successful Cleft Lip/Palate surgery trip to Guatemala. If you follow them on Facebook, I am sure you've seen the beautiful photos. Mission of Love is one of the main recipients of the eQuilter Charity program, and a year ago I joined the surgeons on this annual trip to Guatemala. If any of you are health professionals who would like to volunteer for this amazing trip, contact Kathy Price at Mission of Love!

Check out our 120 videos from international quilt festivals, Quilting Arts TV and Quilters Newsletter TV on our eQuilter Video Page.

Upcoming Quilty Travel:

Mar 24 Quilting Arts TV

May 1-4 SAQA Conference Wash DC

Oct 1 Quilt Exhibit, Rome

Oct 14-19 Polar
Bear
Tour, Churchill

Check out our eQuilter Facebook page!
(Sneak peeks of new collections throughout the week)

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Creative Nudge – Indigo Aesthetic

BlueWa_550

One of the great pleasures of immersing oneself
in the Tokyo Quilt Festival, is to dive into the inky blue depths of the "Wa" exhibit, filled with
intricate quilts hand-pieced and hand-quilted, many constructed from vintage indigo fabrics.

Yes, there are shimmering brilliant silk quilts, made from a
grandmother's antique kimono, and there are excursions that range from the
subtle whisper of taupe, to the luxe of beading and gold metallic, but it is the quiet dignity of these indigo quilts that draws me back again and again.

There are many things at this show that express the Japanese aesthetic …as my
translator says… things that are "very Japanese" in their precision, their visual harmony, their discreet formality. They are a quiet statement about another time when indigo dyeing was a seasonal event, and every mark or woven design in an indigo cloth was carefully
considered and meticulously executed.

The brilliant colors of Japanese pop culture and contemporary design seemed more prevalent at this show, and I felt somehow (without counting) that there were less of the traditional taupe and indigo quilts, compared to previous years.

Japanese quilters and visiting textile collectors go to flea markets and
antique fairs throughout the year, looking for precious vintage cuttings of old
kimonos. Older traditional quilters mix and match these collector items into
new quilts, middle-age quilters might mix them with newer Asian prints, and younger
contemporary quilters often forgo the traditional Asian designs altogether…preferring retro and vintage looks from the 20th century.

In other words, there is something for everyone!

I am posting photos one batch at a time, because I want to make sure that the
quiltmaker's name is included with each image. Every year I see more and more
westerners going to this show and posting photos, but many or most do not make
any note of the artist's name.

You will find either the quiltmaker's name in kanji characters in the corner of the image, or the image will be saved with their name. I encourage anyone who posts photos from this show to include the name of the artist. Hopefully next year they will have more of the names translated into the transliteration of the romaji spelling of the name.

Please enjoy this photo tour of the show, and check back as I add more images over
the next week. In case you missed it, I also have photos of the Snow Monkeys of Nagano.

My Churchill Polar Bear tour group is set for Oct 13-19, (yes, this year!) and the very
limited 14 slots will open up in a couple days when I get the contract signed.
If you wish to receive signup information before it is announced in the newsletter, contact eQuilter Customer Service.

sharing your Passion for Fabric…

Luana

Upcoming Quilty Travel:

Mar 24 Quilting Arts TV

May 1-4 SAQA Conference Wash DC

Oct 1 Quilt Exhibit, Rome

Oct 14-19 Polar Bear Tour, Churchill

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Romaji & Tove

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It is Saturday at home, and Sunday here in Japan
as I write to you from my hotel in Narita. I've just spent 3 days in Tokyo at
the Quilt Festival, and now I'm chillin' at an airport hotel, waiting for my
flight tomorrow night.

One of the things I am doing is editing my photos so they include the name of
the quilter one way or the other. Some of the Japanese quilters' names have
been given a transliteration from a Kanji character to Roman letters (known as Romaji) …and
some have not. For the quilts whose makers names cannot be spelled out, I am
using Photoshop to copy and paste the names/characters on the namecards, into
the quilt photos. Whew!

I've been coming to this show for many years now, and I do see more Westerners
here every year. I also see more blogs with photos from the show but no artist
names. I am hoping that the Tokyo Quilt Festival organizers will put the
transliteration of all the quiltmakers' names on the name cards next year, but
in the meantime everyone who goes to the show needs to think twice about
posting photos without names.

Anyway, the first batch of quilt images is up, along with the photos I took on my daytrip to Nagano to see the Snow Monkeys.

I am still going over all the photos from the Tokyo show, but one of my first
impressions is that there are less taupe and indigo quilts this year. The only
piece I noticed with blatant machine quilting (instead of the usual Japanese
hand-quilting) was a handbag. The only reason I noticed was because there was a
group of ladies standing over this handbag in animated discussion, and the only
two words I understood were "machine quilting".

This year I was deeply honored to receive a ticket to the opening ceremonies.
Security is very high because the Emperor's daughter-in-law (Kiko-San)
presides, plus the Finnish ambassador and his wife attended, and the cultural
attach? from the US Embassy was among the speakers and honored guests. It was
VERY formal, and "very Japanese" according to my translator.

The big special exhibit this year was a large group of pictorial quilts, based
on the illustrations of Finnish illustrator/artist Tove Jansson. I had never
heard of her, but her characters and books are wildly popular here. The exhibit
curated by Yoko Saito was mobbed while I was there. The artists who created
special quilts for this event were wildly creative, and it makes me want to go
out and get one of Tove's books!

I'll be sharing detail shots from this show for several weeks, so be sure and
watch for my midweek Creative Nudge newsletters!

We are finalizing details for me to lead a group on a Polar
Bear
tour to Churchill Canada, Oct 14-19 this year. I will post more info
in a newsletter next week, but you can also contact Customer Service to be
emailed right away when details are set.

****************

Check out our 120 videos from
international quilt festivals, Quilting Arts TV and Quilters Newsletter TV on
our eQuilter Video Page.

********

Upcoming Quilty Travel:

Mar 24 Quilting Arts TV

May 1-4 SAQA Conference Wash DC

Oct 1 Quilt Exhibit, Rome

Oct 14-19 Polar
Bear
Tour, Churchill

Check out our eQuilter Facebook page!

(Sneak peeks of new collections throughout the week)

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Serendipity

RMPBS

One of the things that inspires and amuses me
most about Life, is how sometimes things just magically come together, and
something wondrous happens. I ask a question and the answer appears a week
later. Put out a request to the Universe and it comes to me in a totally
unexpected way. State a goal and then see the bricks being laid down one at a
time on the intended pathway. Wonder about what happened to an old friend?. and
run into that person in an out-of-context situation. Does that happen to you
too?

Last weekend I got the urge to go to a local coffee shop, and was delighted to
hear some live music (2 acoustic guitars) playing there. I got my soy latte and
sat down with Sophie, then noticed out of the side of my eye that there was a
knitting group in the corner. Well of course I had to go see what they were
doing! As I approached I recognized an old friend from my oil painting days. I
hadn't seen her for years and had been recently wondered what happened to her.
We used to go out in the summer and do plein air painting in the Boulder Iris Gardens, and up in the mountains. We were together in a weekly figure painting group for 15 years.

As we chatted, one thing led to another, and it turned out we will both be in
Hawaii at the same time, and my friend Bonnie is staying with an artist who I
idolized when I first moved to Boulder from New York in the 90's. I never got
to know Sandy, but I admired her work in galleries and went to a couple
lectures that she gave. She was at the peak of her career, and one of the most
famous artists in Boulder. Now 20 years later, through a serendipitous meeting
at a coffee-shop knitting group, I'll be visiting her studio and having lunch
on the beach in a couple weeks. Who'da thunk?

I had another fun connection yesterday, when I visited Rocky Mountain PBS to pick up donated comfort quilts for Colorado Flood victims. The quilts were sent by Nancy Zieman, donated by viewers of her Sewing With Nancy show on PBS. They asked me to be the middleperson – to pick up the quilts and distribute them to those in need.

Many thanks to all the "Sewing with Nancy" quilters who sent their
colorful quilts to us in Colorado! It was part of a huge on-air fundraiser
event put on by Rocky Mountain PBS recently.
We are thrilled that they thought of us, when deciding where to donate these
lovely quilts!

I had a delightful visit with Elizabeth at PBS, and told her about our charity
program and our comfort quilt projects. As we came to the end of our coffee
chat, she revealed that she grew up in the family business in the garment
district of New York. Her dad (and her grandpa) have run a business selling
embellished fabrics to the trade, which includes not only fashion houses, but
also costumers for Broadway musicals, Operas and Ballet. I went home and looked
through my business cards and yep, sure enough, I've shopped at her dad's store
recently, and also when I worked on 7th Avenue as an import fashion designer. I
love when that happens!

In case you missed Ditch New Years Resolutions Day on Friday, or Thesaurus Day
on Saturday, we will observe Martin Luther King Jr's birthday Monday, and go directly to National Hugging Day on Tuesday. Our son Sam turns 17 on National Pie Day this week, and we wish him a Sweet Seventeen!

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Creative Nudge – Marigold, Berry & Crystal White

TajOrangePurple_550

When I travel, I take at least 500 photos a day. Every night I edit down to about 300, and try to pick out the Photo of the Day.

As you may know, I went to India for 2 weeks in September, with my quilter friend Pam Holland who is from Australia. (and her sister who lives in Dubai) We are all 3 photographers so we had a great time totally indulging our love of capturing colors and images.

I took hundreds, no actually thousands of photos of Indian women and their colorful saris. This one was taken the day that we went to the Taj Majal in Agra. It is just one day out of my entire life, but I will never forget that day. I took close to 1000 photos that day.

Many of those photos were very simple:
Capturing the multicolor saris worn by the women walking in and out of the crystalline white marble temple. The white-on-white of the carved designs covering the exterior of the building, were the perfect backdrop for the riot of color that had come from every corner of India.

Now, every day, I look at these photos from my trip. I have a random slide show on my laptop that goes through the thousands of images. It makes me think about color in a different way every single day.

Here is the image that caught my eye today. I just love the deep berry purple, with the hot marigold color. I pulled together a group of fabrics that express this color inspiration, and you can see all these colors if you click here. (If you are inspired to make a project with these colors.)

How do you stay inspired every day?

In one week I will be flying to the Tokyo Quilt Festival, to bring you a whole new group of inspirational images!

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Featured Free Pattern – Downton Abbey “Mary”


 DowntonMary2

 

Welcome to the Premier issue of the
eQuilter Free Pattern Newsletter!

Based on the phenomenal popularity of our Free Pattern Designer, we're expanding this feature to bring you free patterns for designer and licensed collections, right to your Inbox.

You may order the pattern as configured, or customize it to your liking with any of our over 20,000 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.

The featured fabrics for the pattern will change based upon current
inventory, so we recommend ordering as soon as possible for best
selections!

As you may have read in the New York Times last weekend, Downton Abbey returned in the US on PBS  for its fourth season Sunday night, setting a record for a season
premiere. Now millions of Americans are discovering they have a thirst
for British historical drama. Who knew?

We're crazy about Downton Abbey too!…and we've stocked this
category with all the graceful prints developed by Andover Fabrics to
represent Downton's time period.

This quilt pattern is inspired by the character Mary. We also have the Downton Abbey Union Jack quilt pattern online.

If you follow our Facebook feed, you may know that we met the DA
costume designer Caroline McCall, and set designer Donal Woods, during
Houston Quilt Market. It was so interesting to hear them talk about the
process of creating and sourcing all the detailed costumes and props for
the production.

Next year watch for quilts, garments and other items on set, that
are made from this fabric collection. Season 5 has already been
commissioned, so we look forward to seeing what Downton Abbey and
Andover will come up with, as the show evolves into the Twenties!

If you haven't tried our Free Pattern Designer,
it is a lot of fun. We have a huge inventory of free patterns from the
last several years, so you can always pull up an existing pattern and
redesign with your own unique choice of fabrics.

When you finish, it puts all the correct yardage in  your shopping
cart. If you wish, you can email your designed pattern to yourself or to
your friends.

Whether you are a professional or amateur quilt designer, the
eQuilter Pattern Designer will take your color ideas and make you look
good!

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Creative Nudge – Dreaming of Asia

Maiko1a_550

 

One of my greatest pleasures over the last several years has been my annual trek to the Tokyo Quilt Festival. It is not only the quilts that inspire me, but the textiles, the colors, the crafts, the architecture, and the exquisite details in the most mundane items there.

The more I go, the more I have to go back.

During the year as I preview fabric collections, what I anticipate the most are the new Asian fabric designs. If you have ordered from our beautiful Japanese designer groups, you've had the same reaction that I do, I am sure….running the silky fabric through your fingers, admiring the intricate artwork, and perhaps your eyes glaze over just a little when you see the rich metallic details.

True high quality Asian fabrics and designs are harder to come by these days, and over the years we've recognized that many of these gorgeous prints become collector items as the years pass. Yes they may be hard to cut up, but that's because they bring us so much pleasure just sitting in our stash. We may keep them in a special box, and take them out to admire and show our friends, but in the end we know they are some of the most special fabrics we will ever collect. 

Our company started almost 15 years ago in the basement of our home, and our first groups of fabrics were beautiful Asian prints and colorful Bali batiks. That is the foundation that our little fabric empire was built on, and it is still one of the most important parts of our business.

Here's a photo I took in Kyoto several years ago, in a collage of fabrics in stock now at eQuilter. Do I go out to the warehouse to fondle these fabrics when nobody's looking? You betcha!

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Hidden Messages

EBINSPMU

2014 has kicked off with a New Moon on New Years Day which is considered very auspicious for students of astrology.

In numerology it is a "7" year, considered a Universal Year that will evolve our collective consciousness, and bring things that are hidden out into the light of day. We can only hope, right?

On a mass consciousness level, a 7 year brings up questions of "what is the purpose of life?", and on a personal level it can bring up the question "what is MY purpose in life?"

When we sit down at our sewing machine, or go into our studio for a New Year cleaning and organizing session, we might wonder…what is the purpose of my creative passion?

What is my subconscious motivation for pursuing this art and craft so intensely?
Why do I choose this theme, or that color palette…what does it say about me on a deeper level?

I find that any time I want to do some soul-searching,
I have only to look at the art that is inspiring me these days,
the projects that are calling to me,
and the color palettes that I am repeatedly drawn to in my work and home environment.

Often artists are surprised to find that, when meditating on a completed work of their art and craft, they discover a hidden meaning that was not apparent while they were in the creative process.

What is your creative work saying to you for the New Year?

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Quilters are all Heart and Soul.

XmasScene_550
Quilters are all Heart and Soul.

They collect fabric and take classes,
they make quilt blocks and quilt tops,
and then when someone is in need…
they stitch it all together and give it away.

After staying up late night after night,
secretly sewing the most special quilt,
and anticipating the joy it will bring…
you wrap it up and watch for the look of surprise on the loved one's face.

In this Season of Giving,
we know the greatest joy will come to you
when those packages are opened up on Christmas morning,
and all the love you have poured into those stitches will be felt
by that special person
who is lucky enough to receive such a precious gift.

All of us at eQuilter wish you a day of joy and peace
with your family and friends,
and we thank you for letting us be
a small part of the joy you give to others
on this day of giving.

****************************

Here is a little holiday musical video, from our family to yours!

Warm holiday wishes,

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Happy Winter Solstice!

Candlegirl

This week some twenty-something friends were complaining to me about how fast Christmas came up this year. *Snort!* I told them, it only gets worse. It is hard to imagine that the end of the year comes faster every year, but that seems to be what most of us experience. Wasn't it just a couple months ago that I was making my list of goals for 2013?

Today we recorded our kids and their music teachers playing a Christmas song for you all, and I'll have it up on our video page this weekend. Ruby wandered into the performance and kind of stole the show….

I want to personally send out a thank you to all of you who have sent us messages in the last week – too many to respond to individually – but we just love hearing how many of you love and depend on the service that we provide. It is important to support your local quilt shops, but we are here for you if you don't have a LQS, or if you need something special that is not available in your area.

Although we feel very lucky to have a job where we work with gorgeous colorful fabrics every day, we know it is because of you that we can do this kind of work. When we carefully choose hundreds, actually several thousand fabrics at Quilt Market, that will ship to us over the next several months, we are always thinking of YOU. Often when previewing new collections, we get a little breathless, giggle and exclaim "Oh! The quilters are going to LOVE this one!" …. and, you DO.

The cherry on top is that our mutual love of fabrics can raise so much money for our charity program, which hit $1 million last year and is still going strong. Our charity program was inspired by the loss of our daughter Hanna, 18 years ago on Dec 22. On that day I swore that somehow, some good would come from our loss, and that is how we decided a couple years later to donate a percentage of sales to a group of charities, many of which directly support families living in extreme poverty or dealing with disasters. We directly support several programs that help orphans and children living in dire circumstances, and we've been told several times from the organizations that we've saved the lives of hundreds or thousands of children with our contributions.

We couldn't do it without you, so I thank you for supporting our business and our charity program, and you can share in this great accomplishment. The total raised is now at $1,153,000.

Many thanks to all of you who have rushed comfort quilts to us this year, and over the last 12 years since we started our quilt relief program on 9/11. Recently 6 quilt groups sent 10 special memorial quilts for Sandyhook Elementary which are to be displayed in the Newtown Community Center. eQuilter and Mission of Love have worked together to distribute over 15,000 donated quilts over the years… and again I must give you our most humble thanks for allowing us to distribute these bundles of love to those most in need.

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