Creative Nudge – Lady Liberty as Muse

Liberty_550

When you read this, it will be September 11, the 12th anniversary of the attack on the World Trade Towers.
Because I had lived in the East Village
in NYC for many years, even though I had started a new life back in
Colorado in 1990, that day is seared into my memory as it is for most of
you.

It was also the starting point of our comfort quilt program for disaster victims, in partnership with Mission of Love.
On 9/11, I watched the towers come down on TV.
Then I went into the office to tell our staff what I had seen.
We held hands and prayed for peace and understanding, and all we could think of was…what can we do to help?

We put out the call to our customers, and over 3000 quilts came pouring in.
They were distributed in NYC to families who had lost a loved one, or who had otherwise been directly affected by the event.
Mission of Love, and some of my old friends in NYC
who were part of my spiritual network, made sure that each quilt was
personally placed into the arms of someone who had suffered a loss.

I snapped this photo in March of this year, about an hour before Sophie and I visited the memorial park at Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan.
I have a very special attachment to Lady Liberty.
When I lived in NYC in the 80's, I was very fortunate to be able to climb all the way up into her crown, and look out across the harbor to the World Trade Center's twin towers.

In 1986 I went to her Centennial Celebration and joined in the giant lovefest that the city has for Lady Liberty.

Honestly, whenever I see her in person,
I get teary-eyed.
I know I have ancestors who saw her as they arrived in the US, so
perhaps there is a genetic memory of the emotional intensity they must
have felt when they saw this grand lady greeting them with her
illuminating torch held high.

We have friends in the quilt industry who lost loved ones on 9/11/2001, and today we send them love and wish them peace.

We thank all the quilters who rushed to send quilts after 9/11/2001, but
also all of you who sent quilts after Katrina, the Haiti earthquake,
the Japan Tsunami, the Colorado Fires, Hurricane Sandy, and the tornado in Oklahoma.

I am leaving Friday for India, the largest democracy
in the world, but also a land of great contrasts of beauty and poverty.
Through Facebook and my contacts as a Bernina Artisan, I am grateful to
have connected with a fellow quilter (and Bernina lover!) in New Delhi,
who is going to host Pam Holland and I on Sunday.
We will gather with a group of quilters for a special dinner on Monday
night, before leaving on our cross-country adventure Tuesday morning.

We have uploaded the last 3 videos from Birmingham Quilt Festival, bringing the total to 12 videos from this European quilt exhibition.

You may notice that we now have topped 100 videos on the eQuilter video page! Please take advantage of the inspiration and information that is contained in all of our quilt videos…
it is there for you to enjoy!

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Birmingham Videos Part 3, India Trip

I am posting the last few videos from the Birmingham Quilt Festival in the next couple days, before I leave for my next big adventure on Friday the 13th.

Did you catch my video interview with Kaffe Fassett and Brandon Mably? Of course we carry all the shot cottons, yarn-dye stripes, and books that are mentioned in the interview.
You'll hear him talking about his fabrics from India.

I have just uploaded Part 1 & 2 videos of the Pictorial Quilt Exhibit, which was sponsored by eQuilter in Birmingham. This is one of my favorite categories, which is why we sponsor this of course!

Please note that we now have the book Abataka which was mentioned last week in the Mary Fisher video.

So are you wondering why I am going to India on Friday? I am meeting my dear friend Pam Holland (artist, teacher, author, and fellow international adoptive mom) and we are going to tour India for 2 weeks.
We are both photographers and artists with a passion for color and
textiles, so we are working our way across the country from New Delhi,
Jaipur and Agra, to the banks of the sacred river Ganges at
Varanasi…with a textile theme in mind.

(I took a road trip on the Great Ocean Road in Australia last year with Pam, after we made several videos at the Melbourne Australasian Quiltfest)

This is my first time to India, although I spent a month in Columbo in
Sri Lanka, in the late 80's.
I arrived a week after the civil war started, and as our flight was
about to land at Columbo Airport, the gentleman next to me quipped "This
flight was blown up a week ago!" – as if that was a piece of
information I needed to have at that moment.

Well I assume this trip will be quite different, and my goal is to take a
TON of colorful and inspirational photos, which I will share with you
when I return.
(Maybe a few while I am there, but I expect I'll be too exhausted at
night to work on editing photos while on the trip.)

Those of you who came to my interview with Jinny Beyer
at the Not Fade Away conference, will remember that I peppered her with
questions about the time she lived in India, and how it inspired her as
a designer.

I have made a connection with Bernina India in Mumbai, but I need to
make connections with quilters in New Delhi so hopefully I can meet some
Indian quilters next week on Sunday.
If any of you can help me with this, I'd be most appreciative!

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Creative Nudge – Kaffe Interview

KaffeBrandon_550

One of the special things about traveling to
quilt festivals is the opportunity to meet the talented
celebrities of the industry
.

We were lucky have a chance to visit with Kaffe Fassett
and Brandon Mably at the Birmingham Quilt Festival, in their " Shots
and Stripes
" booth, promoting the book of the same name. Our video interview
is online now
, and yes, I had a crook in my neck after looking up at Mr.
Tall Kaffe during our three-part interview!

Brandon spoke about their
lives as artists
, Kaffe showed us a quilt made for the Missoni family, and
then they both talked about their trip to Egypt with Amy and
David Butler
. Fascinating!

The exhibit and the book are about beautiful quilts made strictly from Shot
Cottons and Yarn-Dyed Stripes, which are handwoven in India. I am leaving for
India in 10 days, so I've been really paying attention to Indian textiles as I
prepare for this adventure.

This last weekend in the UK, there was a scene in the TV show Coronation Street
where a character was
in bed reading Kaffe's biography
. Juicy colorful reading!

Of course all of you Kaffe fans know that we have
stocked his prints
, shot
cottons, yarn dyes and books
for many years. We have so many of his
products that we had to split it into two categories!

This is the 9th video from the Birmingham Quilt Festival, and I have a few more
to post before I leave for India. It is so interesting to see what European
quilters are doing these days, and I love to see the cross-pollination of
media, techniques and color trends. Modern quilting style is showing up across
the pond, and it is also fun to see the European interpretation of this design
aesthetic.

See this, and
our other videos from the Birmingham Quilt Festival on our eQuilter video page!

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Birmingham Videos Online – Part 2

This weekend I have a 2nd batch of videos up
from the Birmingham
Quilt Festival
. Bonnie McCaffery and I met up to make several videos
about the art quilts and the artists
at this big European quilt gathering.

eQuilter was the sponsor of the Pictorial Quilt category, and I was delighted
to interview the winner of the exhibit – Stephanie Crawford.

I've also posted my review of the Group Quilts in Birmingham, and a 2-part
video with the Dutch quilters who call themselves Wiolan.

There are 8 videos online now from Birmingham, and more on the way in the
coming week! Watch out for my interview with Kaffe Fassett and Brandon Mably.

Due to new ownership, this year in Birmingham the names of the quilters were
posted next to their quilts. This may seem like a no-brainer, but previous to
this there was just a number next to the quilt, and you had to look up in the
show book to see the name of the quilter.

In this age of social media, and ever-evolving ways of online promotion, I
think it is fantastic that now the attendees (and fellow quilters) can
immediately see the quilt, identify the quilter, and share the image and name
online.

I was surprised when I went to the Canada quilt festival in May, that the still
were not allowing photos of the quilt exhibit. I think it is the only quilt
festival I have been to in many years, that was still forbidding photos of the
exhibit. They
graciously allowed me to come in and take photos to share with you
, but I
hope next year you will open up the show for you to also share images of those
beautiful quilts.

The truth is – quilters LOVE to take photos and share their excitement with
each other online! I get a kick out of the Tokyo
Quilt Festival
because there can be 10 people tightly clustered around a
quilt at one time, taking closeup photos of stitching details with their
smartphones.

The most important thing is that the name of the quilter always go out with the
image when sharing, so she or he gets credit. Those images can be reposted and
repinned hundreds or even thousands of times, so it is important that we
include that information from the start. On my photo page you will see
that I now make the image file name – the name of the quilter – so if someone
copies and saves the image it can carry the name of the quilter along.
Something to think about…

I am leaving for India in less than 2 weeks, so I am working on getting more Birmingham
quilt photos
posted before taking off on my next adventure!

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LauraAmiraglio_1b_550

The Birmingham Quilt Festival is the largest quilt gathering in Europe, which is why I love to travel to the UK in August.

There I meet quilters from Norway to Normandy and the Netherlands, and I discuss quilting with Russians and Romans.
I take photos of quilts made in Paris and Prague, and have coffee with Scottish and Spanish quilters.
Then I try to make sense of it all, and share the experience with you, over the following month.

As the Japanese quilts have a distinctive look and feel, and as Australian quilts have their own unique color palette, I enjoy seeing the diversity among the European quilts that come to the Birmingham show.

Here is a detail of a stunning quilt that attracted a lot of attention.
It is "Da Vinci's Knots" by Laura Amiraglio – an Italian quilter as you
may have guessed.
At first glance you might think "Celtic" because of the interlaced
knotwork, but the colors remind us of the stucco and frescoes of
Tuscany.
Click through to my photo page for the allover photo of this intricate quilt.

One of the games I play there is to guess the country of origin for the
outstanding quilts.
This year I noticed many quilts from Taiwan which was rather
exhilarating! There were of course many British-themed quilts –
considering that the show took place in Birmingham UK- and these quilts
celebrated everything from English poetry to London's urban
transportation system.

The quilts that expressed a piece of the quilter's culture were usually
bursting with graphic eye-catching elements.
Often the quilter was not trying to create a nationalistic quilt, but
they created something that evoked their homeland anyway, because their
life has been steeped in the flavors of their native juices.

It gave me a lot to think about.
If I were to make a quilt that expressed my American experience, what
might that be? When I express myself freely through my textile art, does
it say that I am American, or that I am a Citizen of the World?

Do your quilts express your nationality – consciously or unconsciously?

If diversity is the spice of life, then the Birmingham Quilt Festival is a goulash, a tikka masala, a bouillabaisse, a jambalayah and a waterzooi of creative visions.
The European quilters play with scrumptious fabrics and groundbreaking techniques, and end up with a smorgasbord of eye candy.

eQuilter is sponsoring the SAQA exhibit from the Birmingham quiltfest, to be shown next week at IQCAfrica
2013 in Johannesburg South Africa.
(Fellow Coloradan – Ricky Tims will be teaching there!) If you are going
to this show, please send us photos of our eQuilter sponsored exhibit
and let us know how you liked the IQCAfrica show.

See our videos from the Birmingham Quilt Festival on our eQuilter video page!

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Birmingham Videos Online

One of my favorite parts of my "job"
is to travel to international quilt festivals, to take photos and produce
videos.

Bonnie McCaffery and I met at the Birmingham
Quilt Festival
, and filmed several reviews of the quilt show, plus several
artist interviews.

This weekend I
have posted the first 4 of these videos
:
Part 1 and 2 of the Art Quilts
Interviews with Mary Fisher and Ferret

You'll see these at the top of our eQuilter video page. If
you want early notification of the next few videos, you can click through and
subscribe to my video channel!

One quilter emailed me and said she is disappointed I haven't posted photos
from Birmingham sooner. Haha – me too! I've been running on fumes since I got
back from Scotland last Sunday night, but I'll be posting the first batch of
edited quilt festival photos in the next day or two, so watch my photo page. (You can
also subscribe to my Flickr photo page if you wish.)

I'll have more videos by Tuesday night when I write the Midweek Creative Nudge.
If you are only getting eQuilter newsletters on Saturday night, be sure to
update your subscription to include the Creative Nudge. Lots of photos and
videos coming through the pipeline this week!

Sophie got braces Tuesday, started 6th grade and Middle School on Thursday, and
got her first cell phone on Friday. It was a stressful week but she is now
happily sending me multiple text messages every hour. Sam started 11th grade,
and our puppy is now 32 pounds! It is good to have the kids back in school, so
I can catch up on my emails and creative projects.

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Creative Nudge – Make it Your Own

KayBell2
In my Saturday night newsletter, I mentioned a
quilt in the
Birmingham
Quilt Festival with a Scottish Thistle. Today I want to show you
a detail of that quilt, because of the amazing quilting in the background.

One of the trends we are seeing is tons of creative doodle-quilting in the
backgrounds of modern quilts. What might appear to be blank, or just negative
space in a quilt, turns out to be full
of unique machine-quilting
upon closer inspection.

If you read my reviews from QuiltCon
(or read my article about Modern Quilts in the recent
issue of McCalls Quilting Magazine
), you are aware that there has been an
upswing in younger quilters becoming very proficient on longarm machines. A lot
of the quilts at QuiltCon
were pieced by one person, and then quilted on a longarm by a second quilter.

This Scottish Thistle quilt was made by one person, and even though it is not
technically a modern quilt (it has an appliqued flower) there are elements of
modern quilting here. You can click through to my photo page to see
more detail shots, and an image of the whole (large!) quilt by Kay Bell.

The
most creative quilts
come from those who don't follow the rules, but
explore the place in between the trends, the descriptive labels, and the latest
techniques or media. We see elements of old and new here, but in this
combination, we see something unique and fresh.

So the moral of the story is…don't look to others' guidelines and rules when
creating. Identify the trends and then break the rules. Make it beautiful or
make it edgy, as you wish, but make it your own and show off your talent in
your own way!

Our first few videos from Birmingham are going up tomorrow on our video page,
so keep an eye out for the first of several Birmingham video reviews and
interviews.

* The quilt detail above is from Kay Bell's quilt "Inner Circle, Flower of
Scotland", photographed at the Quilt Festival in Birmingham UK. *

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My Highland Fling

 InverarayPiper1
I am just finishing up a 10 day trip to the UK ? with 3 days filming at the Birmingham Quilt Festival
? and a week touring Scotland. Back home in Colorado, over the last
year my mom and I have been delving deeper into our family history, and I
am understanding why I felt so at home when I visited Scotland for the
first time last summer! Last weekend our tour started in Glasgow, worked
our way across the Highlands, and finished in St. Andrews and
Edinburgh. I?ve spent hours and hours gazing out the windows of our tour
bus, completely entranced with the dramatic landscapes. Glen Coe is one of the places that touched my heart so deeply. The Culloden Battlefield
(Bonnie Prince Charlie?s last stand) was an eerie experience. As we
headed east?towards the Scotch Whisky distilleries?the vast fields of
golden grains were punctuated by emerald green pastures with sheep and
shaggy Highland cows.

One of the things I?ve enjoyed the most are the historic textiles in the castles we?ve visited. Yesterday we visited Crathes Castle,
and two of the bedrooms provided a banquet of quilting, embroidery and
cross-stitch artwork. As much as I loved the Victorian-Era quilt, I was
blown away by the Tudor-Era crewel embroidery bedspread.

Today we had a castle experience that was way beyond my expectations: 600 years of history at Glamis Castle
in Angus. This is where the Queen Mother (Queen Elizabeth?s mother)
grew up. If you saw the movie ?The King?s Speech?, she was Bertie?s
wife. Anyway, it was as engaging as my tour of Windsor Castle several
years ago, which is saying something! There were historic textiles all
through the house, and they were proudly displayed.

It is also a lot of fun to see filming locations for Downton Abbey and Harry Potter. When we visited the Duke of Argyle?s castle in Inveraray
(and met him in the gift shop!) we discovered to our great delight,
that it was the filming location for last year?s Downton Christmas
special! We also saw the viaduct train bridge in Glenfinnan that was used in the 2nd Harry Potter movie, where Ron is driving the flying car.

I have always loved the combination of purple and green, and you see
those colors everywhere here. One of the things I find so amazing in the
Highlands, are entire mountains and vast valleys that are covered with carpets of blooming purple heather! The ubiquitous purple thistle
is one of the beloved symbols of Scotland, because of an ancient story
of an enemy who cried out when he stepped on a thistle, and alerted the
Scots to the enemy?s advance. At home in Colorado the thistle is
eradicated as a weed, but here it is celebrated in tapestries, jewelry,
porcelain dining sets, and family crests as a beautiful purple blossom.
There was a dramatic large quilt with a purple thistle at the Birmingham Quilt Festival, which you will see soon in one of my videos!

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Creative Nudge – Group Ideas

KreativtSanitorium_1_550

This week I am writing to you from the
UK
: I just finished a whirlwind 3 days at the Quilt Festival in Birmingham
(making several videos with Bonnie), and now I am in Scotland on a cross-country
tour
.

Next year Scotland's citizens are going to vote on a referendum to secede. When
you are in Scotland
and you hear about the history
between England
and the
Highlanders
, you can understand why some might want to withdraw back into
their own country.

On the other hand, as part of the United
Kingdom
there are obvious benefits. That's why they are going to have a
vote, and nobody knows for sure what will be the result of the election.

It seems like in the quilting world, and in the larger world, people are
reevaluating their membership in larger groups. Some groups that have existed
for a long time, are breaking down, deconstructing, and/or reorganizing. I
always like to spot comparisons between the microcosm of the quilting world,
and the macrocosm of the larger global consciousness.

The Group Quilt category at the Birmingham show this year
seemed to be in a state of deconstruction and reorganization…in a good way.
It blew apart my preconceptions of "what is a group quilt" and gave
me quite a creative jolt. I mean… I
really thought I knew how to define a group quilt
… but now I am working
with a blank slate.

Over the past two decades that I've been part of the quilting world, I've seen
quilters argue over the silliest things. They sometimes spend more time
debating "what is art?" and "what is a quilt?" than
creating in their studios. I have hoped for years that maybe we are progressing
beyond this, and the Birmingham Group Quilt category gives me hope!

I say this with tongue
in cheek
of course. It is our nature to want to divide and conquer when a
category becomes too oversaturated. I remember when eQuilter was a relatively
new business, and I had to start dividing up some of our categories. What was
once one big flower category is now 4 flower categories, and a lot of thought
went into those divisions. First the Roses
had to secede from the Flower Union, then the remainders were split into Large
and Small
Flowers
, and finally the stylized Pop and
Folk Art
blossoms got a category of their own.

Curious about the Group Quilt category? Watch for new show reviews on our video page
in the next couple weeks! In the meantime, I'd like to invite you to put on
your brainstorming cap and think about all the ways a quilt could be divided up
amongst a group of quilters. I am seeing a lot of creative juice funneling into
group quilts around the world in the last year, and I think there is a
microcosm trend in quilts, that mirrors what is going on in the macrocosm.

What do you think?

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Trend Report from Birmingham Quilt Festival

 

I am writing to you this
weekend from my hotel in Birmingham England, after attending the largest
annual quilt festival in Europe.
Bonnie McCaffery met me here, and we've walked the show and filmed
several videos, reviewing quilt exhibits and interviewing artists.
I've met many old and new friends, including many of our European
eQuilter customers!

One of our interviews was with Kaffe Fassett and Brandon Mably, in an
exhibit of Kaffe's beautifully modern quilts made of his yarn-dyed
stripes and shot cottons.
After years of making quilts using his flower prints, these quilts have a
decidedly modern feel.

We also interviewed AIDS activist Mary Fisher, whose powerful quilts include portraits of African children who are HIV positive.
Her work in Rwanda and Zambia is parallel to the projects we support through Engineers Without Borders.

eQuilter sponsors the Pictorial Category here, and we have a delightful
video with the winner Stephanie Crawford, whose Chinese-themed triptych
was inspired by her son's residence there.

We also were lucky to find a translator to interview a 75 year old
Russian male quilter, whose appreciation for women is reflected in his
body of work.
His muse is his wife – a fashion designer.
They do not, however, share their fabric stashes.
Ha!

Some of the trends I am reflecting upon, from this side of the pond:

There is a steadily growing presence of male quilt artists, and their
work tends to be bold and unique.
Large pixilated portrait quilts were a standout at this exhibition.
Asian-themed quilts or quilts by Asian artists, caught our eye and our
imagination here.
Group quilts are busting out of all the previously-held ideas of what it
means to be a 'group quilt'.
More than ever, three-dimensional details and embellishments are
defining the most unique quilts, and sometimes the whole quilt is a
three-dimensional expression of fiber art.
Text, letters, words, and fonts are all being used to convey visual
ideas?sometimes that is the only design motif on a quilt! Layered
images, discharged textures and thermofax screenprints are being
expressed in more sophisticated ways.

I find it so delightful to discover British, Celtic, and European themes
in the quilts at this show.
These are themes that we seldom see in Houston (understandably so) and
in particular I am personally drawn to the Scottish themes.
Next week I will be traveling throughout Scotland, and will be
photographing lots of art, color and design inspiration.
I am hoping for good weather, and I'll be posting my itinerary on
Facebook.

Fans of Oliver Twist threads will be happy to know that I got tired of
waiting for our distributors to expand their stock, so I went straight
to the source here, and we'll be carrying an expanded range of their
gorgeous hand-dyed threads in the near future.

Tonight we are going with a large group of quilters to Stratford, to the
Royal Shakespeare Theater! Kaffe told us that they had designed
costumes and sets for a previous production, which must have been an
incredible experience.

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