Creative Nudge – Many Faces, Many Quilts

 


DijkstraHesselink227A_550

This beautiful quilt "This Many Faces,
This Many Cultures" is from the recent Festival
of Quilts
in Birmingham. The artist who made this multiple portrait piece is
Rita Dijkstra-Hesselink, who lives in Holland.

I felt that this piece
reflected the growing international
popularity of our
beloved art and craft – Quilting
. Around the
world
so many people share a love of fabric and sewing, but when they are
exposed to the joys of quilting, they can't help but be captured by the
pleasures of patchwork and fiber arts.

Do you remember the moment you
were captured by the quilting bug? I do! It was 1990…and I had left the
fashion industry and moved back to Colorado to raise my young son. (who is now
22, and graduating from college in December!)

One day I was browsing
through the magazines at a supermarket,
when I came across a group of quilting
magazines
. As I picked them up and began leafing through the pages, the hair
on the back of my neck stood up. I knew in that moment, that this was what I'd
been looking for.

As I took classes in local quilt shops to learn about
the terms and
techniques of quilting
, my background in garment
design and construction
, and my love of fabrics and color,
all came together in a glorious whirlwind of creative
delight
. I felt I'd found my place where I belonged, and the wonderful
quilters I met those years were welcoming and generous.

Quilters are all
about giving, and we know that many of the quilts you make are meant to shared
with others. Be sure to stock up during our Labor Day
Sale this week
– so you can take advantage of our bolt ends and overstocks
for the upcoming season of
giving
.

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A Weekend at Home!

Sophie and I had a fast but fun visit to Quilting Arts TV studios earlier this
week. On the way back the United computers and website went down for a couple
hours, so we had a delay at the airport. Then we had another delay when our
plane suddenly swerved away from the Denver airport and had to land in Cheyenne
Wyoming! Sophie thought it was cool to be in 3 states all in one day. That's
what I call positive thinking!

Anyway we filmed 2 segments that will show
up on QA TV's Series 1100 later this year. This week we received the DVDs for QA
TV's 1000 series, which has 2 segments with the two of us. You can also see our
Series 1000 segment clips on our video page.

Tonight we are uploading the first 2 videos from the Festival
of Quilts
in Birmingham. One is a review of the eQuilter-sponsored Pictorial
Quilts exhibit, which was one of the most popular sections of the show! The
other is an amazing quilt artist – Kate Findlay – whose glimmering metallic
mandala quilts are inspired by the Hadron Collider in
Cern, Switzerland
. Have a look on our video
page
!

Just in case you missed them – Sophie's FOUR "Kids Eye Review"
videos from the Long Beach Quilt Festival are also up on our video
page
.

I am using this long holiday weekend to try to purge the extra
"stuff" from my house and studio. Now that our kids are getting older I keep
hoping we can get rid of more kid stuff, but Mason passed on his stuff to Sam,
and Sam passed on his stuff to Sophie, and I am trying to convince Sophie to let
go of more stuff for the young cousins. Sound familiar? I've been passing on my
magazines to schools and organizations like YWCA, where I know they'll be
appreciated. It is hard to strike a balance between purging, and placing
appropriately.

Anyway, while everyone else is out on the roads this
holiday weekend, I'll be at home!

How about you?

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Creative Nudge – A Bountiful Spirit

SunsetSky550

I've just arrived home late Tuesday night, after flying home from Cleveland. After a 2-hour delay (due to the United website and computers going down!) we finally flew toward Colorado… only to be diverted to Cheyenne Wyoming at the last minute! Anyway, after refueling in Cheyenne, we finally made it home and I got Sophie tucked into bed by midnight, after her big Quilting Arts TV adventure.

While we were at the studio waiting to film, I realized that we'd be sharing the Green Room with legendary threadpainting artist Ellen Anne Eddy! I took a class from her 20 years ago, before I even dreamed of eQuilter, and to see her again was such a delight. The best part was….Sophie got a private freemotion stitching lesson from Ellen – the Master Stitcher. What a lucky girl! Ellen was filming 3 segments for QA TV, so if you are not familiar with her work, you'll see her in a few months on the show or the DVDs. We are also going to carry her books. Yeah!

Ellen is one of those special people who make you feel very happy. She is so full of infectious laughter, bountiful smiles, and gracious compliments, that one feels lucky to have had a brief encounter with her. Of course, she is brimming with not only a positive loving attitude, but seemingly boundless creative energy. It all comes from the same place. Those who are generous of spirit, also seem to have the most abundant flow of creative inspiration.

Sophie filmed a segment with Pokey Bolton and did a great job – holding her own with the Quilting Arts TV host. Of course it is easy to work with Pokey. She is super busy with her new job at Quilts Inc, but still has time to encourage and support creative quilters and fiber artists on her PBS show.

Tuesday morning I had brunch with Kathy Price, director of Mission of Love, and we had a chance to talk about the upcoming trips that eQuilter is funding. In December MOL will send a team of doctors to Guatemala for a week, to do as many cleft palate and cleft lip corrective surgeries as possible. Early next year the children's hospice that is being built there, will be finished and dedicated. Kathy shared stories of the children she has met there in previous trips, and Sophie got to hear about the orphans we are helping in Guatemala.

After all my traveling around the world this year to various international quilt shows (Tokyo, Melbourne, Ireland, Birmingham) I am having fun sharing those images of quilts from those shows with other quilters around the world. On Sept 21st I will be giving a presentation in Rome, and on Sept 23rd I'll be giving a presentation in Moscow. Stay tuned for exciting news about this next big trip!

This photo was taken at sunset Tuesday just before our flight was diverted to Wyoming!

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Long Beach, Birmingham, Ohio, Rome and Moscow. Whew!

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Today was one of those glorious end-of-summer days that was filled with sunshine, mild temperatures, and lots of happy people in town for the USA Pro Cycling Challenge. The 6th stage was here today, and a Boulder athlete won the day's race at the top of Flagstaff Mountain, so it's a good day to be a cycling fan here in Boulder.
This week we released a video press release about our $1 Million raised for charity. Have a look, and if you like it, please pass it on to your local news organizations! Thank you!
Did you see Sophie's first two videos from the Long Beach Quilt Festival? We have her 3rd and 4th videos up this week – with her favorite animal quilts, and the wildly creative quilted village.
One of the trends I've been following at quilt shows this year, is the creative reinterpretation of classic designs such as William Morris' textiles. As the spare design aesthetic of the Modern Quilt Guild has expanded rapidly, on the other end of the scale I've also seen beautiful ornate designs from Turkish Tiles, Art Deco and Art Nouveau graphic design, and vintage French and Italian architectural details, reinterpreted in a larger scale, with small scale patterns (such as flowers or leaves) used where a solid color might have been used originally. I really enjoyed the Celtic versions, at the Irish Quilt Festival in June, and last week in Birmingham's quiltfest.
Tomorrow I am flying to Ohio to tape another segment on trends for Quilting Arts TV. If you haven't seen my most recent fabric trend clip, check it out on our video page! Sophie also is coming along to film a segment with Pokey Bolton.
Then I am home for a little bit, preparing for a business trip to Italy and Russia! I am still nailing down the details so I'll tell you more before I leave Sept 18, but I am giving a special presentation in Rome on Sept 21, and then Moscow on Sept 23.
Watch for my new videos from the Birmingham England " Festival of Quilts" in the next couple weeks: they will be announced in one of my newsletters. Do you also get my Creative Nudge on Wednesday mornings? If not, be sure to check your eQuilter newsletter settings.
A couple quick book tips: snap up Kaffe Fassett's new bio, and Gail Lawther's "Glimpses of Britain" – both are fabulous!

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Creative Nudge – Letter from an English Garden

SudelyKnot1_550

 

I am writing this just
before flying home
from Birmingham
England
, after attending the Festival of Quilts here. Bonnie and I filmed
several videos and I took tons of photos. I scoured the show looking for the
most unique European art quilts, the British
and Celtic
themed quilts, and the amazing 3-D fiber arts seen at this show
yearly.

Yesterday I fulfilled a dream by visiting Stratford-Upon-Avon:
visiting some of the " Shakespeare
Properties
" including his
birthplace
, going on a behind-the-scenes tour of the Royal Shakespeare
Company
, and then seeing the Bollywood version of Much Ado About
Nothing
. What a day!

Today I took a tour through the Cotswolds countryside, with
the charming cottages made out of the distinctive honey-color limestone. Many
have thatched roofs, and the old wisteria vines or hollyhocks next to the carved
or painted wooden doors, adding to the visual charm of the villages.

Then
I stood on a hilltop with rows of
lavender all around
, listening to the huge yellow and black bumblebees
buzzing among the purple sprigs, and breathing in the head-clearing aromatherapy
of lavender acreage.

My visit to Sudely Castle included a tour of the
historic textile exhibition, handmade lacemaking demonstration, and
reproductions of the gowns and jewelry worn by Henry VIII's six wives. (taken
from their portrait paintings) Henry's last wife (and the only one who survived
him) was Katherine Parr, and she lived on this estate. It is the 500th
anniversary of her birth, so there are special exhibits about her life at the
castle.

Above you see the knot garden, made from 1200 boxwood plants,
grown in a formal celtic knot design. This was originally planted here for Queen
Elizabeth's royal visit to Sudely
Castle
. Now this crisp knot garden grows in the shadow of the Banquet Hall
ruins, and the original plans for the knot garden design are displayed in the
castle museum. Clematis, honeysuckle and climbing roses engulf the ruins.
Massive yew hedges have small openings that lead to the formal rose garden and
fountain.

My last stop of the day was in Chipping Campden, where I stopped
in the Court Barn Museum to see the
Arts and Crafts local history, and then St James Church to see the oldest
medieval alter hangings… with silver and gold metallic embroidery thread on
ivory silk damask… from the late 1400's.

We tried to visit William
Morris
' house, but it is only open on Wednesdays and Saturdays!
Rats!

I'll be sharing more photos as soon as possible. I fly home in a
few hours, and this Sunday Sophie and I fly to Ohio for Quilting Arts TV. It may
take me a week or two to catch up!

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Festival of Quilts in Birmingham, England

This weekend I am writing to you from the Festival of Quilts in Birmingham, England. It is the biggest quilt festival in Europe, and quilters come from all over Europe, and indeed from across the globe, to participate in this public show.

eQuilter is a sponsor of the Pictorial Quilt category here, and this year it has over 60 entries from 13 different countries! These include entries from: Australia, Belgium, Hungary, Italy, Israel, Germany, Norway, Netherlands, Romania, Spain and Switzerland.

This year is very international with approximately 700 competition quilts on display.

Next year the theme for the International Competitions for adults will be ?Transported? and for young Quilters it will be ?transport?: the dates for The Festival next year are 8th ? 11th of August.

This year they are presenting a gallery with Pauline Burbidge's work, inspired by The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, representing the series of large quilts she is working on for next year: it will tour the US going to The Quilt Museum in Nebraska.

My flight from Newark was delayed 6 hours, so instead of arriving at 7 am, we landed at 1:30 pm. I managed to walk most of the show at the end of the day, and tomorrow morning Bonnie McCaffery and I will film several galleries and interview several fiber artists.

I find it fascinating to track how the 3-D fiber-sculpture trend is growing exponentially here. I'll be sure to get photos so you can see what I am talking about. I love seeing the unique uses of color and texture, as I compare quilts from other international shows. European quilts express a very different aesthetic, compared to quilts in the Tokyo Quilt Festival, or the Melbourne Australia quilt show.

The big news here is that the show has been bought by another company, so next year it will be managed by a different group of people. I hope next year they will figure out how to put the quilters' names on all the quilts. Right now there is a number on a little card next to each quilt, and you have to look up the name in the show book to find out who is the quiltmaker. Very frustrating.

I only had a couple hours to walk the show today, but I found plenty of creatively unique quilts. I took lots of photos and will be sharing with you in the near future. Tomorrow I'll spend the whole day on the show floor, shooting video interviews and talking to quilt artists about their beautiful work.

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Creative Nudge – Fabric Moxie

TimnaTarr_W

In "the old days" children were brought up to go into the family business. They were raised in the soup of the trade chosen by their father, and steeped in the traditions of what was often a multi-generational occupation. Choosing one's own livelihood was a luxury.

These days kids are encouraged to follow their passion to find true success. So now when one's offspring express a desire to follow in the parents' independent vocational footsteps, it is a bit ironic.

Our daughter Sophie didn't inherit her entrepreneurial moxie from our DNA (she was adopted from China in 2003) but she has plenty of her own ambition. She has certainly been soaking up the love of fabrics since she was a toddler. For quite some time now, she's come to the office several days a week, and especially likes to have the run of the fabric warehouse on the weekends. Many years ago she declared that when we retire, she'll take over running the business for us.

That may or may not happen – who's to say? – but she definitely has the fabric bug, and the appreciation for beautiful works of fabric art.

Do you remember your first fervent gushing and unabashed appreciation of beautiful fabrics and quilts? Sophie often belly-laughs out loud at a whimsical quilt, as you will see in the first 2 videos we made at the Long Beach Quilt Festival. She will gasp out loud "How did she DO that?!" along with the grownups at a quilt show.

She wanted to make these videos to share her favorite quilts with other kids, but I bet you grownups will enjoy them too! We made 4 of her "Kids Eye Review" videos in Long Beach… the 3rd and 4th will be posted later this week!

I was very lucky as a kid. Nobody told me that I should follow a particular "practical" career. I started off as a music major, then switched to art and design. It never occurred to me that I wouldn't have success….because I was following my heart. Our business is a living embodiment of that passion for beauty, and the fabrics we ship around the world are like a global group hug …shared between members of the Secret Society of International Fabriholics. Tee hee!

Saturday night I'll be writing to you from the Festival of Quilts in Birmingham, England. Last year the big hit at this show was the Tentmakers of Cairo…and now we have the book from this exhibit as well!

* This quilt was made by Timna Tarr, and was shown at the Long Beach Quilt Festival in July 2012. Sophie is 10 years old, and is starting 5th grade today!

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Creative Nudge – A Medieval Muse

As we dive into the second week of the Olympics, many of you are thinking about making a quilt to commemorate these London games.

Here at eQuilter we've had fun collecting British and London themed prints, along with the various sports represented in the Olympics.

For those who have traveled to this beautiful city, there are many art and architecture treasures that can inspire our quiltmaking. One of my favorite places in London is Westminster Abbey. There are so many layers of history here, that you just can't take it all in on your first visit.

You may be familiar with Norah McMeeking's book Bella Bella Quilts, which translates the marble inlaid floors created by the Cosmati family, into beautiful quilt designs. (I am meeting Norah at a very special quilt show in Rome, in late September…stay tuned for more details in upcoming newsletters!)

The center of Westminster Abbey has a complex 13th century Cosmati inlaid pavement, but it is usually covered by a carpet to protect these precious ancient marble inlays…unless there happens to be a coronation or a royal wedding! One of the times I visited, it was uncovered and under restoration. We watched the conservators on their hands and knees with toothbrushes, bright lights, and magnifying goggles.

If you visit the octagonal Chapter House in the East Cloister behind the Cathedral, you can't help but notice these beautifully preserved Medieval tiles. Here is a shot of some of my favorite tiles in that building, and to me they look like they could be a beautiful inspiration for an applique block, don't you think?

But wait, there's more! Just when the last of the athletes and fans drift out of London and the city returns to normal (the "new normal" – post Olympics), quilters from all over Europe will flood into Birmingham for the Festival of Quilts.

I will be there on Saturday and Sunday, Aug 18-19. Last year in August while I was in London and Birmingham, the riots were happening! This year I hope to find England basking in a mellow post-Olympic glow.

ChapterhouseTilesB_W

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Finales and Full Hearts

If you are a long time reader of our newsletter, you may know that I am a classically trained musician. I was a music performance major at CU here in Boulder, before I went on to get my fashion design degree at FIDM in Los Angeles. I still have a passion for classical music, and attending a live performance is one of my great creative energizers.

Last Friday was the season finale of the Colorado Music Festival at the Chautauqua auditorium, which is at the base of our scenic Flatirons here in Boulder. I have a connection to the festival because the founding conductor (Giora Bernstein) was my conductor in the CU orchestra.

Anyway, here's what I wanted to share:
There is a magic moment, toward the end of the last piece of a concert, on the final performance at the end of the season, when the musicians hearts are full, and they play with such emotion and passion, that it hangs in the air like a thunder cloud that is ready to release a lightning bolt.

Being a musician, I like to be part of that moment. Often the center front seat in front of the conductor is actually a cheaper seat, and it's as close as you can get to being in the orchestra during the performance. So last night I saw their eyes become moist, I saw the bittersweet smiles and glances exchanged as they entered the last dramatic section of Beethoven's 5th. At the end, as the audience leapt to their feet for a standing ovation for the whole season, I saw the musicians embrace and say good-bye and good luck in the next year.

Over the years, living in LA, Hong Kong and NYC… and for many years now in Boulder….I've had musician friends whose craft requires a heart full of soul and passion, which is expressed through their art. Sound familiar? Often they help me to see things from another point of view, or their artistic passions inspire me to create in my own medium.

Many of you use music in your studio or workspace to motivate and inspire, but I have to share that experiencing a live performance, when possible, casts a golden creative glow that lasts for a long time. (and it is extended when I play a CD of the same inspiring music)

When I was a young designer, some of my greatest inspiration came from the street musicians playing down in the New York subway platforms…their improvised music echoing through the tubular acoustics of the underground chambers. Those were bittersweet moments too – seeing such talent being expressed by a lonely musician on a sweltering train platform.

Try adding some music to your creative process – live music or perhaps some unusual world music CDs – and see what happens!

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Creative Nudge – Today is a Treasure

Sometimes you have a week that just stops you in your tracks, and makes you ask yourself… what really matters?

Monday morning I started thinking really hard about an old friend of mine. It seemed random at the time, but a couple hours later I got the message that she had died 24 hours earlier. I felt very close to her in that moment: I felt Kathy had somehow come to say good-bye.

Kathy, Bonnie and I worked together at Joseph Magnin's for one year, when we were all 19 years old. Before the year was up, Bonnie had died in a head-on car collision on a mountain road – from a drunk driver. Now Kathy is gone – her breast cancer had turned into bone cancer – her remission suddenly turned on her a couple weeks ago. She leaves behind 3 biological children and 7 adopted children from Russia and Eastern Europe.

So this month when we mail out our check to the National Breast Cancer Foundation, it will be sent in her name. However, every month when we send out those checks to our charity recipients, we know that there are unspoken names attached that represent our customers' loved ones. When you make a choice to support a charity, there is a story, and often a name attached to your choice.

I looked on Kathy's Facebook page to copy some photos of her, and there was no "portrait" photo with her alone. In every photo she was leaning in to hug another person in the image. In every single photo she was giving her love to another person.

She had found one of the basic truths in life – that true happiness is found by giving to others, by supporting others, and by focusing on others' needs. This is also what quilters do. They make quilts that comfort, heal and express love. We can see that so clearly in the large pile of comfort quilts that has arrived in our office in the last couple weeks, for the Fire Victims of Colorado. The stitches are just vibrating with love and care.

This last weekend we stopped at the Long Beach Quilt Festival on the way home from Hawaii. After visiting 2 elder relatives who were in the hospital in Honolulu, we were in a contemplative mood at the quilt show. I was thinking about the cycles of life – how we care for our children and our elders – and then the wheel turns and we ourselves are getting older.

This exquisitely detailed 3-D nature study by Holly Altman really reminded me of the Tides of Life…and how even as the Tide recedes, life flourishes in the changing waters. Holly's piece was hanging at the entry to the show, so if you attended the show I am sure it caught your eye.

Every day is a gift, and I thank Kathy today, for reminding me of that treasure. For an artist or creative person, every day is an opportunity to express beauty and truth, and heal a little piece of the world around us.

HollyAltmanTidalPool_W

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