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Drawing Day is a worldwide drawing event encouraging everyone to drop everything and draw for the sake of art. They set a goal to create 1 million drawings online on June 6, 2009. 

The Quilt Show.com was one of 22 websites featured as a "Supporter" of Drawing Day 2009.  http://www.drawingday.org/support-drawingday.php

The Quilt Show.com was also featured as a "Website You can Draw Online" and a "Website to Upload Your Drawings". http://www.drawingday.org/participate.php

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"Aprenda más del quilting" (Story about Alex's June 2009 Visit to Costa Rica)

Manuel Sancho

June 2, 2009

¿Usted sabe lo que es "quilting"? ¿Le suena?

Es una forma de costura donde se crean piezas muy bellas, es más se crean verdaderas obras de arte.

Una empresa nacional divulga este arte, y trajeron a una experta estadounidense a dar un curso.

En "El Costurero" un grupo de mujeres hacen arte; arte llamado quilting. Quizás usted lo ha oído.

El quilting es una técnica de costura donde se unen 2 lienzos de tela con un relleno en el medio.

La capa superior se hace uniendo pedacitos de tela formando un diseño. Y se realizan piezas bellas.

Ellas recibirán clases con una de las más reconocidas profesoras y artistas del quilt, Alex Anderson, quien viene de Estados Unidos, donde el quilting significa una industria de 3 billones de dólares; y más de 9 millones de personas lo trabajan.

Alex visita el país gracias a la empresa "El Costurero" que desde hace más de una década difunde el quilting y da clases.
 

A pesar de que el quilting tiene poco tiempo de conocerse en Costa Rica, muchas personas entusiastas ya lo practican. Este arte es para todos, incluidos los hombres. De hecho, el socio de Alex Anderson es un hombre.
 
No deje pasar esta oportunidad. Llame al 2225-9534 o al 2225-0526 para ser parte del curso.

Si usted siempre le ha gustado coser o hacer manualidades, no le de más vueltas. Póngale la puntada final.

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SEW ON THE NET

"If you have any doubt that quilting can be fun, you need look no further than www.thequiltshow.com..." 

By Alex McDowell

Never before has quilting taken such a fun turn as it has on The Quilt Show!  The website gives access to all sorts of things, such as forums, blog posts from the show's hosts, articles about quilting and gallaries where members have posted photos of their finished work.

Once signed in, members have access to all of the forums and can post, reply and chat within the site.  Membership is free but the option is also given to upgrade membership for a yearly fee.  Membership grants access to the episodes, although there is also a link where you can purchase DVDs, for those who would rahter keep their memberships free.

Any member can submit quilts to the gallery and can also enter competitions and challenges.  The gallery is filled with submissions from members - some are a feast for the eyes while others are...well, beauty in the eye of the beholder, but they're all great in their own right.

Patterns are avilable, either free or to purchase for a small fee in The Quilt Show Shoppe.  There are also plenty of free, educational how-to quilt videos, which have been provided by the sponsors.  It's a great site for content but beware - it's easy to lose yourself on the site and forget about your current project!

(The Quilt Show website is bright and colourful, with lots of useful information.)

(Once signed in, members have access to all the forums and can post and chat.  Membership is free but the option is given to upgrade.)

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"Inside Alex Anderson's Place" 

The March 2009 issue of "Quilter's Home" takes a behind the scenes tour of Alex Anderson at her home and shows you inside her studio.

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Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims were voted "Most Influential Person in the Quilting Industry" by the readers of Quilters Newsletter "Reader's Choice" awards (Feb/March 2009.  (The readers selected both Alex and Ricky in a three way tie with Karey Bresenham of Quilts, Inc.)

 

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Editor Sherry Nugent "Catches up with Ricky Tims in Birmingham"

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 “I Want You to Quilt” Former Home & Graden TV Host Fires Up Faithful in Auburn

By Daniel Hartill , Staff Writer  Thursday, October 9, 2008

 

AUBURN - More than 200 women from around Maine and New Hampshire gathered Wednesday to listen to Alex Anderson - a quilting show impresario - talk about the nimble-fingered "sport of quilting."

"I don't know where you are in your journey," said Anderson, who hosted "Simply Quilting" on cable's Home & Garden TV for 11 years. "I just want you to quilt."

Most of the participants, who paid $55 each to attend, were already converts to the world of patchwork, running stitches and tacking. They weren't there to learn the basics. Rather, they fed on Anderson's energy. For more than an hour, the Livermore, Calif., woman described the books and TV shows that created her niche of fame.

She talked about awkwardly beginning the two professions, writing her first how-to book over a weekend and starting her TV show after a few guest appearances on a crafter's cable program.

"Let me tell you, that's the first time my kids even cared what I do for a living," Anderson said of the offer to create her own show. "Simply Quilting" thrived for 493 episodes.

When it was canceled, angry quilters sent pleas to the network on swatches. Anderson said she was hurt by the cancellation but she adjusted. So must the quilters.

"I have some other news for you," she quipped. "'Gilligan's Island' is over."

Anderson has since gone online with a Webcast titled "The Quilt Show."

Throughout her talk, Anderson showed slides of some of her quilts and talked about techniques, from hand- stitching to working with the most modern machines.

She also showed off the work of friends, praising them with, "I love, love, love this one!"

Her enthusiasm, not her practical advice, was what brought Donna Kassa of Auburn to the event.
 

"She's very, very passionate," said Kassa, who has been making quilts since she was a girl.

Geraldine Thompson of Poland hoped to energize herself to share the craft, which Anderson called "passing the thimble."

The visit was sponsored in part by an Auburn shop, Cote's Sewing and Fabric Center. Most of the attendees are regulars at the store, president Ron Blake said.

The stop was also sponsored by Swiss sewing machine manufacturer Bernina. There, too, Anderson made her pitch with gusto, describing the first time she used the hand-assembled machine.

"It was like that first great kiss you get as a freshman in high school," she said.

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Stars align in cyberspace for The Quilt Show

Saturday, October 11, 2008

It’s probably the most significant alignment of stars since Fons met Porter.

I became a true stargazer last month in the hamlet of LaVeta, nestled at the foot of Colorado’s famous Spanish Peaks.

That’s where Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims tape their online video/Web magazine called “The Quilt Show.”

I was thrilled to get an insider’s peek at the groundbreaking endeavor these talented co-hosts started in April 2007.

Anderson and Tims were wrapping up their fourth series of shows, which feature guest quilt artists from all over the world. The shows are filmed twice a year in front of a live audience inside Tims Art Quilt Studio and Gallery. The shows I observed will be aired January through June on the Web site.

On this particular day, they taped two separate segments, one shining the spotlight on Anderson and the other on Tims.

Anderson gave tips on making “Daisy Chain,” a quilt she designed with beige and cream-colored fabrics and featured in her book “Neutral Essentials.”

She said she enjoys the subtlety yet richness of neutral tones.

When Tims took his turn behind the lights and cameras, he demonstrated how to make a kaleidoscope quilt of bright fabrics from a strip-pieced strata.

“It looks complicated, but it really isn’t,” he said of the method, which is available on DVD.

Not only is Tims a world-class quilt artist, but he’s also an incredibly talented musician, composer, photographer and videographer. He lives on a ranch outside LaVeta.

His father, Richard Tims, was in the audience on that day, as he often is.

“We knew he was special pretty early on,” the elder Tims said of his son. “We bought him a piano when he was 3.”

Anderson, too, is a real pro. Most quilt enthusiasts know her from the former “Simply Quilts” television program, which ran for 11 seasons with her as host.

For her contributions to quilting and textile art, Anderson will receive the prestigious 2008 Silver Star Award on Nov. 1 at the International Quilt Festival in Houston. She is a resident of Livermore, Calif.

Together, Anderson and Tims truly are luminaries in the quilt universe.

Their online show runs smoothly with no script, no cue cards, no retakes. They move deftly from cutting table, sewing machine and design wall to a comfortable sitting area where they chat. Neither outshines the other, and their respect for one another is obvious.

Tims says Anderson helped him learn “how to be a host” because he had no previous experience at it.

She, in turn, credited Tims with teaching her “to lighten up some.” Anderson is known more for her traditional quilt style, while Tims developed what he calls a “caveman style” that eschews many of the rules.

They laugh easily together, as Tims’ partner, Justin Shults, emcees the tapings with the audience of about 40. Both hosts address the crowd personally after the spotlights are turned off and answer audience questions.

Their film crew works with precision in the small gallery space, and they have fun together, too. Some of the members fly into Colorado with their equipment a few times a year from Chicago and California. Many are showbiz veterans. A couple of them work for “The Oprah Show,” and the foreman (who is actually a woman) has a Hollywood career, having previously teamed with Anderson on “Simply Quilts.”

Here’s how it works for viewers: Go online to www.thequiltshow.com, where you can join for free or purchase a subscription for $24.95. Thirteen shows are offered per series, as well as block-of-the-month projects, chats, forums, images of quilts and quilters’ profiles.

Anderson’s husband, John, is one of the online show’s biggest supporters. He also attended the taping in LaVeta, where he sold DVDs of the series, books and other products by his wife and her business partner, Tims.

John Anderson compares “The Quilt Show” to a worldwide quilt guild. It boasts more than 31,500 members in 94 countries.

“It’s really the future of the educative arm of quilting, with access to such talent,” he says.

Whether “The Quilt Show” reinforces the allegiance of the dedicated millions or entices newbies into our fold — preferably both — I have to say that Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims bring pure star power to cyberspace.

E-wmail Sherida.Warner@ gjsentinel.com.

 

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"Meet Ricky Tims: Texan, musician, quilter, inspirer" by Judi Mendelssohn

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Quilters looking forward to Anderson's visit

Popular TV host and author to appear at Weber's Inn Monday

Alex Anderson, a well-known quilter, author and TV personality, will be at Weber's Inn in Ann Arbor from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday for an event that is expected to draw close to 500 quilting enthusiasts.

Anderson has been highlighted in numerous magazines, penned more than 18 books, designs her own line of fabrics and threads, and is the national spokesperson for Bernina of America. She was chosen as recipient of this year's Silver Star Award by Houston's International Quilt Festival for her far-reaching and positive contributions to the quilting community.

In the morning, Anderson will give a lecture on her journey as a quilter accompanied by a virtual trunk show of her quilts and a light continental breakfast. Participants will hear about her early experiences with quilting, the ups and downs of being a TV host, and her newest endeavor.

In college, Anderson completed a quilt as part of her coursework toward an art degree and that experience jumpstarted her deep relationship with quilting.

Anderson hosted HGTV's "Simply Quilts" for 11 years before the show was canceled, and fans today still look for reruns of the popular show.

Her latest project, "The Quilt Show," is an interactive online video/Web magazine whose mission is to educate, inspire, entertain, connect and grow the world quilting community. The site offers subscribers hour-long episodes with charismatic co-hosts Anderson and artist Ricky Tims.

"The Quilt Show" also offers a place for quilters around the world to share ideas, view quilts, list global events, read newsletters, learn quilting techniques and get projects.

Anderson cites technology as the biggest change she's witnessed in quilting over the span of her career. She refers to "The Quilt Show" as "The Ultimate Cyber Quilting Bee" with its live audience, special guests, opportunities for learning and the interactive aspects of the site.

The Silver Star Award recognizes Anderson's impact on the quilting industry, but she has also touched the lives of many individuals throughout the world.

"I appreciate the stories, but it really doesn't resonate," she said. "I consider myself as just another quilter."

She describes quilters as a unique community of good people who support each other, despite coming in different packages.

"It's the nature of quilters," she said. "If everybody in the world quilted, there would be less fighting."

Although she has been quilting for more than 30 years, Anderson said she never gets bored with it. Anderson credits her energetic co-host Tims and "The Quilt Show" for her current enthusiasm and points out that there's always something new to learn about quilting.

She believes there are several misconceptions about quilters, including that it's "a little old lady sport," quilters have to be patient and quilters have to be good to join a guild.

A self-proclaimed impatient person, she authored a book for younger quilters titled "Kids Start Quilting with Alex Anderson" and acknowledges TV shows like "Project Runway" that emphasize sewing help to captivate a younger audience.

Anderson has always sought to educate and encourage quilters of all levels and offers advice to newcomers.

"Take a class at your local quilt shop, put on your blinders and don't look at the others or you'll get discouraged," she said.

Along with that, she tells quilters to pursue the types of quilting that best suit them and don't try to quilt in a style that isn't a good fit.

"Do what makes your own heart sing," she said.

According to Anderson, quilts are a part of American history and most people have a quilt in their family, making quilting a generational connector.

"It gets us in touch with our ancestry," she said.

The sponsor of this event, Viking Sewing Center, is celebrating 40 years in business. Kris Houghtaling first learned to repair sewing machines at the age of 13, when his parents owned the business. It's now co-owned by Kris and his wife, Doni, who live in Dexter along with 11-year-old Kristin and 9-year-old Mitchell.

The owners and their staff attend conventions to keep up to date on the sewing industry and it was at a convention in 2007 when Doni first met Anderson. The Houghtalings' daughter, Kristin, had entered a quilt into a competition and won honorable mention.

Anderson looked over Kristin's quilt, shared her own story, and offered words of encouragement.

"It impressed me that she took time out of her day to come and talk to my daughter," Doni Houghtaling said.

She describes Anderson's presentation style as upbeat and funny.

"Alex is one of the most personable, down-to-earth people. You wouldn't know she's as popular as she is, because it's like talking to the girl next door," she said.

Following a lunch break, Anderson will be available to meet participants, sign books, and pose for photographs. Attendees will be able to purchase Anderson's line of fabrics, patterns, books, quilt kits and DVDs.

Susan Vaughan, a quilter from Chelsea who likes Anderson's fabric and patterns, can't attend the event because of a new baby. She said she believes that Anderson took an activity that is considered to be solely for grandmothers to one that is enjoyed by all ages.

"She took quilting to the mainstream," Vaughan said.

Ethel Polsdofer, a quilter from Saline, said she looks forward to hearing what Anderson has to say.

"Alex Anderson has been an inspiration to a lot of quilters, especially new quilters like me, because she makes difficult things look easy," Polsdofer said.

Dexter resident Kathy Willis is looking forward to the event because she feels she always learns something new from Anderson.

"I'm very excited about seeing her. You can take everything you learn from quilting and apply it to other sewing projects."

Willis believes that Anderson has good color sense and a vast amount of knowledge.

"I'm anxious to learn what she has to say," she said.

Judy Gordon, Saline Township treasurer since 1988, quilts for pleasure and swears that quilting lowers her blood pressure. She teaches at Viking Sewing Center and will be staffing the event on Monday to discuss clubs and classes.

"I think Alex has so much information. It will be neat to see her in person," Gordon said.

Additional Viking Sewing Center staff will be on hand at various booths during the afternoon to provide activities while attendees wait in line to meet Anderson.

Michelle McCalla of Manchester and Kathy Reed of Plymouth will handle sales and share their knowledge of sewing machines. Bernina sewing machines purchased at the event can be signed by Anderson in the afternoon.

Cindy Hunter of Dexter will cover embellishing techniques, a service technician will cover the proper care of sewing machines and Crystal Smythe of Tecumseh will be assisting with fabric selection, check-in and questions.

Nanette Weaver, a Scio Township resident who has designed her own jacket pattern, will demonstrate machine quilting. She looks forward to showing off the store, as well as getting Anderson's autograph at the event.

"It will be fun to hear her story," Weaver said.

Two Saline residents also will be working at booths. Sylvia Coleman will demonstrate machine embroidery and Nancy Lindemann will assist with fabric selection and the cash register.

This will be the second time that Coleman will see Anderson and recalls that at a Toledo event Anderson was interested in seeing the items that participants had made.

"She's very personable, down to earth and just adorable," Coleman said.

Coleman finds Anderson to be an inspirational individual.

"She is really the person who is responsible for getting so many people interested in quilting," Coleman said.

Tickets are $25 and are available by calling Viking Sewing Center at 761-3094.

By Alison Marable, Special Writer  PUBLISHED: June 19, 2008

Alison Marable is a freelance writer and can be reached at alimarabelle@yahoo.com.