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Update April 2018 - CONGRATULATIONS PAT HOLLY! She just won Best of Show in the 2018 Spring Paducah QuiltWeek contest with her fabulously stunning quilt Turkish Treasures. And Paducah Mayor Brandi Harless proclaimed her the newest Duchess of Paducah! What a great night for Pat!


Update March 2018 - Pat's quilt, Turkish Treasures, just won Best of Show at AQS QuiltWeek® – Lancaster, Pennsylvania 2018.

Star Members can watch Pat in Show 608: Mastering Machine Appliqué.


Pat Holly's quilt, Turkish Treasures, won 1st Place at Houston 2017 in the Innovative Appliqué Category. It is an amazing quilt in all its aspects, but the border really caught our attention. It is made of Oya Needle Lace. Be sure to go to the bottom of the blog to see the sign and hear Pat give Alex a quick rundown on the quilt.

 

 

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Karen Grover talks with Bonnie Browning about her quilt, Back to Bali, that won 1st Place in the Small Wall Quilts: Stationary Machine Quilted category, sponsored by Koala Cabinets. See how she used Broiderie Perse appliqué in her quilt.
 

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Here's how Maria's quilt, Colors Unfurled, got started,

I had an idea. What if I take all the star blocks I’d made over the years and used them to make a new version of the American flag? A version of the flag that celebrated all of our cultural diversity. A version of the flag that represented not just traditional red-white-and-blue values but pink-purple-and orange values too.

Click here to read the whole article about the making of this quilt.

Original Photo: Mary Kay Davis

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Dallas Area Quilter Donates Quilts to the Museum of Texas Tech University

By Marian Ann J. Montgomery, Ph.D.
Curator of Clothing and Textiles, Museum of Texas Tech University

Although you may consider yourself primarily a quilter, sometimes you will find that you have museum-worthy quilts that can be donated to a museum. One such quilter is Pam Joiner of the Dallas, Texas area who donated three quilts from her collection to the Museum of Texas Tech University. All three quilts are absolutely beautiful and previously there was nothing similar to them in the collections. The first one pictured below is similar to a Dresden Plate, but the pattern is listed in Brackman’s Encyclopedia of Pieced Quilt Patterns as #3437, The Gardner’s Prize. The green centers are a little darker than the apple green, which was popular in the 1930s so it is likely the quilt was made in the 1940s in Leonard, Texas. It is nicely quilted in the fan pattern. Barbara Brackman’s Encyclopedia of Pieced Quilt Patterns is the reference tool used to document pieced quilt patterns so many quilt historians refer to the Brackman number from the Encyclopedia when describing a quilt pattern.


The Gardner’s Prize, Brackman #3437 printed by Aunt Martha Studios/ Workbasket magazine c 1940.
Gift of Pam Joiner (Mrs. John Charles), TTU-H2016-037-002.
Photo courtesy of the Museum of Texas Tech University.
 

The sweet blue print and white quilt pictured below also came from Leonard, Texas. The pattern is Buckeye Beauty, which is listed in Brackman’s Encyclopedia of Pieced Quilt Patterns as #1254.  Two color quilts were popular in the 1920s and 1930s. The pattern was first published in the Nancy Cabot syndicated newspaper column, written by Loretta Leitner Rising, first printed in the Chicago Tribune in the 1930s. However quilt patterns were devised by quilters and used prior to their being printed in newspapers and pamphlets.  The quilt was made circa 1930. The blue printed fabric is of such a soft, sweet pattern and the quilt is beautifully made, with scalloped borders.


Buckeye Beauty, Brackman #1254 printed by Nancy Cabot in the syndicated column written by Loretta Leitner Rising for the Chicago Tribune and also available through pamphlets and in the Progressive Farmer magazine. 
Gift of Pam Joiner (Mrs. John Charles) TTU-H2016-037-003.
Photo courtesy of the Museum of Texas Tech University.
 


Circa 1936 Baby quilt.
Gift of Pam Joiner (Mrs. John Charles), TTU-H2016-037-001. 
Photo courtesy of the Museum of Texas Tech University.

The pretty baby quilt that Pam also donated is unique with pieced, curved sashing and heavy quilting in blue thread on white fabric.  A locomotive, three fishes, duck, house, girl, boy, flower in pot, lamb, pig, donkey and windmill are appliqued on the blocks. The Bucilla Company offered the kit for this quilt in their 1936 catalog. An amazing number of baby quilts were made in Texas during the Depression years. Many beautiful ones came through the door at the Abilene quilt documentation a few years ago and two lovely ones were documented at the quilt documentation at Texas Tech University in 2016. The Museum is thrilled to add this generous donation of three beautiful quilts from Pam Joiner to the collection.

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What could it be?!

Here is another hint:

sequoia fabric bundle

 

Sequoia Fat Quarter Bundle

Designed by Edyta Sitar of Laundry Basket Quilts, this fabric line is inspired by the beauty of California. Featuring birds, flowers, dots, stripes and geometrics - the fabrics evoke the majestic beauty of wooded sequoia forests.

Each bundle contains 32 cotton fat quarters - 1 of each print in the collection - for a total of 8 yards of fabric.

Get yours now - we only have 50!

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Capt'n John writes - "I haven't even gotten through half the quilts this year, but the colors are just jumping out everywhere. I also feel, like I did last year, that the quilts that didn't win are amazing too. Of course the winners are beautiful, but so are those that didn't win. This quilt by May Black is an example. May entered "Vintage Rose" (96x96) in the "1st Entry in an AQS Paducah Contest" category. The colors are so bright, I had to stop and take a look.

Then you notice that the construction is fun. This is a great pattern, Vintage Rose, by Judy and Bradley Niemeyer at Quiltworx. There are two borders on the inside and no borders on the outside. The use of flying geese on just one side of each of the central designs gives the feeling of movement. I marveled at the exact math that must have been necessary to get the arches to turn the corners perfectly. Also, be aware that your quilt needs excellent quilting. Great quilting is everywhere and the quilting by Juanita Long on this quilt is wonderful. All this combines to make it a eye-popping first entry by May."

Take a look:

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Watch Pam Holland build a home for a fish using muslin (cheesecloth), dye, and quilting. Discover some new techniques for your next quilt.

 

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It is that time of year in Deschutes County. A Novel Idea is the largest community reading program in the state of Oregon. Now in its 15th year, the library committee reviews and picks one book to share in several cultural and author events. In the last few years, one of the highlights of The Novel Idea has been sponsored by Quiltworks. Anyone who wants to participate is invited to read the novel and create a quilt that is reflective of something in the book that speaks to them.


This year's book, No One Can Pronounce My Name by Rakesh Satyal, is a humorous and tender view though the eyes of an immigrant family who is living in Ohio.



I hope you will decide to read the book and enjoy the quilts that the group at Quiltworks created. It is one of my favorite exhibits each year and it is fun to view after having read the book...so, save this post so you can take a look at the quilts, in the Smilebox below, once you are done!!

 
 
Click to play this Smilebox slideshow

Click here for Anna's blog.

Click here for Anna's YouTube Channel.

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It's time to do some spring cleaning. Have you removed the lint from your machine lately? Learn how to do it properly and keep your machine running smoothly all year long.
 
 
 

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Ricky Tims: Quilts That Speak

AQS QuiltWeek Paducah April 18-21, 2018.

See a retrospective quilt exhibit featuring works from Ricky Tims’ 27-year quilting journey. On display will be his first quilt, several award-winning quilts, and works that have never been presented on the international quilting stage. Witness the transitions and diversity in his contemporary quilts that are surprisingly all rooted in tradition.