RGold wrote:
Hi Robin, I hope I can catch up with you at Paducah to give you more details, but I'm part of two organizations that put on annual shows. I'm one of 7 members of the committee that puts on our local show. We hang about 200 quilts each year. The 7 of us do most of the work, but we get support from our chamber of commerce and financial support from one of the local banks. I'm also one of the volunteers for the Ogallala quilt show, a regional show held annually in Dimmitt, Texas. Ogallala also hangs about 200 quilts (slightly more this past year). The board of directors for that show meets monthly for planning the show, and the same people have the same tasks from year to year, with some rotation or chances every year. One of my friends is in charge of volunteers, and she usually has about 175 volunteers set up—these vary from people like me who are there for the whole week (start setting up Monday afternoon, hang Tuesday, judging with a nationally certified judge on Wednesday and Thursday, awards dinner Thursday night, show open Friday and Saturday, and take-down Saturday after 5) to people who only act as quilt angels for 2 hours during the show.
Wow! It's amazing that a committee of only seven could pull this off. Maybe my guild could learn from you, too. It could be that too many on the committee makes it more challenging. When I was on the committee a few shows ago, there were about 15 members and I just learned that some of the positions for our upcoming 2015 Quilt Expo have been split. So, that means there are even more on the committee now. It's often difficult to get volunteers to fill all of those positions.
I was responsible for the program booklet and sponsor ads. Most of our sponsors also had vendor booths at the show.