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Geoduck 05-14-2018 11:37 PM

Guild BOM
 
How does your guild handle a block of the month program? Do you have trouble getting people to participate? What happens to the blocks - are they raffled to participants? - made into charity quilts? What types of blocks garner the most interest? Anything else you can tell me so we can improve our program? Thanks!

Freckles48 05-15-2018 03:50 AM

In a guild I used to belong to, the participants put their name in a draw and one person gets to take the lot home.

Quiltlove 05-15-2018 03:58 AM

My guilds BOM last approximately 6 months and each participant ends up with their own rendition of the quilt. Many times this is presented as a mystery quilt. We usually have around 12 participants. Then all of our quilts are put in our annual quilt show. Lots of fun.

Rhonda K 05-15-2018 04:02 AM

The program needs to provide the members with challenges and opportunity to learn in order to encourage member participation.

Here are a few questions for consideration for your program.

What types of BOM have been successful for your group? What are the different skill levels of the members? The program will need to provide some challenge work along with traditional work. Schedule a different member to provide information on a block each month.

Take a vote and determine a theme or topic for the year.

Does the guild provide the fabrics or are the instructions open to fabric choice from each member?

At the end of the program have options available for finishing the quilt. Setting the blocks, sashing, borders are all design opportunities for the members. If one wants to donate the blocks or make a charity quilt that is another option.The members could choose to make a second block for donations. Then they could be raffled or made into charity quilts.

For successful programs consider what the members want and try to make it happen for them.

Doggramma 05-15-2018 08:41 AM

In our Guild, there's a person in charge of deciding which block will be used every month as well as what colors to use. Then people make the block (as many as they want). The blocks are put into something so one can be drawn out. Whoever made that block gets all the blocks to make into a quilt. I've won twice. Once I only won 4 blocks. Once I won 279 HST's. Usually quite a few participate. You can't win again until you make something with the ones you won.

This is a Modern Guild. There are some older people, but mostly it's younger people in the Guild. Most members seem pretty enthusiastic about the programs like the block of the month.

suern3 05-15-2018 02:43 PM

Our guild does a block of the month but actually the block patterns are available all at once. The one I participated in was various star blocks. We don't exchange blocks. Each person makes their own quilt in their own color choices. At the end of the year you bring your completed top to a meeting where a picture is taken of the top. Then there is a drawing for prizes for those who completed a top. Does not have to be quilted to enter. I was lucky enough to win a $25 gift certificate from a LQS! We pay a $5 fee to do the BOM which I think pays for the prizes.

ILoveToQuilt 05-15-2018 02:50 PM

For the past couple of years, our BOM has been "Blocks with a Purpose". People are given a pattern and fabric. The blocks alternate between two "charities" - Quilts of Valor and Families in Transition (FIT). The QOV blocks are usually made with patriotic fabric/colors. The FIT quilts are usually made for children and are constructed using juvenile fabrics and fun patterns. The person who coordinates the BOM, takes the finished blocks and constructs either tops or finished quilts. If the coordinator chooses not to put the tops together, the guild has a couple of special sewing days, throughout the year, where we work on charity quilts.

We have also made pet beds for the local animal shelter. Use two fat quarters: put right sides together, sew around 3 sides, turn right side out. Channel quilt 3-4 rows. Stuff with bits and pieces or fabric, batting, what have you. Sew open side closed. A quick and easy pet bed.

Hope these ideas help!

GEMRM 05-15-2018 04:34 PM

My guild did a BOM mystery quilt one year, one year it was a variety of blocks that were sampler types and this year they had two separate BOM, one a more modern one and one that was more traditional.
Fee of $10 for the entire set of patterns that were released month by month. In the sampler type one there were more than one block per month.

quiltingshorttimer 05-15-2018 06:25 PM

Our Guild BOM program is designed to garner blocks to use in our "emergency quilts"--which go to families that lose their homes to floor, fire or tornado. We ask that members make one block for the emergency quilt and one for the member raffle--each month someone that has donated blocks gets the member raffle blocks. We did see a decline in members doing blocks but that turned around when we 1) went to simpler blocks that are quick to do 2) went to all scrappy (although our chair does suggest "spring" colors, etc) Many members will put all their blocks in the emergency pile and only one in the other. Or if they win them, they hand them to the emergency chair to use in quilts.
What didn't work--was when the chair picked blocks that were all easy, but she'd alter the directions to include embellishments, etc and people got frustrated and quick doing them.
What also worked in past, the chair would have pieces of fabric to use for a quarter--so for instance a block may have a focal fabric (25 cents) and then work from stash.

WMUTeach 05-16-2018 02:23 AM

My guild has a year long running project that generally is meant to stretch our skills just a little bit. Perhaps the challenge is color, solids, using large prints or circles, or applique. The 11th month is directions for setting options or finishing the quilt. We never make it a requirement. About 2/3 of the membership participate. The resulting quilt is owned by the maker, no trading of blocks. The leader of the group also each month walks through how to make the next block. This "tutorial" helps us tackle the new skill or "challenge". It is absolutely up to the individual what they want to do with the end product. Some ARE donated but most become gifts for friends and family.


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