I seen a placemat on Pintrest....
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 199
I seen a placemat on Pintrest....
I seen a placemat pattern on Pintrest and it inspired me to make a quilt just like it...only bigger of course. I want to enter it into a quilt show. Do I have to acknowledge the placemat designer? Do I say on the entry form what I said here that I was inspired by a placemat?
By the way I didn't buy the placemat pattern just figured it out on my own.
By the way I didn't buy the placemat pattern just figured it out on my own.
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 16,421
If the form asked for the designer of the pattern then yes. I've seen many Bonnie Hunter, Jenny Doan, and other well known designers quilt designs in shows and no reference to the pattern or designer.
#3
Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: South Dakota
Posts: 58
I seen a placemat pattern on Pintrest and it inspired me to make a quilt just like it...only bigger of course. I want to enter it into a quilt show. Do I have to acknowledge the placemat designer? Do I say on the entry form what I said here that I was inspired by a placemat?
By the way I didn't buy the placemat pattern just figured it out on my own.
By the way I didn't buy the placemat pattern just figured it out on my own.
#4
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 17,827
Agree ... important to read and know the rules of the show. Then follow them!
Give the info they require, and nothing else.
I learned that lesson ... I was too honest with one show, and acknowledged the long arm quilter,
which I thought was only fair and right to do.
Guess what? The judge's assistant later told me, that I was in first place until the judge saw that.
Interesting ... the tags are supposed to be kept folded with that info hidden during judging.
The other interesting thing ... lots of other quilts were quilted by someone other than the entrant.
They just didn't make note of it on their entry tag!
*sigh* Live and Learn!
Give the info they require, and nothing else.
I learned that lesson ... I was too honest with one show, and acknowledged the long arm quilter,
which I thought was only fair and right to do.
Guess what? The judge's assistant later told me, that I was in first place until the judge saw that.
Interesting ... the tags are supposed to be kept folded with that info hidden during judging.
The other interesting thing ... lots of other quilts were quilted by someone other than the entrant.
They just didn't make note of it on their entry tag!
*sigh* Live and Learn!
#5
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,538
QuiltE, if the category didn’t say quilted by maker then the judge was in error. With that being said, the judges assistant was in breach of judging by disclosing anything that occurred during judging.
#6
Power Poster
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 17,827
Though ... we know how that goes.
With the judge done and and long gone ... all one can do is breathe deep and move on!
Then there was the time that the rules clearly stated ... mini quilt, maximum 20" in any direction.
Sure enough the winner was well over 20", both in width and length.
The judge and/or assistants obviously did not know the difference between min and max.
The funny thing (well not funny!), all of us who were not in the top three, truly had minis.
All well below the 20". All with basically 1/2" finished pieces.
Yes, the 2nd and 3rd placings were within the 20" but with larger pieces.
The entries were like two different classes by their "read" on mini quilts!
*sigh*
#7
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 16,421
I have won several viewer's choice awards and they mean more to me then any judge award. I don't enter to be judged on workmanship, that is not what a quilt is to me. Really irks the winners of the judges ribbons for someone to win viewer's choice that was by passed by the esteemed judge.
#8
In our county fair --there is a click and the judges always make sure their buddies always win the ribbons. discouraging when the quilts that win --my dog wouldn,t even want to sleep on them. Enough said. ( They don,t have a viewers choice for the quilts either)
#9
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Chula Vista CA
Posts: 7,402
I never entered because I don't make quilts for show. But I do love to look at the displays at quilt shows. But I did laugh at one that won a ribbon because it was a kit. (I had the same kit at home.) So my sister said to one of the docents she didn't know they would accept kits made from kits, and the reply was, "We don't!" Okay - we walked away and didn't point it out.
Some of the hand quilters I would love to sit with for instruction. When I took classes It was always hand held and not on a frame/hoop and the instructors would ask me why I was there. Because I can't get that perfect 10 stitches to an inch on my hoop.
Some of the hand quilters I would love to sit with for instruction. When I took classes It was always hand held and not on a frame/hoop and the instructors would ask me why I was there. Because I can't get that perfect 10 stitches to an inch on my hoop.
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