Go Back  Quiltingboard Forums >
  • Main
  • what are your personal quality standards? >
  • what are your personal quality standards?

  • what are your personal quality standards?

    Thread Tools
     
    Old 01-08-2010, 06:02 PM
      #141  
    Banned
     
    Join Date: Jan 2010
    Location: Cumberland Island, GA
    Posts: 110
    Default

    Originally Posted by maggiemuggins
    I lived in Mennonite area for many years (near St Jacobs Ontario) and if their quilts are "perfect" , they will deliberately put something in the quilt that is not perfect to indicate that only God is perfect.
    Well said! AMEN. XO Sandra
    cumberlandquiltchick is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 06:40 PM
      #142  
    Senior Member
     
    gramqlts's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Aug 2009
    Location: Arkansas
    Posts: 686
    Default

    I always put on the attached note or card to receiver....Made with love, prayers and a few imperfections. I'd say I was a cozy quilter too. I expect my quilts to be used in every day life...not put up for viewing in a museum.
    gramqlts is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 06:59 PM
      #143  
    Super Member
     
    blahel's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Sep 2007
    Location: other side of the black stump, Perth Western Australia
    Posts: 1,902
    Default

    Originally Posted by gramqlts
    I always put on the attached note or card to receiver....Made with love, prayers and a few imperfections. I'd say I was a cozy quilter too. I expect my quilts to be used in every day life...not put up for viewing in a museum.
    I like that!
    blahel is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 07:30 PM
      #144  
    Senior Member
     
    gramqlts's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Aug 2009
    Location: Arkansas
    Posts: 686
    Default

    Catlady- my mom made me an aphgan years ago. I loved it so much and was so thrilled that I was afraid to use it cause it would get messed up....so I put it in a bag and kept it in the closet to "preserve" it. My aunt came to visit months later and when I was showing it to her she said "Oh, it is so nice of you to save it so your husband's next wife will have something new and beautiful to use." I have never put anything up again....I use them to death...lol. Needless to say that husband was used up and is gone also...smile.
    gramqlts is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 08:40 PM
      #145  
    Senior Member
     
    Join Date: May 2009
    Location: Northern Illinois
    Posts: 351
    Default

    Originally Posted by gramqlts
    Catlady- my mom made me an aphgan years ago. I loved it so much and was so thrilled that I was afraid to use it cause it would get messed up....so I put it in a bag and kept it in the closet to "preserve" it. My aunt came to visit months later and when I was showing it to her she said "Oh, it is so nice of you to save it so your husband's next wife will have something new and beautiful to use." I have never put anything up again....I use them to death...lol. Needless to say that husband was used up and is gone also...smile.
    When I was much much younger I did the same thing with gifts
    given to me, didn't want them messed up. Now that I'm
    "older and maybe wiser" I use them to pieces. I put them out
    where I can see them and use them. Especially the things my
    mom made me. Now that she has passed away those things
    are really special to me, feels a little like she's here with me.
    Catlady is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 09:42 PM
      #146  
    Super Member
     
    Quiltgranny's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2009
    Location: WA
    Posts: 1,372
    Default

    Originally Posted by Butterfli19
    I was reading Harriet Hargrove's 'Machine Quilting' book and became immediately depressed. The intricacy of the quilting in that book is something I don't think I will ever achieve.

    Then I started thinking...do I want to be a "master quilter?" I decided I would rather be a cozy quilter than a master quilter. I can be so obsessed about seams and points and lines that I decided if I become too picky it will take the joy right out of it. I like to make quilted things and dolls for gifts and enjoyment and therapy and am considering selling as well, and I want them to look "Nancy Perfect", but I also need to feel happy about the process and the end result.

    So, to what standard do you hold your quilting?
    Well, take heart, Harriet Hargrave and her daughter Carrie Hargrave have recently embarked on a new series of books that should appeal more to the beginning and intermediate quilter, especially if some have found her previous books a bit intimidating. This new series is called "Quilter's Academy - A Skill Building Course in Quiltmaking. There will be 6 volumes in all. The first one, "Volume 1 - Freshman Year, is available now. The second one, "Sophomore Year" will be available before summer this year.

    Harriet says in this book, "Our plan is to walk you through a series of classes, lessons, and projects that will build one skill on another, so that when you have worked your way through the entire series of books you will be well on your way to being a master piecer."

    Harriet has noticed in the past few years that there are many classes taught as projects, but the basic skills needed to really understand the process are severely lacking.

    Their first book includes 11 projects, too. If anyone is interested, you can read more about it here:

    http://www.amazon.com/Quilters-Acade.../dp/1571205942

    So far, I have found her straightforward and easy to understand approach to be informative and helpful. I love all the tips she has to make it all go smoother so that our hobby can be so much more enjoyable.

    Personally, I do strive to do my best, too. I'm a bit of a Type A, too, but am learning to relax some as time goes on and I become a little more comfortable with my abilities. One thing I have found quite stressful is this one particular quilt I am working on has caused so many folks to say, "You need to enter that into the next quilt show." That, and the fact that it is for DH, who is much more of a perfectionist (at some things) than I am has only served to make me quite nervous about the whole process. I am almost done and personally, I cannot wait to be done and relax into a project that won't be so stressful. However, that isn't going to happen yet, as my next project is a queen size wedding quilt for my DS and finance` due in July! Already I'm stressing, can I have it done in time? How can I do a quilt this large on my machine? How can I do the machine quilting any justice when I only do SITD and there are open areas just screaming for beautiful feathers or some other FMQ pattern? Where is that elusive cozy quilting?? :roll:
    Quiltgranny is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 10:14 PM
      #147  
    Fox
    Junior Member
     
    Join Date: Oct 2009
    Posts: 141
    Default

    My critic was my mother. I saw some pieced quilts hanging on a clothes line on a drive when I was a child, that I thought were beautiful. My mother's reaction to them was a demeaning "those poor people, they have to live that way". She was born at the turn of the century to a very poor family, and hated anything that reminded her of Depressions, Wars, rationing etc.. I taught myself to quilt when I was in my forties, and had a quilt I'd designed hanging in my bedroom. On a visit she looked at it without saying a word, then turned in disgust saying I'd "cut off the points" on the border. Enough said. She never mentioned it again, and it took me ten years to get back to quilting. Of course she's dead now...but I can imagine her shaking her head in wonder how I could waste my time doing something so beneath her standards. I like it.

    And I LOVE the COZINESS of it!!
    Fox is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 10:35 PM
      #148  
    Senior Member
     
    jamh's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Sep 2009
    Location: cordele ga
    Posts: 604
    Default

    Ima cozy quilter! I always say if you think you can do better than i do, i will give you MY machines and say have at it!! I do the best I want to do!! :) :) :)
    jamh is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 10:45 PM
      #149  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Oct 2007
    Posts: 1,962
    Default

    I don't do "perfect", that way there is always something for me to strive for. If every quilt I made was perfect, I wouldn't have any reason to keep quilting. :)

    Every quilt is a learning experience, I will be truly sad when the day comes that I don't learn something when making a quilt.
    Shadow Dancer is offline  
    Old 01-08-2010, 11:50 PM
      #150  
    Super Member
     
    kd124's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Mar 2007
    Location: Camas, Washington
    Posts: 2,593
    Default

    I would say cosy quilter; love that term by the way.
    kd124 is offline  
    Related Topics
    Thread
    Thread Starter
    Forum
    Replies
    Last Post
    Mrs. SewNSew
    For Vintage & Antique Machine Enthusiasts
    46
    09-11-2014 10:29 AM
    Carron
    Main
    15
    09-24-2011 06:44 AM
    Anna.425
    General Chit-Chat (non-quilting talk)
    8
    04-15-2011 05:31 PM

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    BB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is On
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off



    FREE Quilting Newsletter