Why do you quilt?
#72
Originally Posted by Rhonda
I have thought about adding my name to the things I make to sell but it would be too time consuming. I make lots of small stuff. I know there are thousands of hotpads I have made over the last 11 years out there. I even had some go to Japan and the Netherlands. So I went international a couple of times! But putting my name on them seems like bragging and with a bookmark being so small and my time so busy I just never did. I like the idea that there are lots of my hotpads and checkbook covers bookmarks etc out there and that people like them. I hope they brighten someone's life.
As far as leaving my kids any -I have done some lap size stuff they either have or will get.
As far as leaving my kids any -I have done some lap size stuff they either have or will get.
#73
Originally Posted by sewjoyce
Originally Posted by Rhonda
I have thought about adding my name to the things I make to sell but it would be too time consuming. I make lots of small stuff. I know there are thousands of hotpads I have made over the last 11 years out there. I even had some go to Japan and the Netherlands. So I went international a couple of times! But putting my name on them seems like bragging and with a bookmark being so small and my time so busy I just never did. I like the idea that there are lots of my hotpads and checkbook covers bookmarks etc out there and that people like them. I hope they brighten someone's life.
As far as leaving my kids any -I have done some lap size stuff they either have or will get.
As far as leaving my kids any -I have done some lap size stuff they either have or will get.
#74
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Flagstaff, Arizona
Posts: 375
:D I agree on the signing of your stuff.
On my stuffed animals, my name exceeds the spaces allowed for your factory stamped labels, so I have learned how to make my own and on my art quilts, I actually paint in my name/initials and the date. Now it's got a past.
On my stuffed animals, my name exceeds the spaces allowed for your factory stamped labels, so I have learned how to make my own and on my art quilts, I actually paint in my name/initials and the date. Now it's got a past.
#75
why do i quilt well it started out that my daughter brought me some tops that her friend gave here so she ask me if i could put them in a quilt so i watch some t.v and read books and done them on sewing machine for her then i said hay i could do this so i started it on my own but i also learn to hand quilting and piecing which i love to do it is so relaxing to do and watch t.v or take along project where u go yes i love to quilts that why i quilt .
#77
I remember my ex MIL was a quilter. I heard last Fall she passed away from Cancer. I remember watching her make these beautiful quilts and admiring all the beautiful fabrics. In the Winter of 1994 she bought me all the fabrics I needed to make my own sampler quilt. This was to be my birthday gift. She gave me the very basics of quilting and I took it from there. I found the art of quilting very creative and was only limited by your imagination.
I love quilting for many reasons. I love the creative power it gives me, I love how I can cut up a beautiful piece of fabric into tiny pieces and assemble them into something amazing. I love the feel of a needle and thread in my hand. I love the crispness or the soft feel of fabrics on the bolts in a fabric store.
But my favourite thing of all is that I love how I can just lose myself for a few minutes or a few hours into a quilt and not think of anything else. If there is any worries or stress or concerns happening in my life, they just dissolve away for the time I am playing in my sewing room. I just get lost, and I LOVE IT!!!!!!! Even when I don't have any worries or concerns, I just love to get lost in my art.
Since that first sampler quilt back in 1994, I have taught myself further into the art of quilting and all the many wonderful techniques that are out there. I wanted to be able to share my love of quilting with other people and found myself starting my teaching career in the Fall of 1997. 12 years later here I am still teaching and selling my work.
I am forever researching and looking for new techniques or ideas to teach or to sell. There is no limit to creativity and I plan to challenge myself every day!!!!!!!!
Quiltingly Yours and Addicted!
Andrea
I love quilting for many reasons. I love the creative power it gives me, I love how I can cut up a beautiful piece of fabric into tiny pieces and assemble them into something amazing. I love the feel of a needle and thread in my hand. I love the crispness or the soft feel of fabrics on the bolts in a fabric store.
But my favourite thing of all is that I love how I can just lose myself for a few minutes or a few hours into a quilt and not think of anything else. If there is any worries or stress or concerns happening in my life, they just dissolve away for the time I am playing in my sewing room. I just get lost, and I LOVE IT!!!!!!! Even when I don't have any worries or concerns, I just love to get lost in my art.
Since that first sampler quilt back in 1994, I have taught myself further into the art of quilting and all the many wonderful techniques that are out there. I wanted to be able to share my love of quilting with other people and found myself starting my teaching career in the Fall of 1997. 12 years later here I am still teaching and selling my work.
I am forever researching and looking for new techniques or ideas to teach or to sell. There is no limit to creativity and I plan to challenge myself every day!!!!!!!!
Quiltingly Yours and Addicted!
Andrea
#78
Thanks so much Eddie, for starting this! I've truly loved reading every posting!
I started sewing in 4H, then Home Ec - the gingham apron. lol!!! Then not a whole lot until my daughter was about 2, I made her a dress... Then lots of Barbie clothes, stuffed cats, bunnies, other crafty things. My ex mil taught me counted cross stitch, crochet, and knitting. Did a few craft shows....
I believe it was late 80's/early 90's when my sister took a quilting class, and brought her new quilting books over to show me. I'm not sure if it was before rotary cutters or what, but the thing was to rip your material. Still makes me cringe! But I learned speed strip piecing! I made a couple of big lap size quilts, then went off to make dd school dance dresses. Ever sew with sequin material? Ha. lol!!!!
Just dabbled a bit, made a few small tops, until I was laid of last January. Then I came across Jennifer Chiaverini's novels and got re-hooked!! lol!!
I love old quilts. Love imagining all the love that went into them. Love the patterns of them. There's so many I want, I decided I needed to make them myself!
I'm also in the process of making each of our kids/their spouses and grandkids a quilt. We've six kids + six spouses and eight grandkids currently, so I'm doing them for their birthdays.
I also really discovered while making my dil's quilt, that it's almost like making a prayer quilt for them. All the hours I sewed on it, my thoughts were always of her. And she knows that. Knows she is much loved.
Why I quilt - because I've always loved doing something creative, because I love the old quilts and want to make them for myself, and so every child of our's, whether birthed, step, or by marriage, and every grandchild, have an extra tangible reminder of how very much they're loved by me.
I started sewing in 4H, then Home Ec - the gingham apron. lol!!! Then not a whole lot until my daughter was about 2, I made her a dress... Then lots of Barbie clothes, stuffed cats, bunnies, other crafty things. My ex mil taught me counted cross stitch, crochet, and knitting. Did a few craft shows....
I believe it was late 80's/early 90's when my sister took a quilting class, and brought her new quilting books over to show me. I'm not sure if it was before rotary cutters or what, but the thing was to rip your material. Still makes me cringe! But I learned speed strip piecing! I made a couple of big lap size quilts, then went off to make dd school dance dresses. Ever sew with sequin material? Ha. lol!!!!
Just dabbled a bit, made a few small tops, until I was laid of last January. Then I came across Jennifer Chiaverini's novels and got re-hooked!! lol!!
I love old quilts. Love imagining all the love that went into them. Love the patterns of them. There's so many I want, I decided I needed to make them myself!
I'm also in the process of making each of our kids/their spouses and grandkids a quilt. We've six kids + six spouses and eight grandkids currently, so I'm doing them for their birthdays.
I also really discovered while making my dil's quilt, that it's almost like making a prayer quilt for them. All the hours I sewed on it, my thoughts were always of her. And she knows that. Knows she is much loved.
Why I quilt - because I've always loved doing something creative, because I love the old quilts and want to make them for myself, and so every child of our's, whether birthed, step, or by marriage, and every grandchild, have an extra tangible reminder of how very much they're loved by me.
#79
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: The Finger Lakes of upstate NY
Posts: 3,592
Originally Posted by ddrobins1956
I really like the idea of leaving some quilts behind when I leave this world. I have quilts that my gr. mother made and it's very comforting to know that her hands touched that fabric, even though she has been gone for many years. My goal is to leave some special family quilts for my children and gr. children. I'm thinking that I'll not gift them with these until I'm very old or have passed. Sounds crazy I know, but it's really all I'll probably have left for them, as I'm spending their inheritence on fabric and sewing machines.....lol
#80
I began quilting nearly 20 years ago because it seemed the only type of sewing that no one else in the family already did. My mom sewed clothing and stuffed toys, embroidered, tatted, cross-stitched, crocheted, and is an incredible knitter. My sisters followed suit with sewing clothes and doing cross-stitch. I wanted something of my own.
(In recent years, several family members have become quilters and I do enjoy sharing ideas and appreciating one anothers creations.)
I love taking all these different "ingredients" and putting them together to create something beautiful. I love knowing that no where else on earth is there an identical product, nor will there ever be. I love the process of hand-quilting, giving so much time to focus my thoughts on the quilt's recipient. I love that quilts, unlike clothing, will fit anyone no matter their size!
(In recent years, several family members have become quilters and I do enjoy sharing ideas and appreciating one anothers creations.)
I love taking all these different "ingredients" and putting them together to create something beautiful. I love knowing that no where else on earth is there an identical product, nor will there ever be. I love the process of hand-quilting, giving so much time to focus my thoughts on the quilt's recipient. I love that quilts, unlike clothing, will fit anyone no matter their size!
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