quilt used as moving blanket
#31
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2015
Posts: 2,867
I don't think I'm going to clean for the couple that abused that quilt anymore. They just seem disrespectful in general. They showed me disrespect in ways when I was there and also disrespected the quilt. Personally, I want the quilts I make to be used as enjoyment. A quilt used as a picnic quilt would make me feel appreciated. A quilt put under a metal bed to help it slide through the house, while moving the bed is not showing appreciation of a quilt. It's not a moving blanket and could easily rip. Not that it would of mattered to this couple as it was just being kept on top of boxes in the garage. Plenty of people out in the world that don't itch me the wrong way, so I'll just keep my cleaning business for those people.
#32
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Chula Vista CA
Posts: 7,401
A friend of mine was very insulted when her grandson and wife let their dog sit with them on the quilt she made them. I too was rather horrified when a friend told me she loved to cuddle with her dog and have the quilt I made wrapped around them. But then I read the book," That Dorky Homemade Look" and enjoyment it the name of the game. I don't make heirloom quilts. I do spend a lot of money on them, but I want them used, and I want them worn out so I cI can make them more knowing they are enjoyed. If the end of out on the wood pile then they obviously don't need another one, but if they end up in the dog's bed not such tragedy. We had a dog that fell in love with a Christmas rug I had made. It was a hooked rug so it was shaggy and he loved it. We finally decided it was best to let him have it. He slept with it until the day he passed away. And when I washed it, he would go around the house looking for it.
#33
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 809
A friend of mine was very insulted when her grandson and wife let their dog sit with them on the quilt she made them. I too was rather horrified when a friend told me she loved to cuddle with her dog and have the quilt I made wrapped around them. But then I read the book," That Dorky Homemade Look" and enjoyment it the name of the game. I don't make heirloom quilts. I do spend a lot of money on them, but I want them used, and I want them worn out so I cI can make them more knowing they are enjoyed. If the end of out on the wood pile then they obviously don't need another one, but if they end up in the dog's bed not such tragedy. We had a dog that fell in love with a Christmas rug I had made. It was a hooked rug so it was shaggy and he loved it. We finally decided it was best to let him have it. He slept with it until the day he passed away. And when I washed it, he would go around the house looking for it.
#35
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2016
Posts: 2,888
I love the stories of how the quilts were used and abused. I think it comes down to: some people love them and cherish them and some people don't. Maybe those "don't" people have no conception of what goes into making quilts.
I remember speaking with a lady in a fabric store. She told me of finding the quilts she had lovingly made in her DIL's garage sale.
bkay
I remember speaking with a lady in a fabric store. She told me of finding the quilts she had lovingly made in her DIL's garage sale.
bkay
#36
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 2,245
A friend of mine was very insulted when her grandson and wife let their dog sit with them on the quilt she made them. I too was rather horrified when a friend told me she loved to cuddle with her dog and have the quilt I made wrapped around them. But then I read the book," That Dorky Homemade Look" and enjoyment it the name of the game. I don't make heirloom quilts. I do spend a lot of money on them, but I want them used, and I want them worn out so I cI can make them more knowing they are enjoyed. If the end of out on the wood pile then they obviously don't need another one, but if they end up in the dog's bed not such tragedy. We had a dog that fell in love with a Christmas rug I had made. It was a hooked rug so it was shaggy and he loved it. We finally decided it was best to let him have it. He slept with it until the day he passed away. And when I washed it, he would go around the house looking for it.
#37
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 2,245
That smile says it all. This quilt is being used perfectly. LOL. I know that you wouldn’t want it any other way.
#39
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: St. Augustine, FL
Posts: 171
I made a baby quilt for a neighbor years ago, after the child reached about 6 the quilt was laying on top of the trash. My daughter saw it and grabbed it because she knew I had made it. Some people don't value the time, love and money that goes into making a quilt.
#40
I have been around here for awhile. I have taken a couple years off from quilting but am now starting to look at these projects and want them done. If you look at my photo, it is one of the first quilt tops I finished in 2007. Not quilted yet but soon. I have to get the long arm tuned up, the work flow remembered, and some of these quilts Done. It's good to see Patrice has kept this place afloat. BTW... Think Big. Nothing like finisheing a queen size quilt. Just amazing sense of accomplishment. tim
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 06-03-2019 at 01:47 PM. Reason: shouting/all caps
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