I love Wednesdays. It means, usually, I am done teaching for the week, we get a morning newspaper (only now on Wed, Fri, and Sun), I can work on sewing projects all day, and tonight is Survivor--the one show my husband and I always watch together--it's the little things, right?
Yesterday I got the May segment of Rajah Revisited done:
This quilt is a replica of an historical quilt made in 1841 by women prisoners being transported by ship from England to Australia. The pattern is a free Block of the Month for paid subscribers to
www.thequiltshow.com, my favorite Internet quilting site. I didn't finish the April segment until the very end of the month so I decided to get in front of this month and now it's done.
I've got to brag on my most recent class of beginner students--we concluded their 5 week class last night. For the first time all the students who had attended all 5 sessions came to the last class with their tops complete--I was impressed as that's a lot of work to complete in one week for true beginners. They all said they didn't want to be the slacker! Here they are:
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Barbara Z Christmas-y |
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Beca S Happy
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Donna D--Also Happy, similar fabrics as Beca but distinctly her own |
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Holly R Spring-y |
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Katy W Lively--the black adds such a pop! |
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Marilyn R daughter of Barbara Z LOVE her own take on the pieced border
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The pattern is Mix 'N Match Stars,
Glad Creations. From the beginning this group of mostly strangers was a lot of fun, arriving early each week, full of enthusiasm and questions. Classes like these are why I teach. The first week I tell them I have 3 goals for this class:
1. At the end of class I want them to feel that both their time and money was well-spent
2. That they actually finish the project, not leaving it in a box under the bed for their descendants to wonder what they planned to do with all that fabric
3. Most importantly, and I am always successful at this, I want to addict at least one of them completely and totally to quiltmaking--I think I hit the jackpot with this group!
I also tell them right up front that quiltmaking is an expensive way to make bedding. If you want a blanket, go to Belk. We are making gifts for generations yet unborn. This is how we say "I was here". At the end of class I always get choked up when discussing why they HAVE TO put a label on their quilts--to say, this is who made this quilt, this is why, this is where, this is when. Future generations will thank them.
Tomorrow I get to travel to Birmingham, two hours south of here, to give a lecture and teach a two-day workshop to the Evening Star Quilters. The lecture is The Hard Stuff, a favorite of mine, and the workshop is one of my most favorite to teach--photos of that next week. Get ready, Birmingham, here I come!
Let's Quilt!
Barbara