I have been home a week and am just about rested from two weeks in Houston, TX for International Quilt Market and Quilt Festival.
Market is a trade show only open to those with credentials: shop owners, designers, and others in the quilting business. It runs before Festival, which is the largest quilt show in the world, open to the public.
Here are a variety of photos from my two weeks there.
The view from my room at the Marriott Marquis |
My favorite restaurant in Houston |
Shrimp Diablo--my selection on my first trip there |
Enchiladas del Mar, my go-to and what I had on my second visit |
The Market Team in our newest garment |
Faculty ship their class supplies weeks in advance. The first day of set-up for me involves accepting all the freight, logging it in, and seeing that each box is placed where it can be found by the teacher. BEFORE:
During Festival I took a class with Becky Scellato on Sashiko--slow stitching, very enjoyable:
The days are long when working a show and meals are not always healthy or quick. Phoenicia is a market a few blocks from the convention center that I get to often. The salad bar is great--this is two day's lunches for me:
I didn't go on the show floor very much and bought very little. Here are a few photos of quilts:
Other quilts I get inspired by are either antique quilts or reproductions of antique quilts. The Special Exhibit from France featured quilts inspired by antiques. Here is a real favorite:
The rest of the Education Team arrived for Festival. Each day we wear garments we have made with fabric we are given, to help identify us as "staff" on the third floor. We get a photo each morning after our 6:55 AM daily meeting:
It was 24 years ago I first started working for Judy Murrah in the Education Office. Sadly, Judy passed away in 2017 and I still miss her and her wonderful way of making everyone feel special. Faculty, staff, students, everyone she talked to got her full attention. It takes a lot of work and people to run a successful show and I was always so happy to be part of that success. Judy was a mentor and friend, and I knew she respected me as a professional quiltmaker and teacher. She often told me so.
It's now time to move on to another phase of my professional life. On our last day I told everyone I would not be back as part of the Education team next year. My plan is to return in a different role. Time will tell if that happens. Stay tuned. I will be at Houston, for sure. My hotel is already booked. There are so many people I just have to see each year. There is nowhere else to be for quilters in the Fall.
Let's quilt.
Barbara
Oh my! Your ending caught me a little off guard. You will be sorely missed in the office, even when I’m in trouble! Your quilts are beautiful and I know you have a ton to share with the quilt world. Have fun!
ReplyDeleteCindy Lohbeck
Barbara, thanks for highlighting my BOM Color My World: La La Land. It was the last quilt I finished in my old Los Angeles studio before packing it up for our move to Huntsville. During the year of creation I was happy to have the help and advice of several other good friends in my guild Westside Quilters who also worked on it. Great memories. I look forward to hanging it in my new studio …someday when all this unpacking is over.
ReplyDeleteSally Wright
DeleteWow! A different role at Houston!?! I can only imagine. So happy for you. Thank you for the revisit. I remember the French quilts and particularly the one you show here.
ReplyDelete