Tuesday, November 12, 2013

100 Things Every Quilter Should Do - A Bucket List

 A little bit of fun we've been discussing in my Southern Cross Quilters online group.

Click on this link if you're a quilter, and see how many of these things you've done. Of the thirteen I haven't achieved yet, only two are truly on my Bucket List.

Can you guess which two they might be?

100 Things Every Quilter Should Do

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Comfort and Joy

Christmas Day might be 6 weeks away, but today St Mark’s Quilters held our final workshop for the year and celebrated our 4th year of quiltmaking together with a break-up Christmas lunch in the garden.

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We began the year making quilts for the folk of Dunalley in Tasmania who had lost their homes in the January bushfires, then went on, over the following months, to make dozens of Blankets of Love for Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and child-sized quilts for “The Marcia” kindy for autistic children at Liverpool.

Sadly we’ve ended the year once again working on quilts for victims of disastrous bushfires, this time closer to home in Winmalee in the Blue Mountains. That’s the harsh reality of summer here in Australia. And the season has hardly begun.

As soon as Di B and I read Tracey’s appeal to quilters for assistance in giving every school aged child a quilt, as well as an extra quilt for every household, we knew we wanted to get on board to make her vision a reality in the new year.

We emailed our quilters the instructions for a very simple double square block and asked them to raid their stashes, if they wanted to help, and bring along as many completed blocks as they could today. These were to be the building blocks for our quilts for Winmalee.

Those girls are wonderful. They brought along more than a hundred blocks!

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After a day of crawling on the floor to arrange and rearrange blocks into child-sized and adult-sized quilts, we have around 8 finished quilt tops – and rather a lot of homework to do quilting them!IMG_3042

The blocks were numbered with masking tape and stacked together in order, making it possible for many hands to work together stitching them into quilts.

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We have quilts in reserve (we like to keep some for emergencies), so along with these we’re confident we’ll be able to make a decent contribution to this heartwarming effort by the wider quilting community.

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Lunch in the garden was a fun affair, with delicious food contributed by everyone.

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Once again we thanked God for giving us a passion for creating quilts, a gift we all love using to give comfort to people in need of encouragement and hope.

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There were paper hats (no photos!) and Christmas earrings.IMG_3084

And the usual show and tell.

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Another Blanket of Love by Margaret

And these colourful kiddies’ quilts…

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Barb

 

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Gail

 

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Di C

 

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Michaela

 

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Moo

 

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Gillian

 

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Michaela

Michelle worked on the binding of a beautiful quilt she’s made for the newborn  daughter of an Iranian refugee couple in her church.

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1930s fabrics, large quilting stitches and knots give this quilt real vintage charm, and I know it’s going to be treasured.

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Gillian has finally finished a real labour of love, two storybook quilts for her granddaughters.

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I could suggest you play “spot the differences” and there are quite a few, but both are enchanting, with sparkle and quirkiness, and all the traditional elements of a fairytale – a king and queen (complete with golden crowns), a handsome prince and a frog who might be a prince in disguise, a beautiful princess, a rather friendly looking dragon, and a snow white unicorn.

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Finally, if you’ve made it this far I’ll leave you with a little bit of silliness, a collage of some of the bags people brought today. They just made me smile Smile

Bags

Red roseDi