Virtual Quilt Issue 42: tvq42
Transcription
Virtual Quilt Issue 42: tvq42
The Virtual Quilt August 2000 Issue 42 This issue: New York City & Dallas, TX Another double dose of The Traveling Quilter! Also: Software Review: Digital Nostalgia in Red and Quilter Profile: Jackie Robinson O ne day only, alone in New York City. What to do? Shopping, museums, tall buildings? Come on, you know you’d rather go fabric shopping. I knew in advance that the one store I had to go to was The City Quilter, but unfortunately they don’t open until 11 a.m. So first I set off for The Gazebo. After buzzing to be let into The Gazebo, you’ll find yourself facing a wall filled with stacks of finished quilts for sale. If that’s what you’re looking for, there are some very nice ones available, in all kinds of patterns. Most appear to be hand quilted. They come from The Gazebo’s “factory” in the Caribbean. A queen size quilt, I was told, will run you $495 and up, depending on the pattern. Traveling Quilter in the City Christina Holland Outside the Gazebo. Next you’ll notice an array of Gladys Boalt ornaments, filling the center of the store. They’re nice, but not cheap. Keep on going back. Pass the pillows and the baby quilts, back to the far back left corner, and you’ll find the fabrics. It’s a smallish fabric selection - one shelf of batiks, 5 shelves of color solids, and the remainder sorted by color. There’s a decent selection of oriental fabrics. Most prints are between $7 and $11 per yards. You’ll also find some thread, a small amount of batting, a limited tool selection, and some books. It’s immediately obvious that The Gazebo exists mainly to sell The Gazebo of New York finished products, not materials. If you’re shopping along 5th Avenue anyway, though, it’s probably worth your time to stop in 114 East 57th Street New York, New York 10022 to browse. To get there from 5th Avenue, just turn east (away from Central 1-800-998-7077 mailto:reply@thegazebo.com Park) at the giant Warner Brothers store. http://www.TheGazebo.com/ This is mainly a shopping neighborhood, but there are places to get a bite to eat nearby. The Palace restaurant is just down the block, and Starbucks is right next door. After walking a mile or two to get there, I was so focused on getting my iced tea fix at Starbucks that I walked right past The Gazebo without even noticing. So much for being street savvy and aware of my surroundings! Next, I hopped on the orange (D/Q) subway line to Brooklyn. After catching the occasional glimpse of the Brooklyn bridge and the Manhattan skyline, I disembarked at the 7th Avenue station and headed south to Sew Brooklyn. The store is just past 3rd Street (if you’re heading south on 7th Avenue) on the right hand side. It’s The Virtual Quilt 2 in a fairly busy shopping area, so there are plenty of places to eat just about any type of food you desire. I recommend Ruby’s Chinese on Flatbrush Avenue near the subway, for good portions at a Sew Brooklyn 228 7th Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11215 718-499-7383 and $10 per yard. There are other types of material to be found as well, including antique prints on soft flannel. If you’ll be in the area for a longer period, you should check out the class schedule at Sew Brooklyn. The current list is six pages long, ranging from beginning classes in sewing, knitting and embroidery to a variety of quilting courses, How to get there: From Manhattan, take the Orange (D/Q) subway line to Brooklyn. Get off at the 7th Avenue Station and go south on 7th Ave to the corner of 3rd Street. good price. Many places appeared to be closed until noon, though. Sew Brooklyn is small, although it extends back further than you’d first suppose. It’s a homey place, and very friendly. On the right hand side are the books, beads, buttons, knitting needles, yarn, thread, tools, and so on. There’s a large bin of “new and vintage buttons” for $1.50 per ounce. The fabric lines the wall on the left hand side, along with baskets of fat The Fabric Alternative quarters ($2.50 78 7th Avenue apiece) scatBrooklyn, New York 11217 tered all 718-857-5482 around. Also in the back is a classroom. The quilter’s fabric selection is moderate in size, but varied enough to tempt you in one way or another. Most bolts were marked between $9 The Virtual Quilt and even offering selections for kids. On my way to Sew Brooklyn, my eye was caught by The Fabric Alternative, on the southwest corner of 7th and Berkeley. I crossed the street to investigate, but there was a hand-written sign on the door promising that someone would be “back in 5 minutes”. So I went on, but decided to stop back by on my return. The Fabric Alternative is a small and quiet shop. It’s an all purpose fabric store, and mainly specializes in home decoration fabric. In the center of the shop, though, I found a fairly good selection of 100% cotton prints suitable for quilting. There were two shelves of batiks, a shelf of nice oriental prints, some celestial prints (moons and stars), and some fun kid’s prints. As a quilter, I wouldn’t make a special trip to Brooklyn just to come to this store. But if you’re in the area, or if like me you make the trip to Sew Brooklyn, it’s worth your while to visit The Fabric 3 Alternative. The highlight of my day of quilt shopping was without doubt The City Quilter. As far as I can tell, it’s the only real quilt store, for quilters, to be found in Manhattan. The shop was relatively busy when I arrived, but everyone was extremely friendly, even chatty. I couldn’t help but notice one of the other customers while I was there. She was evidently a newcomer to quilting, afraid to touch anything and looking rather bewildered by all the fabric bolts. I remember The City Quilter 157 West 24th Street New York, New York 10011 212-807-0390 mailto:info@cityquilter.com http://www.cityquilter.com/ that feeling. The staff, I noticed, was very helpful to her, putting her at ease and answering every question graciously. After a day in the city, The City Quilter was a breath of fresh air. The fabric selection is large, making good use of the limited floor space of a Manhattan store. There are two full rooms, plus a classroom. The back room houses the tools, books, and the batik fabrics (a full wall). The main fabric area is in the front, with several little nooks to maximize the available shelf space. Bolts start at about $7 per yard and go up from there. I was tempted to spend a lot of money at The City Quilter, but I was (mostly) able to restrain myself. I found a lovely panda print, though. I was also unable to resist buying the fat quarter ($2.50 apiece, except for a few marked at 5 for $5) of Siamese cats lounging on blue quilts, since I’d found and purchased the same fabric with red at Sew Brooklyn earlier in the day. All too soon, it was time to meet my husband after his day at the computer conference (MacWorld Expo). I had a wonderful time quilt shopping in New York, and I’ll be sure to stop back in to visit The City Quilter and Sew Brooklyn the next time I’m in town. Quiltchannel needs you! Submit your favorite web site to www.quiltchannel.com today! The Virtual Quilt 4 PCQuilt for Windows PCQuilt for Windows is easy to learn and easy to use quilting software. The block and the quilt are on the same screen so you can see your quilt emerge as you design and color your blocks. Combine blocks in a variety of ways to see endless new designs. The program includes all the features that have always made PCQuilt easy and fun to use. Now with the new Windows version, PCQuilt will help you estimate your yardage, print templates, quilts and blocks, and has a friendly Windows interface with easy to use toolbars. PCQuilt comes with a extensive library of blocks, border, quilts, palettes and fabric patterns. PCQuilt is also available for the Macintosh. Look for PCQuilt at your local Husqvarna VIKING Dealer or visit our website at http://www.pcquilt.com Nina Antze 7061 Lynch Road Sebastopol, CA 95472 707-823-8494 1-800-731-8886 POPPIES FABRIC Poppies Fabric, located on Orcas Island in Washington, carries fabric, patterns and books, as well as some locally spun yarns. Browse our internet site, www.poppiesfabric.com, where you can find some of the widest selections of Moda Marbles, Benartex Fossil Ferns, Hoffman Batiks, and great deals on fat quarter packages of coordinating fabrics, kits and notions. Our Photo board displays quilts made by some of the finest quilters in the Pacific Northwest, some of which are for sale. Come get ideas at our site, and while you’re there, visit our free pattern section! The Virtual Quilt 5 Software Review Digital Nostalgia in T Red he Redwork Revival is a remarkable phenomenon that has spawned dozens of new books of patterns for this traditional style of needlework. Designs can range from the simplicity of just a few lines to relatively complicated patterns, but the style overall is generally primitive, or at least unsophisticated. Typically the pictures rendered in redwork are nostalgic, reminding us of an earlier, and perhaps simpler, time. Redwork’s simplicity doesn’t mean it can’t be treated digitally, however, and Martingale’s new Redwork CD, edited by Nancy Martin (Redwork and Beyond: 201 Redwork Designs on CD-ROM, That Patchwork Place, 2000, $19.95) is a great way to have a versatile collection of designs that can be adapted for your use. Like Redwork itself, the program is pretty simple. Installation from the CD takes just a few seconds and the program interface with the user is straightforward. A window forms in the middle of the screen (it can’t be maximized or minimized, though it can be sent to background if you pull up another program) with a list of categories on the left and images of the available patterns in the Redwork and Beyond: 201 Redwork Designs Windows 95, 98, 2000 or NT Mac OS 7.5.3 or higher suggested retail: $19.95 selected category on the right. The categories include such traditional subjects as children’s toys, animals, flowers, tea sets, cowboys, and no fewer than three sections featuring Sunbonnet Sue. There are also two alphabets included in the program, one illustrated and the other suitable for monograms. Christmas is represented with a generous selection of both religious and secular images. There are fifteen pattern groups and 201 designs in all. By pointing and clicking on one of the patterns, a box is brought up with a larger rendition of the pattern and a selection of images sizes for the printout. Sizes range from as small as 2 inches to about 9 inches, though most of the images run from about 3 to 8 inches. Printouts are crisp and clear, with lines thick and dark enough for easy tracing or transfer. The accompanying packaging (a large format tri-fold booklet) contains basic instructions on transferring the designs and a beginning embroidery lesson. Fabric selection is treated for quilt squares and dishtowels, another traditional use of redwork. The bookley also contains hard copy of all of the available designs so you can look at them when not at your computer. The Virtual Quilt 6 The CD contains software for both Windows (95 and above, including NT and 2000) and Macintosh (Mac OS 7.5.3 or later). On either platform it requires a minimum of 12 MB RAM and a CD-ROM drive. At $19.95 this program is very reasonably priced and is really handy if you’re a redwork fan, or think you might like to be. The Redwork and Beyond CD-ROM is available at a discount at the Planet Patchwork store. NEW ENGLAND FABRIC LOFT WE NOW CARRY AURIFIL COTTON THREAD! Home of the wide width fabrics. Specializing in one piece quilt backings. All fabrics are 90” to 120” wide, 100% cotton. Imagine no more seams on the back of your quilt! End the frustration of piecing your quilt back. Make that large tablecloth you need for Holiday dinners. We are now the Distributor in US for “Aurifil” mako cotton thread. Made in Italy with the best Egpytian cotton. Three different weights. Made for machine embroidery, quilting, and all of your sewing needs. 154 colors (9 are variegated), high sheen and reliable strength, and colorfast. The 50 wt is the most common for quilting and most sewing needs. 50 wt has 1422 yards on it’s spool for $6.25! See website for colors available and more information on other new products. Come and visit our website. http://www.fabricloft.com Secure online ordering. Samples available CHECK OUT AND COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES WHERE YOUR MONEY BUYS MORE FOR LESS! Looking into Quilting Software? Look no further than The Quilt Software Network http://www.quiltsoftware.net/ Reviews, advice, and demos of the latest quilting software. Find out what’s right for you! The Virtual Quilt 7 SCHOOLHOUSEENTERPRISES Amazing but true! Gridded Geese(c) is a unique paper foundation method for massproducing Flying Geese units up to 24 at once (no kidding!). Schoolhouse Enterprises, inventors and manufacturers of this revolutionary product, offers both a printed version of their catalog, and an on-line (http://www.planetpatchwork.com/store/) shopping cart service in conjunction with Planet Patchwork. You can safely order online through Planet Patchwork’s secure server with your credit card! The folks at Schoolhouse Enterprises and Planet Patchwork search for items for quilters (and friends of quilters) which are unique and often overlooked by other catalogs you might connect with. Check out their on-line catalog, which offers such interesting items as Photos-to-Fabric(tm) photo transfer paper, Ott Lights, beautiful embossed note cards, kaleidoscope pendants, and much more! And while you’re visiting, be sure to check out the current Monthly $pecial!! Schoolhouse carries the complete line of Electric Quilt products, including EQ4 design software, and Sew Precise! and Sew Precise with Shirley Liby. We also carry the popular Quilt-Pro program. We offer the best prices on quilt design software you’ll find anywhere, guaranteed. EQ4 is only $86.88 and Quilt-Pro is an unbelievable $76.88! We also offer some great package deals for even bigger savings. If you find a lower advertised price, we’ll match it and give you another 5% discount. If you’re having trouble deciding which program is best for you, call our toll-free QuiltSoftware Hotlineat877-558-3660. We also offer a large selection of INSPECTOR CLUESEW’s Mystery Quilts. If you missed any of the Cases which were previously online, you’ll find them here! If you’re not able to access the web page, just e-mail Schoolhouse Enterprises (mailto:inspectr@delanet.com) with your “snail mail” (post office) address for your FREE CATALOG and Sample of Gridded Geese(c)! (Sorry, but Samples are only available in the printed catalogs.) DREAMHORSE WORKSHOP 18” pillows for sale: free-form patchwork bordered by canvas duck on front and backed with burlap ($50), or patches of traditional knit or crochet patterns in off-white cotton yarn bordered and backed with upholstery fabric in natural shades ($75). All covers removable and should be drycleaned. Include $7 for shipping and handling. lindag@inreach.com for questions. (530) 675-2899. Linda Gyulassy at P.O. Box 42, Brownsville, CA 95919. The Virtual Quilt 8 SEAGULL QUILTS 72 ELMWOOD AVENUE EAST AURORA, NY 14052 http://users.aol.com/seagullq/seagullq.htm Quilt patterns include many lighthouses (North Carolina, Montauk, Barnegat, Buffalo, West Quoddy, 30 Mile Point and miniature) nurse, teacher, musical instrument, Christmas paper pieced blocks, holly wreath, starry snowman, paper-pieced borders, miniature star and pinwheel. See web page for pictures. Patterns $6.75 ppd. THE SEAGULL QUILTS TRADING NEWS (FOR QUILT BLOCK & CHARM EXCHANGE) Quarterly newsletter for quilters who wish to exchange quality, 100% cotton fabric and finished blocks with other quilters. Send LSASE for sample issue. BREAKING TRADITIONS HEARTLAND QUILTWORKS Heartland Quiltworks asks: Are you tired of basting your quilts? Would you like a space friendly quilting frame? Would you like to quilt and still be in the same room with your family? Does quilting aggravate your neck and shoulders or bother your carpal tunnel syndrome? Would your like to be able to put a quilt in the frame by yourself? If your answer was yes to any of these questions-The Heartland Quilting Frame Is the only frame you will ever need! Call or write for more information Heartland Quiltworks 100 Cherry St. Cherokee, OK 73728 1-800-441-8112 www.heartlandquiltworks.com Cathedral Windows Quick Method Quilt This book will instruct even the novice sewer how to create an heirloom quality quilt, entirely by sewing machine, in a fraction of the time it would take to sew by hand. Full color cover, clear concise illustrations, yardage charts and many tips. The possibilities are endless! $8.95 per book plus $1.95 s&h Please make check payable to ‘Kimberly Nappier’ and mail to: Kimberly Nappier 6827 Sparkman St. Dept. tvq Tampa, FL 33616 MOTHER HEN’S QUILT EMBROIDERIES Quick, easy, machine embroidered quilt blocks to embellish vests and jackets, towels, pillows, wallhangings or create a quilt. Come and visit Mother Hen’s Quilt Embroideries and view the goodies! http://www.accn.org/~lildozer E-mail inquiries to: Bountipres@aol.com The Virtual Quilt 9 The Traveling Quilter Quilt Shops in Dallas I knew I had only one day to visit quilt stores in the Ft. Worth-Dallas “metroplex,” so I tried to carefully plan my time and not venture too far afield. As it turned out, I wandered farther than I intended, but the serendipitous discoveries I made were more than worth it. While consulting my trusty Quilters’ Travel Companion, I noticed a string of stores that extended up highway 75 north of Dallas, and decided that I would head out for Sharon’s Quilt Depot in McKinney, Carriage House Quilt Shoppe about a half- 204 E. Jefferson Van Alstyne, TX 75495 hour from (903) 482-5023 town. It wasn’t the farthest of the shops, but it seemed a comfortable place to start and then head back toward downtown. And they had a full-page listing in the QTC that made it seem quite enticing. Oops! I didn’t follow my own cardinal rule and call first. I went tooling up the freeway in my rented car to a charming little Texas town with a courthouse square and quaint streets filled with little shops. But there was no Sharon’s Quilt Depot to be found. OK, so NOW I decide to call. Maybe they moved. Nope, the number had been disconnected. I called information to see if there was a new number, but they had no listing for the Quilt Depot. I found out later that the store had closed a few months before after more than 20 years in business. So now what? I was out in the north Texas countryside with a decision to make. I could head back into town or drive another 12 miles out through increasing sparseness of development to the tiny town of Van Alstyne, Texas, to visit The Carriage House Quilt Shoppe. What the heck, I’d driven this far, what’s another few miles? Van Alstyne is a town that looks like it came The Virtual Quilt straight out of the “The Last Picture Show.” There are some shops and houses, and the distinction between residential and commercial not particularly well-defined. There wasn’t much traffic on the morning I was there, and few people in the streets. In fact, there weren’t many streets! I wondered for a few moments whether the town might have been abandoned. But then I found the quilt shop, on a corner, in a grouping of stores that might now be called a strip mall. Except that it looked too much like Mayberry to be called that. I wondered, as I have many another time in seemingly desolate places, how quilt stores can possibly survive this far from “civilization.” As soon as I walked inside, I had my answer. The Carriage House Quilt Shoppe creates its own civilization! Owned and operated by Roxanne Rentzel and Joyce Kislack, this shop completely captures you when you enter the door. The emphasis is on country, with a specialty in reproduction fabrics, and the store carries more than 2,000 bolts from the major manufacturers, including a great many flannels. Cozy but not overstuffed, the interior has what I call a “teadyed” feel to it. Books are scattered around in 10 casual arrangements, and there are lots of cut fat the sureness of his technique was a wonder to quarters for $2.00 apiece. behold. He was working on a big commission Roxanne and Joyce were more than welcomquilt and doing creative patterns that compliing, and were excited to tell me about all the mented the design of the quilt. Richard’s own quilt activity around the Dallas area. They had recently participated in a Shop Hop, and shared with me the map to all the stores, suggesting the best ones to visit with my limited time. They had also recently opened a website (http:/ /www.chqshoppe.net) where they sell their wonderful fabrics online. They have a full listing of classes, including a unique “Batter Up!” sports quilt class, a chenille workshop, and a civil war block of the month using their signature reproduction fabrics. One of the secrets of the shop’s survival, according to the owners, was a billboard they rent along busy highway 75. They get a lot of traveling quilters as a result of that sign. After I had my fill of Carriage House, it was lunchtime, and I asked what the owners recommended locally. They steered me around the corner to the Yellow Rose Rexall Drugstore, which was one of the most wonderful experiences of the entire trip. The Yellow Rose has an old-fashioned lunch counter with unique sandwiches, and the owner has preserved, and added to, the old-timey drugstore feel of the place with vintage accessories and posters that he has resThe only thing this wonderful old drugstore fountain cued from closing drugstores all over Texas. I lacked was Cybill Shepherd sitting at the counter! hope the Yellow Rose doesn’t go the way of all work tends toward the fanciful, with metallic the others -- I was the only patron for lunch threads in mythical dragon and other designs during the time I was there! After lunch I headed back south toward Dallas, done entirely in stitches. He has won a number of awards and told me of his plans to enter several my next planned stop in Plano where Country items in an upcoming national show. His other Calicos was waiting for me. Plano is of course point of pride was that he didn’t have a huge, a close commercial suburb of Dallas, and the months-long backlog of work. He attributed that quilt store was ensconced in a strip mall that to the fact that he spends eight hours a day doing had none of the feel of Mayberry. Actually the longarm quilting, and he loves store had two names -- Silver it. Country Calicos Quilt Shop Threads and Country Calicos, The store is more eclectic 701 E. Plano Parkway #110 the product of a patchwork than The Carriage House, with Plano,TX 75074 of ownership over a period of a wider variety of fabrics time. The physical store is very (972) 423-2499 reflecting the taste of owner large -- about 3500 square feet. Linda Taylor. She was very There are two big front rooms and two classinformative, telling me how she had driven up rooms, plus a room in which there is a big Gamill longarm where the store’s resident quilter, to McKinney to “claim” Richard, who had been working out of the now defunct Quilt Depot. She Richard Larson, does wonderful freeform work. keeps about 2,000 bolts of fabric, a wall of books, Richard was working while I was there and The Virtual Quilt 11 Club and Supply House,” and it definitely had the feel of a hangout. 4,000 bolts of fabric were artfully arranged throughout the generous space on plain wood racks. Fabrics tended toward brights (no tea-dye in evidence!) and there were interesting shop samples of innovative techniques such as raw-edge piecing and blooming ninepatch. Adding to the friendly atmosphere was a children’s corner with a wonderful painted mural of an outdoor scene, and a resident cat, Thomas, who regularly retreated to the bathroom, where his food and his catbox were kept. One of the store’s specialties is its photo transfer business. The folks tending the store told me that it grew out of a need the shop’s patrons had when the local printers stopped doing photo transfers onto fabric. In response to the need, Quiltmakers provides the service for a fee, or will help you do it yourself, selling their own line of transfer paper. I could have lingered in the friendly confines of Quiltmakers for hours, but had to move on, so I bought Lynn a Quiltmakers Social Club and Supply House mousepad for her computer, and said my farewell. There are more than 20 quilts ships in the Dallas-Ft. Richard Larson can make a longarm machine do all sorts of tricks. Worth area, so I just barely scratched the surface. I seem to find myself there ited. Almost invisible behind a gas station, it was with some frequency, and it’s good to know I left in a homely building that belied that wonders that were within. Quiltmakers calls itself a “Social plenty left for next time! and a full complement of tools and threads in the store, and it has an informal, welcoming feel to it. There is a Teddy Bear Quiltmakers corner as well. 9658 Plano Road It was now getting Dallas, TX 75238 toward midafternoon, and (214) 343-1440 I would soon have to return my rental car, so I chose one last store that had come highly recommended, Quiltmakers in Dallas proper. Just a couple of miles from Country Calicos, Quiltmakers has the least curb appeal of the stores I vis- MY FAVORITE THIMBLE GREAT NEWS - The My Favorite Thimble RE-COATING KIT is now available. If you have been pleased with My Favorite Thimble but wish the rubber coating would last longer, we now have a solution. Each Kit contains enough material to repair your thimble approximately 10 times. It’s quick and easy, and you could even use the Kit to add a rubber coating to any brand of metal thimble. Visit our web site at www.myfavoritethimble.com for details and receive a FREE gift with any order. This month the gift is a sample pack of My Favorite Fabrics Note Cards. This offer is being made only to TVQ subscribers, so be sure to mention TVQ in the Special Instructions box on our Order Form. Chris Hanner & Company 3687 Coldwater Lane Snellville, GA 30039v http://www.myfavoritethimble.com/ Email: hanner@mindspring.com The Virtual Quilt 12 GREENHAVEN Greenhaven, a bed and breakfast retreat especially for Quilters, on the Olympic Peninsula. Visit Washington State and stay with a quilter, and her cat Oliver. The Herbolds live just outside of Sunny Sequim. Their home, set in the tall trees, is warm, pleasant, and affordable. Norma can direct you to quilt shops in the area, plus the natural wonders located on the Olympic Peninsula. For those in the Northwest, Norma can also plan a personal retreat for you and your quilting friends. You are invited to visit the website for Greenhaven, where you can check out Norma’s quilts, learn more about Sequim, and of course, see Oliver. The address is: http://www.olypen.com/ normah You may email Norma at normah@olypen.com or call 360-681-0364 for more information. THE CRAFT CONNECTION The Craft Connection (http://www.craftconn.com/) is the most exciting place on the Internet if you want to make or sell handcrafts. We sell quality cotton fabric, Mettler and Sulky thread, and quilting notions, all at a discount. Fabrics are linked to coordinating fabrics, so you know your choices will look great together. We try to find fabrics you won’t see anywhere else. And we’ll package them into packets of fat eighths, fat quarters, or 5” squares, so you can get a good variety without a big cash outlay. Among our fabric categories are florals, pictorials, and guy stuff, and you should see the new Lost Fabrics of Atlantis collection. Every month some items are for sale at 20 percent off our already discounted prices. You can use your credit card online on our secure server to safely purchase our fabrics and also our crafters’ products. If you’re a crafter, you can sell here and take credit cards without having your own credit card vendor account. Check out our Free Stuff. Each month we offer a new pattern and a new lesson. We also have a Calendar of upcoming Quilt Shows. Come by our website at http://www.craftconn.com. THEQUILTBLOCK We are a cottage industry located just outside of Yosemite National Park. We specialize in clothing and patterns for quilters and for people who love quilts. We offer t-shirts and sweatshirts in sizes from medium to xxx-large. All of our quilts are machine pieced. Most of our patterns are easy enough for beginning quilters. Come see what we have to offer at our website. We have a great sale page, and we now offer secure online shopping! http://www.sierratel.com/thequiltblock/salepage1.htm Or e-mail for more information to mailto:gastinc@sierratel.com The Quilt Block P.O. Box 127 Midpines, CA 95345 (209) 742-5418 Fax: (209) 742-7662 The Virtual Quilt 13 Planet Patchwork http://www.planetpatchwork.com/ Home of The Virtual Quilt, The Traveling Quilter, and so much more! SILVERDOLLAR SHEEPSTATION What is small, soft, and furry and kind to your sewing machine and serger? The MINIDUST-IT! Genuine sheepskin duster on a 6” stick that is perfect for picking up dust and lint from your sewing machine and serger. Soft, beautiful sheepskin won’t scratch polished surfaces. Picks up the lint and tiny threads; doesn’t spread them around. Prevents lint build-up. Fun and handy to use. Also works great on the computer. ANNOUNCING: New colors -- white, black, navy, gold, cocoa, taupe, teal blue, gray, charcoal. Price: $3.50 each INCLUDING mailing. To order send check to: Silver Dollar Sheep Station 5020 Winding Way Sacramento, CA 95841. Or call 800-887-8742. Or E-mail: Sheep50@aol.com. Because we manufacture the Mini Dust-it to a very high standard, we currently have a good supply of imperfects. They may be thinner and not as pretty or have some other defect, but they still work great! And best of all we offer these to you for just $1, INCLUDING postage. HOWEVER, minimum order is three (no maximum). You can order them at the address above and enjoy this wonderful product at a bargain price! Announcing new item: “My Favorite Fabrics” note cards More than just note cards, these note cards use real fabric as the actual design and are like little gifts, each one unique and beautiful. Six note cards in a pack with matching envelopes They make perfect gifts for anyone-- but especially your sewing friends. They will love them! Price: $7.95 for the pack of six, includes cost of postage The Virtual Quilt 14 W hen you talk to Jackie Robinson, even in the relatively “removed” medium of e-mail or an online chat, what strikes you about her is her energy and enthusiasm for quilting. In her nearly 30-year career, she has been involved in almost every conceivable aspect of quilting -- as a quilter, a teacher, a designer, an author (and publisher!) and a quilt shop owner. While only one or two of these commitments would be enough to wear out most of us, Jackie draws energy from all aspects of quilting and returns that energy many fold through her design work, books and teaching. As for many quilters, there was a vestigial tradition in her family that she built upon: “My very *FIRST* quilt was actually a completion in 1972 of a quilt started by my mother-in-law, her Mom, and her sisters sometime in the ‘30s. I found it in her cedar chest, and finished it. Trust me - it is NOT well done; in fact it’s downright awful! But, hey <g> everyone starts somewhere! That quilt is presently possessed by my ‘former’ (and terrific!) sister-in-law, and she has promised that it will end up with one of my children some day. “My paternal grandmother was a great quilter, and I have her Dresden Plate. She passed away when I was 7, so I have only a small memory of her, and no memory of ever seeing her quilt. I also have a doll quilt she made for me when I was 4 or 5. It’s a simple one-patch with no batting, and very special for the obvious reasons.” Jackie describes Quilter Prole herself as “primarily a traditional piecer, though I often put a new ‘spin’ or ‘twist’ on an older idea, either in the way it’s assembled, the color choices, or by adding or subtracting a corner or side, or something which makes it slightly different . . . . I never really change directions <g> though often take side trips.” Her “side trips” have taken her in a number of creative directions which have led to major books and classes she has taught. “In 1984, I became interested in the art glass Frank Lloyd Wright designed for his Prairie Style homes of 1900-1910. I developed several quilts based on that art glass, and 18 of them are in my book, Quilts in the Tradition of Frank Lloyd Wright. The leading of the ‘glass’ is pieced in - not appliqued, and the technique is one which applies to many other areas of patchwork. Therefore, it’s a popular class which I teach. “Additionally, my Wright lecture is quite well known, and numerous of my teaching jobs are based around it. I literally ‘put him on’ as I tell his life story, show a sampling of his work, and show and talk about the 18 quilts in the book. “Following the Wright quilts, I dabbled for a while in Art Deco style, applying the narrow strips - though this time to curves. I still make an occasional Art Deco piece and Wright pieces, though those are for my OWN pleasure or for show pieces.” More recently, Jackie has become known for her development of a style of three-dimensional piecing. “The Three-Dimensional patchwork started a little over 4 years ago when a customer came into my shop carrying a 3-D Bow Tie she had made that morning at a guild meeting. I admired it, and she asked me how she’d made it! Of course, I didn’t have a ‘clue’ so we Jackie Robinson The Virtual Quilt 15 unstitched enough to figure it out. I found that piece incredibly exciting, and within a few days I’d devised lots of ways to handle folded fabric in the seams. I quickly made some quilts using this technique - just couldn’t stop. It was like Popcorn - and I kept wanting more. Quilter’s Newsletter Mag selected one, Quiltmaker took another, and I printed 3 others as patterns right away. Then started working on the Sampler idea, realizing it was the most flexible way of playing with 3-D. It became a workshop on my travel schedule, and within a month or two I noticed I was teaching it ALWAYS when I traveled, and the book was bo rn. I very seldom teach somewhere without 3-D being included. “As other 3-D designs came into being, I also started playing with the rectangles that would produce the long skinny diamonds in Storm At Sea. They are definitely different than the patches in the Sampler, and a bit ‘floppier’ which also makes them ‘curvier’ and works great to show the rollicking sea in Storm At Sea quilts. “I still play in 3-D regularly. Recently added a wonderful 3-D waving Flag, and brand new is a 3-D Turkey with incredible tail feathers! It’s just SUCH FUN that ideas pop up routinely! (Some aren’t worth developing <g> but I think the Turkey will be popular, and the Flag certainly is!)” As for where all these ideas come from, Jackie has developed a few techniques of her own to keep them flowing: “I’ve never been able to ‘force’ a design. That may be because I have no training in art or design, but mainly I think that ‘forced’ things tend to look or feel contrived. (My degree is in merchandising - I was a buyer for dept stores when younger) I’ve had only one art class, and that was in advertising art - doing ad layouts, etc. “Some days ideas just ‘POP’ and they come faster than I can even get them onto paper (or in the computer!) Other days I can’t make something work for the life of me. Though, I’ve learned that getting OUT of my sewing room and into the fresh air is the best way to get rid of cobwebs in my head. We live in the country (in Durango, Colorado) - on purpose! It took a long time to move through the accumulated real estate values until we could afford acreage and big vistas. Jery designed and built our home 5 years ago. It took him a year to build it, and for that year we were totally on my income - talk about incentive to produce! <gg> I can lace up the hiking boots and take off across country. PERFECT SQUARE Make perfect half-square triangles like a pro with PERFECT SQUARE. Perfect Square is a REUSABLE iron-on transfer. Each sheet can be used at least 10 times, usually many more. For a sample, FREE pattern and complete brochure, please send $3 to Monica Novini, 24111 Olivera Drive, Mission Viejo, CA 92691. Patterns have been written especially for PERFECT SQUARE and the necessary sheets to make the quilt are included in the pattern. The PERFECT SQUARE website has been updated to include information on all products and patterns complete with pictures. Credit cards are accepted. Also included are pictures of Monica’s art quilts and links to really cool quilt sites. http://www.perfectsquare.net The Virtual Quilt 16 “We also take long drives around here. That makes for a really relaxing day, and by the end of any of those, I’ve always had at least one new idea - either for design or marketing or something which helps my business. So, taking a total ‘day off’ - getting away - works well for me. I’m certain it’s the relaxing that does the trick - just letting go, and that makes room for new ideas. . . . Basically, all the design in this world boils down to coming from one source - Nature. So, embrace it - see where it’ll lead you!” Somewhere along the line Jackie’s merchandising background and interest drew her into the ownership of a quilt shop. She calls it “Eighteen & one/half years of Quilt Shop Heaven! I’ve owned and operated Two quilt shops, have now sold both, and both are alive and well. “’In’ Stitches is in Ballwin, Missouri - a suburb of St. Louis. It opened in March of 1982, and in 1988 we sold it to Pam & Garry Bryan. At that time, Jery and I had chosen to move to Durango. Within a month after the move, Animas Quilts opened in the fall of 1988, and was eventually sold, in 1999, to Pat and John Nicholas, when Jackie’s teaching and writing career became too demanding. Even though she is no longer doing it, Jackie remembers it fondly: “Owning and operating a quilt shop is more than a full-time job. And, it’s serious business <g>. Over the 18-1/2 years I spent in that business I watched many shops come and go. The survivors are the ones who view it as a business rather than a hobby. “I loved absolutely every minute of it! Would still be a shop owner if I hadn’t been so fortunate to have this teaching career, The marketing and merchandising of a quilt shop is a daily challenge, and that makes it a whirlwind of fun. The customers are absolute ‘gems’, and my staff was the ‘best’. “With a degree in merchandising, in total I’ve spent over 30 years in retail. GEE! Where has The Virtual Quilt it gone! While it’s a constant challenge, and I found it very stimulating, the demands of always having new samples, creative displays, etc. are numerous. And the bottom line in retail - well it’s just slim, that’s all there is to it. The only way a retailer gets rich is by sheer volume, so quilt shop owners work at a labor of love, and love it is. We get a reasonable living from it, and enjoy it so much we’re willing to take home less than we would in another industry.” As if the challenges of retail weren’t enough, Jackie has also been a successful selfpublishing author for nearly 20 years. “It happened by accident, because I came up with Weaver Fever, and it was tiny and not a candidate for the big publishers. Once I learned how to draw in the graphics programs, how to format the book in that program, and then that the big distributors would buy from me - it just simply made sense. “I’d bought a small Macintosh while in St. Louis, and have upgraded through the years to the powerful Mac I run now. Desktop Publishing has improved by leaps & bounds, and the programs I work in are fabulous. “When I’m working on a new design, I draw it completely in the graphics program. Then math it out, and write simple instructions, including complete cutting details, etc. That all happens before I ever touch the fabric. Then, using my sketchy instructions, I cut and start stitching, bouncing back and forth between my sewing machine and computer so the instructions are expanded as I go. And, I get to proof the math on the actual piece. Pretty groovy! Also, while stitching, I’m creating the individual illustrations to show how to make it. Timing is perfect - I have all those small parts available to look at. “Once it’s completed, I place the text in the page layout program and start adding the illustrations where they go, and it’s done! Then, it’s time for proofing. I have two special people doing this. One is an avid quilter, and great at 17 math, so she checks that and also lets me know if the instructions don’t make sense. The other has a MFA in English. She has only made 1 or 2 quilts and so knows the lingo, but isn’t fluent in it. She makes certain my words are correct (So I won’t sound foolish!) and also lets me know if she understands what I’m describing. On top of that, they are two of my favorite people, and I genuinely trust their judgment.” In addition to her book publication, Jackie has also been published in all of the major quilting magazines in the U.S. and around the world. Her credits include Quilter’s Newsletter Magazine, Patchwork Quilt Tsushin (Japan), Australian Patchwork and Quilting, and many others! Jackie was also one of the earliest quilters to establish a website, back in the early nineties. First hosted by the World Wide Quilting Page, Jackie has since established her own domain at http://www.animas.com. Of the influence of the internet, she says that its primary contribution has been “ACCESS ! The quilting world gets information SO MUCH FASTER this way, and I reach quilters who are not necessarily shop customers. Also, there is so much product available these days, no shop can carry it all, so I have an opportunity to show my wares to quilters whose local shops don’t carry my books or patterns. “We do a printed brochure on an annual basis, but I can make changes on my website instantly, and cherish that opportunity.” For all of her enthusiastically pursued activities, Jackie gives a special measure of her devo- tion to her teaching. Of its impact on her quilting, she says, simply: “Gee. The teaching drives it. It’s my contact with the real world of quilters. Through those sessions with them I see what they want, need, enjoy - and hopefully learn from those experiences. “My newest book, Favorites!, came directly from the classroom experiences with lots of guilds. I’ve discovered that jillions of quilters are basically ‘self-taught’ and in many cases, they work way too hard at their passion. Because they haven’t taken many classes, lots haven’t learned the shortcuts which make our work not only more efficient, but also cleaner. So, I wrote a book designed to show them how to efficiently cut, piece, etc. It’s only been available for a month and the reorder activity is astounding especially since it’s summer and quilting’s slow season. “Another way the teaching affects my quilting is simple DESIRE. <g> When I spend several days in a classroom, I’m chomping at the bit to get back to my sewing machine. It just always seems they are having sooo much fun, and there I am, telling and showing them how, but missing all the close encounters with my Bernina. So, when I get home, I can hardly wait to stitch something!” Whether she is having close encounters with her Bernina, her Macintosh, or the Colorado mountain countryside, Jackie is a dynamo of creativity and enthusiasm, and quilting is the engine that has driven that passion for so many years. PINETREE QUILTWORKS, Ltd. http://www.quiltworks.com PineTree Quiltworks has been growing by leaps and bounds and has made a major commitment to keeping certain “staples” in stock. These include the full lines of: Marbles by Patrick Lose for Hi Fashion, Basic Realities (formerly called Palette) by Jinny Beyer for RJR, Fossil Fern (from Benartex), the 1895 series batiks from Hoffman ... Please stop by PineTree’s store at www.quiltworks.com, click on What’s New to see the latest additions, and remember to make a bookmark! The Virtual Quilt 18 COMMENTS, QUESTIONS, NEWS, IDEAS, BRICKBATS? Like any news publication, TVQ is always hungry for information about new developments in the area we are trying to cover. If you have an idea for a story, or want to tell the world about something you are doing which relates to computers and quilting, we’d like to hear about it. We’d like news of new classes starting up to teach quilt design on computers, or new approaches to that teaching. New products, maillists, World Wide Web pages, etc., are all fair game, and we’d appreciate any tips you can provide. Send your tips by e-mail to rholland@planetpatchwork.com. If you have a comment about an article, a complaint or a correction, we’re glad to hear that, too, and may publish some comments as letters to the editor. Again, these may be sent to rholland@planetpatchwork.com. The Virtual Quilt A Newsletter for Computing Quilters Editor and Publisher: Robert Holland, Decatur, GA Copyright (c) 2000 by Robert Holland. All rights reserved. This file may not be reproduced in any form except to be printed out for the personal use of the subscriber without the expressed, written consent of the copyright holder. Layout: C. Holland HOW TO ADVERTISE IN TVQ Our advertisers, both here in the newsletter and at the TVQ website, have found TVQ to be an effective and economical way to reach thousands of online quilters. Ads in the newsletter are only $5 each (up to 100 words, inquire about longer ads) or 3 for $10, and there are also attractive packages available which combine newsletter and website ads. For more information e-mail rholland@planetpatchwork.com or visit http://www.planetpatchwork. com/adcard.htm. We specialize in helping small quilting-related businesses gain exposure on the internet. The Virtual Quilt 19