Sunday, 22 June 2014

CQA/ACC Member Jo Vandermey

There is nothing more thrilling than to get an email from a member telling me that she is guest blogging on a very creative blog and asking if I would be interested in taking a look?   "Definitely" was my response, and boy was I glad I did!


Meet Jo Vandermey who blogs at the 'sewing geek blogspot' here.  She was a guest blogger over here. This is where you need to go and see what this quilter has done with Lutrador!

Jo tells us a little about herself.
I continue to quilt regular quilts, I am experimenting in the Fibre Art/Mix Media realm. I am a fabric junkie... I named my self the sewing geek because I like learning ... I am always curious about how to do things. 

I belong to two traditional quilt guilds Smithville Quilters Guild and Grimsby Quilters Guild. Two small town guilds in my area. I love the camaraderie!

I belong to a Small group of 4 individuals called the Fabrigos. We started meeting this January and we seem to click. We just completed a group entry to submit to Fibre Content 2014 so no pictures can be shown yet.

I am an individual member of CQA/ACC. I actually joined for the magazine but love the blog. 

I am a member of SAQA and go to the local parlour meetings 4 times a year in Burlington.

I am a wife of 28 years to the most patient man I know – mom to three wonderful kids and one daughter in law. My last quilt was for a wedding present to a couple who are like my own kids. It is almost finished... my best friend and I are hand quilting it for them. And because we pass it back and forth it has taken awhile.  My next quilt will be the wedding quilt for my son and daughter in law. They are patient with me. In between I work on my art quilting

To see her work,  check Jo out and be sure to leave her a comment!

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Walk To Brock #9


Fantastic work, everyone! We squeaked into Brock University in St. Catharines, ON just under the wire. Whew!! And what a journey this has been. We have been on the road since last September.  Our challenge was to travel from Mile Zero in Victoria BC to St. Catharines ON by way of Inuvik NT, inch by inch, based on your finished quilt measurements. When we got to Inuvik, our Regional Representative, Shona Barbour and her guild members mailed local souvenirs to 24 guilds across Canada, chosen at random.




115 guilds, groups and individuals participated during the last ten months. I received over one thousand emails with your inches, your stories, your photos and, of course, your weather reports. Each month, we accumulated on average half a million inches. 

The GRAND TOTAL of inches as of June 11, 2014 is 4,999,138.25. This is amazing! That represents a lot of busy Canadian quilters.


Now that we are finally here, we will be enjoying all aspects of Quilt Canada 2014 and we hope you do too. The Trend-Tex quilts and the National Juried Show entries will be posted on the website under Galleries. Keep an eye out for them!

So that’s it for inches this year. A BIG thank you to everyone who participated. It was a lot of fun. There was so much positive feedback from all of you, over the 10 months and millions of inches - stay tuned for next year’s challenge. 

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

Fun Tips and Giggles #17


Do you ever want to peruse the internet for ideas but not sure quite where to look?

Here are two fantastic sources of inspiration.  The first is pinterest.  Think of this as a giant board that you can tack (pin) all your favourite ideas onto and come back to them.

You can also use it just for browsing and do not have to create an account for yourself.  If you decide to create an account, then you can create topic boards to keep your pins organized.  This means you can have different topics to 'pin' favourite items when you do a search.  Say you create a board called 'quilts with buttons'. Type that in the search engine and it will show you many images of quilts with buttons. You can click on a picture and 'pin' it to your board.


Warning, it is very addictive and hours can slip by quickly.

The second place to find creativity is Craftsy project page or free pattern page.

Craftsy is a huge online learning centre that has expanded to include patterns, blogs and just a ton of projects for you to look at and be inspired.   There are almost 37,000 quilted projects on the site. Go and check it out and maybe even sign up (free) and put up your own project!



And a little giggle for you!

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

It is with regret that we were informed of the passing of CQA/ACC member Eunice McLeod.


Ms. McLeod had been sewing since she was 4 years old.  Her quilts have been exhibited at numerous shows across Canada including quilt conferences, SCACA Quilt and Rug Fairs, York Heritage Celebration of Quilts and the 1st Canadian Contemporary Quilt Show.


Eunice has served in many capacities with the Simcoe Arts and Crafts Association and was a charter member of CQA/ACC and the Simcoe County Quilters’ Guild. She taught church women, guild members and neighbouring guilds. Much of her teaching was done on a voluntary basis.

As Education Director of CQA/ACC she was responsible for the ‘Standards of Quiltmaking’ booklet. She also designed our CQA/ACC logo. Her original block was kept in the archives for several years until recently when it was decided that it should be showcased at every Quilt Canada.  It was mounted and framed behind glass and is on display at each of our annual conferences at the CQA/ACC table.



In 1991 Eunice McLeod won the coveted Dorothy McMurdie Award.


Sunday, 11 May 2014

Walk To Brock #8

Woohoo, we made it to Thunder Bay, ON!

Fantastic work, everyone! I’m receiving large inch amounts as you get ready for your quilt shows. We burst though the final provincial border and landed in Thunder Bay, home of member guild Thunder Bay QG, who contributed a large number of inches to help get us here.  

Visiting Fort William Historical Park would be lots of fun for a day as would hiking in Kakebeka Falls Provincial Park to see the second highest falls in Ontario.

With a good push, we should be able to get to Brock University in time for this year’s Quilt Canada conference.  The deadline for reporting your last inches is June 11/2014 – the opening day of Quilt Canada 2014. Inches reported after June 11 will not be counted.  We are so close, let's do this!

Notes received from the guilds:
The Orchard Valley Quilters Guild's says that even if we don't get all the way to Brock, at least the challenge was an inspiration for quilters to show their work - and some used it as a drive to finish those UFO's.

St. Thomas guild sent these photos of some of their quilts that were measured for this challenge. Apparently they have good fun doing the challenge each month as one member walks around with the tape measure and another member copies down all the inches and adds them up.




Come on quilters, rev up those sewing machines, shine up those thimbles, and let's quilt our way to Quilt Canada 2014!  We can do it!


Saturday, 3 May 2014

Fun Tips and Giggles #16

Did you see the incredible display of Trend-Tex quilts and wearables from our 2014 'Modern Ways' challenge?   It is going to be simply breathtaking having them all hanging in one show!  Thank you to all the members that participated!  This is our biggest number of entries ever!

I was on YouTube and the number of quilt tutorials is simply staggering.

For a simple yet effective block, here is a 6 minute tutorial on the Disappearing 4 Patch Block.

Ever wonder how to 'Quilt As You Go'?  Check out this video!

Now this has to be my all time favourite tutorial for making a fun and fast and oh so creative quilt.   It is just a 4 minute tutorial... you have to look at it!


And your little giggle for the day=)



Tell me at least a few of you can relate to this picture?


Jackie W.

Friday, 25 April 2014

Karen Thatcher


Karen Thatcher won second place at the National Juried Show in the Original Abstract Design Pictoral category last year, and she didn't get fully on our radar.  When she won an award in one of our member's challenge, someone did some digging and Ms. Thatcher got noticed.  We are so glad that we can bring this amazing CQA/ACC member to the forefront!

Karen Thatcher is a remarkable woman and after a traumatic brain injury where concentration, short term memory and organizational thinking were compromised, Karen needed a tool to move her injury forward.  That tool was quilting.  After some time the lessons learned at Brain Injury rehab helped Karen understand that solutions could easily be adapted to quilting needs.
Karen’s latest project is a series entitled “My BC”.


The “My BC” series by Karen Thatcher. 
I live in a small ski community where everyone plays outside.  Most of my friends participate in at least 4 sports, even at my age and you are more likely to find me on a hike than in a mall. So “My BC” quickly became how and where we play in BC.  I knew that my friends might not have been to my hiking trail but surely they would have been to one just like it.  My mantra quickly became “everyone recognizes this place.”

Biking BC


Working with silk for this series was a different challenge but after I contacted J. Pattison Group. (a large Canadian conglomerate), about 4000 ties were donated, from their employees
I received the ties and took a month to prepare them and then to categorize each into color and value. Some ties came with a Windsor knot still tied.  All were clean and some were never used.  Actually there was one tie that had a $350 price tag on it and it was still in its wrapper. Only two needed to be tossed out.  In order to use them the silk needed to be stripped from the tie stiffening fabric. This doesn't sound like much but it takes about 2 minutes per tie....add it up - 4000 ties.

Fishing in BC

 17 bulk paper boxes came over 3 or 4 months, and in some of the boxes also came other very beautiful things.  There were a dozen handmade silk shirts all new, which I matched with a beautiful tie and took to the local employment center.  My thought was that they were far too usable to be chopping up.  There were 3 or 4 handmade kimonos.  Again, far too expensive to destroy so I gave them to women with breast cancer. One woman gave her wedding dress.  There were two layers of beautiful fabric measuring at least 7 meters at the hem.   
I was recently standing next to one of my quilts at a gallery, and I overheard two people talking about the whereabouts of ‘Hiking BC’ and the two were convince it was local.  I can tell you that it is nowhere.  It is just a figment of my imagination, memory and a couple of pictures “smooshed” together.

Hiking BC

 All of the “My BC” quilts have the same history. Each quilt progressively builds on the last, hopefully adding to my technical skill base making each quilt better.
Because I am not a professionally trained artist and because of the brain injury my techniques might be a little unconventional and sometimes inconsistent.

All my quilts have an idea or theme, hiking, fishing, sailing and are started with a roll of brown paper and a fat black felt pen both found at the local $1 store.  
I usually have a bunch of inspirational photos around...stuff I like, places I've been and paintings either masters, magazines or locals.   I decide what kind of trees and where they should go...maybe a mountain behind.  If I've seen a picture I particularly liked, maybe the layout or color catches my attention I might use that information.
For the BC series I did not use any specific photos. Keep in mind my outcome is never the same as the original.  The original rough drawing is the size of the finished quilt and is much like a child's drawing.  All of the artistic bits are figured out as I work. My work table accommodates a 4'x7' and everything fits flat on that and I try for less than 44" width for obvious reasons. I work as large as I can and then cut back after the quilting is complete.

Ski BC


I attack the piece in two ways.  I often start with drawing a rough design on fusible batting and migrate color chunks right to the batting following the drawing lines. Sometimes I migrate chunks of color to precut pattern pieces. These pieces are cut from pellon and then transfered to regular batting. Usually this is determined solely on the piece and what supplies I have. Once the background is complete, I add the shapes, layering things farthest away to closest. Deciding to add or not to add is always the best part.  Most times the placement has less to do with the original plan but how the background worked out. I finish with whatever ever needs to be done, extra leaves, branches and even the occasional house might be added. Rarely is the finished piece similar to the original.  In ‘Fishing BC’ the original didn't have long grass or tree root.

Written by Karen Thatcher.  Edited by Barbara Spence.