As you know Diane is dealing with more family health issues than anyone should have to face! And we are all praying for them!
In light of this we have decided to give Diane one less thing to worry about (an interview with me) and upload her original Karma Point Interview from a year ago!
Diane has been such an integral part of this club that she has now won the Karma Point twice! That says a lot in its self!
Here it the original interview - if any one would like to transcribe Diane's interview, feel free to send it through to me and I'll post it here, for those that can't listen for tecnological reasons ENJOY
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This is an interview I have been looking forward to doing for a long time! Having worked with Tennye at Quilting Weekly it is just fanastic to finally talk to her "live"
Tennye has also been kind enough to provide us with a written version of her answers to my questions - so those of you that can't 'hear' will be able to read
I'm sure you'll enjoy listening to Tennye as much as I enjoyed talking to her - she sounds just as lovely as I thought she would!
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And Tennye's written responses:
1) 1st Tennye can you tell us a little about your self? Where in the world do you live? Do you have any children? How many? ages? etc. Do you have any pets? Any other hobbies apart from quilting? Do you work? what work do you do?
Well, I am Tennye and I am from Cedar Park, Texas just northwest of Austin the
State Capital, where I was born and raised. My parents and I moved here in 1968
and they are still in the same house as they lived in then. I married in 1981 to
Charlie GiOtis and he had a son from a previous marriage. Together we have three girls.
In 2005 the child I put up for adoption when I was 16 found me and she has become a part
of our lives as well so I also have grand-children. So the kids ages are Emily 36, Christopher
32, Aislynn 25, Aften 23, and Brena 20 (almost 21) Emily is married to Ray Nixon and they
have two girls Beanna 11 and Alissa 10 this month. Brena is married to Justin Minks and they
have no children. Aislynn and Aften still live at home, they are both still working on getting
their education, and working full time. Aislynn is also a musician, she plays the guitar for
a church praise team. We have two cats Cali and Hydie, named after the flowers Cala Lily
and Hydrangea. Cali is a calico, and Hydie is a little orange kitty.
My girls and I are also scrapbookers and for one of Brena's wedding gifts we made her a
cookbook that is recipes from family and friends and we did pages like scrapbook pages
for each recipe. We asked the family to end or bring their favorite or one of Justin or
Brena's favorite foods that they make so she could have the recipes to make them for him
and for herself. I can't tell you how many times she has called me from the grocery store
to ask what goes in a dish she likes that I make while she is shopping. LOL
I work part time at the Bernina set in at Hancock Fabrics. That means we are a store inside
a store. I sell Bernina sewing machines and teach quilting and sewing through the
store. I also make most of the quilts for the store to demonstrate what can be done with the machines.
I have a blog on line that I am using to teach quilting, but so far no one has found it. I
have not had any hits and no one has ever commented on it. I am hesitant to tell anyone about
it because I get busy sometimes and don't have time to write. So I go months without writing
and posting on it. I also make quilts for people at home. I am currently in the middle of a large
commission making quilts out of a mans cloths who has passed away. His wife wants to give them to
his children as a gift for Christmas to honor Dad. She also wants me to make as many baby quilts
as I can out of what is left so she will have them for the grandchildren as they come along.
2) How long have you been quilting?
Since 1980's..
3) How did you get interested in quilting?
I have always had the great quilt that my Great-grandmother and grandmother and great aunt and my mom
made. As well as one my Dad's grandmother made too. I always loved them and wanted to someday learn to
quilt so I could make one for my kids. Then I was at a Bible study and the speaker talked about how to
quilt. I took three pages of notes form her 45 min. talk. I started to check the library for books
and to look at the book store for some too. This was all before I had a computer or access to one, so I had to do all my research the old fashioned way. I got a flyer in the mail for a community class at
the local middle school in night a week for six weeks. I signed up for it and made arrangements for my
daughter to be taken care of by my grandmother. I learned the churn dash block and I learned to hadn
quilt. I have taken one or two other classed on patterns that I fell in love with and could only get by
taking the class. Other than that I am pretty much self taught. I did watch a lot of public TV in the early days and Georgia Bonesteel and her Quilt as you go method is still one of my favorites. I truly
love to be able to finshe the quilt as I put it together. I have made many quilts that way and even done
a T-shirt quilt that way. If you are hand quilting it is something you can take with you, if you are using the machine it is done easily on any machine, you don't need a long arm or special big
throat for quiting even a king size quilt.
4) What excites you most about quilting?
I think what excites me most about quilting is that it will be here for decades and maybe centuries after I
am gone. It is something we can pass on to our children and teach then to make for their children as well.
We have been given a legacy and we can pass it on. It is timeless.
5) Is there any thing about quilting that you find particularly challenging?
Yes, I find applique to be a very challenging aspect of quilting. It is one that many people would like me to teach them
to do and I am not good at it and not particularly fond of it, so it becomes the challenge. I have made myself learn more
about it and do it so that I can not only teach it, but maybe enjoy it more. I surely respect those who do
it as the work involved is tedious.
6) What fabrics do you enjoy quilting with and why?
I am sort of old fashioned when it comes to fabric choices. I use only cotton, and it is only because I have seen what can
happen if you use other fabrics and they shrink at a different rate, or not at all and you have one that does shrink. I also hav
have a quilt that someone else made for me with satin and other fabrics in it and the other fabrics have fraid out or just worn
out and had to be replaced or repaired.
As for color I am partial to bright colors and find myself leaning toward purples and pinks far too often. I have learned though when I am just buying fabric for stash building that I will buy ugly fabrics sometimes. Oddly they end up being just the right one to make a quilt shine. I am always surprised when it happens too. You would think I would have gotten used to it by now. I have seen it happen over and over.
7) Do you usually use a pattern when you are making a quilt or do you prefer to create it from scratch?
I do both, it depends on who I am making it for and what the purpose of the quilt is. I creat my own patterns pretty often by finding a square I like or two and putting them together. I have one in progress right now that is a black and white quilt and I just took two blocks I liked and put them together to make a quilt. I tried severl blocks until I was satisfied with the look I wanted, then I made it up and saved it in my computer. I actually made up two different ones and I will most likely make
both of them eventually. I have a softeware pkg. that is made by EQ, but isn't EQ. It has about 200 or so blocks in it and you can make your own designs with it. Then I also have access to the embroidery software that we sell at work and it has a whole quilt section and I don't even know how many blocks are in that. One day I would like to buy the EQ6 and have it to use. I have to finish paying off some debt first though. LOL
8) Where do you source most of your quilting material?
I guess I already answered this mostly, but I also use books and now the internet. Kathy has given the forum so many great websites that I use a lot of them, and in the early days of Quilting Weekly I also signed up for Penny Halgrens web site and I learned of other block sites while I was on hers too. I had to give her up though as it cost too much for me.
9) What kinds of quilts do you prefer making and why?
Well, my daughter says I make pretty quilts more than utillity quilts. She would prefer I made more big cuddly quilts and I don't. I make smaller quilts like sofa quilts is what I call them they are not twin size and not lap size but they are big enough to get under. Even when I make a baby quilt I make it big enough that the baby will be 7 before they out grow it and can use it for a long time. I would have said I make quilts you can use. I want my quilts to be used for a long time and I want the people who receive them to love them and use the for a long time. I think the reason Aften said that is because to answer your next question early I give most of the quilts I make away so the ones I have here at the house are the pretty ones I have made and not the cuddly ones. Also I have a large stack that need to be quilted and I have not had the time. I seem to get carried away with the process of making the tops and then not getting around to the quilting part. Not because I don't like to or want to it just takes me longer to do that and then I get side tracked.
10) do you mostly make quilts for yourself or for others?
Others
11) How do you find the time to quilt?
Well, as I have said I don't always find time to quilt , but to piece. That is another reason I am a big fan of the quilt as you go method of quilting. That way when it is finished it really is finished. I have two that I have cut our right now and I am seriously thinking about using that method for them. I do as I say have a part time job so I can quilt on my days off if I have not filled those days with teaching jobs. I also can sew at work if all of my projects for the store are completed. So I do work there some days when I am between projects. Right now I am working on a giant Dahlia at the store and it has been more challenging than I had expected it to be. I have put it away several times just because it was frustrating and I needed to do something else so I didn't make a mess of it. That is one I have wanted to make for years so when the boss bought it I was pretty excited, but now I see why it is so expensive for the pattern. I find quilting is very relaxing and I wish I had more time to hand quilt. I usually end up at the machine instead because it is faster. That is sad too because the hand quilting is part of the legacy I want to pass on to future generations.
12) Where do you do most of your quilting? Do you have a quilting area that is always set-up?
When My Youngest daughter moved out to go to college I moved my sewing stuff into her room. I have a Little Gracie II quilting frame and my husband built me a table with folding legs out of a 4x8 sheet of hard board with a laminate top. We cut it down to the size I needed and put folding legs on it. I have it set up so that if needed we can put an air mattress in the room for company when the kids come in from out of town. When the whole family is here we have people all over the house anyway so it doesn't matter that Brena doesn't have her room any more. LOL
13) What quilting projects do you have going at the moment?
I am working on the commision to make quilts from a mans cloths. I have two that are ready to quilt and I have a pattern for the next two. I have one out of his jeans and one out of his slacks and shorts. Then I will make as many small baby quilts as I can out of what is left over for any future babys that might come along. I am also working on a t-shirt quilt, and I have a blog that I am teaching quilting on and I am using the rail fence for that I have that one almost complete. I am also making coffee sleves so we can all go green and stop using cardboard sleeves on our Starbucks coffees. I am kind of addicted to it and I wanted to stop using so many cardboard sleeves.
14) Do you have any special quilting projects planned in the next year?
Yes, I am wanting to write more classes and do another trapunto quilt in the traditional trapunto method. I already have the fabric bought and am ready to start that one. I would also like to get some of my quilts quilted. I have a quilt planned for my daughter in law and son in laws.
I have so many quilts in my head I would just like to get some of them out and made this year. It is always a good thing to see one or two completed.
15) What else can you tell us about your quilting addiction?
I used to do other things, and now I would rather Quilt than do any of the other things, I used to do.
16) Obviously you have been a very active member of the Creative Quilting Club forum.. How have you found the club and especially the forum?
I love the Quilting Weekly forum, and the ladies I have met there. I love having friends from all over the world, and know that they will be there for me any time I need them. Kathy, is always there with a website or a good word to help us out when we need to know something.
It is great to know if you have a problem and you need some help you can always count on the ladies on this site.
Ok, here it is - In Kathys words Enjoy.. well Done Kathy!!
1)1st Kathy can you tell us a little about your self? Where in the world do you live? I live in the central part of Vermont which is in the northeastern part of the US. My husband’s family has a saw mill and a beef farm with Angus Herford crosses. I have lived in Vermont all but a short time after I got out of college.
Do you have any children? How many? ages? etc. I have two grown daughters in their twenties. The younger one is married and has a 9 month old son (the three of them have just moved back in with us, until their house can be finished). The older one has rooms on the second floor.
Do you have any pets? We have one three colored cat, named Pepper. Plus, the younger daughter has her cat here right now.
Do you have any other hobbies apart from quilting?I do not really have any other hobbies, though I have had a spell of making cards lately. I can see why people get hooked on it. I have just been using images from the quilting catalogs I receive along with some card stock that was given to me. I do not like to throw away thinks that could have a use.
Do you work? What work do you do? I have always been a stay at home mother, since the girls were born. I never went back out to work when my daughters were grown. Seasonally there is work for me to do on the farm. We grow a big garden to feed the family that has now grown to 10 people. I mostly help harvest the vegetables and the fruits. We make maple syrup in the spring and I help some with that. I use to help with haying, but that came to an end this year when we bought a round baler. Now the hay is all handled with machinery. Now I have my grandson in the morning while his mom works (he goes to my in-laws in the afternoon).
EXTRA QUESTIONS: 2) How do you find time, being a "farm wife" had injured husband for several weeks, 90+ year father in law, in and out of hospital, and family next door, babysitting grandson PLUS planting, picking, and canning all the produce they grow, yet she makes beautiful quilts, and is online everyday... ? I really don’t make very many quilts. I have finished one for my grandson so far this year, started another for a Christmas gift and one more planned for the same. I don’t try to quilt in the summer; I am just too busy. I don’t do much planting, except the flowers. My husband and his brother do most of the planting; my brother-in-law does much of the weeding and all of the transplanting. I help my sister-in-law with the picking. The guys helped a lot with bumper crops the strawberries and the blueberries this year. The garden is starting to slow down now it is autumn. In a little bit I will have to get back to quilting. I am more addicted to being online, than quilting at this point; I can not stay away long.
EXTRA QUESTIONS: 3) I would love to hear Kathy talk about her garden!!!!! We get to see such lovely pictures from there and so I bet she would have plenty to say about that? It has been harder to find time for the garden this year with my grandson to care for.It is rather neglected. We have lots of gladiolas and dahlias that we plant each year and dig in the fall. I plant some annuals, too. Many of these I grow from seeds that I save each year (zinnias, marigolds, poppies, nasturtium). We share a yard with my in-laws and there are perennials there, also.
4) How long have you been quilting? I think is has been about 10 years. Though, I did make a small baby quilt as a child.
5) How did you get interested in quilting? I had a grandmother who quilted and a great grandmother, too. I really got interested when my younger daughter made her first quilt as a project at school when she was 10 years old. I had a spell of sewing clothing, but my daughters didn’t really like what I made, so it was a change from that.
6) What excites you most about quilting? The colors and the designing excite me the most. I love to see how everything goes together. Colors attract me to fabric and flowers.
7) Is there any thing about quilting that you find particularly challenging? I part I like the least is the layering of the sandwich. It is hard on my knee to do big quilts on the floor.
8) What fabrics do you enjoy quilting with and why? I like cotton the best; it feels nice to handle and it the easiest to sew.
EXTRA QUESTION: 9) Quilting wise, I would be interested to know more about her sewing room? My sewing room/computer room/ storage room is stacked up with boxes from cleaning out the bedroom for my daughter, her husband and son. I have a sunny west facing window, between the computer and the sewing machine that looks out on the yard between the houses. My Singer treadle machine located there. My daughter’s industrial Bernina is in the kitchen/ dinning area right now.
EXTRA QUESTION: 10) How she stores her fabric and where does she buy most of her fabric? Most of my stash is stored in copy paper boxes now. Scraps are sorted by size in zip lock bags or by color in small boxes. I do have a small dresser that I may be able to empty soon and put sewing supplies in out of the reach of little fingers. I have bought most of my fabric at Wal-mart and Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft Store. A great deal of my stash was given to me by various family and friends.
11) Do you usually use a pattern when you are making a quilt or do you prefer to create it from scratch? I usually pick out a pattern I like and then choose my own colors and layout.
12) What kinds of quilts do you prefer making and why? I am fascinated by patterns that appear curved, but are made with straight lines.
13) Do you mostly make quilts for yourself or for others? I mostly make them for others. We only have one of my quilts that has not been given to someone; that was an early one that was made with secondhand fabric.
14) How do you find the time to quilt? That is a good question. I haven’t lately. I just do it when I make up my mind to do it. I do have a deadline with Christmas gifts. They need to be finished by about the first of December. Sometimes meals are late and the house not as clean as it could be!
15) What quilting projects do you have going at the moment? I have a twin sized bed quilt in the works. The center is pieced, but I need fabric for borders and the back now. The other one will be a boat themed wall hanging.
16) Do you have any special quilting projects planned in the next year? I have one more family quilt to do for a Christmas gift, unless one of my brothers gets a new girlfriend.
17) What else can you tell us about your quilting addiction? I am very addicted to quilting forums. The people there are so friendly and I learn so much from others. I am not hooked on the buying of fabric; I try to buy what I need for the projects I am working on and only then do I buy if I don’t find what I need in my stash. The exceptions are when something I really like is on sale or my stash of green is depleted.
18) Obviously you have been a very active member of the Creative Quilting Club forum for a long time now.. How have you found the club and especially the people? I have enjoyed the forum very much and the people are very friendly and helpful. The members could improve it if more of them contributed. Even those with the free subscriptions can chat. There are enough members so somebody could be on the site at any one the time to extend a welcome to new people and old.
First, Debra can you tell us a little about your self? Where in the world do you live? Oregon, which is the northwest coast, in a little city called Beaverton. I have lived here all my life except for 6 years. We lived in central Washington and after 6 years moved back to Beaverton.
Was there a change from Oregon to Washington? Yes, it was not a good change. In central Washington you have 4 definite seasons with very, very hot summers, and often very cold winters, in spring you usually cool & very windy, fall is quite nice. Here we don’t often know you have gone into spring, you may go right into summer and often times you have nice falls then you go right into cold winters. You never know, but I would rather be here. I don’t do hot weather well, so I am glad to be out of Washington.
Do you have any children? I have 1 son, his name is Travis and he is 26. He was married last October. So he has his first anniversary coming up. .
Do you have any pets? 1 dog, he is 2 years old now, his name is Gus. He is a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel mixed with Cocker. He was suppose to be a pure bred, but he is much larger than most of the Cavalier’s. So after research we believe he is mixed with Cocker Spaniel. He is suppose to be only 19 pounds, but he is my 43 pound lap dog.
Any other hobbies apart from quilting? I use to do some painting on wood with my mom and my sister, but with my MS (Multiple Sclerosis) it’s hard to control the paints and it got frustrating, so I said forget it. So I usually do quilting or general sewing.
Do you work? I no longer work due to difficulties with my job and MS. It was best that I stop, so I didn’t hurt myself or wear myself out. I am on what they call Social Security Disability (SSDI).
What work did you do? I was an area manager in the food broker business and we would do merchandising in stores like Target, K-mart, Payless, and Rite Aid. I had a crew from about 43 people down to about 15. I would go to 9 different states, so I was on a plane 3 days out of the week and 1 week home. The last couple years due to company changes it was just in the state of Oregon and I was on the road.
How long have you been quilting? Well, probably a total of 2 years with very little to show for it. I seem to buy fabric more than I do anything else, or books. Well I procrastinate, I see things I want to do and get the material and pattern then I like the material so well I don’t like to cut it. So I just look at it, touch it, stack it up and mix it up. My husband says I am going nuts.
How did you get interested in quilting? My mother and sister said I needed something else besides working. Because if I wasn’t on the road I was here at home working because I worked out of the house. The companies I worked for were in Dallas, Texas. So I worked remotely, so like I said if I wasn’t out on the road I was here in the evening working. Then on the weekend I was working. They said, “You need something else to do”. So, they got me into it.
What excites you most about quilting? The fabric. I love fabric and I always have. The things you can create with one pattern, you can change the fabric, the colors, the textures and it looks totally different. I like the landscape quilts that you see people have done. That is what I would really like to do.
Is there any thing about quilting that you find particularly challenging? Yes, quarter inch seams! Something so easy as that quarter inch seam. You have to make sure when you are doing a 4 patch that everything goes together so nicely. You get all your corners together in the middle. You don’t want the quarter inch seams to flip out on the end and make sure you have a pin or seam ripper to hold the edge of the fabric down so that it doesn’t flip out on you.
What fabrics do you enjoy quilting with and why? I like the batiks. I go to a batik club once a month and I get about 13 fat quarters every month and a pattern that we have to do 13 blocks. We than take them back for a block exchange, so I will get 13 back after I turn my 13 in. This month the pattern is split rail I believe. I am guaranteed to get 13 FQ of different batiks.
7) Do you ever do it yourself, like design it yourself? I would love to, but I don’t know if I have the nerve to see what I would create. So, I haven’t done that yet.
Do you use a pattern? Oh, I have to use a pattern. I am not creative enough yet to do it on my own.
Do you change bits of it, or remain true to the pattern? I will change it up a little bit, but nothing drastic. I like the pattern to make sure I am doing everything correctly. Now once I really develop my quilting maybe I will venture out and create a pattern myself.
Where do you source most of your quilting material? I like to support the local quilt shops, so I have a couple right here near the house I go to. I go to Pioneer Quilts where I take the Batik class. The really nice one is called Fabric Depot is huge and they have really good prices. It is a bit far for me as it is clear across town so I don’t go there often.
Have you ever bought fabric online? Yes, I have found a company called Virginia Quilters that has done real well with what I need. Holly Hill Quilts out in Westland here, not close to me, but not far from me. I order some things from her. She has a really nice shop as well. I like ordering things online, but Virginia Quilters has a nice selection of fabrics.
What kinds of quilts do you prefer making and why? Well, I am making my daughter-in-law a lap quilt. Then I am going to do a quilt for my husband for the couch. One that you can use on cold winter nights. I am going to put flannel on the back so it is nice and comfortable for him.
Do you mostly make quilts for yourself or for others? For others. I like to make other things. I am making some other things for Shauna for her kitchen.
How do you find the time to quilt? Yes, again with MS you are limited to what you can do. I use to love to garden, but my son would scold me for gardening and mowing because he was afraid I was going to cut my toes or fall or trip. So he took that job away from me. Then it got so that I didn’t trust myself behind a lawn mower. I am just not able to do that anymore. Bending down and getting up off the ground is not easy to do. With MS you loose muscle strength and coordination to do those things. Sewing is the best pastime and playing with the dog. Most days I fell pretty good. I take my husband’s cleaning to the cleaners and grocery shopping in small spurts and have a list of things and go get that done. Sitting and leaning over the sewing machine or cutting table if your back gets tired then I get tired than that is not a good thing. Quilting makes retirement nice.
Where do you do most of your quilting? Do you have a quilting area that is always set-up? I do. I have my son’s old bedroom. I have moved into his room and it is all mine. I have a nice window that my sewing desk is across from the window and I have nice desk lamp. Then I have a floor lamp that I have in the corner, so it is really lit nicely. I can make as big a mess as I want to and shut the door.
What quilting projects do you have going at the moment?
I have a lap quilt that is Olivia, which is a girl pig I am making for Shauna. I am repairing a tent for my son. I am making a stand mixer cover and pot holders for Shauna and myself.
Do you have any special quilting projects planned in the next year? Yes, I would like to make Travis and Shauna an anniversary quilt. Then I would like to do a family memory quilt. The type with the different pictures with the family. I would like to have everybody sign the block that I make of their picture.
What else can you tell us about your quilting addiction? It is an addition for sure. The only thing I can tell you is you have to keep me out of the fabric stores. I just love the fabric. I don’t like to embellish anything, I just love the fabric the way it looks. When you put things together I like to try new things and not go any further, but just always try things. So that is a bad additions, not finishing something. I am creating UFO’s. Someday I will have to do something with them but I will do one block of something maybe two blocks of something then go on to something else. So if I want to finish anything I will have to make more blocks. I now have many blocks that I have gotten from this batik club that I have to figure out something to do with besides look at them in the plastic bag.
Obviously you have been a very active member of the Creative Quilting Club forum.. How have you found the club and especially the forum?
I think it is great, I love the weekly quilting, I love the idea of having the online classes since I don’t like to pack a sewing machine very far, so I have the opportunity to learn here at home. The forum is great, they are real supportive, they give great suggestions on things that you are doing. They remind you if you are trying to put a log cabin together to keep the light and darks or the mediums separate if that is what the block is to look like. They are just great women they are very encouraging. They are very positive and that is what I like.
I know you have been waiting with baited breathe for this interview
Here it is, you can finally learn even more about the adorable Jo...
English summer, we may get a good day sometimes.
1st Jo can you tell us a little about your self? Where in the world do you live? Do you have any children? How many? ages? etc. Do you have any pets? Any other hobbies apart from quilting? Do you work? what work do you do?
I live alone a widow of 11 years, in England, Near the Old Roman City of Bath, a Big Tourist attraction, I believe 2nd in country to Windsor Castle.
I have 1 daughter, 2 Grandsons, handsome Lads, over 6ft tall. They will break a few female hearts.
Yes I have my doggie, Shamwari, (South African for My Friend), nickname Shammy, Jack Russell, Patterdale cross, a sweetie, not a bad bone in his body.
As you will all know my garden is my big hobby after quilting.
How long have you been quilting?
I have been quilting for 12 years, before that did hand embroidery, stump work.
How did you get interested in quilting?
How did I get into quilting, a fluke, who knows where it came from. I belonged to a Craft Group, whilst living in South Africa for a few years. Saw ladies in group doing patchwork, I said no way am I going to play with pieces of fabric, Here I am Addicted.
What excites you most about quilting?
Fabric is exciting, to match, blend colours, gives a real buzz.
My Favourite has to be Appliqué, then of course the Crazy Crazy Patch, knee deep in scraps, add bead etc, absolute fun.
I did manage the Ornament Paper Piecing. WOW.
What kinds of quilts do you prefer making and why?
I have made quilts for my family, Caroline will not let Lads take their Quilts to Uni, she imagines others sat on bed with beer cans greasy take always, etc. Say no more. Cot quilts for charity, cushions for friends Birthdays, 2008 has to be Cushion Present Year from me.
Do you have any special quilting projects planned in the next year?
Next Project, to play with Ornaments received from all over the world. Thinking, just wait for Show & Tell.
Where do you do most of your quilting?
I quilt in my dining room, always a sewing room, glass patio doors give good light, looking at garden, fresh air on good warm days.
Pup sits with chin on door step, a good watch dog. He will get a treat for that duty.
Obviously you have been a very active member of the Creative Quilting Club forum.. How have you found the club and especially the forum?
The Club has been my life line, chat line made so many wonderful friends, soul mates.
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