FALL 2012 - International Quilt Association
Transcription
FALL 2012 - International Quilt Association
J OURNAL OF T HE I NTERNATIONAL Q UILT A SSOCIATION FALL 2012 The 2011 IQA JUDGED SHOW Judge’s Choice of Linda Taylor Bohin France Photo by Jim Lincoln Category sponsored by FIFI CAN HULA HOOP! (45" X 56.5") by V‘ LOU O LIVEIRA of Norman, Oklahoma, USA. Original design. con tents J OURNAL OF T HE I NTERNATIONAL Q UILT A SSOCIATION V O L 2 6 12 14 15 U M E 3 4 N U M B E R 1 letter from the president Singing “Quilters just wanna have fun!,” Stevii Graves preps you for the excitement at the upcoming International Quilt Festival in Houston and IQA’s important contributions to the show. the iqa files: rachel wetzler From geometric designs to pictorial works— with a generous helping of yellow fabric!— Wetzler’s “simply sensational” quilts run the gamut of styles and techniques. And that’s not even counting her needlework on lingerie and a furry bear costume! festival opportunities Do you know what perks and privileges your IQA membership gets you at Quilt Festival in Houston? Plenty! Also find out about IQA’s annual meeting and the return of Quiltapalooza. 2012 iqa teacher’s directory ballot box Cast your vote in the upcoming election for IQA Board Members! 18 winners gallery— art, pictorial Is that a quilt? Or a painting? Many novice viewers of pictorial quilts have a hard time believing what’s in front of them was made with fabric. See the winners from this category in last year’s judged show. 28 winners gallery— traditional pieced 40 younger quilters make the scene 44 from the iqa library The past is preserved in the winning quilts from this category in last year’s judged show— piece by piece. While the average age of a U.S. quilter is 62, there is an increasing number of younger artists in their 20s and 30s taking up the needle and machine. Megan Farkas, Luke Haynes, and Nora Ronningen are just three of these quilters who are putting their own creative stamp on the artform that brings both challenges and joy. Reviewed in this issue: New Ideas for Appliqué by Pat Sloan; Les Quilts Miniatures by Kumiko Frydl; and Patchwork Sassaman Style by Jane Sassaman. L E t t E R F R O M t H E P R E s i d E N t BOaRd OF diREctORs Dear members, president Stevii Graves Cyndi Lauper had it wrong when she sang, “Girls just wanna have fun.” She should have been singing, “Quilters just wanna have fun.” No matter where you go, you know you are in the quilt world when you hear peals of laughter followed by multiple people all talking at once. Total chaos, total fun. vice president education Pokey Bolton vice president finance Brenda Groelz vice president membership Linda Pumphrey vice president public service Susan Brubaker Knapp secretary Pat Sloan treasurer Marti Michell founders Jewel Patterson (1910-2002) Helen O’Bryant (1914-2005) Karey Bresenhan Nancy O’Bryant jOURNaL staFF editorial director Nancy O’Bryant editor Bob Ruggiero writer Rhianna Griffin design and production Hunter-McMain, Inc. Where else, but at a quilt show, would you find eight women wearing matching lime green T-shirts, hot pink basketball shoes, and purple glitter antenna on their heads? You might also find a male quilter accompanied by a group of women wearing buttons that identify each as a member of “Bob’s Quilt Harem.” Standing next to the harem group is the couple, all dressed in black, seriously discussing the merits of three-ply thread versus two-ply thread. All having fun in their own way. I hope that all IQA members can come to Houston this year. If you cannot be in attendance, you could keep up with all the excitement by reading blogs. Pokey’s Ponderings at http://pokeysponderings.com/ is a great blog, written by soon-to-beretiring IQA board member, Pokey Bolton. Pokey is always in the know. For those of you attending Houston, please check out the IQA and Quilts, Inc. websites. We don’t want you to miss out on anything. Plan on attending the IQA Winners Circle Celebration. Don’t you wonder who won this year? Even I don't know, because the results are kept tighter than a Pentagon secret until the awards presentation! But you can see all the winners on IQA’s site beginning Wednesday, October 31! Once Festival opens, go look at all the quilts juried into this year’s IQA judged show, “Quilts: A World of Beauty.” After all, you want to be sure the judges did a good job selecting quilts for awards! For a fun-filled evening, come to IQA’s annual, meeting, The Lone Star Quilt Conference, and then Quiltapalooza. Put on your fascinating Fascinator and watch the silliness evolve. And be sure to read the article in this issue that tells you about all the perks that your membership allows you throughout Festival week. If you see me at the show, please say hello. I'll be easy to find...just look for a short, round, middle-aged woman wearing comfortable shoes…. Sincerely, Stevii Graves, President The International Quilt Association InsTruCTIons For vIewInG The IQA DIGITAL JournAL on A TAbLeT or smArTPhone: For iPad/iPhone: •Both devices can now read direct pdf files. •Adobe Reader X is available in the app store for iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch. http://www.adobe.com/products/ reader-mobile.html •The pdf can be sent as an attachment on an e-mail. •Once the recipient receives the e-mail, he/she can download the attachment, then click it to open in the iBooks app. IQA’s Facebook Page! www.facebook.com/internationalquiltassociation •iBooks is a free app for the iPad/iPhone that is available through the App Store for the iPad/iPhone. •The pdf can be added to the library in the iBooks app, then viewed on either the iPad/iPhone. For Android/blackberry: •There are several apps available for devices that use the Android operating system. •Adobe Reader X is available in the app store for Android. http://www.adobe.com/products/ reader-mobile.html •Aldiko Book Reader can be used for an Android device, www.aldiko.com •Kobo for Android, Sony Reader for Android, Amazon Kindle Reader for Android, Barnes and Noble Nook for Android are also available. •Mobipocket Reader 5 is available for Blackberry users. www.mobipocket.com The website www.goodereader.com contains many of these apps that can be downloaded for devices other than the iPad/iPhone. on the cover ARTICHOKES IN B L O O M ( 44" x 37") by A NDREA B ROKENSHIRE of Round Rock, Texas. Judge’s Choice of Cindy Brick. Category sponsored by Bohin France. Photo by Jim Lincoln. Original design. 3 The 2011 IQA JUDGED SHOW First Place—Merit Quilting, Machine Category sponsored by C O N V E R S AT I O N S bernina of America WITH DIANE (63" X 63") by M ING H SU of Woodside, South Australia, Australia. Traditional pattern, from Feathered Star Quilt Blocks I by Marsha McCloskey. Also inspired by Diane Gaudynski and her books. 4 The 2011 IQA JUDGED SHOW First Place—Miniature Quilts Category sponsored by Pellon M O N O C H R O M AT I C ( 1 4 " X 14") by K UMIKO F RYDL of Houston, Texas, USA. Original design. 5 iqa files: rachel wetzler o f v a n n u y s , c a l i f o r n i a IQA Journal: Tell us a bit about your early life - growing up, going to school, etc. Wetzler: I’m a girl from the Midwest—born in Iowa and raised in Minnesota—where I went on to receive a degree in Religious Education and married David, my college sweetheart. In 1980, we moved to the Chicago area for my husband’s post-graduate studies, thinking we would be here about two years (it’s now 32 years). We live in St. Charles where my husband’s business, ChurchSmart Resources, is located. My most recent work experience involved data processing and market research in publishing companies. Quilting was my “after work therapy.” Fourteen years ago, I left the corporate world to pursue my dream to quilt full time. DELICIOUS (56" x 64") 6 IQA Journal: How did you first get involved in quilting? Wetzler: Although I made my first quilt over 20 years ago, the groundwork for my interest goes back to childhood, when my mom taught me to sew. Thanks, mom! As a kid, I sewed most of my clothes. As an adult, I’ve sewed dolls, pillows, draperies, lingerie, even a furry bear costume. But then a magazine quilt pattern caught my attention. It was a twelve-block sampler designed by Diane Rode Schneck. By the time I’d finished the quilt, I knew this was it—quilting was my thing. Ten years and seven quilts later, I chose to enter quilt competitions. IQA Journal: Your quilts feature both geometric designs and pictorial works. What kind of freedom does it give you to go back and forth between these styles rather than specialize in one? Wetzler: As a left brain/analytical type, working in a geometric style is part of my DNA. All my early quilts are geometric. When I joined PAQA (The Professional Art Quilt Alliance), I became acquainted with a lot of right brain/creative types. Through their example and encouragement, I started dabbling in drawing and discovered—with a lot of erasing and starting over—I could actually design and make a pictorial quilt. Since this style doesn’t come naturally to me, it’s a challenging endeavor. Making a pictorial quilt stretches the boundaries of what I know I can do easily. After finishing a pictorial piece, I feel the need to go back on autopilot, which for me is returning to the confidence and relaxation of working in a geometric style. Alternating between styles stirs in me a positive tension that keeps me on my toes rather than simply cranking out quilts. IQA Journal: Your quilts are very discernable, especially for their use of yellow. How did you develop your style, and what is so appealing about yellow? Wetzler: My style is a reflection of who I am and what appeals to me. I’ve always been drawn to ancient ornamental motifs and classic radial designs resulting in many of my geometric quilts. Old World architecture and the desire to design scenes of tranquility influenced several of my pictorial quilts. I think my dominant style— geometric—is hard-wired inside. But as I keep trying to master skills and broaden my viewpoint, I’ve worked to add a secondary style (pictorial) to my FA N D A N G O (68" x 68") FRAGRANT MEMORIES (60" x 51") 7 Rachel Wetzler “bag of tricks.” Perhaps it was always there but was undeveloped. I guess desire and persistence drive me to at least try something new once in awhile! Many people shy away from yellow in quilts. It’s true that a little yellow goes a long way, but every one of my contest quilts incorporates yellow, some far more boldly than others! My blog, A Bit of Yellow, says it all: I like yellow. It’s the color of sunshine. A bit of yellow in my quilts is my trademark statement of hope, the sunshine of the soul. IN THE QUIET (53" x 65") 8 Rachel’s studio sewing cabinet, built by her husband. IQA Journal: Tell us how you developed your “Simply Sensational” series and what appeals to you about architecture in the quilts. Wetzler: The quilts in my “Simply Sensational” series use architectural settings to highlight each of our five senses. When I came up with the idea for a series on the five senses, I thought my best bet at effectively “describing” the senses in fabric was to create a scene where each sense speaks for itself. I’m drawn to classic and Old World architecture, and have always been interested in interior design, so it appealed to me to use architecture as the structure to hold the concept. Architecture is the framework in these scenes meant to evoke feelings of calm, beauty, and gratitude for God’s creative genius in giving us these gifts. My goal was to create an environment for the viewer to feel that they could step into the quilt and experience the sense. One quilt in the series is adapted from a vintage illustration, one is based on a photo I took in France, and the other three are scenes imagined in my mind. IQA Journal: What quilting style or technique do you want to try that maybe you haven’t yet? Wetzler: As one example, I’m interested in trying Susan Brubaker Knapp’s technique to create a small wholecloth painted quilt based on a photo. I’ve got the supplies—now I need to carve out the time to experiment! iQa FiLEs IQA Journal: Do you have quilters or quilting instructors that you look up to or have taught you something valuable? Wetzler: It would be a long list if I started to name quilters whose work I admire. In general, quilts that speak to me are original in design, have strong visual impact, and that indescribable “something extra” that stops you in your tracks. Pictorial quilts that grab me tell a story and connect with me emotionally. On the practical side, I will mention taking a Caryl Bryer Fallert class where I learned the Applipiecing technique. I use it to accurately construct my large pictorial quilts. There are quilters we admire from afar, and then there are quilters we actually rub shoulders with, like the small critique group I’m involved in locally. I consistently learn valuable lessons from them in our monthly “think tank.” M O R A L C O M PA S S ( 4 9 " x 4 9 " ) And although not a quilter himself, my husband’s valuable perspective and critique has kept me from making many design and color catastrophes. 9 Rachel Wetzler IQA Journal: Any funny or amusing stories about something that happened while you were making a quilt? Wetzler: I finished a pictorial quilt top where I had used a bit of tulle to add depth and shading. Before layering the quilt sandwich, I decided to give the top a final pressing with the iron. Famous last words: “It seemed like a good idea at the time.” Except that I forgot about that little area with the tulle and ended up with a quarter sized “melt down” as the tulle disintegrated under my too hot iron. Fortunately, the design already had a lovely dragonfly near the disaster zone, so I appliquéd another one over the damage, and it turned out beautifully. ORCHIDACEOUS (47" x 47") 10 IQA Journal: If you could have one quilting “super power,” what would it be? Wetzler: Here’s a risky confession: I don’t like to quilt! When designing, auditioning fabrics, and constructing the quilt top, I’m a happy camper. But once the top is complete I want to move on to my next creation. iQa FiLEs The actual quilting phase—especially free-motion work—is stressful for me. I don’t enjoy the quilting part, and am rarely satisfied with my results. So I’d like to snap my fingers and have that over and done with. IQA Journal: What quilts are you working on now? Wetzler: Currently, I’m in the quilting phase of a piece based on the ceiling designed by gothic architect John Wastell in Canterbury Cathedral’s Bell Harry Tower (1503). The natural stone fan vaults of the ceiling are accented with details painted in rich blue, red, and gold. My rendition is a riot of color (yes, a lot of yellow) that would surely make Mr. Wastell roll over in his crypt! IQA Journal: Any other comments? Wetzler: My hands need to be busy most of the time making or improving things. When I’m not quilting, you may find me “playing house” by painting a bookcase, rearranging furniture, or scrounging resale shops for a home accessory to tweak. For more on Rachel and her work, visit www.rachelwetzlerquilts.blogspot.com FOOTLOOSE (42" x 38") 11 festival opportunities Exclusive Quilt Festival Houston perks for iQa members! This year’s fall International Quilt Festival will take place November 1-4 (with Preview Night on October 31 and classes beginning October 29) at Houston’s George R. Brown Convention Center. IQA members who attend will have special opportunities that no one else will! Here’s a rundown of what your membership entitles you to that no one else receives. IMPORTANT NOTE! The Lone Star Quilt Conference, IQA’s annual membership meeting, will take place on Thursday, November 1 from 5:30-6:15 p.m. in room 310ABDE of the George R. Brown Convention Center. Come hear your Board discuss IQA news and plans and meet the new officers while being eligible for an exclusive prize. Also, those who attend will be the first through the doors for Quiltapalooza, which immediately follows! • One Day’s Free Admission IQA members get one day’s free admission to International Quilt Festival. Just present your membership card at the door. 12 • VIP Preview Only IQA members and Festival enrollees admitted, 5-7 p.m. on Wednesday, October 31. Show your membership card at the door. • Preview Night: International Quilt Festival Immediately following the VIP Preview, International Quilt Festival opens to the general public for a special Preview Night showing, 7-10 p.m. IQA members can also attend this for free with your membership card. And Preview Night does not count toward your free day’s admission! • IQA Winners’ Circle Celebration Quilts, quiltmakers, and $94,250 in prizes make IQA’s Winners’ Circle Celebration the place to be from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, October 30, at the third floor ballroom in the Brown Convention Center. The excitement is in the air as all winners for the judged show are announced live. You can also meet the corporate sponsors, enjoy photos of the quilts on screen, and then see the winning quilts themselves and visit with many of the lucky winners. IQA members can attend free. Important Note: If you have not preenrolled, show your membership card at the door. If you have a friend who is a non-member, they can purchase See the top winning quilts before the general public at IQA’s Winners’ Circle Celebration. their ticket at the special IQA table set up in front of the ballroom before standing in the line to get into the auditorium. IQA members who are winners in the judged show will have reserved seating, which will be roped off with signs near the front of the stage. • Private Photo Op IQA members only have a special one-and-a-half hour opportunity, beginning at 8:30 a.m. Friday, November 2, to photograph “Quilts: A World of Beauty” and Festival’s other special exhibits (except those which prohibit photography) before Festival crowds arrive. Booths will not be open for shopping. IQA membership card required. Entry between 8:30-9:30 a.m. only through Hall D. OtHER iQa EVENts • Quiltapalooza! Right after the Lone Star Quilt Conference, IQA’s general meeting, join your quilting friends old and new at the annual Quiltapalooza! on Thursday, November 1, 6:30-8:30 p.m. The event—which benefits IQA and its programs— is a chance to set down their packages and projects to enjoy a Thursday night on-site cash bar, boxed meal, entertainment, raffles, camaraderie, and lots of door prizes. On the “heels” of last year’s shoe challenge, this year’s show and tell will concentrate on Fascinating Fascinators! You know, those hats that were all the rage at the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (see photo). These miniature hats are just the ticket to display your latest creative blast. It's a light-hearted evening sure to make you smile. Emcees for the evening will include the always-funny Charlotte Angotti, outgoing IQA VP of Education and Quilts, Inc. Chief Creative Officer, Pokey Bolton, and quilter/teacher Beth Farrier. So if you’re enrolling for events at Festival, be sure to check off event #475. And if you’re attending the Conference just prior, you’ll receive early entry and tickets for an exclusive raffle! • Mini-Quilt Silent Auction IQA sponsors this auction of donated miniature quilts, spotlighting the work of members, previous winners, and guest artists. Proceeds benefit IQA’s programs. Stop by the IQA booth at the front of Hall D and bid on these collector’s items. • Raffle Quilt Yellow Rose of Texas and More (pictured) by Stevii Graves, Martha A. Nordstrand, and quilted by Meredyth Gretzinger Rotlisberger will be raffled off at 2 p.m. on Sunday, November 4. You need not be present to win. Tickets are $1 each and can be purchased at the IQA booth. And if one of your friends is not an IQA member, she/he can still participate in all of the above events with you by signing up for a membership at the IQA table and receiving a temporary membership card. That table will be at the top of the escalators in Hall D from 4:00-6:45 p.m. on Wednesday, October 31, and at the IQA booth in Hall D for the remainder of the show. YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS AND MORE (81" x 91") A “Fascinating Fascinator” by former IQA President Charlotte Warr Andersen. See more great art at this year’s Quiltapalooza. 13 2012 iqa teacher directory aRiZONa Barbara Polston 4802 E. Ray Rd., St. 23-202 Phoenix, AZ 85044 www.barbarapolston.com author, quilt designer, fabric painting or dyeing, paper piecing caLiFORNia Cara Gulati P.O. Box 6640 San Rafael, CA 94903 415-662-2121 [email protected] author, quilt designer, curved seam piecing, art quilts Jennifer Rapacki 3851 Les Maisons Dr. Santa Maria, CA 93455 805-264-5504 www.jenniferrapacki.com author, quilt designer, Photoshop Elements (inkjet printing on fabric) & EQ Jenny K. Lyon 9693 Wexford Circle Granite Bay, CA 95746 916-797-1490 [email protected] www.quiltskipper.com machine quilting, trapunto, freehand free-motion quilting cOLORadO Christine M. Hause 4444 Morrison Rd. Denver, CO 80219 303-727-8500 www.christinehause.com author, miniatures, Crazy quilts, embellishments 14 FLORida Ellen Zindner 3845 Peacock Dr. Melbourne, FL 32904 321-724-8012 www.adventurequilter.com author, color, design, “Double Reverse Appliqué” LOUisiaNa Stella Guidry 117 Lo Gan St. Lafayette, LA 70506 337-288-9078 [email protected] hand quilting, Crazy quilts, embellishments MaRYLaNd Jeanne Sullivan 432 State St. Annapolis, MD 21403 410-263-5744 www.jeannesullivandesign.com hand appliqué, author, quilt designer, machine appliqué MiNNEsOta Nancy Eha 4890 Neal Ave. N. Stillwater, MN 55082 651-439-2827 www.beadcreative.com author, embellishments, hand beading tEXas Gail Dentler 218 Ridge View Victoria, TX 77904 361-652-8397 [email protected] www.thegaildentler.com machine quilting, hand appliqué, quilt designer, fabric painting or dyeing WasHiNGtON Maggie Ball 10598 NE Byron Dr. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 206-780-1437 [email protected] www.dragonflyquilts.com author, quilt designer, bargello, Mongolian outreach WiscONsiN Lisa Binkley 1117 Woodbridge Trail Waunakee, WI 53597 www.lisabinkley.com embellishments, bead & thread embroidery on quilts Betty Ekern Suiter 901 Coronada Dr. Racine, WI 53402 262-639-4575 [email protected] hand quilting, hand appliqué, quilt designer, trapunto ballot box candidates for your 2013 iqa board Vicki Anderson–Vice President of Education Vicki Anderson has over 20 years’ experience publishing, writing, and editing for the quilt/sewing/craft industries. She is the founder of Meander Publishing Inc., where she is the Editor in Chief and Publisher of Modern Quilts Unlimited and Machine Quilting Unlimited magazines. An avid quilter since 1979, Vicki has a desire to use her knowledge to attract new quilters, especially a younger demographic. “I hope to use the position of VP of Education to become a resource for those potential quilters and artists who need a helping hand to develop their voice. By advancing the Grant Program through social media and online venues, I feel that we can tap into the talent of new, modern quilters, while preserving the traditions and history of our craft.” Linda Pumphrey–Vice President of Membership Pumphrey is a quilt industry veteran with more than two decades of experience and an award-winning quilter. She is currently the National Sales Manager for AccuQuilt. Pumphrey holds a Master of Business Administration degree with a focus in marketing. She is also a published writer and sits on several renowned quilt industry boards. Linda is running for her second term in this position. “As an organization, IQA is wonderful about recognizing the achievement of quilters and supporting quilters worldwide,” she says. “IQA would not be such an outstanding organization without our members and their support of our mission. I hope by being able to serve to grow our membership and the benefits we offer to our members.” Pat Sloan–Secretary The talented artist, pattern designer (Pat Sloan & Company), fabric designer, and radio host is running for her second term in this position. “Being on the IQA board has been extremely educational and personally fulfilling,” she says. Working with my fellow board members to create a show to be remembered is an honor. I am excited about serving one more term to be involved in promoting quilting at the highest level!” Marti Michell–Treasurer Michell is running for her second term in this position. She is the owner of From Marti Michell, “Home of the Perfect Patchwork Templates,” which also offers pattern and books. She is an esteemed quilter, teacher, and author who travels all over the world. She began in 1972 selling quilt kits to stores with her business, Yours Truly. Michell was presented with the Silver Star Award in 2004 for her lifetime contributions to quilting. (Please detach or photocopy and mail to: IQA Ballot, 7660 Woodway, Suite 550, Houston, TX 77063 USA; or fax to 713-781-8182. We must receive your ballot by October 23.) As a member in good standing of the International Quilt Association, I hereby cast my vote for the following nominees: VP of Education: ■ Vicki Anderson Other ________________________ Secretary: ■ Pat Sloan Other ________________________ VP of Membership: ■ Linda Pumphrey Other ______________________ Treasurer: ■ Marti Michell Other ______________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________Member’s Name (printed) _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________Member’s Signature Note: If you are nominating a write-in candidate in the “Other” column, please make sure that you have received their consent before filling in their name. 15 T h e 2 0 1 2 Q u I LT s : A w o r L D o F b e A u T y J u D G e D s h o w s P o n s o r s $94,250 in non-purchase cash awards Note: Click on a company’s logo to visit their website The Handi Quilter® Best of Show Award $10,000* The Founders Award International Quilt Festival The World of Beauty Award eQuilter.com $7,500* $7,500* The Robert S. Cohan Master Award for Traditional Artistry The Fairfield Master Award for Contemporary Artistry $5,000* $5,000* The Pfaff Master Award for Machine Artistry The Maywood Studio Master Award for Innovative Artistry $5,000* $5,000* The Superior Threads Master Award for Thread Artistry $5,000* 16 *These prizes also include airfare to and hotel accommodations for Quilt Festival. NEW AWARD SPONSOR! The Future of Quilting Award Omnigrid–New Sponsor! $1,000 Each Category Award Totals $2,000 ($1,000 for first place, $700 for second, and $300 for third) ! EW or N ns o Sp Art-Abstract, Large Art-Abstract, Small Art-Miniature Art-Naturescapes Art-Painted Surface Art-People, Portraits, and Figures Art-Pictorial Art-Whimsical Digital Imagery Embellished Quilts Group Quilts Handmade Quilts Innovative Appliqué Innovative Pieced Merit Quilting – Hand Merit Quilting – Machine Miniature Mixed Technique Traditional Appliqué Traditional Pieced Wearable Art Judge’s Choice $250 each Viewers’ Choice $500 www. quilts. org 17 winners gallery art, Pictorial FiRst PLacE M AY N A R D (54" x 81") by D AVID TAYLOR of Steamboat Springs, Colorado, USA. Original design, based on a photograph. 18 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY accUQUiLt Artist’s Statement: “This quilt was adapted from a photograph by my friend Hillary Spillane, wife of winter Olympian Johnny Spillane, of their dog Maynard. The image was taken on a cold winter’s day in northwest Colorado. The shadows in the snow were created with linings and thread.” c anine derrieres aren’t a normal subject matter for quilts, so Taylor can certainly claim to be at the vanguard of this potential movement. Even if he has to shock a few people along the way. “During the first exhibition for Maynard, the curator of the museum was a little aghast at my subject matter,” Taylor recalls. “She was full of questions about how I created the piece, and could not wrap her head around my technique. ‘Did you have to touch it?’ she kept asking. ‘Did I have to touch what?’ I replied in kind. ‘It! ’ she said. ‘No,’ I answered, ‘not the actual dog. I work from photographs. But you can touch it.’ Then I walked over to the quilt and poked his butt with my finger. I thought she was going to pass out.” Taylor first started quilting in 1999, through the encouragement of his friend, Madeleine Vail. Until then, he had only done apparel and costume work, and was not convinced quilting was the thing for him. He has obviously changed his mind. “Madeleine still has the first simple block I completed from a pattern she developed and had given me as an exercise,” he says. “It's certainly not anywhere close to being a square, and I was even more sure after that grueling experience that I could not do this.“ For Maynard, Taylor wanted to work on a “white” quilt, and he felt that this image was the perfect opportunity. No ifs…ands…or butts. 19 art, Pictorial sEcONd PLacE R E D VA S E AT MIDNIGHT (72" x 84") by B ARBARA L IES of Madison, Wisconsin, USA. 20 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY accUQUiLt Artist’s Statement: “The name of the quilt came to me out of the air and I designed the quilt around that. It’s my first attempt at needleturn appliqué. The flowers are original drawings based on my own photos.” Original design. a ccording to Lies (although her mother denies this) she was born with needle and fiber in her hands, because textiles have been her lifelong passion, and quilting is an extension of that. “There was no single ‘moment’ of discovery,” she recalls. “When I could no longer do hand work because of carpal tunnel problems, I turned exclusively to quilting because I could do most of it by machine.” And machine quilt she has, as with this effort, whose title came to Lies in the middle of the night, with the design to follow. “I spent a lot of time working the blue Attic Windows blocks to get that effect of light through a glass block window. And my camera became my best friend during the creation of this quilt, with hundreds of black and white photos of the blocks laid out on my design wall,” she says. “The oil-painterly quality of the flowers is one of the happiest outcomes of all. My camera was my best friend here too. I have thousands of photos of flowers and used those and Adobe Illustrator to develop the templates and value placement for each petal of each flower. Each was created off the background. Once I had several dozen flowers, I began arranging them on the background.” Lies also points out that this is her first asymmetrical, non-radial quilt, and has a realistic image. “One of these days, when I grow up as a quilter, I will develop my artistic voice!” she says. “In the meanwhile, I’m having a great time romping around birthing some of the many quilts gestating in my imagination. But I am a piecing klutz. On the other hand, I love appliqué!” Finally, this quilt also provided the artist with some, um, inexpensive entertainment. “I am a cheap date and easily entertained,” she explains. “As the light effects in this quilt began to emerge, I would turn off all of my studio lights and close the door. Then, I would slowly open the door to see that ray of fabric light gradually brighten like the moon coming from behind a cloud to beam through the window onto the vase. Thrilling! As I say, I am easily entertained.” 21 art, Pictorial tHiRd PLacE MARMALADE’S FIRST SNOW (47" x 35") by D AVID TAYLOR of Steamboat Springs, Colorado, USA. 22 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY accUQUiLt Artist’s Statement: “My friend Jane McLeod took this picture of her cat, Marmalade, stepping out of her barn. I knew immediately I had to turn it into a quilt. Most of the barn wood was pieced together and then appliquéd in place. I love the latch and the hinge.” Original design, based on a photograph. t aylor’s second win in this category is for a quilt also based on a photograph of an animal— albeit of a species that doesn’t always get along with the one from his other work. “Most all of my quilts start with a photograph, and this one is from my friend Jane McLeod,” Taylor explains. “She snapped several images of her barn cat, Marmalade, as he ventured out on the morning of experiencing his first snow fall.” And the artist is definitely pleased with his results, calling this quilt his personal favorite since his Spring Chicken from 2008. “I do enjoy creating barn wood from fabric. The patternmaking for wood is simple enough, it’s finding the right fabrics to create the realism that is the time-consuming part,” he says. “That just means I usually have to go buy more fabric. That, as Martha [Stewart] would say, is a Good Thing!” And after sampling a variety of techniques, Taylor has discovered that it’s all about hand appliqué for him. “And I really love machine quilting on my HandiQuilter Sweet 16,” he adds. “I do have an appreciation for all types of quilts. For me, it’s all about a love—and obsession—for fabric!” 23 art, Pictorial HONORaBLE MENtiON AUTUMN BEAUTY (56" x 59") by B ARBARA S HAPEL of Washougal, Washington, USA. 24 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY accUQUiLt Artist’s Statement: “Combine the elegance of the Great Blue Heron with the beauty of maple trees shedding their leaves with such breathtaking style, and a scene is created that I hope brings the viewer peace and a moment of pause.” Original design. s hapel’s entry into quilting, unfortunately, came through tragedy. But on a positive note, it has helped sustain her through many years. “I started quilting because my best friend’s mother passed away unexpectedly in a car/train accident,” she explains. “Her mother was a lifelong quilter and left a quilt in a quilt frame that my friend, Jeanette, inherited. She wanted to learn how to quilt so she could finish her mothers’ quilt, so she convinced me to take a class with her.” For this effort Shapel—whose favorite style is contemporary appliqué scenes of nature—saw a picture of a bright red maple in the midst of a pine tree forest. “I really wanted to interpret that tree, along with a pair of Great Blue Herons, in a quilt,” she says. “I'm very happy with how this quilt turned out, but I always feel like there’s room for improvement. Maybe my next one...” 25 art, Pictorial HONORaBLE MENtiON SOUTHERN DELIGHT (53.5" x 71") by M ARIYA WATERS of Melbourne, Australia 26 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY accUQUiLt Artist’s Statement: “Created as a gift for my husband’s 60 th birthday and our 40th wedding anniversary. The Kea (New Zealand snow parrot) is a bird of our childhood. The sky quilting design is a heart theme. There are little spiritual motifs quilted in the water and the corners of the border.” Original design. E ven in quilting, it seems, what goes around comes around. In the 1990s, Waters made a quilt with a very stylized Kea (snow parrot) that her husband particularly enjoyed, but she sold it. As he was sad about it, she promised him another one—and a decade later, delivered. “In those 10 years, my drawing skills had improved so much that I am really proud of this bird!” she crows. “Especially his feet, and it is also very hard to make a bird look happy, but I achieved that also!” The background of the quilt was originally going to be a glacier, but Waters had the perfect piece of fabric for…well…water...so it became a lake. And there are lots of quilting motifs in the quilt that symbolize the life that Waters and her husband have together, and these are representations of spirit guardians based on Maori myth and legend. Waters notes that she saw her first quilt in New Zealand in 1987 while studying for a City and Guilds of London embroidery course. She began and completed her first art quilt two years later, though over the years she gradually moved around the circle to making more traditional quilts, which she really enjoys. “I love to make technically difficult quilts because of the challenge they pose,” she observes. “I particularly love appliqué, and also machine quilting, and I teach both techniques. I like mixing and matching both hand and machine appliqué techniques in my quilts, and have had to develop new techniques to deal with pushing on the technical boundaries.” She also uses turned-edge appliqué in a lot of her work both by hand and machine, and has extended this out to large landscapes like Southern Delight. “But my greatest love is to make miniature quilts,” she adds. “After each major project, I create a special miniature as a bit of a wind down.” Still, even though this project was intended as a birthday gift, Waters cut it close…real close…on that aspect. “I created the bird during the state quilt show in Melbourne. On day one I made the front wing, day two the back wing, day three the body and the tail, and on day four nearly a hundred people were waiting for the bird to go together as a single unit ready to apply to the background,” she explains. “By my husband Gavin’s 60th birthday, only the quilt top was completed! So I told him he had to “remain” at 59+ until I finished quilting it. I presented to him 364 days later. So he had his official 60th birthday…on the day before his 61st birthday!” 27 winners gallery traditional Pieced FiRst PLacE BARCELONA CROWS NEST (96.5" x 85.5") by PATRICIA D ELANEY of Abington, Massachusetts USA. 28 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY FROM MaRti MicHELL Artist’s Statement: “The color came first. A trip to Barcelona inspired the white-onwhite scheme based on a Gaudi mosaic ceiling of 63 whites and a booth selling eggs at the market. A Nancy Crow workshop led to the ruler-free strips of the traditional string quilt. Subtle and spontaneous.” Original design based on Nancy Crow workshop and featuring String Quilt Spider Web. t he inspiration for Delaney’s winning quilt came from an anniversary cruise of the Mediterranean. imagine. Between the two visuals, I had my color scheme. I almost always start with color in my quiltmaking.” “We stopped in Barcelona and took a tour to see [famed architect] Gaudi’s work, including the Sagrada Familia church and Park Guell,” she explains. “I noticed the pavilion ceiling was white mosaic, and the guide mentioned that there were exactly 63 colors of white—from pink to blue, cream, green, and everything in between. Delaney may have decided on a color scheme, but actually making it happen turned out to be a bit of a challenge! Collecting that number of pale tints was difficult, she says, and a color that appeared pale in-store “decided to speak up at home.” “The outdoor market was like none I had ever seen. The booths were so beautifully arranged! One entire booth was nothing but straw nests with eggs in every tint you can And after two days straight of working on the quilt during a guild retreat, Delaney realized she’d become completely “color starved,” and had to break out her Kaffe Fassett reds and purples for a few hours before she could get back to work on Barcelona. In the year prior, Delaney took a class with well-known quilter/teacher Nancy Crow. “I told her I wished to break out a bit from my traditional style,” she says. “So, when it came time to choose a design for my quilt, I thought a Spider-web block would showcase my fabrics. I went wild and crazy by not using a ruler to cut my strips, à la Nancy. Ta da! “The upside to this was not having to match seam allowances! After making my strip sets, I used a thirty-degree ruler to cut the triangles, and I was off running. I noticed that the Spiderweb blocks reminded me of the straw display nests for the eggs, hence [the name] Barcelona Crow’s Nest.” 29 traditional Pieced sEcONd PLacE ME AND MY SHADOW (83" x 83") by G AIL S TEPANEK and R ONDA K. B EYER of New Lenox, Illinois, USA. 30 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY FROM MaRti MicHELL Artist’s Statement: “When I find fabric that I really like in a quilt shop, I may purchase a yard or two, but when I found this taupe line, I walked out with four yards of each color. The pattern choice was easy...we both love Feathered Stars. Ronda’s selection of quilting designs always adds such interest to our quilts.” Original design based on a Feathered Star pattern. s tepanek came across the fabric used in this quilt—which also served as its inspiration—after a friend recommended it to her. “She thought that it was me, and she was so right!” she says. “The line included brown, gray, and taupe, which are all colors that I like to work with. I purchased four yards of each with no idea as to what I was going to do with them. Within the week, colors and the Feathered Star pattern—a pattern that both Ronda [Beyer] and I favored—were selected.” Stepanek and Beyer collaborate on quilts often, and have both a good working relationship and design process down at this point. It was Stepanek who selected the pattern and layout for Me and My Shadow, but, as the quilt progressed, she would often email photos to Beyer for her input and suggestions. “It was a struggle to find the right outline to the ‘on-point’ center, and I must have sent at least 20 pictures with different ideas to Ronda for her approval,” Stepanek says. “Finally, we agreed to use a portion of the paperpieced star as trim.” The Feathered Stars were all paper pieced. “If I’m not hand piecing, I’m paper piecing,” Stepanek adds. The scrolls in the sashings—a suggestion that came from well-known quilter, Claudia Clark Meyers—were machine appliquéd, while the dots were hand appliquéd. And once Stepanek had completed her work, Beyer completed the quilt by adding the beautiful machine quilting. 31 traditional Pieced tHiRd PLacE STAR MEDALLION WITH 96 BASKETS (88" x 88") by K ATHLEEN H. M C C RADY of Austin, Texas, USA. 32 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY FROM MaRti MicHELL Artist’s Statement: “When I first saw this quilt pictured in print, I thought it would be a challenge to reproduce. And it was! The hand piecing was a challenge because of the amount of pieces, and the hand quilting was even more of a challenge. I finished it one week before my 85th birthday.” Center Lone Star and Baskets quilt inspired by an antique quilt published in Quiltmania (2009). a fter coming across this quilt in the pages of a Quiltmania magazine, McCrady knew she wanted to create her own version...even if it would be a challenge. And challenge it was, largely because it is entirely hand pieced and appliquéd. It took McCrady the better part of a year to complete all of the hand piecing, and several more months to quilt it. “Understand, though, that I can really only quilt for about an hour a day,” she explains. “Sometimes I get going and don’t want to stop...but I need to stop after about an hour.” You see, at the time of the quilt’s creation, McCrady was nearing her 85th birthday. Now, at 87, she has to pace herself a bit more than she once did, but it’s not stopping her from doing the thing she loves— creating beautiful, traditional quilts by hand. While McCrady has dabbled in many areas of quilting—even creating several contemporary and machine-quilted works—she always comes back to traditional patterns and techniques. And though she appreciates all styles of quilting, and firmly believes there is room for all in the today’s quilting world, she says that she would hate to see the day that the traditional quilt is no longer represented. As McCrady points out, it’s often the quilts “created by our quilting foremothers more than a century ago,” when quilters had very little with which to work in the way of fabrics and tools, that are admired the most. When asked what she thinks someone, 100 years from now, might say about her quilts, she jokingly replies, “Why didn’t she use a machine?” 33 traditional Pieced HONORaBLE MENtiON C E L E S T I A L C O M PA S S R O S E ( 7 3 " x 7 3 " ) by PAT C ONNALLY of Midland, Texas, USA. 34 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY FROM MaRti MicHELL Artist’s Statement: “Celestial—‘of the sky.’ Compass Rose—‘a figure displaying the orientation of direction on a map or nautical chart.’ Pattern for inner quilt by Jacqueline de Jonge, and I designed and drafted the outer border. The Compass Rose is the quilting design overlaid onto the field of stars.” Inner quilt pattern by Jacqueline de Jonge; outer border by artist. c onnally chose the design used in the body of her quilt— based on a pattern by Jacquelin de Jonge, and created in a different color wave—because she needed a challenging project and to get past a drafting roadblock in another quilt she was working on at the time. “It did challenge me—not from the difficulty of the elements, but the time it took to make each section and then putting the ‘jigsaw puzzle’ of it together,” she says. “I used techniques learned in a Ruth McDowell class where each pattern piece is marked with colored registration marks that are transferred to the fabric and matched up and pinned.” After seeing the finished piece on her design wall, Connally felt that the quilt could benefit from a border that incorporated all of the fabrics and extended the “spikey star” design to the outer edges. “I drafted the outer border full size on paper and made copies for piecing it,” she explains. “A black and white flange was used between the body and the border to give a break from the powerful colors of the bright batiks.” Although Connally loves the piecing process, and the satisfaction that it brings, she says she’s always ready to move on to the actual quilting! For this piece, she wanted the quilting to tie into the theme of the piecing without taking away from it, and to make its own statement. “I created a design to place over the whole top that would again carry out the star theme,” she adds. “When you see the quilt from a distance, the Compass Rose overlay is not noticeable. But with a little closer look, you will see the designs because they don't line up with any of the piecing. The variegated threads used in the quilting give a glow to the overall quilt.” 35 traditional Pieced HONORaBLE MENtiON BRILLIANCE (78.75" x 78.75") by YAEKO N EGUCHI of Saitama City, Saitama, Japan. 36 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY FROM MaRti MicHELL Artist’s Statement: “Twinkling stars I saw from cottages at the top of the mountain inspired me to make this quilt. I quilted this with a wish to keep nature beautiful forever.” Original design. N eguchi says that she enjoys climbing as much as she enjoys quilting, and it was actually a climbing trip that provided her with the inspiration for the design of her winning entry. “This quilt was inspired by a lot of shining stars I saw from the summit when I climbed the mountain,” she explains. “I expressed these shining stars in the night sky with outline-stitched round shapes.” To create the piece, Neguchi used a combination of hand piecing, hand embroidery, and hand quilting…you’d be right to guess that she prefers making quilts by hand! In fact, the hand work is one of the things that most keeps her excited about quilting. Because it takes longer to work by hand, she says she creates many stories as she works on a quilt. But this extra time and effort can also create extra challenges along the way. As she worked on this quilt during the summer months, the weather became increasingly hot, and so did Neguchi. “It was hard to stop my sweat even though the air conditioner worked with full power,” she laughs. But this only added to the sense of achievement she felt when she completed the piece, she adds. Another challenge was finding the perfect fabric to match what she’d envisioned for the design of the quilt. She visited many fabric stores, but to no avail. But—funnily enough—it was during a casual stop by a store that she never visits that she came across the material she’d been after all along. 37 traditional Pieced HONORaBLE MENtiON CHRISTMAS ALL AROUND (87" x 87") by S HERRY R EYNOLDS of Laramie, Wyoming, USA. 38 catEGORY sPONsOREd BY FROM MaRti MicHELL Artist’s Statement: “Created to reflect the wonderment and magical beauty of Christmas. Favorite icons, memories, colors, and the sparkle of the season were captured and will always be fondly remembered. Designed on graph paper. Free-motion quilted on 20-year-old Bernina 1001.” Original design. W ith this quilt, Reynolds wanted to capture the “magic, wonderment, and beauty” of Christmas, her favorite holiday. “My quilts all tend to have a theme, and are designed from the thoughts I have about that theme,” she begins. “With Christmas, I think about stars, trees, ribbon, and sparkle. “I definitely wanted to use the swirling Lone Star as the center, and between its points, I wanted to put little appliquéd motifs that reminded me of fond holiday memories— mistletoe, a stocking, a present, a sleigh, a reindeer, a snowman, three kids decorating a tree, and finally the scroll that reads ‘Dear Santa, please define GOOD! Love Taylor, Darryn and Kara,’ my three kids. We still hang the wooden plaque I made years ago with these words beside the Christmas tree.” These motifs were created using fused pieces of fabric, edge finished with a tiny satin stitch. The colors, while not the traditional reds and greens of Christmas, do reflect those colors found in Reynolds’ home and, she says, work to create the feeling of a peaceful Christmas night. “I absolutely love playing around with fabric and will spend weeks placing them until I have what I am seeing in my mind,” she adds. Another aspect of quilting that keeps Reynolds excited about the art form is the process of transforming her vision—“first onto graph paper, and then bringing it to life with fabric and thread,” she declares. “I am a meticulous piecer, and consider myself very detail orientated. The wonderful thing about quilting is that there is always room for improvement. When you let your determination and creativity set the standard, the results can be amazing!” 39 younger quilters make the scene b y d e b o r a h q u i n n h e n s e l L ike artists of any medium, quilters know no boundaries–– not in terms of style, methodology, materials, or demographics. detail of hand stitching from VORTEX IN V A R I A T I O N by M EGAN FARKAS It’s not surprising to note that, among the 21 million active quilters in the United States, the average age is 62, according to the survey, Quilting in America 2010. But younger quilters like Nora Ronningen, Luke Haynes, and Megan Farkas are paving the way for the next generation of fiber artists with pieces that extend the boundaries and sometimes, happily break the rules. Both Ronningen, 25, and Haynes, 29, have degrees in architecture, which may explain why they approach the art of quilting from both an analytical and an aesthetic perspective. THE TSAR’S DECREE ( 5 2 " x 4 1 " ) by M EGAN FARKAS 40 The geometry of quilting is what drew Ronningen to quilting and presented a challenge this University of Minnesota graduate was drawn to tackle. She used 1,233 pieces in the center of her work, Vortex in Variation, which was shown at the International Quilt Festival in Houston in 2011. “It is paper-pieced from a pattern I drafted, and each piece was cut and trimmed later with a rotary cutter,” Ronningen, who does website design in La Habra, California, says. “I’ve been sewing forever, but I’ve been quilting on and off since I was 12.” She learned to sew from her mother, Dawn Cook Ronningen, who has an Etsy shop (cwneedleorder) where the pattern for the 95-inch-square Vortex in Variation is available. Ronningen now uses her skills to help her mother draft commercial patterns based on historic quilts, and working in that arena has given her a deep appreciation for quilting traditions. “I saw tons of amazing quilts in Houston,” she offers. “I really enjoy looking at a lot of the old quilts, the older fabrics and the craftsmanship that goes into all those.” “I’m just looking forward to making more quilts eventually, and to keep practicing and improving on my skills like the hand quilting I’m still learning,” she adds. “On one hand, I think it can be really relaxing. The quilt in Houston was the first I’d done hand quilting on.” N ORA R ONNINGEN Hand quilting is also what drew Megan Farkas, 36, of Sanbornton, N.H., to take up the needle. She started out with needlepoint and cross-stitch, but was looking for more of a challenge. Then in 2003, a colleague at the private school where she works in the development office asked for her help teaching elementary students to make ABC quilts. “She knew that I could sew by hand, so she thought I could teach the kids to sew seams,” Farkas says. “I made my own ABC quilt and I thought ‘This was actually kind of cool. I could get into this.’” Farkas then made baby quilts for friends and other smaller projects for the next six years, until 2009, when she entered the competitive quilting arena and became an instant hit. “It’s been really astonishing,” she said. “My first show was February of 2010, and I got best hand workmanship in the innovative category in the MidAtlantic Quilt Festival.” In 2011, for her first entry in the International Quilt Association judged show in Houston, she won the Future of Quilting Award for Sakura I: L UKE H AYNES M EGAN FARKAS Hanaogi Views the Cherry Blossoms, a 98” x 60” work that is totally handappliquéd and hand-quilted. “I’ve never used a machine. I don’t own one,” Farkas adds. “I don’t have anything against machines personally. When I go to shows, I love test-driving the longarms because that’s really fun. But for me, it’s just about the handwork.” Farkas—who says she doesn’t own much of a stash either—chooses hand-dyed cottons or tightly woven batiks for her work, and said she finds inspiration in Japanese block prints and Islamic art. Her quilt, The Tsar’s Decree, will be shown as part of this year’s IQA judged show in Houston. The 52" x 41" piece depicts an artistic style not unlike “The Great Wave,” the universally recognized Japanese wood-block print. “I was really pleased that it got in because it’s not a blockbuster, barnburner type of quilt,” she observes. “For me, it’s at a gut level whether I pursue something or not. A lot of it has to do with color, or the color I imagine it could be. It’s the pattern and the rhythm of it. SAKURA I: HANAOGI VIEWS THE CHERRY BLOSSOMS (98" x 60") by M EGAN FARKAS [MAN STUFF #1] H A M M E R by L UKE H AYNES 41 M A D A M X by L UKE H AYNES “As far as the handwork goes, I think I’m a little out on the fringe with that,” Farkas sums up. “I just don’t see a lot of people jumping into that in this country, although in Japan, it’s going strong.” It took him three years to finish the 17' x 10' piece he called “ugly and hard to look at because of all the polka dots,” but his next effort–a selfportrait––proved more satisfying and aesthetically pleasing. Portrait artist Luke Haynes, 29, of Seattle, Washington, has no problem making quilts by machine. A 43second video on his website, lukehaynes.com, shows him speedily constructing a small art quilt. In just 10 years since taking up quilting in art school, this prolific quilter has finished more than 170 quilts. “From there, I started honing my technique as both a quilter and a portrait maker,” Haynes said. “For the first three years, I didn’t know anything about sewing or making quilts. I was sort of making it up as I went along. I was just kind of a painter who used fabric. “It’s not quite a quilt a day, but I am working hard,” said Haynes, who studied architecture in New York City. For three years after that, he worked with an architect in Ashevillle, North Carolina, then gave it up to pursue quilting. V O R T E X I N VA R I A T I O N (95" x 95") by N ORA R ONNINGEN 42 “The first quilt I ever made, I started in 2002. I was in art school at North Carolina School of the Arts. And I break from classes, and I was just kind of sitting around twiddling my thumbs,” he recalls. “I had this box of pre-cut fabric squares. I just kind of thought to myself, ‘I could do something with this.’” “In recent years, I started learning a lot about quilting traditions and technique and incorporated that into my work. But early on, I was more or less a painter/architect who happened to use fabric for those images,” he adds. “There was batting and backing and it was sewn all the way through, so by definition it was a quilt, but not much further than that.” Haynes has come a long way in the quilting world. In 2010, he won an honorable mention in the Merit Quilting, Computer Guided category for On My Bed #3, a self portrait that was displayed in the Houston International Quilt Festival. This spring, he had a solo show at the Eli Alexander Gallery in New York City, and it’s unlikely that he’ll go back to architecture. “There is not big money in being a quilter initially, but I’ve started selling to museums and developed a big collector base. I work with probably five galleries at any given time,” Haynes said. “So as I develop a business, it’s going to be as lucrative––if not more so––than working for an architect.” Haynes now serves on the board of directors for the Quilt Alliance (formerly the Alliance for American Quilts), and is actively involved in outreach programs, as well as the preservation of quilts and quilting history. But even with a rich history from which to draw, all three young quilters are also looking to the future, where they predict quilting will continue to thrive. “I think that there are lot of people that are young and interested in quilting,” Ronningen says. “I think it’s a lot more of an expensive hobby than say, knitting. It takes a lot more time, money, and space that a lot of young people don’t have, but there are definitely people out there that are interested in this.” “You kind of think of quilts as these large, bed-sized masterpieces that take so much skill and practice to make––and that’s true, but only on your 30th quilt.” Haynes adds. “I think it’s a matter of getting people to make their first one, and then they realize that it’s acceptable and a lot of fun and very rewarding. “The first thing we have to do is get quilts as art in front of as many people as possible,” he continues. He also believes that more textile art shows in museums and more exposure to the art form also will help erase the gender lines and the perception of quilts as “a home ec project.” [THE AMERICAN CONTEXT #4] AMERICAN GOTHIC by L UKE H AYNES “I see the way the Modern Quilt movement is taking off and that’s really exciting,” Farkas says. “People of every age, particularly younger people, are getting engaged by this.” 43 from the iqa library b y s t e v i i g r a v e s New Ideas for Appliqué Pat Sloan Leisure Arts 88 pp., $19.95 www.leisurearts.com Les Quilts Miniatures Kumiko Frydl Les Editions de Saxe 63 pp., $19.59 € www.edisaxe.com Patchwork Sassaman Style Jane Sassaman Dragon Press 168 pp., $29.95 www.dragonthreads.com Definitely, do not judge this book by its cover. It really is a quilt book! Pat has made a charming folk art calendar quilt, in two color ways, for this book with eight projects to be made using motifs from the quilt’s appliqué block patterns. Kumiko Frydl is an award-winning miniature quilt artist who uses many different techniques for her quilts. This book is written in French. But even if you cannot read French, you can read pictures! Simple patterns and complex fabrics combine to make dynamic quilts. Jane says to “let the fabric do the work.” And she is a genius at making fabrics work! The purse on the cover is just one of the projects to make. The table runner and coordinating placemats are a great gift item. Pat includes directions for needleturn appliqué as well as for machine buttonhole appliqué. In a pinch, try Google Translate, but the pictures seem to cover the subject well. The paper pullout in the back of the book has patterns for 15 different miniature quilts. The techniques include paper piecing (La couture sur papier), wholecloth, and embroidery. She begins with a wholecloth quilt, and then goes on to an Amish Bar Set quilt that no Amish lady could have created. The patterns begin to have more pieces, but are easy to piece. Manipulating the large-scale prints is what makes these quilts exciting. If you are a current member of IQA (or publisher of a current member) and have a book or DVD that you would like to submit for potential review, please mail it to: Bob Ruggiero, c/o IQA Journal, 7660 Woodway, Suite 550, Houston, TX 77063. Materials cannot be returned regardless of whether or not they are chosen for review. 44 The 2011 IQA JUDGED SHOW judge’s choice of stevii Graves Category sponsored by Bohin France L A U R A’ S S T O R Y I X ( 6 6 . 5 " x 6 5 " ) by RYOKO H ANDA of Ueda-shi, Nagano, Japan. Inspired by the book Hedgehog in the Fog by Yuri Norstein and Francesca Yarbusova. The 2011 IQA JUDGED SHOW First Place—Art-People, Portraits, and Figures Category sponsored by The Grace Company CHECKS & BALANCES (93" x 65") by C ARYL B RYER FALLERT of Paducah, Kentucky, USA. Original design.