Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Report on 8 November 2014 QSG of NSW talk by Brenda Gail Smith


The final Quilt Study Group of NSW talk for 2014 took place on the 8th of November when Brenda Gael Smith gave a very interesting and informative talk about “Technology & Your Creative Practice”. 



Brenda covered all manner of things technical that can help you organize yourself and your quilting. 
She stressed that she was only going to cover easily accessible and everyday devices, tools, tutorials and applications, and she spoke to the many shared resources that are available on the internet. 

Brenda explained how she uses her digital camera in planning and recording her works; how she uses photo editing software for preparing images when entering quilt shows; and then covered the use of other software for exhibition planning. Finally she spoke about the commonly available Smartphone and iPad apps she uses and explained how you can set up your online presence via blogs or websites. The last area she covered was one many quilters and artists appreciate greatly – those bugbears of time management and keeping fit!

If you missed the talk and would like more information or would like to hear Brenda speak, check on her blog to see when she will be repeating it - http://serendipitypatchwork.com.au/index.html

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Saturday 7 March 2015 QSG of NSW talk by Judy Day on Miniature Quilts

Judy Day is an internationally acclaimed quilt maker who has made many reproduction and miniature quilts such 'Moxley', 'Autumn Leaves', 'Dancing Dollies', 'Auntie Green's Coverlet' and 'Shellbourne Wreath'.

Her quilts have won many prizes and her miniature quilt 'Dancing at Netherfield' is one of two of her quilts that are in the collection of the National Quilt Museum in Paducah, Kentucky, USA (see http://www.quiltindex.org/basicdisplay.php?kid=1C-3B-DC)

Judy will cover the history of miniature quilts, what constitutes a miniature quilt, tips on how she chooses patterns, fabric, piecing and/or quilting designs, and how she cuts and constructs them.

Come along to hear Judy speak about Miniature Quilts and see her wonderful collection at the Quilt Study Group of NSW talk. The talk will start at 2pm on Saturday 7th March 2015. The venue, The Meeting Room at The Glover Cottages, is at 124 Kent Street Sydney and is an easy 10 minute walk from Wynyard and Circular Quay train stations. Entry is $5 for Quilters' Guild members and $10 for others. Afternoon tea is included.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Report on 20th September 2014 QSG of NSW talk by Ros Moules on The Community Quilts Program



Ros Moules gave a wonderful talk about the history of the Community Quilts program of The Quilters’ Guild of NSW and showed a large selection of the quilts and quilt tops that the group is currently working on. She joined the Community Quilts program of The Quilters’ Guild of NSW in 1991 and took over as coordinator of the program when Ruth Carter died in 1999.  At that stage Ros estimated that the group had made and given away around 305 quilts.
Ros Moules with one of the group's completed quilts

The first Community Quilts coordinator was Nonie Fisher and we saw some wonderful photographs from that first quilting bee they held at Rivendell in Concord in 1983.  On that day the group completed seven quilts. By their second quilting bee they had finished 18 quilts and had 20 under way.
The Template Newsletter with a report in 1984 on the Community Quilts program

Ros took us through the progression of the group and there was much amusement when she described the components that they had to use in those days - sheeting as backing, thick poly batting, and what we would now call ‘unappealing’ fabric for making the lap sized only quilts. Now the group make 48x72 inch single bed size quilts, use a preprinted Guild label, and have a number of common and easy patterns they often use to design the quilt tops.  
Ros with Heather Davie showing a common quilt pattern

Another quilt using a pre-printed panel



Some long-arm quilters have also donated their time and energy. Since 2011 Bernina has made a yearly donation of $1,000 to the program, which is used to buy better quality fabric for tops and backings.  Last year Bernina also donated a new sewing machine to the Community Quilts program.

In terms of recipients of the quilts, Ros remarked that even though everyone wants a quilt, not everyone needs a quilt. The work is very rewarding and the recipient's reactions are memorable. They are very careful to find worthy recipients and try to match the style and fabrics to each person. By the time June Fleming died, 100 quilts had been made for Stuart House - all marine themed. Then they made children’s quilts specifically for foster children. Now their quilts fall into 3 categories - single bed quilts, utility quilts, and raffle quilts.

Community Quilts give quilts to the Royal Far West Children's home in Manly, make a raffle quilt annually for Stewart House at Harbord, make quilts for the Baptist Church’s inner city refuge and for the Stretch-A-Family DOCS program for homeless young people, and also for various nursing homes. They have also made specialty quilts. These included tactile quilts for blind children, weighted quilts for children with Asperger’s, and a reversible mortuary quilt for a hospital.

They do get some UFO quilt tops but if it will take too much effort to fix or if there is no matching fabric, they are reused by contacts who make drainage bags and head scarves for breast cancer patients. Very little given to the group is not used. Many people have made quilt tops at home using donated fabric, so on their sewing days the Community Quilts group just pins and quilts in the hall. They finish their sewing day with show and tell of their own and the Group’s work, and at Guild Meetings now they display their latest efforts so everyone can appreciate them. This wonderful group is a credit to the Quilters’ Guild of NSW.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Detour via the Silk Road… upcoming exhibition by Judy Hooworth…

Timeless Textiles Gallery

90 Hunter St Newcastle East
20th November – 12th December 2014
Opening November 20th 6-8pm

“My new work is influenced by travels in China and Central Asia in 2012 and 2013.
Inspired by embroidery and tile patterns from the region, I have connected with artisans from the past, recreating and reinterpreting their designs with silk screened mono prints and intensive stitching in my quilts and textile pieces.”


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Saturday 8th November 2014 QSG of NSW talk by Brenda Gael Smith

On Saturday the 8th of November, noted contemporary textile artist Brenda Gael Smith will give a talk for the Quilt Study Group of NSW about the useful tools, skills and resources she has discovered that have helped her in her quilting practice.


Brenda's talk will range from digital photography to setting up an online presence, time management and exhibition planning. Brenda's work with the international Twelve by Twelve group and her most recent work curating The Living Colour! Exhibition (which is currently touring Australia and New Zealand and will go to USA next year) has provided her with extensive experience and advice that we can all benefit from. Be prepared to share examples of how you have used your digital camera, computer, tablet, and/or smart phone to support your creativity or productivity when making quilts. 

Brenda's latest blog entry for this talk can be viewed at -
http://serendipitypatchwork.com.au/blog/2014/10/21/technology-creative-practice/

The talk will be given at the new QSG of NSW venue - The Glover Cottages at 124 Kent Street, Millers Point, Sydney. Quilters' Guild of NSW members pay $5.00 and non-Guild members $10.00 to attend visit. Afternoon tea is provided.

Please bring along any quilts you have made or are making that have involved the use of technical resources such as digital photography, quilting or graphical software and share them with us.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Saturday 20th September 2014 QSG of NSW talk about Community Quilting

On Saturday the 20th September Ros Moules, the Community Quilts Co-ordinator, will give a talk about the history of the Community Quilts program of the Quilters' Guild of NSW Inc. As the contributing members of other Guilds and quilting groups around the world have all found, making and donating quilts and quilt tops to worthy causes and recipients has brought joy - to both the maker and receiver.
Ros Moules with a happy recipient of a Community Quilt at the Sylvania Heights Nursing Home recently

Since 1983 the Community Quilts group belonging to the NSW Guild has been making and donating quilts on behalf of the Guild. It is a voluntary project where members meet to sew quilts for the community, and to date over 2000 quilts have been donated. On-going commitments are to Royal Far West Children’s Home in Manly and to foster children in NSW. Quilts are also donated to various nursing homes and for raffles to raise money for community organisations.
Bronwyn  Gosling and Maralyn Iwancauk  

Carolyn Rawson and Faye Young hard at work quilting

Denise Green and Ros Moules quilting

Margaret Lee and Heather Davie pinning a quilt top

The talk will be given at our new venue for 2014 - The Glover Cottages at 124 Kent Street, Millers Point, Sydney. Guild members pay $5.00 and non-guild members $10.00 to attend visit. Afternoon tea is provided.  Please bring along any quilts you have made or are making for any community quilting programme and share them with us.

Report on the 2014 20th Anniversary Quilt Study Group of Australia Seminar

The 20th Anniversary QSGA Seminar was held at the National Maritime Museum at Darling Harbour in Sydney, with glorious sunshine on both days. 
 
Seminar speakers (L-R) Michelle Watters, Jennifer Palmer, Jess Wheelahan, Nonie Fisher, Di Ford, Chris Jones, Margie Creek and Gail Chalker
The lecture theatre of the Museum was a most suitable venue for the seminar, easily accommodating more than 60 people who came from all over Australia and from abroad. Di Ford, the owner of the now closed Primarily Patchwork quilt shop in Victoria, provided a feast of quilts to illustrate her talk on Primarily Quilts – 19th Century Inspiration, her latest book published by QuiltMania










Gail Chalker introduced us to the inspiration found in the Greenmount Cemetery and sewn on Baltimore quilts. She asked the tantalising question: which came first - the headstones or the quilts? A visit to the cemetery and subsequent investigation have not given Gail a clear answer.



As Exhibition Secretary for The Quilters’ Guild of NSW’s first Quilt Show in the Lower Sydney Town Hall, Nonie Fisher had lots of history to share about the Guild's activities . She also spoke about her own quilting adventures, including using the first rotary cutter in Sydney. Many people recognised her very popular quilts, featuring applique and pieced work, that they had made in workshops at the Quilting Bee.


It was wonderful to have Jennifer Palmer present her talk on cataloguing and caring for quilts. Jennifer has vast experience in curating collections, including textiles, in many of Australia’s historic houses, museums and art galleries. She was keen to share her knowledge to ensure we could be confident our quilts were protected in the best possible ways.


Chris Jones and Margie Creek talked about the Miegunyah Quilt Project, and they even had one of the not yet researched quilts from the collection with them. This is such a worthwhile project and such an important collection of quilts that we felt privileged to have an update on progress.


SCQuilters (Southern Cross Quilters) is part and parcel of many Australian and NZ quilters on-line experience, so it was exciting to have a potted history of the group included in the programme. Michelle Watters, who has organised the annual retreat since the early days of the group, gave this talk.


Our final speaker was Jessica Wheelahan, who describes her quiltmaking as a collage of collected histories. She explained her design process from inspiration to final quilt, illustrating her talk with quilt after quilt – a most impressive accomplishment and a delightful way to end the first day of the seminar.


On Sunday night, we relaxed at dinner in the Novotel Sydney Darling Harbour. Margaret Rolfe was the after dinner speaker, and she delighted us with the history of the Quilt Study Group of Australia seminars, reminding many of us about previous seminars and the talks given by eminent researchers and quilters. No one present at one seminar in Canberra could forget the talk by Sheila Allen, who wrote The Diary of a Girl in Changi and made one of the blocks in the quilt. Not a dry eye in the house, as I recall.
 
Karen thanking Margaret Rolfe
Throughout the evening we enjoyed auctioning textiles and quilt-related items that had been donated to raise funds for the next seminar. For the first time, some of the more prized items were put up for silent auction, and the highest bid for any item was for a small but exquisitely embroidered Kantha made by Carolyn Sullivan. Many other items were highly prized, including a selection of French fabrics from Brigitte Giblin and some unique fabric designed by Jessica Wheelahan. Liz Bonner, Secretary of QSGA, added to the fun by re-offering fabric she had purchased at a previous Sydney seminar auction – a particularly ugly cheater fabric for making Christmas placemats. Bought as a bolt, she decided to add value to the fabric by offering it in bundles all pre-cut ready to sew. Daphne Massey bought 27 placemats and intends to make them up for the next church fete and Di Ford promised to bring her set of placemats back – value added - for the next seminar. Something about tea-dyeing them to death…
 
Auction in process with those Xmas placements on offer
Monday was another beautiful day by the harbour as we gathered for Uncoverings, where Trish Bloomfield, Melinda Smith, Carolyn Sullivan and Brigitte Giblin uncovered their collections of quilts and the stories behind them. What a wonderful visual feast it became for everyone, as quilt after quilt was uncovered with their owners delighting us all with stories of how and why they were collected or made. 
Trish Bloomfield showing her quilts


Melinda Smith introducing her quilt collection


 
Carolyn Sullivan and Karen Fail

 
Karen introducing Brigitte Gibson and her collection of French quilts