by Quilt Alliance | May 21, 2015 | Alliance Quilt Contests, On this Day in History Quilts series
On this day in 1881, the American National Red Cross was founded in Washington, D.C. Founders Clara Barton and Adolphus Solomons started the organization to provide humanitarian aid to victims of war and natural disasters in affiliation with the International Red Cross, for whom Barton had worked during the Franco-Prussian War. Quiltmaker Ann Holmes from Asheville, North Carolina, made “Thank You Clara Barton” as her entry to the Quilt Alliance’s “Home Is Where the Quilt Is” contest in 2012. Ann’s artist’s statement: “It is amazing all that she accomplished for our country. Establishing a public school; “Angel of the Battlefield” during the Civil War; spent four years to identify over 22,000 missing soldiers; established the American Red Cross and served as president for 23 years; at 83, president of National First Aid Association. She certainly patched many lives together! Her work was not considered women’s work and never had the right to vote. Clara died in 1912.” View this quilt on The Quilt Index to find out (just click on the image above). Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view or click the “See full record” link to see a larger image and all the data entered about this quilt. Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…
by Quilt Alliance | May 16, 2014 | Alliance Quilt Contests, QSOS, Quilt Index
The deadline for our annual quilt contest is two weeks away–“Inspired By” entries must be postmarked by June 1, 2014. Full details including a downloadable entry form can be found on our website and blog. If your design or execution are still in neutral, here is a little inspiration game to get your motor in gear. Match the Quilt to the Alliance Board Member Five Quilt Alliance board members have offered photos of their in-progress or finished Inspired By entries: Allie Aller Lisa Ellis Luke Haynes Michele Muska Victoria Findlay Wolfe See if you can match up the artist with the quilt! In the left hand column below are the Inspiration quilts, selected from The Quilt Index or Q.S.O.S., and on the right are the original contest entries. Post your answers here as comments (A=board member’s name, etc…), and we’ll draw a winner on Monday, May 19 at 5pm Eastern from all those with correct answers.
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A. Medallion Quilt. c.1830. Quilts of Tennessee
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B. Feathered Star by Mariette Pierce, 1800-1849, DAR Museum.
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C. “Aletsch” by MIchael James, 1990, National Quilt Museum.
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D. Split Rail Fence. 1901-1929. Michigan Quilt Project.
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E. “Scrap Bag Bouquet” by Tom Russell. 2011 Q.S.O.S. interview.
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Full details on the Inspired By contest, including a downloadable entry form, can be found on our website and blog. Thank you to these generous Quilt Alliance Business Members sponsoring “Inspired By”:
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http://www.equilter.com/
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http://www.modafabrics.com/
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http://www.aurifil.com/
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http://electricquilt.com/
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http://www.ezquilt.com/
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http://www.simplicity.com/
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http://www.sewingexpo.com/
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http://stkr.it/
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http://www.threadsmagazine.com/
Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…
by Quilt Alliance | Apr 4, 2014 | Alliance Quilt Contests
Our annual quilt contest is all about Inspiration this year. We’re working with our partners at stkr.it to offer all contest entrants a chance to document the story of their quilt as it unfolds through a StoryPatches Slide Show. That feature should be ready for photo uploading soon and until then, we’ll feature entries in progress here on our blog. Want to share your entry? Email your photos with captions to Amy Milne. This week, I’d like to share the story of Audrey Hyvonen’s contest entry, that was inspired by this 1920’s Split-Nine Patch Streak of Lightning quilt made by an unknown quiltmaker and documented as part of The Heritage Quilt Project of New Jersey.
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1920’s Split Nine Patch Streak of Lighting Quilt, made by an unknown quiltmaker
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Referencing a classic Streak of Lightning pattern
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Figuring out the original pattern repeat of the combined patterns.
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Dark squares cut and layering with their red accents.
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First iteration- which I was set on for many days- i loved the yellow in the center
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A third iteration?
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Trying the “dirty” blocks towards the center again.
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Flipping it!
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Flipping it back- keeping the lines longer
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Isolating the greens- making the light blue communicate a bit more
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Converging the points- getting closer
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Leftovers look interesting- perhaps the back? perhaps another quilt?
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Prepping a paper window.
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Window cut and ready to use
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Trying the window on the original idea
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Trying it on the points
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Finding my favorite! (loses the yellow center focus, shifts vision to the nine patch light blue echo between the light and dark, keeping the “dirty” blocks on the scene and the greens isolated.)
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Audrey Hyvonen, quilt artist, pictured with one of her daughters
Here’s how to enter: 1. Pick an inspiration quilt. Choose a quilt from The Quilt Index or the Quilters’ S.O.S.- Save Our Stories (Q.S.O.S.) projects, (see the Inspiration Gallery on our contest page for a few quilts selected by our members as examples of the variety and richness found in these resources). Browse and explore the projects to find your own inspiration quilt. 2. Find something(s) about the inspiration quilt that inspires you (like color, line, texture, subject matter, …) 3. Make your own quilt–work your magic–all techniques, materials, and styles are welcomed, but no replicas or copies allowed. All entries must be 16″ x 16″ and comprised of 3 layers (top, filling and back). 4. Sew a sleeve and a label on your entry and mail it to us with your entry form and fee by June 1, 2014. You could win the Handi Quilter Grand Prize: The Inspired By contest is sponsored by these generous partners: [gallery…
by Quilt Alliance | Nov 10, 2013 | Alliance Quilt Contests
Our first week of TWENTY auction quilts went on sale on eBay.com on Monday, November 11 at 9pm Eastern. All quilts are 20″ x 20″ and the starting bid for each is only $60. The quilts will be offered through December 9 in four one-week auctions. Click here to view and bid on the quilts on eBay. Click on any of the quilts below to see a larger view. The 7th annual contest and Auction, titled TWENTY, celebrates the Alliance’s 20th anniversary, and documents the work of 93 artists from 26 states and 5 countries. The annual small quilt auction is one of the Quilt Alliance’s most important fundraisers, supporting projects like Quilters’ S.O.S. -Save Our Stories and Go Tell It at the Quilt Show, and enables our participation in projects like the Quilt Index. The Alliance contest theme is traditionally open-ended to challenge the creativity of quilters from all corners of the quilt world– traditional, modern, art, applique, embroidery, machine quilting, hand quilting and those whose work falls under several of these categories or none at all. The only strict requirements of each year’s contest are the size of the entry (usually 15-20″ square) and that the construction include 3 layers. The 2014 theme is Inspired By and entry forms will be downloadable in December, 2013 on the Quilt Alliance website. This year it all starts with inspiration. Entrants will be able to pick from our online Inspiration Gallery featuring quilts from The Quilt Index and Quilters’ S.O.S. – Save Our Stories projects, or select your own source to inspire your original…
by Quilt Alliance | May 11, 2013 | Alliance Quilt Contests, Guest Blogger, Quilt Alliance board member post
Every year I make a quilt for the Alliance’s fundraising contest. I love doing this for so many reasons, but the one I want to share with you is how important this is for me as a quiltmaker. I get to play with new ideas on a small scale and try new techniques as I think about each year’s theme… But wait a minute! All my quilts have been about gardens! That being the case, please allow me to escort you on a garden tour, to show you how these contest quilts themselves have “grown” each year. I want you to see all the techniques I’ve discovered along the way and incorporated into my subsequent work. 2008 The Home in the Garden In this quilt, for the first time, I tried printing a photograph onto fabric and then enhancing it with hand embroidery. It was like “painting by numbers” a little bit, very easy, and so much fun. I’ve made many home portraits since this first one. Freeform applique as applied to crazy quilting was another first for me, discovered while making this quilt. Now it is my preferred method of choice for creating any crazy quilt block. Here is how those white patches look sewn down….. ….and then hand embroidered with crazy quilt stitching. Another first: only using one color for all of the stitching on the seams. Again, this is something I do a lot now. Giving the central section an on point setting allowed for some fun in those four blue silk corners. A confession! I dripped some juice on that blue silk and could not get it out! So, do you notice those white mother-of-pearl butterflies? You guessed it. And again, what I tried here I’ve used since, so in later quilts, if you see butterflies you’ll know they’ve flown in to solve some dilemma…… 2009 Ode to Tamar Flowers, not quite gardening, became the subject of the next quilt. This gave me a chance to revisit a favorite technique from my early quilt years, Broderie Perse, which is a style of applique using printed elements to create a scene on the background fabric. Combining Broderie Perse with a crazy quilt background and border of small blocks was this year’s adventure. A pile of cut out flowers, ready to arrange in collage fashion. I have made more floral collages than I can count, but it had been several years…so I was loving this! The collage is set and ready to sew down in this picture. I’ve pieced the border blocks and have begun arranging the all black background fabrics. The top is all finished and awaiting embroidery. The black background reminds me a lot of the white background in The Home in the Garden. The fabrics and stitching again each only use one color. Many quilts of mine now use these strict design parameters. In case you were wondering who the Tamar is in my quilt’s title is, this label gives the answer. While I could not replicate the quilt by Tamar North pictured here, it totally inspired the making of mine. Using antique crazy quilts as a jumping off point for my own interpretations has also become a recurring theme for me since making this quilt. 2009 Garden Lace I enjoy printing my own floral arrangement photos onto fabric. For this quilt, I wanted to try using nothing but these fabrics in a quilt to see how it would look. Fusing lace over wide ribbon, and then using that to cover the seams between fabric patches, was another new idea in this quilt. Every year, I learn so much working on my Alliance quilts! 2010 Granddaughter’s Flower Garden My cousin Tracy Seidman painted this watercolor of our grandmother’s house. After printing the image on fabric, I set it in a border of vintage Grandmother’s Flower Garden blocks. This began my continuing explorations of combining vintage blocks with crazy quilting and embroidery. Three dimensional flowers were prevalent in my work at this time, so I had to add some to this quilt too. 2011 Soil and Sky The theme for this year’s contest was “Alliances”. I can find a relationship to gardening in any contest theme, and this year’s quilt was no different…to me, the relationship between soil and sky is truly a romance, not just an alliance. This quilt combined my own printed fabric (including imagery of paintings of tomatoes I found online, after I received the painter’s permission to use them), some Broderie Perse, three dimensional vegetables instead of flowers, and for the first time, stitched writing on the quilt. I wish I had used a darker thread color so that the words are easier to read. But these small quilts are great for teaching us what to do better next time. Those tomatoes are so great! In the upper left is a photograph of tomatoes growing in our garden, too. The carrots are vintage millinery (can you imagine a hat with carrots on it?). Their tops were another experiment for me. I tried doing some machine thread-painting on water soluble stabilizer, rinsing the stabilizer away, and gluing the resultant “carrot tops” to the carrots. I read this quotation on the Facebook page of a man whose life’s work has been teaching small scale sustainable agricultural practices to villagers all over Africa, via the Peace Corps. And how true this sentiment is! Click on the picture so you can read it. Except for the writing not being dark enough, this is my favorite of my Alliance quilts. But there are two more that I loved making too and that have taught me a lot, so read on… 2012 Washougal Valley View For years I had tried to figure out how to integrate a little machine quilting into my heavily embroidered and embellished crazy quilts. It seemed to me that those two surface treatments were mutually exclusive. But for this quilt, I was determined to find a way. The vintage blocks–and some flying geese strips I had made years ago of vintage fabrics–were put to work for my background. How I love using those old blocks and fabrics! They contrast well with the sky, which was hand painted by Mickey Lawler, of SkyDyes. The hills of my view of the Washougal River Valley came next, along with a fragment of hand dyed Battenberg lace for the lower border area, a gift from my dear friend Michele Muska. I added a little cabin, symbolic of my own home, and some three dimensional flowers to the foreground. And….there is the quilting! It’s in the sky! This is the finished quilt, in the house shape for the theme “Home is Where the Quilt Is”. I loved absolutely every second, making it. I’ve made several other quilts with my little home in them, too, including the next one… 2013 20 Years in the Garden While this year’s quilt is not a crazy quilt per se, after years of embroidery making crazy quilts, there was no way I could depict a garden in a quilt without it. The quilt is well along in this photo. You know my process by now! A little trick I discovered is shown here. My bed of silk ribbon lettuce needed some definition…so I used a permanent marker directly along the edge of the ribbon after it was stitched into place. Risky! I knew if it didn’t work, I could snip out the ribbon and try again…but I didn’t need to, at least, not this time…. My husband is always trying to get me to spend more time in his garden (weeding, I suspect.) But this kind of “gardening” works for me! I am gluing the squash leaves into place. The quilt is finished, and ready for its adventures this summer at various exhibits, and then to go to its new owner’s home after it is auctioned off. Always, always label your quilts. People in the future will want this information! On my label is my husband’s garden, the inspiration for this quilt, where we have indeed spent twenty happy years. I hope you can see by now what an important and thoroughly joyous part of my quilt life making the Alliance contest quilts has been. Won’t you make one too? You’ll be so glad you did, surprising yourself at what you learn. And you will feel such satisfaction, helping this wonderful cause of documenting, preserving, and sharing quilts and their makers’ stories. And thank you for taking my tour! See you in 2014….. Allison Ann Aller is an award-winning quilter, author and teacher who has served on the Quilt Alliance board of directors since 2009. See more of Allie’s work, including more great tutorials and works in progress on her blog, Allie’s in…
by Quilt Alliance | Feb 3, 2013 | Alliance Quilt Contests, Tiny Desk Exhibition
The 7th annual Quilt Alliance contest theme is TWENTY and all quilters who love quilt history and believe that every quilt has a story worth sharing are encouraged to enter. This year in honor of our 20th anniversary as a nonprofit organization, we celebrate “twenty”: the numeral, the concept, the quantity, the word. All techniques and materials are encouraged. Entries must be a quilt (3 layers–top, filling and backing) and conform to our contest guidelines. Postmark deadline for entries is May 1, 2013. The Grand Prize winner (to be chosen by a panel of three professional quilters/designers) will receive an HQ Sweet Sixteen machine quilting system by Handi Quilter, Inc. Download entry forms here. Here is a Tiny Desk Exhibition (love those NPR Tiny Desk Concerts) of Alliance contest quilts made by Alliance member Dr. Ramona Bates of Little Rock, Arkansas. Ramona donated these miniature beauties between 2009-2012 and each quilt now lives in the collection of a generous quilt fan. Click on the link below each quilt to see materials and techniques Ramona used along with her artist statements. These quilts are also documented in The Quilt Index, along with all Alliance contest quilts (browse them here). Meet this Member! Visit Ramona’s Blog, Sutured for a Living, and find out more about this talented plastic surgeon with a passion for piecing (and knitting, and dogs and knitted items for dogs…). Thank you, Ramona, for giving your time, talent and treasure to this organization. As you help us save the stories of quilts and quiltmakers, we are so proud to preserve and share your own quilt story. I hope you enjoy this Tiny Desk Exhibition. Please share with a friend! Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…