Jul 31, 2009

Friday Winner: Freddy and Gwen Collaborate Again!


My Freewheeling Twists and Turns week is past the apex. And it's time to announce the winner of Free Give-Away: Freddy & Gwen Collaborate Again. I believe in doing things simply, using time-honored techniques that still allow for intuitive input.

I announced to the house, (husband and two cats) that it was time to pick a winner. And as my husband and I were 'talking it over'..in this case, over his morning ritual of his Sudoku puzzle, and discussing numerical sequencing and their odds, I simply used the intuitive 'pick a number' technique..in this case from 1 to 100. I had 99
numbers to choose from as we began our talk, but as we finished the conversation, a 100th came in... and not knowing the exact chronological sequencing, I 'let her in the back door' and closed the draw at the incredibly nice number of 100! I mean, what are the odds of that? An even 100 entries!!!

And the winner
is Laurel. Laurel blogs as a single mother of a 9 year old daughter, works full-time, and yet still creates a wonderful assortment of lovely and creative quilts at: Laurel's World in Wisconsin.

Considering the incredibly high number who did not follow the rules and left no connecting email address or link of any kind, and his number not only worked on the first try, but Laurel was one of the dozens of blogs I've been off to visit since receiving 100 comments from my designated 7 to 7 Frugal Friday time sequence, I thought the odds were good ones. Especially, after finding once I re-visited her blog that she lists my
2,500 Free Quilt Patterns in her sidebar ;)

Happy Frugal Friday...with a totally fabulous free book to Laurel! And a big thank you to Eileen Cannon Paulin, President and resident 'Creative Custodian' for Red Lips 4 Courage Communications, , Freddy and Gwen's collaborative books' publishing services and production company for offering this wonderful book to my blog.

Everyone else. Thank you so very much for entering. I've had a blast visiting your blogs and will continue through the list until I've been to every single one of the 100 comments!!!!!

Jul 27, 2009

Freewheeling Twists and Turns


What fun it has been to come online and see dozens and dozens and dozens of comments from readers dropping in for a chance to win Freddy and Gwen's new book "Freddy and Gwen Collaborate Again: Freewheeling Twists on Traditional Quilt Designs" and providing me with the opportunity to check out so many wonderful new bloggers!

If you created a link to my giveaway,(Free Give-Away: Freddy & Gwen Collaborate Again) I'm visiting your blog in return..between the giveaway offer last Friday to the 'Draw the Winning Name' one, this week. I'm grateful to meet so many new bloggers from around the world in all different time zones...that's the nice part of giving others with different days and nights ;) enough time to drop by and leave a comment..... and create a link back to my blog, that I can check out, too!

I've already contacted the production company Red Lips 4 Courage Communications so that Eileen can watch how much fun I'm having watching the books title spread around the world with the power of blogs and bloggers!!!

And when I'm not watching or reading, I'm dealing with all of the twists and turns that all of our lives take. Spending a day helping a daughter move.... and another day, sharing with other quilters the loss of one of our own group member's husband.....and now helping my brother (long distance) face a really daunting surgery to repair a third failed hip replacement in Eagle River, Alaska.

In the wink of an eye, one of our quilters went from having a husband with some chest pains, to being a widow. This kind and very dear man, did everything with his wife...took her fabric shopping, to quilt hops all over Oregon, to meetings, to sewing groups..he'd go have coffee and she'd sew with us for hours and hours. A better husband and spouse would be harder to find. And he died on the operating table, this last Friday during his 3rd bypass surgery. So very, very sad. She is devastated beyond words and is only just now beginning that hard journey of facing loss and unbearable grief. Send a prayer up for my friend and the sudden and unexpected loss of her husband.

And today, Monday.....please send up a prayer for my own brother facing an extremely tricky surgery involving a rod being put in his back to support a third hip replacement that is not fitting properly and is so tight it is putting unbearable pressure on his sciatic nerve. I'm thinking the very best of positive thoughts and a relief to his own unbearable fear and pain. Please join your positive energies with mine for him, as well.

These are simply the hard twists and turns of all of our lives. But always, we have the caring of each other and the spirit of togetherness and support. And always, always...we have the joy of life, the things that we can do to be happy, and help others share in happy times, and the ability to share our joy by giving to others.

So, today, as I go off to sew with my small Monday quilting group, I am happy to have finished this small 'Twists and Turns' quilt that is a scrappy creation of a sort of 'Disappearing Happy Blocks '...big blocks shown, then all cut up into quarters and re-arranged in a haphazard, free-wheeling fashion.

I'm off to quilting today....banded together by the unity of women who understand life's twists and turns. Continue to join me in my on-going Virtual Quilting Bee For Charity The binding goes on a string quilted/mile-a-minute combination, that I'm working on now. It will keep my hands busy and fill up my heart with its brightness.

LINKS:
Liberated Quilting

Liberated Quilting Challenge

Liberated Quilting: Free Patterns, Blocks, and Tutorials

Word Play (Quilts)

Jul 24, 2009

Freddy & Gwen Collaborate Again + Links Galore!

            
 


"It takes courage to create. It’s an act of bravery to look deep inside and express yourself through the work of your hands. 

Our books nurture creative courage and empower women to communicate their stories and visions through their art." So begins the introduction to Red Lips 4 Courage Communications, the production company for 

"Freddy and Gwen Collaborate Again: Freewheeling Twists on Traditional Quilt Designs." 

 And as each of us puts on our red lipstick for courage, our imaginary red eyeglasses ;) or just pulls out all of our red fabrics to play.....Freddy Moran and Gwen Marston have pulled forth their own unique abilities in the development of 70 new and innovative quilt designs. 

With an amazing 20 quilt designs from Gwen, and another 20 from Freddy, and then 30 more that they made together....what more could we ask for? 

How about the chance to win a free copy of their newest book just by commenting on this post :) (Drawing now closed 7-31-09 , 7:00 AM) 

When Eileen Cannon Paulin, President and resident 'Creative Custodian' for Red Lips 4 Courage, their books' publishing services and production company, offered me a copy of the book to give-away on my blog, I leaped at the chance. 

It's that much fun and so worth sharing and passing on! So, I'm putting on my own red lips and paying homage to the wonderful women...and a few equally as wonderful men...who read here and might like the chance to own this book for themselves (or pass on to a friend as a fabulous gift!) 

Filled with free wheeling patterns and carrying energies which evolve from the principles of traditional patterns, to the creative flow of color and form unique to African-American quilters like The Gee's Bend Quilters, to that amazing spontaneity of modern or interpretive art (the book includes patterns for shapes, pieces and blocks, as well as suggestions for combining your own pieces from a 'spare parts' department) and creating your own unique extensions in color, design or form. 

Drawing closed 7-31-09 7:00 AM


 If you'd like a chance to have this book sent you...completely for free...please leave a comment below. And then link back to this post on your own blog if you have one! And if you already own this book, you can still be in the running and win it as a gift for another quilter...or anyone who sews that you might want to cheer up, encourage, or inspire!

 Please be sure to leave a comment and please help me spread the word by sharing this link in a post note on your own blog

And if you're a 'no reply blogger' or don't have a blog, please send me an additional email request to insure that your name is added into the drawing. This is our opportunity to show the power and influence of blogs and bloggers in the world of information and marketing potential...not only to those who read here, but to Freddy and Gwen, themselves! 

 So, if you already own the book, please do comment so they'll know how much and why you love it! (They're going to be reading this!) And if you don't have it yet, comment and let me know that you'd love a chance to own it. Everyone is entered just by commenting! 

  Drawing now closed 7-31-09 , 7:00 AM 

 PS: To make a link post this on your blog in a post...use the make a link button below the post or copy and paste this on your blog in a regular post box. 




Jul 22, 2009

Freddy and Gwen: In Sisters Again!

 




If you attended the Sister's Outdoor Quilt Show, you couldn't help but notice the shimmering energies of quilts that filled every surface of this little western town. And among the brightest of the brights, were the innovative quilts of Freddy Moran and Gwen Marston.

 








From the quilts that paraded through the picnic in the park, to the quilts that hung on walls of town buildings, their bright and creative designs seemed to bridge the passageway of the The Gee's Bend Quilters and their fabulous quilts on the side of the Stitchin' Post, to the equally lovely but perhaps more traditional quilts, that graced so many of the buildings around town. 






 


Gwen Marston, known for her historical knowledge of quilts and quilting design, and Freddy Moran, famous for her use of colors and non-traditional designs, have once again collaborated in the creation of new and stunning quilt patterns in what is quickly evolving into a fabulous art form of their own. These and other quilts and the evolution of their history and design is described by Freddy and Gwen in their new book, released just in time for the Sisters, Oregon showcase.

 
And, as my Frugal Friday offer on July 24th, I am giving away a free copy of their fabulous book

"Freddy and Gwen Collaborate Again: Freewheeling Twists on Traditional Quilt Designs", where the ideas, patterns and tips to create these quilts and 62 others are showcased.
I was selected by the book's production and design company Red Lips 4 Courage Communications to offer the book in a blog drawing and the chance to show support for Freddy and Gwen and prove the power of quilting blogs and bloggers

 Please join me this Friday for the give-away, leave a comment to enter the drawing and then share that give-away post's link in a post note on your own blog. This is a huge opportunity to increase visibility for Freddy and Gwen's new book and to encourage additional opportunities for all of us as quilting bloggers to be involved in creative marketing strategies! I have been told that the post and all of the responses and comments on it will be sent to Freddy and Gwen, themselves. So, please come back on Friday and contribute with some creative comments of your own and check back next Frugal Friday for the winner!!!


  Sisters OR: The Little Town With a Big Heart


Free Freddy and Gwen Book to Give-Away! scheduled to post on Friday 2/24/09 at 7AM
Leave a comment to enter the drawing then!


Jul 17, 2009

Sisters OR: The Little Town With a Big Heart

  


 If you were one of an estimated 10-12,000 people in Sisters, Oregon for the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show this July, you might be in this 10 minute video

Sponsored by the Stitchin' Post and created by Zionpictures.com...it showcases the quilters of Gee's Bend (listen to them sing 'I'll Fly Away...", Janet Storton and her amazing Ugandan ministry "Sisters of the Heart" interview, and the hearts from around the world that keep on giving....the fabric postcards of the 'Wendy' Wish" project.




 


 


 




 


It also showcases the thousands of quilters walking the streets of Sisters, looking at and yes, touching! the beautiful quilts that covered every building, fence, table, store wall, quilted car, and yes filled the hearts of each and every one of us who viewed them! 


    













 


  



What it can't show, is the amazing depth of the heartfelt joy and complete and utter beauty you find every single place you look! The first quilt in this post. the dark blue one also shown above, epitomizes that joy.

 Stitched by the "The Coffee Creek Quilters", a group of minimum security inmates of the Coffee Creek Correctional Facility. It not only showcases the freedom and joy they feel when they sew and quilt, but the love and joy they feel as they make quilts o give away, to use to earn money for their continuing program and eventually, even a quilt they can keep for themselves or a loved one.(check their website link to see student quilts) In weekly classes, the students make three quilts, two to give to charity, the third one to keep. 

As this group of women quilt, they try to imagine just who might receive one of their quilts, what kinds of lives they might live, and just how much they might feel the love that they, the quilters put into every bit of fabric, and each and every stitch. And in that emotive process, how can they not help but to feel just how their own lives might transition, growth and develop in that process of empathic, joy, caring, and giving back? 

 The heart of the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show, of the quilts, of the fabric covered buildings, and the of the people of the town, itself as to be felt to be believed. It's a feeling that can only be described as a super charged atmospheric rush of emotion and pure heartfelt joy as you see the beauty of gifted hands combined with loving hearts and the undeniable gifts of creation. 





 




Whenn Jean Wells, owner of the Stitchin' Post imagined the very first Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show in 1975 and its showcasing of !2, yes 12!, quilts, she could never have imagined that it would skyrocket to being one of the premier quilt shows in the country and one of the very best outdoor quilt shows in the world! 



 



 



 






 


  Jean Wells speaking of the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show: "My whole goal was for people to be able to share what they had done rather than to have a judged or juried show to pick the best quilt. I wanted it to be a day of sharing."



  



And a day of sharing it truly is. You walk the streets, parks, alleyways and lawns of this beautiful little western themed logging town, and the beauty of the people, the quilts and the every present sunshine just flows into every pore in your body. As Ann Richardson, the Quilt Show's executive director says "Think show and tell...that's what our show is. 

If you're proud of your quilt, we're happy to show it." The show relies on over 500 volunteers to make the portable hanging frames (and the Sister's High School cross country team puts them up!) to hang the quilts (everyone from the owner's of the building's own family, to every volunteer in and out of town) with regular clothespins from guide wires, wood stripping bars, to teepee-like wood frames, and the walls and storefronts of buildings. 

 With the week before the show known as "The Quilters Affaire" , dozens of classes taught by 36 national, even world-class teachers, lectures series such as that of the ladies of Gee's Bend in the High School auditorium, to the fabulous picnic with indescribably good food catered by Tate and Tate of Bend, on real plates served by members of the Sisters High School Cheer team, the fun begins on a Monday and culminates in the big show on Saturday. 

 And the heart of the show lies in just not the spirit of the showcasing of the textile art of quilting, but it what quilting creates and gives back to a larger community. This year quilts were showcased as part of Janet Storton's "Sisters of the Heart" ministry which now teaches young girls in Kapchorwa, Uganda to quilt as a means of earning a living (watch the video for details!)  




       


         


        


 


And then there was Cindy Pierce's project "Wendy's Wish'" a fabric postcard sale that has earned almost $50,000 in just three years in memory of her friend Wendy who died of colon cancer. With donations of fabric postcards from all over the world, it's personifies the very spirit of why we quilt and what that gift can give to others in so many different ways. (Click on link to see how YOU can donate a card for next year's show!)


         


Combined with that project, the lovely framed postcard art of the showcased Quilt Show teachers. Individually custom framed by the High Desert Gallery, the postcards were outstanding examples of the quality of not only this year's teaching staff, but of the beauty of this fabric art in even miniature versions. 


 


 


 


The atmosphere of this charming little town, the unbelievable beauty of quilts splashing color everywhere you look, and the warmth and the love that just pours out of every stitch of creation, and every heart beat of intention flows forth with a radiance that is not only seen but felt! 


  ****And for my usual Frugal Friday freebie : enjoy a free visit to the big heart of the Sisters Out Outdoor Quilt Show in news and video...**** Nuggest News-- Sisters Oregon: video


Free Gee's Bend Quilter's Pattern:


Loretta Pettway Bennett created a Pine Burr Quilt for the State of Alabama while participating in the Alabama State council on the Arts Foklife apprenticeship grogram. Loretta's mother, Quinnie Pettway, was one of the orginal Gee's Bend Quiltes and taught Loretta how to make it. On March 11, 1997 it was officially designated as the "State Quilt" of Alabama. 









Jul 14, 2009

The Gee's Bend Quilters



 


Collector, William Arnett was working on a history of African-American vernacular art in 1998 when he came across a photograph of Annie Mae Young's work-clothes quilt draped over a woodpile. 




He was so stunned by its originality of design, that he knew he had to find it and its creator. With a few phone calls and some creative research, he and his son Matt Arnett, tracked Young down to Gee's Bend, Alabama, where William Arnett then showed up (unannounced) at her door late one evening. 

 Annie Mae had just burned some quilts the week before (smoke from burning cotton drives off mosquitoes), and at first she thought the quilt in the photograph had been among them. But the next day, after scouring closets and searching under beds, she found it and offered it to Arnett for free. Arnett, however, insisted on writing her a check for a few thousand dollars for that quilt and several others. 

Soon the word spread through Gee's Bend that there was a crazy white man in town paying good money for raggedy old quilts. And the 'raggedy old quilts' begin to miraculously appear from the walls, floors, beds, and rag bins of the most talented quilters that art historians had yet to discover! 

 Lucy Mingo started working in the fields when she was 6, picking cotton, corn, peas and okra under the hot Alabama sun. She raised 10 children, fought for civil rights, crossed the Pettus Bridge in the march to Montgomery. Lucy has now made some 2,000 quilts in her lifetime and as part of the bigger collective of 50 African American quilt makers, known as the Quilters of Gee's Bend, her work, and many of theirs, has been exhibited in museums and galleries, and on postage stamps, since 2002.

 "My mother, my relatives had quilts in the first show," says Loretta Bennett, 48. "It was awesome to see their quilts on the wall and all the people looking. I was just so happy for them. It just brought tears to my eyes." 

 To understand their accomplishments and how far they've come, you need to understand where they started and what they've endured. Gee's Bend is a sharp turn of a peninsula in the Alabama River. In tiny Gee's Bend, post-plantation life lingered longer than anywhere else in the South. Life remained hard for blacks in the South, but life stayed harsher longer for folks in Gee's Bend. 

It was as if the Great Depression landed there and took up permanent residence. Phones, lights and running water didn't even come to their homes until the 1970's. Quilts were made of 'shirt tails' and 'dress tails' and 'sleeve tails'. 

Those few remaining clean spots on old overalls, denim work pants, the backs knee area of house dresses and the tiny bits of fluff for stuffing left after hard days picking cotton, and hard nights cooking, cleaning, doing laundry the slow way, and raising children in small wooden shacks without benefit of running water or electricity. China Pettway, 57, also remembers those leaky roofs.

 "When it rained we had one good spot, one good corner to get in. All of us pile everything up there. Catch rain with buckets, pans and frying pans.

"They all worked the fields as children, attending school only on rainy days. "We all missed school," says Loretta. 

"The teachers, they knew. We was all in the same boat." And Mary Ann Pettway, 52, added, "Mama was teaching us at home. She used a cardboard box and got a coal out of the fireplace and mark on the box to teach us our alphabet, to teach us how to read and write. 

 But the one thing they seemed to almost instinctively know how to do.....was to make quilts to keep them, and their families warm. 

Their quilts were lined with gritty leftover lint from the cotton gin. When Lucy Mingo describes thrashing out the seeds and dirt "You beat it and beat it and beat it again. Then you beat it and beat it and beat it again. Hard work, but when we got done, those quilts was warm and they last a long time." 

 As we heard in their lecture on Thursday evening, during the Sisters Quilter's Affaire Week (2009)

"You work in the fields in the day, quilt at night. A little print of cloth, get the bit, part it out, everybody using the same shape, nobody could buy nothing, nobody laugh at you, cuz they be in the same shape."

   

 And as they quilt, the women of Gee's Bend often sing soulful spiritual songs that meander around like the meandering lines of quilted stitches. 

They sang for us during their auditorium appearance, they sang during our Friday night picnic, and they sang as they signed autographs in front of the Stitchin' Post. Their original designs, too, wander around the realms of traditional quilting.

 Like the gospel music that surrounds and inspires them, their artwork is improvisational, unpredictable and deceptively simple.  When others try to emulate them, they almost seem to overdo things in the attempting.... and just somehow miss the mark of these amazing quilts. 

The closest thing I've ever seen was the beautiful quilts showcased by Gwen Marston and Freddy Moran at our picnic lecture on Friday night. (more on those, later!) While incorporating their own unique collaborative style, their quilts felt like the quilts that had so inspired them from all of those years before. 

 Today, Gee's Bend quilts and prints hang alongside the works of well-known artists, and fine art prints are made from some of their smaller quilts, but when asked whether they feel like artists, the women of Gee's Bend answer with a long, drawn-out "noooo."


 


Gee’s Bender Quilter's have coined their own terms for common quilt patterns. They call the square-in-a-square Log Cabin pattern by the name "Housetop"; the Courthouse Steps variation is known locally as "Bricklayer." 

The Roman Stripes or Fence Rail pattern is, to them the "Crazy" quilt pattern. "What little we had, we took and use. We was loved. We share one another. We worked hard, we worked like slaves. We do chores, wash, cook, clean the yard, clean clothes, iron clothes, quilt 'til 2, 3 in the morning. We had to do it. It had to be it. I did what I could and made do with it."

 "But," admits Louisiana Bendolph, "when I go to our exhibits and see our quilts on the wall, I realize I'm part of something bigger. I'm learning how to use that word 'pride,' to know that some things I do are worthy of being proud." 




 



 

 Anud when I told them how much it personally meant to me to meet them and to listen to them speak of their lives, and to see the immense and simple beauty of their quilts..they all answered with the same words. 

 "People keep tellin' us that. I guess pretty soon I'm gonna believe it." 

 And as they speak now, in lectures, at quilt shows, in exhibits in museums all over America, maybe, just maybe they're starting to believe it all right. With hearts and souls that stretch out beyond themselves, their spirits seem to soar...as they speak, as they sing, and as they quilt. And all I can add...is the words Florine Smith used to close the show...as she stared at each section of our huge audience.

"Thank you, Thank you, and Thank you! shown throughout post: 

Ladies in an auditorium lecture format, Thursday evening, July 9, 2009; In our picnic venue, Friday, July 10th; And as they autograph their two volumes of quilt books on Saturday, July 11. All at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show, Sisters Oregon 

 NOTE: All quotations taken from my direct notes during my own attendance at this lecture from the women's own words. No other article of any kind was used in the creation of this personal blog accounting of my own experience at this lecture. All photos are my own.... taken that evening, by me.



Free Gee's Bend Quilter's Pattern:


Loretta Pettway Bennett created a Pine Burr Quilt for the State of Alabama while participating in the Alabama State council on the Arts Foklife apprenticeship grogram. Loretta's mother, Quinnie Pettway, was one of the orginal Gee's Bend Quiltes and taught Loretta how to make it. On March 11, 1997 it was officially designated as the "State Quilt" of Alabama. 




my other links: 

other accompanying links to this post: