Preemie Quilt Update

Back in January I delivered a pile of preemie quilts to the NICU at the IWK Children's Hospital in Halifax. I wrote about it here and my encounter with a Dad who just wanted a pink quilt for his daughter. 

A pink quilt for a tiny baby and her dad.

I had accumulated another pile (87!) quilts to go in to the hospital so while I was at my quilting bee, my husband delivered them to the NICU. I asked him to inquire about the baby girl and the pink quilt. Knowing the hospital is very conscientious about privacy I doubted we would find out much. I guess I just wanted to know that she was ok...and she is! She had just been sent to her "home" hospital (the IWK is the only children's hospital in the Atlantic Provinces). So she is much closer to home now and I am sure her parents and family are thrilled to have her there. I hope the pink quilt is keeping her warm! Many thanks to the quilters from the Mayflower Quilters Guild and the Mahone Bay Quilt Guild for their continued wonderful support of this project. I am truly grateful.

Oldies But Goodies

Several weeks ago I did a trunk show of my quilts at the Mariner's Quilt Guild. As I went through my quilts, deciding what to take from an almost 39 year "quilting career" I came across some favourites from many years ago.

Windowpane" (machine pieced and hand quilted) for Kate, my first quilt after many pillows and wallhangings. I started small, I didn't want to get discouraged. This was made in 1973, there weren't any quilt stores here then, I bought fabric wherever I could find it. Remember Woolco? They had one of the largest fabric departments around and a few cottons. This pattern came from an early magazine MacCall's Quilting. The quilt is starting to show it's age. It has survived a crative daughter who loved to draw (with markers) in bed! It has kept 2 rough and tumble grandsons cosy and is now frequently found wrapped around the base of a Christmas tree. I love seeing it being used, worn and all.

Amish Pinwheel (machine pieced and handquilted)was made in 1987 after having worked through the exercises in Roberta Horton's Amish Adventure book I made this quilt. In keeping with Amish style I used several different blacks (at one point I had swatches of 27 different blacks!). I loved making this quilt. There is something wonderful about pinwheels. While I was making this quilt, Kate put her name on it, she loved it and it has been graced a bed in her home ever since. I must go back to the Amish style. I still have a good collection of plain fabrics.

Underwater, a small wallhanging (machine pieced and handquilted) in the style of the traditional pattern Chinese Coins. I have used this pattern before. Again I found this in Kate's collection! Good thing she lives close by.

I loved sharing my quilts with the quilters at the Mariner's QG. It was a good exercise to go through, putting the quilts in a bit of order chronologically for the first bit then by type - applique, contemporary and bed quilts and I finished with a few WIPS. It also gave me a chance to take some new digital photographs of the quilts.

Quilt Canada 2012

Quilt Canada 2012 will be in Halifax, Nova Scotia from May 29 - June 3, 2012 at Dalhousie University. This is the third time that Quilt Canada has come to Halifax, in 1984 it was held at Mount Saint Vincent University and in 1994 it was held at Saint Mary's University. At both the '84 and '94 conferences I was involved in the local organizing committee specifically with the workshop planning and teachers. Both times it was a gratifying experience. I met lifelong friends and learned so much.

This time I am thrilled to be teaching. I was unable to work on the committee due to family commitments, I missed being a part of all the planning but it is kind of exciting to not know and to be able to look forward to all aspects of the conference. It has been a while since I was last at a QC. I have taught at 3 previous ones, Ottawa, Saskatoon and Montreal.

This time I am teaching 3 workshops, all by hand! 

I'll be teaching Stab Stitch Quilting. I was taught to quilt this way almost 39 years ago by Polly Greene.

Penny Candy (inspired by the traditional pattern Chinese Coins), machine pieced and hand quilted.

I will also be teaching hand applique.

Running Around in Circles inspired by Kandinsky's Colour Studies: Squares and Concentric Circles, machine pieced, hand applique and hand quilted.

The great thing about applique this way is that there are no templates, it is needle turned, hand stitched with a blind stitch.

The third workshop is based on a quilt in the Nova Scotia Museum collection.

The Waternish Star quilt is hand pieced and mine is hand quilted. It has approximately 4,000 pieces. The original quilt was found inside another quilt. When the original quilt wore out around the edges and became well worn the frugal maker used it as a filling for another quilt. Fortunately the interior quilt was discovered, the second outer quilt was carefully "unstitched" and removed. To date we have not found an original name for this quilt so it remains the Waternish Star, named for the small community of Waternish, Guysborough County, Nova Scotia where it was found.

Several years ago I purchased a copy of Quilts in a Material World by Linda Eaton which is about the quilts in the Winterthur Museum collection. Much to my surprise there are 2 examples of this quilt in this book. That is the first time I have come across the Waternish Star anywhere else! I have been in touch with Linda about the pattern but to date we still don't know anything more about it.

I loved piecing this quilt. It went everywhere with me and I stitched the diamonds into hexagons then sewed the strips together adding the connecting triangles. I worked on this quilt over many years. I jokingly would refer to it as "my life project"! I never knew when it would be finished!

Can't wait for May 29! Hope to see you at Quilt Canada 2012.