It's never a good sign when I'm playing around with the look of my blog. It is an indicator of one of two things: brain freeze ( I got nuthin') or time-out (when I'm stressed, heat stressed, anxiety stressed, etc. and anything I put on the internet would be of the shock and awe variety, and not the "good" shock and awe, either. ) So there you go. I'm playing with the look of my blog. (Okay, I'm in time-out.)
In the meantime I have an amazing labor of love to occupy my hands. A very good friend has one of the wall hangings made by my mother. We used to sell them in our store here in Gloucester and then mail a check back to her where she would cash it in and buy more quilting fabric. (Mom kicked ass that way.) Linn has had this beauty hanging in her home for many years and recently asked me to take it home and give it a wash - she was nervous about doing it herself. Okey dokey. Washed. Line dried in the approaching scorching heat. When I took it down I noticed that the sleeve on the back of the hanging had some places where the threads had just let go. Age happens. I found a spool of black thread and a sharp needle and I'm redoing the entire sleeve. It is a miracle that I'm able to do it without clutching it to my chest, crying, and refusing to let it go. (Eleven years later I think I'm finally making progress with my grief.) I'm actually enjoying the process, loving the chance to work on something my mom made, and grateful for the fact that Linn GETS IT.
There are not a lot of people out there who "get it" when it comes to quilts or, for that matter, anything hand crafted. Paintings in galleries are found "worthy" but quilts, knit socks, hats or scarves are just KRAFTY with a K and not "worthy" of being looked at as serious creative expressions that require time and talent. It has been an uphill battle for years. To show my serious intent I was going to start a quilt guild here in Gloucester and call it "Quilt Bitches" and we'd all get Harley-Davidson tattoos (but the motorcycle would have a quilted seat.) Cool, right? 'Cept I'd never get a tattoo.
A quilter's quest for street cred is apparently a life-long venture. This is made more difficult by The Learning Channel's newest program, Craft Wars, hosted by..... TORI SPELLING. Seriously, TLC? I personally believe the only time she's had a hot glue gun in her hand was when she was replacing some hair extensions that had fallen out. A Twitter peep of mine remarked that while she did watch the debut show, she found "Tori's clown-like makeup distracting." TLC needs to learn (oohh, how ironic...) that credibility is an important part of attracting an intelligent and respectful audience who - when given intelligent content from creditable sources - have a way of going out and spending money with the show's sponsors to recreate those ideas in their own home. It's a concept.
Time to get back to sewing the sleeve on this wall hanging. Linn was skittish about washing it herself because she wanted to make sure it was done carefully and properly because she loves this thing as much as I do. She respects the time, effort, labor and creativity that went in to producing it. She gets it.
I'm so grateful to have you- and a Major Quilt- in my life, Joan..... Linn
ReplyDeleteOh dear a real dilemma, Jojo. I tried Etsy & it was a waste of time.i guess some do OK but it didn't work for me.
ReplyDeleteThere is a quilt site I want to try, I need to sell a dozen or two quilts, they are mounting up here & I am running out of space! When I locate that website I will get it to you. Meantime pray for insight, wisdom and inspiration!
Thank you for commenting - it came when I needed it as I'm starting to spiral up about the whole thing. I pray for others and neglect my own petitions, I need to change that too!
ReplyDelete