Wednesday, 26 July 2017

Wednesday 26 July 2017

Today was 30th Anniversary Day!
So many members, past members and memories.
So many quilts and photographs.
So much good food and so much laughter.
What a wonderful morning!
Thanks very much to Robyn McKenzie for the initial idea to hold some appropriate celebration and contacting so many people to come and to President Marilyn Corsaro for pushing the idea to fruition.
Almost 40 ladies lunched at the Northern Beaches Bowls Club afterwards where there was more laughter and comraderie.
The Lucky Door Prize of a big sewing box filled with fabric and sewing goodies was won by Vera.

Our 30th morning tea with a great crowd of past and present members and a beautifully sunny day.

 The well-laden food table

President Marilyn welcoming everyone and giving her annual report

Foundation members Robyn, Heather and Karen cutting the anniversary cake.

Not everyone brought something to show that they had made at BBQ for Show and Tell but we all enjoyed seeing the quilts on show.  There were things from long ago and things fairly recent, things the sewers were really proud of and things that showed how far they have come. So thank you to those ladies who brought something in. It was fun revisiting old quilts and meeting new ones. But one thing was obvious, this club has produced some diverse projects and accomplished quilters over the course of the last 30 years.
(The photographer should have arranged someone else to take the photos so she could write down details of the quilts. It appears there were far too many to keep all the details in her head. So apologies for any omissions or confusions. If there is a really big lie, just email Lesley and she will edit it.)


Just finished workshop project of president Marilyn. It is the forest at Kingslake after the bushfires.

Robyn loves Batik fabrics and this is a Stack and Slash type quilt made with some lovely examples of Batiks.
The backing also showcases the fabrics.

 An earlier quilt of Elaine with some beautiful dimensional applique roses and a tricky ribbon border.

The latest quilt from Liz for the Women's Centre. All hand stitched and hand quilted. Don't know whether they are Is or Hs.


A couple of table runners from Doreen. The spiral one with some fancy cutting and sewing with a special ruler (And lessons from her friend) and the applique poinsettia which should really have been finished for last Christmas but now it is ready for the next one.


This Bear's Paw quilt belongs to Delma. Just look at all those perfect point claws!

Past member Margaret made this quilt from the blocks members gave her as a going away gift. Each flower had a name pinned on a piece of paper at the back and Margaret knew she would never remember which flower was whose so she embroidered (by hand!) all the names on the blocks. The setting blocks make a sensational 3D effect.

Marlena's first big quilt was started with Joan and Joan said she could begin with any centre block she liked as long as it didn't have a white or cream background. And that teal proceeded to be the most  troublesome colour ever to match with the ensuing borders. Thankfully Marlena stuck with it for a very dramatic medallion quilt.

Margaret used her fabrics to advantage in her Kaleidoscope blocks to make this quilt of turtles. She lives at the beach and this quilt really belongs in her house.

Michelle didn't have time to go round to her Dad's to get her Mum's first quilt, so this is just one of the many quilts Jan made for her family. This one was for Fiona and she helped with the fabric choices, but it really shows Jan's love of bright and happy colours. Michelle grabbed it from the sofa where it is in good use and we were to ignore the spaghetti marks.

This is Michelle's first quilt. She got the idea she'd like to make a quilt for her baby when she was almost 9 months pregnant. Delivering just one week after she started cutting strips, Sam got this quilt for his 18th birthday.

This is Michelle's first finished quilt. She didn't win this 2007 BomB but she liked this Log Cabin Star pattern and so made her own quilt in it.

Robyn spent many hours at patchwork and at home appliquing and embroidering these blocks for her Mother Earth Alphabet quilt.

Barbara's handwork of choice is embroidery and rather than making these blocks into yet another bag, she has framed them to hang on the wall.

 Anne has just completed this large pillow case for one of her granddaughters.

Deane has just finished her Australian Wildflowers quilt which has been her go-to project for over 8 years. The blocks are needleturned applique with hand-embroidered embellishments and it is hand quilted. The quilt was assembled in the quilt-as-you-go method.

 Past member Mary used an applique rose pattern to design this quilt herself. It is needleturn applique and completely hand quilted and won second prize in the traditional section in the 1996 Melbourne Quilt Show.

The other quilt Mary brought to show was from the Coffee and Cream era in the 90s. There are many special pieces of treasured fabric and laces in each block.

Julie brought along 3 of her quilts that have not been given away. This lovely Trellis Garden had so much fabric left over she donated it to the club and we used it for a BomB (Won by Jan Eg and donated to Kaye's leukemia fundraising.) and a couple of blankets of love.

This is Julie's first jelly roll quilt.

And this one used another BomB pattern. When Julie didn't win the blocks, she just made her own. A lovely feature of the quilt is the sashiko she has worked on the black panels.

 Past member Verity is still a regular at Seaforth CWA and her husband likes any project she does that includes fish.

An embroidered block made into a simple table runner by Verity.

 Robyn N brought in a favourite UFO. Her daughter does not like pink anyway so there is no urgency to complete it. Unfortunately, Robyn is no longer able to hand quilt. Maybe one day a handquilting fairy will arrive and offer to finish this very pretty quilt.

A masterpiece of a quilt by Joan. It is needleturn applique with fine hand quilting. It now sits lonely on a shelf in a cupboard so it was wonderful to be able to see it aired today.

 Cold weather brings some interesting discoveries. When the grandkids were cold at Heather's place the other day they pulled some blankets out of the cupboard and this almost finished quilt fell out. Heather had thought she had lost it. And she now has a little project to finish in the cooler weather.

A very dramatic Hunters Star is the result of Heather doing the Chris Timmins workshop last year.


There were not a lot of sampler quilts shown despite originally being required to make a sampler for club membership. Maybe because they were our first quilts and so usually a little lacking in technique and fabric choice. They were a great way to learn the basic quilting practices though.

Karen brought along her first sampler from the very early club beginnings when cotton fabric was not readily available.

Iris was in the very last class of beginners classes that we ran at Bucasia.

And Lesley ended up at BBQ because she had made some blocks and had no idea of how to put them into a quilt. Robin Lloyd talked her into sitting in on the last couple of beginners lessons where she learnt all about sashing and hand quilting. Unfortunately, she must have missed the lesson on binding!

It's a wonder more of these didn't appear for the day. It was a challenge around 1993(?) to construct a tiny quilt block of yourself. You can probably recognise a younger Robyn N here with the red highlights in her hair and the very fashionable glasses! She is still smiling!

It was a wonderful morning catching up and celebrating our beginnings and our growth. Not sure we will all be able to wait for another 30 years for the next reunion. We might wonder at our state of mental and physical health in another 30 years.
The card below is appropriate.





Wednesday, 19 July 2017

Wednesday 19 July 2017

It was a glorious winter's day in Mackay today and despite a very foggy morning many ladies made it out for the meeting. It was lovely to have our South American visitor Anne and our nomad Kaye back with us again and also to welcome Amy who found us at the show and decided this was a group she needed to join.
Things are in "well-planned" mode for our 30th Anniversary celebrations next week where we are hoping to catch up with many past members and have a morning of reminiscing interlaced with good fun and good food. Don't miss it. 9:30 am at the hall.
Brenda won the Badge Draw today despite saying she never wins anything. She now has a voucher to spend at Needleworx.

 Cathy started making a quilt for her neighbour who desperately wanted one, but then her husband got sick so Cathy abandoned her quilt and made this Bargello quilt for the husband. She actually quilted it twice. First she quilted through the diagonals of all the resctangles, but it was too jerky (again!) so she unpicked every stitch and used the low stick painter's tape to make smooth curvy lines and she quilted against them. Cathy also made a heartfelt announcement today that this is positively the very last machine quilting she ever does for the rest of her life!

 A little cross stitched label for Cathy's quilt which apparently almost took as long to do as the bargello!

Some very different sewing this week from Liz. Her friend in Canada found this fabric (from a doona cover) in a dumpster and posted it to her friend in Australia who sews. Liz has made her a dress with very deep pockets as her friend is a gardener and needs to put garden things in them. 

 Kay has been looking through cupboards and found this hanging which she started in 2006. It is Always Remembered from Quilters Companion No21 and is now finished. The poppies remind her of her dad. (And we might take another photo of it which isn't blurred. Sorry.)

 Kaye has a friend who visited Canada and brought her back this panel of cold Canadian things. Kaye now needs some inspiration to turn the pictures into a quilt. And then it will go back to the friend who gave her the fabric. (But shhh - it's a secret.)

June's BomB pattern was the Disappearing Sashed 9-Patch. Marlena has kindly sewn the collected blocks together and finished the top by adding borders. Thank you so much Marlena. It looks great and will be a beautiful charity quilt. (Actually looks better in real life as the Japanese fabrics have not photographed well.)

Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Wednesday 12 July 2017

Neither Lesley nor Di were available last week to do the blog. So here are some backdated photographs. Any details of the quilts or items incorrectly communicated can be addressed by emailing the blogperson. (You know who she is!)

 Di made this Bargello for her brother's 50th in August. He lives in Ballarat, Vic so she used wool wadding and a polar fleece backing for warmth.

 Another quilt finished by Beth. This one uses rectangles as the feature in the blocks. The tiny sashing strips in and between the blocks give it a very geometric feel.

 After working on this quilt for 8 years interupted by eye operations and trips away and other busyness, Deane has completed her Wildflower quilt. It was a Val Moore pattern called Australian Wildflowers. It is completely hand stitched including the needleturn applique,the embroidery details, the bias strips, the hand quilting and the binding. Truly a work of love and perserverence.

 Detail of the border applique and hand quilting.

 Marlena bought these wooden spools some time ago and they have proved to be what she calls "a waster of time". Very cute though you have to admit.

 After Joke's initial foray into blackwork, she thought she could get a little more advanced and searched the internet for a pattern not realising that the one she liked was very fine aida cloth and one thread work. But she practiced on another piece first, and when she had the pattern down pat, she sewed the real thing. Well done Joke.

Barbara is always bringing some style of embroidery to sew, so she made herself this roll to carry her blocks. It matches the wonderful bag she made earlier.

 The front / back of Del's little carryall purse with tiny little blanket stitched motifs.

The back / front of Del's purse. I'm hoping this was a purchased kit and Del wasn't silly enough to cut out all thoses little hexagons herself.