Hello, everyone!
All healthy, so no worries there, in case any of you noticed my absence and were worried. The whole situation in which we find ourselves took over my attention and energy, and certainly my ability to express it all in words. But I’ve been busy, and here’s what I’ve been doing. It’s been a while, so this will be long! Grab an iced tea (in my hemisphere anyway), and settle in.
— I haven’t been doing much quilt repair. At first, I was too freaked at the idea of bringing things in from other houses. Now, they are saying that the virus doesn’t really travel on objects. So I guess I can go back to it. But honestly, every time I think of it, my stomach clenches and I’m stuck in the “what if” place. I have repaired the two quilts that came in before this all started.
I decided not to do any quilting, but to keep it all about dots. I discovered a knot called Colonial Knot. This is my current pick-up project. I'm going to call it Dancing Dots, since my eyes almost immediately start making after images, which dance all over while I’m trying to tie the knots.
— I’ve also been gathering info and experimenting with making quilting videos, hopefully zeroing in on going virtual with some classes.
My colleague Martha Spark and I cancelled our Quilt Restoration Workshop that was supposed to be held this weekend. We have a tentative new date for an in-person session - August 26-28, 2021. More news on these things to follow as soon as we can! Info on the workshop is on my website.
If you or your friends would like to be on the contact list for our class and workshop offerings, either in-person or virtual, please send your name, email and cell phone # to either of us: Ann Wasserman / Martha Spark.My colleague Martha Spark and I cancelled our Quilt Restoration Workshop that was supposed to be held this weekend. We have a tentative new date for an in-person session - August 26-28, 2021. More news on these things to follow as soon as we can! Info on the workshop is on my website.
— The Social Justice Sewing Academy continues to be super, super amazing. You can see the blocks I have embroidered for their pre-pandemic projects - teaching young people to express their social justice thoughts in fabric art.
Their new projects are both about memorializing victims of violence. One project has folks designing and making blocks with victims' names that will be put into banners. The other project has folks making memory quilts with fabrics submitted by the families. There are over 300 volunteers so far. Go to the SJSA website if you want to participate. (I’m waiting for my assignment….)
You can see the memorial blocks that are being made on Instagram at: #sew4justice_sjsa. They are amazing!
— Here’s a project in the very beginning stages of planning. A woman who grew up in Tulsa and yet never knew about the Tulsa Race Massacre is gathering quilters to help make a commemorative quilt. Her plan is to have the quilt ready to display in Tulsa next spring at the 100th anniversary of the massacre. You can sign up on Facebook and let her know what parts of the project you’d like to work on.
So there are my last two months of quilt-related activities. What else has been going on in my life besides quilting you might ask? A book length topic, right? I hope you and your friends and family are well and doing all you can to protect yourselves and your communities.
June 26, 2020
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