Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

First And Last Judith Dursley

Patchwork and Quilting

|

March 2018

Judith Dursley tells us about her first and last quilts this month. A fan of miniature quilts she recently won a Judge’s Choice award in the Jen Jones Challenge 2017.

First And Last Judith Dursley

My first foray into patchwork and quilting came about by accident. On retirement, I joined a local adult education class to learn calligraphy but ink and I didn’t make happy partners. So, acting on a suggestion from a fellow letterer, I wandered along to a patchwork class in January 1999. My tutor, June Foster, was an inspiration. She had enough fabric for me to join in on that first day (a colourwash piece that resembled Brigitte Bardot when I’d sewn squares together by hand). After enough cushion covers to furnish The Ritz and having bought a sewing machine, I made Lynne Edwards’ Sampler Quilt. My son was working in St. Ives at the time, so I decided on the seaside colours of blue and yellow. However, I was then stuck for a third colour and wandered into Joseph’s Coat quilt shop in Cowbridge. Judi Mend

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

S&B – Excellence And Diversity

As part of the Heritage Open Days held each year by English Heritage, Standfast & Barracks, a fabric printing company in Lancaster, opened its doors which meant visitors could go behind the walls of the severe Victorian building and take a glimpse into the world of printing fabric. Having only ever dyed fabrics with lots of water and messy dyes in my kitchen and printed with wooden blocks on fabric, I was intrigued to see behind the scenes.

time to read

4 mins

March 2018

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

Meet A Quilter Joë Bennison

If you’ve visited a quilt show in the last couple of years you can’t have failed to miss the rise in longarm quilting both from the quilts on display to the manufacturers demonstrating the latest machines. I first took notice of longarm quilting when I attended the National Quilt Championships at Sandown in Surrey; here one particular quilter, with her exquisite wholecloth cot quilts, has swept into prominence. The quilter in question is Joë Bennison. I met her at the end of last year to find out more about her and her quilting journey.

time to read

6 mins

March 2017

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

First And Last Sally Ablett

This month regular contributor Sally Ablett tells us about two of her quilts.

time to read

3 mins

March 2017

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

Six Years Of Journal Quilting

In the last issue, Joanna introduced us to journal quilts. This month she tells us more about her own journey in journal quilt making.

time to read

7 mins

February 2017

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

The Sewing Group

Emma Crowe’s new play ‘The Sewing Group’ shows the impact of 21st century technologies and the pressures of high powered work places on our minds and temperaments by conjuring up a simpler life in pre-industrial England.

time to read

5 mins

February 2017

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

The Jane Austen Community Quilt – An Update

2017 saw a bustle of activity here at Jane Austen’s House Museum in Chawton, Hampshire. In May, Lucy Worsley came to the museum to place flowers at the front of the house marking 200 years since the death of Jane Austen; followed swiftly by a year of events including writing workshops, village walks, talks (a highlight being Sue Dell’s presentation of her research into the Austen coverlet, now conserved and redisplayed in the museum) and community sewing workshops in preparation for the completion of our community quilt.

time to read

4 mins

January 2018

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

Greenhill Quilting

This month Jacob Reading from Greenhill Quilting tells us his story about becoming the Gammill UK representative and his love of longarm quilting.

time to read

6 mins

January 2018

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

A Splash Of Colour In A Bleak, Grey World

It is 1943 and Mies Boissevain is imprisoned with seven other women. A member of a prominent banking family, Mies and her family had been sheltering persecuted people and using the cellar of her house as a base for the Resistance group known as CS-6, one of the few groups that performed acts of sabotage. Mies, two of her sons, her niece and nephew were members of the group when they were discovered by the Germans. Many members were immediately executed but Mies and her niece were arrested and sent to the concentration camp at Vught, then Ravensbruck.

time to read

4 mins

January 2018

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

First And Last Sandie Lush

My first quilt was completed in early 1990 and was made out of necessity. I'd always had a keen interest in crafts but this had been confined to knitting, counted cross stitch and the occasional stint of dressmaking. Before getting married, I had never even seen a patchwork quilt, let alone thought about making one.

time to read

3 mins

January 2018

Patchwork and Quilting

Patchwork and Quilting

Let's Go Shopping To Backstitch

Sometimes it’s easy to miss things that are completely under our noses, we forget to look close to home for a solution. And that is what happened when I was looking for a quilt shop to visit for Let’s Go Shopping. I suddenly remembered there was a shop I had never visited before that was pretty much on my doorstep. So on a sunny early spring-like day, I headed off to Backstitch in the village of Barton near Cambridge.

time to read

4 mins

April 2017

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size