Elizabeth Rosenberg
textile artist 

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I've been making regular entries in my blog, "The Flowing Line." So if you want to know about the latest goings-on in my quilting world, please visit by clicking here!

The following entries were made before I started keeping a blog ...

February, 2006

Teaching and Lecturing:
Concentrating on my son's healing left me little time for teaching and lecturing, but I'm back! He's finally doing well, thank goodness, but it took two more surgeries and lots and lots of physical therapy. It's been tough on all of us, but with the help of a GREAT orthopedic surgeon, and the grit and determination of a superman, my son is on the road to recovery. Now, I can finally concentrate on teaching and lecturing again! Last month, I led a workshop for a group that belongs to the Wiltwyck Guild in Kingston, NY. I had visited their guild back in October, and some of their members got together to hire me to come back and give them a bobbin workshop. The ladies were all wonderful, and I spent an unseasonably beautiful, sunny and warm day at their Town Hall while they created some gorgeous wallhangings.

I'm looking forward to my lecture and workshop with the Brownstone Guild on February 10th. Elaine Polakoff, a former member of my guild, NSQG, is their program chair, and I'm sure we'll have a wonderful time!

October, 2005

Teaching and Lecturing:
Well, it's been a long time since I've updated this page, and a whole lot has happened. Let's start with my quilting life. I've given my lecture a total of seven times up to this time, and each time it's been easier and smoother. I've made little changes along the way, and the "audiences" seem to respond well to it. I'm pleased with how that part of my world is going! And the workshops have gone well, too. The last couple of ones were two weeks ago with the Wiltwyck Guild in Kingston, NY. They were a lovely bunch who really caught on quickly and created some very beautiful couched wallhangings. I've added some of their pics to the workshops page under the couching workshop description. The latest class was just last week, with of my most favorite groups, my own Northern Star Quilters Guild. There, I taught my "threadpainting" class, and they all had a great time picking out leaves during an enforced walk and then threadpainting them to create colorful autumn remembrances.

New Work: I had a great time at QBL last summer. I took a class with Cynthia Corbin which was a rather earth-shattering experience for me in many ways. Cynthia is a wonderful teacher, and during her class I had a major breakthrough about my own work. I finally found a way to incorporate what I love about African rock art  with my own, modern sensibility about quilting, women and life in general. It was so exciting that I could hardly wait to get home and start pumping out quilts.

However, life does seem to get in the way of quilting sometimes. My youngest son, Andrew, suffered a mishap at summer camp, shattering his right femur. The recuperation period has been a long, drawn-out and painful affair, taking pretty much all of my attention. Andrew is on the mend, although he still has several months of physical therapy and possibly more surgeries ahead. We'll have to wait and see, and keep our fingers crossed.

Travels: In the meantime, I'm in the process of packing for a well-deserved and much-anticipated trip to Houston for the annual Quilt Festival. I'm going with my friends and Salon Seven sisters Linda and Georgia, and we are going to have FUN!!! I can't wait. I'm flying down tomorrow, and I'm hoping that my next entry will be all about what I see, do and find in Houston.

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Elizabeth
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May, 2005

Teaching and Lecturing:
On May 10th I presented a lecture to the Village Square Quilters in Scarsdale, New York. I have a lot of friends who belong to the guild, so there were plenty of people to hang out and chat with before and after my presentation. An absolutely adorable group of children from a local school came to the meeting to show some of the quilts they had been making in school . . . so cute!

New Work:
I
've started a new piece that's kind of different from my latest endeavors. It incorporates some of the silk pieces that my friend Susan brought home from Italy, some of the upholstery fabric my friend Judy got from her sister-in-law the decorator, and some small blocks that I had stamped with stamps I'd made myself some two years ago. Working with the silk isn't as difficult as I'd imagined it would be . . . I'm happy with how it's turning out, and I'm trying out some satin-stitching-as-quilting. Let's see how it goes!

April, 2005

Teaching and Lecturing:
This is a busy month for me!

On April 5th I gave my lecture to the Hudson River Quilters in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. The Hudson River Quilters is a small group that meets at the Croton library once a month. The library has a gorgeous meeting space. It's a semi-circular room with a stage set up on the straight edge, and large windows all around the circular edge. The projection screen drops down out of the ceiling with a push of a button, and the sound system is amazing, no buzzing, no wires -- incredible. There are about thirty-five guild members, it's a fairly new group made up of pretty traditional quilters, and it seemed to me as if each and every one of them came to the meeting. Among them were Barbara Lerch and Kay Fowler, two lovely ladies who gave me my very first quilting lesson almost fourteen years ago! They sat in right in the front row of the audience, beaming with pride, applauded every quilt, sighed, ooo'd and aaahh'd, laughed at every little joke, and altogether made me feel absolutely wonderful. What a thrill it was to have them be present for this latest chapter of my quilting life!

On April 9th I went to Pearl River to present my workshop "Free Motion without Fear" to the Heritage Quilters of the Hudson Palisades. It was held at the Pearl River Public Library, in the community room. The room was spacious and well-lit, and there was an inspiring display of inlaid marquetry done by local artists around the edges of the room. Beautiful! My students were very well-behaved (they giggled when I told them that!) and enjoyed themselves very much. I enjoyed myself, too . . . teaching always gives me such a thrill! The group treated me to a lovely lunch at a local pub, and as always, I was sad to bring the workshop to an end. Here are some candid photos of them, hard at work.

March, 2005

Teaching and Lecturing:
On Saturday, March 5th, I taught the Magic Textured Scarves workshop at my guild's Super Saturday event. I first came across the technique last year when I attended the International Quilt Festival in Houston, Texas, and was fascinated with the idea of creating lacy, almost knitted-looking scarves with thread and a dissolving stabilizer on a sewing machine. I figured it would appeal to quilters who either didn't like to knit or didn't know how. And it did! All the women in my workshop had a great time, many of them went home with a finished scarf (some even washed out the stabilizer in the kitchen sink during the workshop so they could model their creations immediately!) and I thoroughly enjoyed myself, as I always do with the great members of my guild! Super Saturday is always such a fun event . . . I wish it would happen more than just once a year!

At the next guild meeting, five of the workshop attendees surprised me by wearing their creations to the meeting, and then modeling them up on the stage during the meeting's show-and-tell portion. It was so gratifying for me to see them wearing their beautiful scarves! I felt as proud as a new mother!

On March 12th, after a six-inch overnight snowfall, I drove into Manhattan to give my lecture "The Flowing Line" to the Empire Quilters Guild. I knew it was going to be a very good day when I found a parking spot right out front. Imagine, a parking spot in Manhattan! The Empire Guild holds their meetings at the Fashion Institute of Technology, where my oldest son was a student a few years ago, so I felt right at home. Besides the familiar surroundings, the guild members made me feel very comfortable and welcomed me with open arms. It was a wonderful day! I owe many thanks to my dear friend, Benedicte Caneill, Empire's "Quilter of the Month", who first suggested to the Empire Guild that they hire me, and then helped me set up my equipment and even walked to the drugstore with me to buy an extension cord. She is my honorary "agent extraordinaire!"

On March 21st, I traveled to Rockland County to give my lecture to the Heritage Quilters of the Hudson Palisades. Among the audience were a few old friends who are also members of my guild, and it was great to see them! They made me fell right at home. Even though I battled a nasty sinus infection, the lecture went well, and the ladies enjoyed looking through all the quilts I'd brought along. I look forward to seeing many of them again when I teach a workshop for them next month.

New Work:
I've been working furiously on my new piece, "Spirits of the Mountains." I've already entered it into my guild's show in May, and I must meet the deadline! Work, work, work!

Exhibitions and Shows:
On Monday, March 14th, I met with the other members of The Salon Seven to survey the Mount Kisco Public Library, where we will be having our very first joint exhibition from June 1st to June 30th, curated by Susan Schrott. The opening reception will be held on Thursday, June 2, from 7 pm to 8:30 pm. The space is great -- it's spacious, well-lit and I know that we are going to have a great show. All of the members are very excited about it, and emails are flying fast and furiously with all the preparations!

Travels:
On Wednesday, March 30th, Linda Schoenfeld, Georgia Heller, Susan Schrott and I piled into Linda's car and drove to the Heritage Quilt Show in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. We had such a great time! We ate lots of food, bought lots of fabric, gabbed a lot and had fabulous show-and-tells each evening in our pj's . . . what fun!!! I can't wait until next year, when we do it again!

February, 2005

New Work:
I always try to participate in my guild's annual challenge. This year, the NSQG challenge was "portrait" and so I decided to create a portrait of my beloved departed German Shepard, Ava. I've been missing her terribly, and so I thought that perhaps by working on a portrait of her, I'd be able to come to terms with losing her. I'm still terribly sad and lonely without her, but working on the portrait was comforting . . . . almost a way of spending some time with her. If you'd like to take a look at the work in progress, click here.

Teaching and Lecturing:
On February 5th, I taught my Quilting Up-Side-Down workshop to twenty members of the Northern Star Quilters Guild. I had such a good time with my friends, and made some new ones, too. Everyone had a great time, and I'm looking forward to seeing many of the same faces again when I teach a different workshop on Super Saturday, next month on March 5th. That workshop is entitled "Magic Textured Scarves." We'll be creating a beautiful, one-of-a-kind textured scarf from odds and ends of yarn and decorative threads. Using a new product called “Ultra Solvy” as a base, and then choosing either machine fed or free motion stitching, this makes for a really easy, quick, fun and satisfying project. In fact, I expect each participant will go home with a finished product! I can't wait!

On February 1st, my lecture for the Hudson River Quilters of Croton-on-Hudson, New York was cancelled due to a ferocious snowstorm. I'm disappointed to have to wait . . . the lecture was re-scheduled for April 5th, which seems like such a long time away!

Exhibitions and Shows:
My quilt, "The Golden Skirted Dancers" will be shown as part of the exhibit: Fiber Revolution at the Belskie Museum. It's at the Belskie Museum of Art and Science, at 280 High Street, Closter, NJ  08624, 201-768-0286. The exhibit will run from February 6 through the 27th.

January, 2005

Teaching and Lecturing:
I've spent the last couple of months concentrating on developing my new lecture, entitled: My Love Affair with the Flowing Line. I'll be presenting it to some local guilds and groups in the coming months. See my teaching schedule for the exact dates and locations.

Although writing the lecture was a true labor of love, it was an exhausting affair that took many months and lots of help. I am eternally grateful to my good friends, Benedicte Caneille, Beth Carney, Judy Gignesi, Laura Goldstein, Georgia Heller, Karen Maru, Jeri Riggs, Linda Schoenfeld, Susan Schrott, Barbara Sferra and Joyce Sullivan for their advice, encouragement and support. Without them, their immense patience, and the tireless feedback they provided, I'd never have completed the presentation. My thanks to all of you, my dear friends, for helping me to realize this dream of mine!

Exhibitions and Shows:
The new Fiber Revolution postcard lists the shows and exhibits that Fiber Revolution will be having in the next few months. I will be participating in a number of the exhibits, which will be in New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. Please visit the Fiber Revolution website for the exact dates and locations!
 


November, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
On Monday, November 8th, I went to the Yonkers Riverfront Library with my friends Susan Schrott, Beth Carney and Jeri Riggs, to hang our quilts in the Cultures of Westchester: Folk Art Visionaries show. We had a great time hanging the quilts in the library's beautiful "Yonkers Room" which overlooks the Hudson River. What a spectacular view! While we were working on the hanging, Ernie Garcia, a reporter from the Journal News, interviewed each of us about our work. Imagine my surprise when an article entitled: Folk Artists on display in Yonkers appeared in the Local section of the Journal News on Tuesday, November 9th, and I was extensively quoted! I think that my quilts depicting ancient African women really crystallized the diverse cultural aspects of all the pieces in the show, and that was the reason that the reporter chose to include my comments. Still, it was quite a thrill! Of course, I ran right out to the corner deli to buy up all their copies of the paper!

I received word that my piece Ancient Trance Dancers was juried into Form, Not Function: Quilt Art at the Carnegie. It was one of the 44 works by 44 artists chosen among 470 quilted works submitted by 183 artists. I'm especially pleased to have been accepted into this show since the judge was the very talented Arturo Alonzo Sandoval. The exhibit will be held at the Carnegie Center for Art and History in New Albany, IN (812) 944-7336 between January 14 and March 19, 2005. The opening reception will be held on Friday, January 14, 2005, from 6 to 8 pm.

Travels:
On Wednesday, November 3rd, I flew to Houston with a group of fellow NSQG guild members to attend the IQA show. My roommate, Barbara Sferra, and I had a simply exquisite time. There are really no words to describe how deliciously wonderful the show was . . . a feast for the senses! Every evening, a group of us met to have a show and tell of the wondrous things we'd purchased. Click here for a group picture of some very happy ladies! While we were there I met some absolutely wonderful people, including a new friend, Carol Soderlund, who I met while visiting the SAQA booth. I really enjoyed our conversation. It was such a thrill to meet someone who's familiar with my work and had such kind things to say! I also met quilters from all over the world -- Holland, France, Puerto Rico, Italy, Japan and many parts of the US, including a lovely group of ladies from Kentucky who insisted that I pose in front of my Pink Fat Ladies for a group portrait with them (one of them wanted to know, in her adorable southern drawl, "Now, how did you get into my bathroom to see me when I was naked, darlin, 'cause them there fat ladies look just like me!"). Oh, I laughed and laughed and laughed, and I didn't stop laughing and giggling and buying from the fabulous vendors and being amazed by the gorgeous quilts on display until we came home on Sunday. It was a marvelous vacation, and I just can't wait till next year's show so I can go back there again!


October, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
Four of my art quilts will be displayed at The Blue Door Gallery Presents: CULTURES OF WESTCHESTER: FOLK ART VISIONARIES. The exhibition, which will include the works of over 30 living folk artists living in the New York metropolitan area, will be at the Yonkers Riverfront Library, One Larkin Center, Yonkers, NY, across from the train station. The telephone number is: 914-337-1500. But the very best news is that two of my pieces, Ancient Trance Dancers and The Pink Fat Ladies were chosen for the exhibition's promotional postcard! I didn't have any advance notice that my quilts would be on the postcard, so I was shocked when I opened up the envelope they arrived in! The exhibition will be held from November 12 - December 30, 2004, and the reception will be on Sunday, Nov. 14, from 2 pm - 4:30 pm. The five pieces I'll have in the show are: The Fat Ladies II, The Fat Ladies After Dark, The Red Lady, The Blue Lady, and The Golden Skirted Dancers.


September, 2004

Publications:
The Fall 2004 issue of Quilting Arts Magazine contains a feature article entitled "In The Spotlight: Elizabeth Rosenberg of Yorktown Heights, NY." It's all about my African Rock Art series, how I was inspired to create them and what I hope to achieve in the future. I am so thrilled that a magazine as drop-dead gorgeous as Quilting Arts has included me in their pages. There sure is a lot of jumping up-and-down going on around here! So many friends, former students and quilting buddies have called, emailed or send cards and letters congratulating me on this tremendous achievement. I hope that this article will open many doors for me in the quilt world . . . I'm looking forward to meeting lots and lots of quilters and sharing my love for what can be done with free-motion with them!

Exhibitions and Shows:
The Pink Ladies were accepted into the International Quilt Festival in Houston. I'm so excited that I'll be able to see it hanging there! I'm very much looking forward to going to Houston as a spectator (i.e., civilian not selling anything!). I'll be traveling with my guild and expect to have a fantastic time!


June, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
Ancient Trance Dancers will be at the Martucci Gallery of the Irvington Public Library from June 2nd to July 28, 2004 as part of the Fiber Revolution exhibition. On June 2nd I helped my fellow Fiber Revolution member, Jeri Riggs, hang the show. We had a lovely time together deciding which quilt looked best where. (Mostly, though, I just handed Jeri the scissors, pins and fishing line when she asked for them, and let her have the honor of climbing up and down the ladder!) The Martucci Gallery is a beautiful space. I think the display looks great, and the people who attended the opening on June 5th agreed. We had a nice afternoon at the opening, surrounded by great art created by members of Fiber Revolution, and I got to meet two more FR members: Carolyn Lee Vehslage and Jutta Halpin. It was such a treat to put faces to the names in my mind!

Teaching:
I taught a workshop to the Croton Pointers on May 27th. I enjoyed meeting them, and teaching them how to care for their sewing machines. They were very interested in the information I gave them about needles and thread! They are such a lovely bunch of women! 

Guild Activity:
I agreed to take on the position of Vendor Chairperson on the Northern Star Quilters' Guild Quilt Show Committee. I will begin serving on the committee just as soon as the files are handed over. I'm looking forward to contributing to the guild that's given me so much in the past. It's going to be fun to get involved again!

New Work in Progress:
I've begun a new series, though I haven't abandoned the last one. I think that are at least a few more "Fat Ladies" left in me! But for not, I'm working on a series that is based on a different rock engraving in Africa. The first one in this new series, The Skirted Dancer, is complete, and I've already begun the second in the series. The African rock art that inspired my pieces was photographed by David Coulson, a brilliant photographer and Chairman of TARA (The Trust for African Rock Art. The engravings of the Skirted Dancer are located just below the summit of a ridge in Niger, Africa. They stand about five feet tall (shorter than the fat ladies, but still a pretty impressive size!). Although the age of the original engraving is unknown, the painting is recent. Locals visit the site of the dancing women to color the engravings with clay and charcoal, hoping to tap into the engravings' ancestral power. During the civil war in the 1990's, the engraving was used for rifle practice.

These ancient dancing women speak to me without words in a way that feels primal. I can't understand exactly what they are saying, but I certainly can understand their joy. With my art, I hope to express my own perception of joy in the feminine experience. Even as I sit at my computerized sewing machine, far removed from the heat of the African sun, womanhood is not so very different for me than it was for the dancing women of Africa so many thousands of years ago. To see photos of Two Skirted Dancers in progress, click here


May, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
Ancient Trance Dancers was awarded a first place ribbon at the Northern Star Quilters' Guild annual show, A World of Quilts XXV, held on May 1st and 2nd, and another one of my quilts, The Pink Fat Ladies, was awarded a second place ribbon in a different category. I'm thrilled! 

The show was great this year, as it always is. NSQG puts on a show that is, in my opinion, the very best guild show on the east coast! (It's MY guild, so I can say that!) All the quilts in the show were quite spectacular, the speakers fabulous, the vendors were superb, and it was so much fun seeing all my good friends and meeting new ones!

Demonstrations:
I was asked to give a thread-painting demonstration in the works-in-progress room during this year's NSQG show, and was happy to oblige -- I do love an audience! Despite the limited space and very hot room, we all had a great time resting our feet and talking about my favorite thing -- thread! I enjoyed answering some very good questions from the peanut gallery. My good friend Judy Gignesi did a fantastic job of organizing the Work-in-progress displays and all of the demonstrations -- what a gal!


April, 2004

Teaching:
What a good time I had teaching my Freemotion Without Fear workshop at the City Quilter earlier this month! Such a nice group of women came to class, and the new, larger space is beautiful! I'll be teaching there again in August, giving a workshop on different methods of machine appliqué. 


March, 2004

Teaching:
I'm looking forward to teaching my Freemotion Without Fear workshop to a group of quilters from the Evening Star quilt guild in Garden City, Long Island on Saturday, March 6th. I plan on bringing my digital camera along so I can take some pictures and upload them to my website in the workshop section.

UPDATE: Their are no other women on earth like those from Long Island -- they are simply the best! I had such a great time with this fabulous bunch of women! The digital camera experiment didn't quite work out (it was a new camera and I guess I just didn't give myself enough time to get familiar with it!) . . . oh well, trust me, they were all very beautiful, and funny and welcoming as well. There was some talk about having me come back to give them another workshop, and I hope they really meant it, because I'd LOVE to go back "home" to Long Island and spend some more time with those wonderful women!


February, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
The Fat Ladies After Dark
was selected to be displayed at Considering Quilts 2004: Fiber Artists Explore the Quilt Form, in New Smyrna Beach, Florida. The show will run from April 3 to May 15, 2004, at the Atlantic Center for the Arts at Harris House. Located across from the picturesque Intracoastal Waterway, the venue provides an impressive setting for the exhibit, which is becoming known as one of the finest small fiber art quilt exhibitions in Florida!

Andrew in Montauk will be part of the ART QUILTS: ELEMENTS exhibition at the Page-Walker Arts & History Center in Cary, North Carolina. The exhibit runs from April 30 to May 31, 2004. An artist' reception will be held on April 30, at 6-8 pm.

The Blue Lady won two ribbons at the Northern Star Quilters Guild's annual challenge: Reflections. It was awarded third place for Best Use of Embellishment and third place for Best Use of Non-Traditional Material. The quilt will travel with the other challenge entries to the Quilters Heritage Celebration in Lancaster, PA, where it will be included in a special exhibit from April 1-4th, 2004.


January, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
Spring Rain, New Growth and Elect-Trickle Banana were juried into the Quilters Heritage Celebration in Lancaster, PA. The annual event will be held April 1-4, 2004.

Sale:
The Three Fat Ladies was sold to Carolyn Lee Vehslage. It has become a part of Carolyn's growing fiber art collection. I'm very excited to have a piece included in Carolyn's collection, where it lives among some very illustrious company!


December, 2003

Exhibitions and Shows:
Mini Spring Rain was selected to be displayed at the Road to California Quilters' Showcase at the Ontario Convention Center in Ontario, California. The conference/show will be held January 15th through January 18th of 2004. The judges for the show will be Cindy Walter, Bonnie Browning and Lynn Kough.

Publications:
The Fat Ladies
will appear in Magic Patch™ magazine, a European quilt publication, along with other quilts that were a part of the the Wrapped in Cloth: The Human Figure in Textiles exhibit. I don't know any more details yet!


November, 2003

Sale:
The Fat Ladies was sold to Charles Shafer and Mary Fitzgibbons, of Rio Rico, Arizona, during the Wrapped in Cloth: the Human Figure in Textiles exhibit at the Tubac Center of the Arts in Tubac, AZ. I received a lovely email from Mary telling me that her husband, Charles, purchased the quilt as a gift for her on the occasion of their 30th wedding anniversary. Mary sounds like a lovely lady. I'm so glad that the first, and most special quilt in my Fat Ladies series has found a good home!


October, 2003

Publications:
Festival of Lights appears on page 38 of the November/December issue of Fons & Porter's Love of Quilting™ in a lovely article entitled "Glory Quilts." The author, Linda Hungerford, interviewed me for the article some time ago. I think she did a wonderful job of condensing our very long telephone conversation into a cohesive description of my pattern company and how it began, and its a lovely tribute to the memory of my father-in-law. My thanks to Linda, and to Marianne Fons, who was just great to deal with -- and to my dear friend, Mary Gay Leahy, who convinced Marianne to visit me in my booth at Houston Quilt Market last year.

Exhibits and Shows:
I just received word that two of my quilts, Art Nouveau Tree and Spring Rain, New Growth were accepted into the Quilts=Art=Quilts exhibition at the Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center in Auburn, New York. I'm so honored and thrilled to have two quilts in this very prestigious show! The exhibit opens on November 1st and runs through January 4th of 2004.

The Website:
The tweaking is never done! I've added a new feature to the Patterns page, allowing customers to buy patterns using PayPal. So far, it's working out very nicely, making shopping a lot easier and much more efficient. It lets me get out those patterns much more quickly, with a whole lot less turn-around time!

Teaching:
I'll be teaching my most popular workshop, Free Motion Without Fear, at the new location of The City Quilter on April 17th of 2004.


September, 2003

Publications:
"Spinning Dreidel," a bright, colorful and easy little quilt that I designed, appears on page 46 of the December issue of McCall's Quilting Magazine. Beth Hayes, McCall's editor, asked me to design a Hanukkah quilt for the magazine when I met her last fall in Houston during Quilt Market. Many thanks go to my friend, Meghan Carroll, who cut out all those little coins, helping me to meet the deadline and get the quilt to Colorado on time! The bi-monthly magazine is on newsstands now -- How exciting!

Exhibits and Shows:
Three Fat Ladies, along with 29 other quilts by the group, Fiber Revolution, will be shown at the Ellen Traut Collection Gallery, 635 Farmington Avenue, Hartford, CT ( 860-233-1938), Sept 3 - Oct 31, 2003. The Opening reception will be held on September 5, 5:30-8:30 pm.

Elect-Trickle Banana has been accepted for the exhibit "Quilts for Art Sake II", October 3 -26, 2003. There will be a gala Opening Reception on Friday night, October 3rd from 6-9 pm at the Makeready's Gallery 214 ArtSpace, 214 Glenridge Avenue, Montclaire, NJ 07042.

Mysterious and Second Trial Mystery have been accepted into Art Quilts VIII: A Cut Above. This national exhibition at the Chandler Center for the Arts (250 N. Arizona Avenue, Chandler, Arizona) will be displayed from Sept. 24 - Nov. 8, 2003 with a reception on October 3, from 7-9 pm.

The Fat Ladies was accepted into the Tubac Center of the Arts exhibition "Wrapped in Cloth - The Human Figure in Textiles", October 11 - November 16, 2003. Night Gardening and Andrew in Montauk were accepted into the on-line exhibition. The website http://www.TubacArts.org sale opens on the First of September. Please visit! An opening reception will be held at 3 pm on Saturday, October 11th at Tubac Center of the Arts, 9 Plaza Road, Tubac, Arizona 85646 (520) 398-2371. Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 10 AM - 4:30 PM, Sundays 1 PM - 4:30 PM. Closed Mondays. ** Extra special news ** -- The Fat Ladies was chosen as the featured quilt pictured on the postcard, gallery poster and the website for the on-line exhibition of Wrapped in Cloth. What a thrill! It's the first time one of my quilts was chosen as the featured quilt -- and printed on the postcard for a show -- I am so excited!

Teaching:
I'll be teaching a six hour workshop, Free Motion Without Fear for the Evening Star Quilters of Garden City, Long Island on Saturday, March 6, 2004. I'm looking forward to meeting them!


August, 2003

Publications:
It was such a huge thrill to receive my September issue of Quilter's Newsletter Magazine in the mail and to see my quilt, Strawberry Fields Forever right there on page 60! It was in very good company, with beautiful quilts by, among other talented artists, Ann Fahl and Katie Pasquini Masopust.  

Teaching:
I'll be teaching two class this fall at the Country Quilter: Free Motion Without Fear and a Threadpainting class with a new sample featuring beautiful autumn leaves. See my Workshops page for more information about these two classes.

Changes and Additions to the Website:
As everyone who's ever maintained a website knows, the work is never done . . . It seems as if there is always "just one more thing" that has to be done!  I've changed the organization of my gallery pages, and I'm much happier with the way all the quilts look now. Please drop me a line and let me know what you think!  I've also added a
section to my home page that lists exhibits where my work is currently being shown.

Exhibits and Shows:
Speaking of places where my work is being shown, I've discovered that it's a whole lot of work (almost like a full-time job!) to organize all those entry forms, deadline dates, shipping dates and show and exhibit schedules! I wish I had a secretary!  I think I've finally come up with a system that works for me -- it involves a very, very large calendar with lots of room to note which of my art quilts will be where, when . . . yellow and bright pink highlighter lets me know when each quilts need to be shipped, and when it will return home. If only there was a dedicated computer program I could use!

During the month of August, my quilts I Heard It Through the Grapevine and Electrical Banana will be exhibited at the Mancuso Brothers World Quilt & Textile - On Tour - New England at The Center of New Hampshire Hotel, 700 Elm Street, Manchester, NH 03101 August 14 - 17, 2003. More exhibits are planned for the fall -- my quilts will be traveling a whole lot more than I will!


June, 2003

A New Direction:
Spring was a season of change for me, both personally and artistically -- and it was all good! 

After more than six years of working as a part-time staff member at the Country Quilter in Somers, New York, it was time to make a change, and so at the end of May, I sadly gave notice. I'll miss so many things about working there   . . but, change can be good . . . I'm looking forward to spending my new found "extra time" in my studio creating art quilts!

Also last month came an invitation to join Fiber Revolution, a group of professional fiber artists from New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. I'm excited and honored to be a part of this group of thirty talented artists. Please visit our beautiful new website at: http://www.fiberrevolution.com

This invitation has lit a fire under me, so to speak. I feel invigorated, and I'm eager to get started creating lots and lots of fiber art! So, artistically, I feel as I've entered a new phase. If you've really been paying attention, you'll have noticed that the quilt on my website's home page looks different. It's brand new, though it's based on last year's April journal quilt. I've called it: Spring Rain, New Growth. It's symbolic of the new outlook I have on my art. For now, at least, I plan to spend my creative time working on art that make me happy, that gives me joy, that is pleasing to me alone. I've decided not to worry about whether anyone else will like my work.  We'll just have to see where this new direction takes me!


May, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
Ancient Trance Dancers was awarded a first place ribbon at the Northern Star Quilters' Guild annual show, A World of Quilts XXV, held on May 1st and 2nd, and another one of my quilts, The Pink Fat Ladies, was awarded a second place ribbon in a different category. I'm thrilled! 

The show was great this year, as it always is. NSQG puts on a show that is, in my opinion, the very best guild show on the east coast! (It's MY guild, so I can say that!) All the quilts in the show were quite spectacular, the speakers fabulous, the vendors were superb, and it was so much fun seeing all my good friends and meeting new ones!

Demonstrations:
I was asked to give a thread-painting demonstration in the works-in-progress room during this year's NSQG show, and was happy to oblige -- I do love an audience! Despite the limited space and very hot room, we all had a great time resting our feet and talking about my favorite thing -- thread! I enjoyed answering some very good questions from the peanut gallery. My good friend Judy Gignesi did a fantastic job of organizing the Work-in-progress displays and all of the demonstrations -- what a gal!


April, 2004

Teaching:
What a good time I had teaching my Freemotion Without Fear workshop at the City Quilter earlier this month! Such a nice group of women came to class, and the new, larger space is beautiful! I'll be teaching there again in August, giving a workshop on different methods of machine appliqué. 


March, 2004

Teaching:
I'm looking forward to teaching my Freemotion Without Fear workshop to a group of quilters from the Evening Star quilt guild in Garden City, Long Island on Saturday, March 6th. I plan on bringing my digital camera along so I can take some pictures and upload them to my website in the workshop section.

UPDATE: Their are no other women on earth like those from Long Island -- they are simply the best! I had such a great time with this fabulous bunch of women! The digital camera experiment didn't quite work out (it was a new camera and I guess I just didn't give myself enough time to get familiar with it!) . . . oh well, trust me, they were all very beautiful, and funny and welcoming as well. There was some talk about having me come back to give them another workshop, and I hope they really meant it, because I'd LOVE to go back "home" to Long Island and spend some more time with those wonderful women!


February, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
The Fat Ladies After Dark
was selected to be displayed at Considering Quilts 2004: Fiber Artists Explore the Quilt Form, in New Smyrna Beach, Florida. The show will run from April 3 to May 15, 2004, at the Atlantic Center for the Arts at Harris House. Located across from the picturesque Intracoastal Waterway, the venue provides an impressive setting for the exhibit, which is becoming known as one of the finest small fiber art quilt exhibitions in Florida!

Andrew in Montauk will be part of the ART QUILTS: ELEMENTS exhibition at the Page-Walker Arts & History Center in Cary, North Carolina. The exhibit runs from April 30 to May 31, 2004. An artist' reception will be held on April 30, at 6-8 pm.

The Blue Lady won two ribbons at the Northern Star Quilters Guild's annual challenge: Reflections. It was awarded third place for Best Use of Embellishment and third place for Best Use of Non-Traditional Material. The quilt will travel with the other challenge entries to the Quilters Heritage Celebration in Lancaster, PA, where it will be included in a special exhibit from April 1-4th, 2004.


January, 2004

Exhibitions and Shows:
Spring Rain, New Growth and Elect-Trickle Banana were juried into the Quilters Heritage Celebration in Lancaster, PA. The annual event will be held April 1-4, 2004.

Sale:
The Three Fat Ladies was sold to Carolyn Lee Vehslage. It has become a part of Carolyn's growing fiber art collection. I'm very excited to have a piece included in Carolyn's collection, where it lives among some very illustrious company!


December, 2003

Exhibitions and Shows:
Mini Spring Rain was selected to be displayed at the Road to California Quilters' Showcase at the Ontario Convention Center in Ontario, California. The conference/show will be held January 15th through January 18th of 2004. The judges for the show will be Cindy Walter, Bonnie Browning and Lynn Kough.

Publications:
The Fat Ladies
will appear in Magic Patch™ magazine, a European quilt publication, along with other quilts that were a part of the the Wrapped in Cloth: The Human Figure in Textiles exhibit. I don't know any more details yet!


November, 2003

Sale:
The Fat Ladies was sold to Charles Shafer and Mary Fitzgibbons, of Rio Rico, Arizona, during the Wrapped in Cloth: the Human Figure in Textiles exhibit at the Tubac Center of the Arts in Tubac, AZ. I received a lovely email from Mary telling me that her husband, Charles, purchased the quilt as a gift for her on the occasion of their 30th wedding anniversary. Mary sounds like a lovely lady. I'm so glad that the first, and most special quilt in my Fat Ladies series has found a good home!


October, 2003

Publications:
Festival of Lights appears on page 38 of the November/December issue of Fons & Porter's Love of Quilting™ in a lovely article entitled "Glory Quilts." The author, Linda Hungerford, interviewed me for the article some time ago. I think she did a wonderful job of condensing our very long telephone conversation into a cohesive description of my pattern company and how it began, and its a lovely tribute to the memory of my father-in-law. My thanks to Linda, and to Marianne Fons, who was just great to deal with -- and to my dear friend, Mary Gay Leahy, who convinced Marianne to visit me in my booth at Houston Quilt Market last year.

Exhibits and Shows:
I just received word that two of my quilts, Art Nouveau Tree and Spring Rain, New Growth were accepted into the Quilts=Art=Quilts exhibition at the Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center in Auburn, New York. I'm so honored and thrilled to have two quilts in this very prestigious show! The exhibit opens on November 1st and runs through January 4th of 2004.

The Website:
The tweaking is never done! I've added a new feature to the Patterns page, allowing customers to buy patterns using PayPal. So far, it's working out very nicely, making shopping a lot easier and much more efficient. It lets me get out those patterns much more quickly, with a whole lot less turn-around time!

Teaching:
I'll be teaching my most popular workshop, Free Motion Without Fear, at the new location of The City Quilter on April 17th of 2004.


September, 2003

Publications:
"Spinning Dreidel," a bright, colorful and easy little quilt that I designed, appears on page 46 of the December issue of McCall's Quilting Magazine. Beth Hayes, McCall's editor, asked me to design a Hanukkah quilt for the magazine when I met her last fall in Houston during Quilt Market. Many thanks go to my friend, Meghan Carroll, who cut out all those little coins, helping me to meet the deadline and get the quilt to Colorado on time! The bi-monthly magazine is on newsstands now -- How exciting!

Exhibits and Shows:
Three Fat Ladies, along with 29 other quilts by the group, Fiber Revolution, will be shown at the Ellen Traut Collection Gallery, 635 Farmington Avenue, Hartford, CT ( 860-233-1938), Sept 3 - Oct 31, 2003. The Opening reception will be held on September 5, 5:30-8:30 pm.

Elect-Trickle Banana has been accepted for the exhibit "Quilts for Art Sake II", October 3 -26, 2003. There will be a gala Opening Reception on Friday night, October 3rd from 6-9 pm at the Makeready's Gallery 214 ArtSpace, 214 Glenridge Avenue, Montclaire, NJ 07042.

Mysterious and Second Trial Mystery have been accepted into Art Quilts VIII: A Cut Above. This national exhibition at the Chandler Center for the Arts (250 N. Arizona Avenue, Chandler, Arizona) will be displayed from Sept. 24 - Nov. 8, 2003 with a reception on October 3, from 7-9 pm.

The Fat Ladies was accepted into the Tubac Center of the Arts exhibition "Wrapped in Cloth - The Human Figure in Textiles", October 11 - November 16, 2003. Night Gardening and Andrew in Montauk were accepted into the on-line exhibition. The website http://www.TubacArts.org sale opens on the First of September. Please visit! An opening reception will be held at 3 pm on Saturday, October 11th at Tubac Center of the Arts, 9 Plaza Road, Tubac, Arizona 85646 (520) 398-2371. Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 10 AM - 4:30 PM, Sundays 1 PM - 4:30 PM. Closed Mondays. ** Extra special news ** -- The Fat Ladies was chosen as the featured quilt pictured on the postcard, gallery poster and the website for the on-line exhibition of Wrapped in Cloth. What a thrill! It's the first time one of my quilts was chosen as the featured quilt -- and printed on the postcard for a show -- I am so excited!

Teaching:
I'll be teaching a six hour workshop, Free Motion Without Fear for the Evening Star Quilters of Garden City, Long Island on Saturday, March 6, 2004. I'm looking forward to meeting them!


August, 2003

Publications:
It was such a huge thrill to receive my September issue of Quilter's Newsletter Magazine in the mail and to see my quilt, Strawberry Fields Forever right there on page 60! It was in very good company, with beautiful quilts by, among other talented artists, Ann Fahl and Katie Pasquini Masopust.  

Teaching:
I'll be teaching two class this fall at the Country Quilter: Free Motion Without Fear and a Threadpainting class with a new sample featuring beautiful autumn leaves. See my Workshops page for more information about these two classes.

Changes and Additions to the Website:
As everyone who's ever maintained a website knows, the work is never done . . . It seems as if there is always "just one more thing" that has to be done!  I've changed the organization of my gallery pages, and I'm much happier with the way all the quilts look now. Please drop me a line and let me know what you think! I've added a section to my home page that lists exhibits where my work is currently being shown.

Exhibits and Shows:
Speaking of places where my work is being shown, I've discovered that it's a whole lot of work (almost like a full-time job!) to organize all those entry forms, deadline dates, shipping dates and show and exhibit schedules! I wish I had a secretary!  I think I've finally come up with a system that works for me -- it involves a very, very large calendar with lots of room to note which of my art quilts will be where, when . . . yellow and bright pink highlighter lets me know when each quilts need to be shipped, and when it will return home. If only there was a dedicated computer program I could use!

During the month of August, my quilts I Heard It Through the Grapevine and Electrical Banana will be exhibited at the Mancuso Brothers World Quilt & Textile - On Tour - New England at The Center of New Hampshire Hotel, 700 Elm Street, Manchester, NH 03101 August 14 - 17, 2003. More exhibits are planned for the fall -- my quilts will be traveling a whole lot more than I will!


June, 2003

A New Direction:
Spring was a season of change for me, both personally and artistically -- and it was all good! 

After more than six years of working as a part-time staff member at the Country Quilter in Somers, New York, it was time to make a change, and so at the end of May, I sadly gave notice. I'll miss so many things about working there   . . but, change can be good . . . I'm looking forward to spending my new found "extra time" in my studio creating art quilts!

Also last month came an invitation to join Fiber Revolution, a group of professional fiber artists from New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. I'm excited and honored to be a part of this group of thirty talented artists. Please visit our beautiful new website at: http://www.fiberrevolution.com

This invitation has lit a fire under me, so to speak. I feel invigorated, and I'm eager to get started creating lots and lots of fiber art! So, artistically, I feel as I've entered a new phase. If you've really been paying attention, you'll have noticed that the quilt on my website's home page looks different. It's brand new, though it's based on last year's April journal quilt. I've called it: Spring Rain, New Growth. It's symbolic of the new outlook I have on my art. For now, at least, I plan to spend my creative time working on art that make me happy, that gives me joy, that is pleasing to me alone. I've decided not to worry about whether anyone else will like my work.  We'll just have to see where this new direction takes me!


April, 2003

Inventing Tradition:
The newest Inventing Tradition pattern, Dove of Peace, is featured on page 4 of  the current issue of American Quilt Retailer newsletter. Unfortunately, the telephone number was printed incorrectly. My business contact number is: 914-962-6131. The fax number is 914-962-1159. Click here for more information about my patterns.

The Website: 
After taking a class in web design using Microsoft FrontPage last winter, I've been tinkering with my website and have finally gotten it in good enough shape (I know it's hopelessly slow and there's still things to work out. . .) to replace my old Inventing Tradition site -- I'll never be an expert at this computer stuff, but I do enjoy it. The only problem is that it's never really, really done, and web design doesn't leave a whole lot of time for quilting!

Teaching:
I'll be teaching a class this summer at the Country Quilter based on a pattern from the book, "Garden Inspired Quilts" by Jean & Valori Wells. The quilt, Summer Celebration, depicts a beautiful dragonfly in a lush garden, and features lots of free-motion embroidery and quilting. I'll also be teaching Free Motion Without Fear and a new class on Threadpainting. See my Workshops page for more information about these.  

Publications:
I've just received word that my quilt Strawberry Fields Forever will be featured in an upcoming issue of Quilters' Newsletter Magazine. How exciting!


March, 2003

Publications:
What a thrill to unsuspectingly open a class catalog and find my own quilt inside! Wow!  I just received my copy of the Spring International Quilt Festival/Chicago  class catalog, and inside, on page 2, is my February Zebra Journal page, and a very nice credit with my name right below it! Yahoo! 


January, 2003

Teaching:
I'll be teaching a class based on my new Inventing Tradition pattern, Welcoming the Sabbath, at The City Quilter on February 9th. I'm so excited about teaching in New York City! This is going to be so fun!


September, 2002

Inventing Tradition:
My three newest Inventing Tradition patterns are finally finished! 

Quilt Market:
I'll be attending International Quilt Market in Houston in October. It's my first time there as an exhibitor. My booth number is 1027. I'm excited and nervous, but mostly I'm exhausted, because there's so much work involved in getting ready for Market! The dates for this year's market are October 26th through October 28th. It's open to the trade only - if you attend, please stop by my booth and say hello!

Teaching:
I'll be teaching four different classes this fall at The Country Quilter in Somers, NY. The schedule is available at the shop now, or you can check it out online at The Country Quilter.

One class in particular has been very popular, and fills almost instantly as soon as it's offered. It's called "Free Motion without Fear." It's a six hour class that's designed to get rid of that awful fear that strikes the hearts of many when those feed dogs go down! The class includes lots of information about decorative threads, needles and other free-motion techniques, as well as exercises to strengthen control of stitch length, speed and control. It's been great fun to teach, and I hope to be able to continue teaching it for a long, long time!

Traveling quilts:
In October of 2001, along with almost 300 other quilters, I participated in the "America: From the Heart" exhibit held at the International Quilt Festival in Houston. My contribution, "Reaching Up to the Sky," a tribute to the victims of the World Trade Center disaster, was one of approximately 100 quilts auctioned off, with the proceeds going to the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund. You can see the quilt on page 51 of the book published by C&T Publishing. All the proceeds from the book will also go the Scholarship Fund. 

"Reaching Up to the Sky" has continued to travel around the country, with the kind permission of its new owners, Jim and Janice Feather. Currently, it can be seen at the Hudson River Museum from September 28th through January 5th, 2003.


June, 2002

Inventing Tradition:
I've been working on some new patterns for the "Celebrate Your Heritage" line. They're coming together nicely, and should be ready to go to the photographer very soon. The photographs that appear on my pattern covers were taken by Howard Goodman, PO Box 453, Peekskill NY 10566. He's great! If you need professional craft photography, you can e-mail Howard directly at hogo@advinc.com

Teaching:
I'll be teaching three different classes this summer at The Country Quilter in Somers, NY. The schedule is available at the shop now, or you can check it out online at The Country Quilter.

Traveling quilts:
I recently completed the latest quilt in my "Rock 'n Roll Fruit" series. I Heard it Through the Grapevine has been traveling all over the country lately.  It went to Indiana for the Indiana Heritage Show, and then it traveled to Lancaster, Pennsylvania for the Quilter's Heritage Celebration.  Its next trip was a lot more local — it was shown at the Northern Star Quilters' Guild show, "A World of Quilts XXIII on May 4th and 5th in Somers, NY, where it received a third place ribbon in its category.

Another of my art quilts, "Strawberry Fields Forever" traveled to Dallas for the Dallas Quilt Celebration in March, where it won an Honorable Mention in the Masters Division. When it returned home, I was really surprised to find a huge ribbon in the box! Wow, they give out really, really big ribbons at those Texas quilt shows!

Along with almost 300 other quilters, I participated in the "America: From the Heart" exhibit held at the International Quilt Festival in Houston last October. I'm proud to have been a part of this event, organized by Karey Bresenhan. My contribution, Reaching up to the Sky  was one of approximately 100 quilts auctioned off last October, with all of the proceeds going to the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund. You can see the quilt on page 51 of the book published by C&T Publishing. All the proceeds from the book will also go the Scholarship Fund. 

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