Day 20 Quilting Bee #4 The Frame, and My Favorite Word?

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Uploaded by on Oct 26, 2010

Responses to missusmadness, Marie, Lima, and Tyrbolo. Showing the three pole frame, and suggesting you drop by if in the area and do a few stitches. No skill required.
We can put it on the video.

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Howto & Style

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Uploader Comments (atree3)

  • First of all thank you for keeping me company, I am working late.

    And B....What is the deal with "Moist" What was the context or meaning? Or at least tell me if it was good connotation or a bad one? Pweeze?

    3...I wish I lived in the neighborhood or even if I knew how to sew, I might just pass by...Love the idea of it

    C... it would be cool if you had all of us send you a T-shirt or fabric to use in your next quilt

    and in summation Much love to you sister!

  • @Tobie2 hi, good idea for fabrics

    no connotation, guess that was the point

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All Comments (13)

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  • Moist hey? LOL that is a good one

  • Your comments about "yes" remind me of the first meeting of John and Yoko at her exhibition at the Indica gallery. One of the exhibits required him to climb a ladder and read a tiny note at the top. It said "yes". John said that it was the positivity of the word that stimulated his interest in the artist who put it there.

  • YES has been my favorite word forever. (which is why I named my little candle company YES Candles) Through the years I have bought, and people have sent me letters of all shapes and sizes that spell Y E S. It is quite a little collection but was starting to be too much so I put a halt to that. It made me smile when you mentioned YES...and made me laugh when you said Moist for some reason.

  • I see that makes a lot more convenient arrangement for quilting than the two pole

    frame. It would limit the number of people who could work at once but you get a

    lot tighter assembly of the quilt.

    Great story.

  • Your quilt is coming along fabulous. I will upload the video of the quilt I made. Last year I told you I was going to start one, but I got around to it and finished it a few days ago. Sadly, my camera wasn't working and I just got it fixed. Thanks so much for your inspiration.

  • I forgot to add, I love having people help put stitches in my quilt, and even though their stitches aren't as small and as even as mine, no one will notice, and I have nice way to remember the fun we have that day. And a quilt frame is a must for ease of quilting, I think. If I lived in the Bay area, I would be sending you a message to stop bye!

  • That price seems so low to me...but I digress, people often have no idea the cost in actually making a quilt. If you decide to go to the fabric store, and buy good quality cotton, its easily $200 for the fabric for the top alone. Then there is the backing, and batting, and the thread. That's I never sell mine, I give them away! Ha! I would rather do that to someone that needs a quilt to keep warm! And there are plenty that do...

  • That frame is pretty cool. Fascinating process to those of us who'd never really thought about how quilts are made before.

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