Monday, April 1, 2024

Penn Oaks Newsletter-April 20324

 Penn Oaks Newsletter  April 2024

President's Note

Hi, all!
I did not get any emails or texts from anyone volunteering to hold office in the guild next year. Rikki has said she will be treasurer.

Hopefully, before our April meeting, some one will let me know which position they would like to take for next year. OTHERWISE, I will likely be forced to put names in a hat and draw out names. Also, people who don't come to the meeting will be included. 

All that aside, I am looking forward to seeing all of you, the mega show and tell, and Terry Lieberman's program. She is outstanding! Carolyn

Programs  

In April, we plan to return to in-person meetings in the back building of the church.  We will be hosting Terry Lieberman from the Brandywine Valley Quilt Guild. Bring your quilts for show and tell after Terry’s presentation. The last two months we will focus on a Sew Day working on UFOs or projects and our Quilt Challenge and just having time to socialize with one another and enjoy the members of our guild.

April 4/8/2024

·        Terry Lieberman

·        Don’t Stitch in my Ditch:  How to quilt your quilt and select thread colors

·        In-Person

Terry Lieberman will present “Don’t Stitch in My Ditch: How to quilt your quilt and select thread colors.” Terry is a member of the BVQG. She started quilting 18 years ago and quickly realized that her favorite part of the quilting process was the actual quilting. As a national award-winning quilter, she used her teaching background to easily transition into teaching the art of quilting. Her motto is “YES YOU CAN!”

May 5/13/2024      

·        Sew Day from 1-8pm

·        In-Person

 The May meeting will be a UFO Sew Day.  We will be in person at the back building in the church where we can work on any UFO or new projects.  It will be a time of community and sewing.  Sewing will be from 1pm to 8pm with a meeting starting at 7pm to discuss any business.

June 6/10/2024

·        Year End Party

·        Quilt Challenge

·        In- Person

In June, we will meet in the back building of the church where we will have our Year End Party, Quilt Challenge, a Show and Tell of any work that anyone wants to share, and some games and prizes.

Challenge - Kathy Timko - Rikki Newlander

The Challenge: Lets hear it for Barbie!

If you would like to participate, unleash you inner Barbie with at least a baby sized quilt to keep or donate. Go with a riot of pinks or pick your (or your daughters or nieces) favorite Barbie outfit to use as inspiration. We’re looking forward to seeing what you can come up with!

Rikki and Kathy

Snacks


2024 Getaway

We are diligently working on next years Getaway. Stay tuned.

Ellen McMillen (ejmcmillen@verizon.net) and Cindy Vognetz (cvognetz@hotmail.com

  Ways & Means

So here's our 2024 fundraiser. Prepare a list of UFOs that you would like to get done this year. You give me your list and $5 for each UFO. 
For each UFO you complete, you get $2 back (50ish) and a ticket for an "opportunity" (this is not a raffle).
In December we will get all the opportunity tickets together and someone will win half of what is left over (50) with the other half going to the guild (50).

So, for example, if I have 10 UFOs (you can't spin in my quilt studio without hitting one,  but I digress), I would list them out and give the quilt guild envelope I'll be carrying $50.

If I finish 8, I get $16 back and 8 opportunities to win half of my $34 plus anything else that the quilt guild has added to that pot. Finish all 10? $20 back and 30 in the opportunity pot.

Send me your UFO list by January 15th. I'll collect $ the next time we're together. Take pics of your finishes and you'll get you $2 per and your opportunity ticket at every in person meeting with final drawing at December meeting! You don't have to be at the December meeting to win, but you do need to pay/get opportunity tickets in person! 

Good luck and happy quilting. 

  Membership - Denise Blake and Elaine Egan


  Penn Oaks Sunshine

If you know of a guilt member who could use some well wishes or encouragement because of a sickness or life event, please contact me at ejmcmillen@verizon.net  I will make sure to send our collective good thoughts to our fellow member.
Ellen McMillen

2023  Board

President - Carolyn Davis 

Program Chair - Deb Houck

Assistant to Programs - Elaine Mayer

Treasurer - Rita Marie Smith

Recording Secretary - Kelly Meanix

Corresponding Secretary - Ellen McMillen

Membership - Denise Blake-Elaine Egan

Ways & Means - Jen Burke

Scraps and Pieces From The Textile World

Tal Fitzpatrick’s project PM Please was eventually delivered to Australia’s Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, to whom the messages were directed.

Photo courtesy of Fairfax

One of the most important things about craft to me is that it helps us be of use while also giving us agency, just like it has given (mostly) women agency for hundreds of years. The fact that making often includes choice (colors, patterns, words) is significant. It inherently allows us to choose something, to personalize what springs from our hands. That’s what I was so enamored by when I started writing about craftivism publically in the spring of 2003. That something so quiet can be so loud spoke so near and dear to my heart that I knew it had to be that way for others. So craftivism, the place where craft and activism meet, began. And people all over the world wanted to give their craft even more power than it had already by using their craft skills for creative and activist means.

Although it was not a new concept, it now had a name, which allowed it to grow into a community. After watching people make craftivist items for years, I realized such work is generally made up of three central tenets: donation (giving what you make away), beautification (making your surroundings more beautiful, such as with yarnboming) and notification (raising awareness about a cause or subject). Sometimes the work crosses between the three, such as are the examples I’m going to talk about today. They each use donated items to amplify a cause in different ways. They each utilize the decisions and work of someone else to make the world a better place.

Items made through Shannon Downey’s End Gun Violence project.

Photos by Shannon Downey

Stitching to Raise Money

Shannon Downey’s End Gun Violence project is collecting stitched handguns based on a pattern she created as the basis for pieces to show and sell as a way to raise money for Project FIRE (Fearless Initiative for Recovery and Empowerment), a glass-blowing studio in Chicago that helps kids with trauma issues related to violence. The End Gun Violence project began simply, “I decided to stitch a gun one day because I was just so overwhelmed by the mass shootings and I felt like in that particular day I had heard the word gun violence like at least a hundred times,” says Shannon. She adds that she couldn’t connect with the idea of guns, “so I just started stitching one and then as I was stitching it gave me all this space to really think about it and process how I was feeling about what was going on and just like have some time with it that was instead of it coming at me, I was coming at it.”

When she was finished, she posted it on Instagram, and “folks responded really powerful to it, they were just like, “ugh, guns, ugh” but there’s something about it that takes the power away from it I think when you stitch it and you make it out of fiber.” The project’s deadline is October 31st, which is the deadline for the project’s next fundraising session. The kids in Project FIRE heard about the show and wanted to contribute, too, so one Saturday, Downey taught them how to embroider.

For her, the power of craftivism comes from its small scale that reverberates outward into a larger expanding circle. “I don’t think of it as micro, but when you think of all that needs to be done, this is quite micro, but I just felt like at least I can find a way to do something that will actually, I hope, help change a life, or help change fifteen lives of these young people in this program. But then the sort of ripple effect of how they change lives because their lives have been changed.”

And Downey’s idea has spread; so far she has received project submissions from around the world.

Items made for Tal Fitzpatrick’s PM Message project.

Photos by Tal Fitzpatrick

Stitching to Send a Message

Tal Fitzpatrick’s project PM Please used the donation of both words and stitches in order to share messages with Australia’s Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Some people stitched their own messages, while others shared them with Fitzpatrick and then she stitched them herself. “You have to spark people’s curiosity. And I think that’s what craftivist objects do really well they kind of spark questions and reactions. I think that’s a really important part of why they work.” In the end, she collected 121 messages. Twenty-three were stitched by people at a festival, and the rest were stitched by Tal herself over a period of three weeks filled with 12-hour days.

This project works as craftivism and twins donation and notification by using people’s words and the power of stitching them. The finished quilt tells a story of a certain time and certain worries, hopes and ideas. “I kind of see a lot of my work as storytelling devices or as touchstones that people respond to and respond to critically as opposed to just being like “Oh, that’s nice” or “That’s pretty,”” Tal says. It’s getting into conversation beyond the surface that calls the quilt into power. In the making of the quilt, she says she didn’t edit any of the messages, “for me it was a really democratic process where everyone had kind of an equal opportunity to have a voice.”

Through this work, she gave others the chance to fill in the story with their own words. “With my socially engaged work with the craftivism projects I do I try really hard not to make it about me, I try really hard to use craftivism as this kind of vessel for opening up these political spaces, these spaces where voices that are not seen and not heard can come through or issues that aren’t talked about get addressed. I think it’s more powerful that way.”

With messages about things that are challenging in the moment, noting such problems as asylum seeker resources, marriage equality, violence against women, environmental issues, and getting proper recognition and respect for our indigenous people, these messages become direct requests later rendered in thread.

Items made for Tal Fitzpatrick’s PM Message project.

Photos by Tal Fitzpatrick

“They are things that people were like if this was their one chance to get a message to the Prime Minister, this is what they chose to say. So in that sense, too, it has this real weight.”

Eventually, Fitzpatrick gave the quilt to Turnbull’s office, who in turn gave it to the man himself.

Stitching to Spread Kindness

The third project is my own, and was started as a way to pass along affirmations to women from women. I’ve been collecting stitched affirmation signs to leave for people in public as part of a project called You Are So Very Beautiful. The goal is for both the maker and the receiver to hear the message within as every day we’re bombarded by ads telling us to be different, I thought why not remind us that we are amazing? You can see more of that project on Instagram.

 

2. “Eyewinkers, Tumbleturds, and Candlebugs: The Art of Elizabeth Talford Scott” at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore through April 28, 2024.
3. “Joyce J. Scott: Walk a Mile in My Dreams” at the Baltimore Museum of Art. March 24th, 2024 through July 14th, 2024.

No comments:

Post a Comment

  Penn Oaks Newsletter June 2024 President's Note H i! I am excited about our party. It's all coming together and we are going to ha...