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©
2001
The Nugget Newspaper
Sisters, Oregon
All rights reserved
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Eric
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Quilt
Show brings week of activities
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Quilters
at work during "A Quilters' Affair."
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Hordes of quilters will visit
Sisters on Saturday, July 14, to enjoy the 1,000 quilts that will festoon
the buildings throughout town.
But the Sisters Outdoor Quilt
Show is the culmination of a week of events, and visitors to the show
itself will enjoy activities beyond the display of quilts.
Already on Monday, quilters
were manning their sewing machines at Sisters High School, engaging in
the week-long series of classes and workshops known as "A Quilters' Affair."
Meanwhile, volunteers were sorting quilts and plotting where to hang them
around town, in a logistical effort that resembles an expedition.
Featured Quilters:
- This
year's featured quilter is Helen Goldsmith of Sisters. She's been quilting
since 1990, though she's been sewing all her life. She started taking
classes at The Stitchin' Post and, like so many, became enchanted with
the craft.
"She's kind of known for big quilts," said quilt show founder Jean Wells
Keenan. "She doesn't mess around with little ones."
Actually, Goldsmith
says she'll do a smaller quilt for a class, but she launched her quilting
career with a stipulation that pushed her toward larger work.
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"My first thought was, if you're going to make a quilt, it should fit
a bed," Goldsmith said.
Goldsmith is also
a rug hooker, who uses hand-dyed wool. Both her quilts and her rugs
will be on display on the lawn at Ponderosa Properties during the quilt
show.
-
The "Casual Quilters" of Sisters will display their cooperative works
at the City Center Building at the corner of Elm Street and Hood Avenue
(see story, p. 3).
-
Sisters Drug Company, at the corner of Cascade Avenue and Fir Street,
will host 40 quilts from the Mary's River Quilters Guild of Philomath.
Many activities and events
will be occurring in conjunction with the Quilt Show.
History:
- Nicole
Hanson will display eight quilts from her vintage quilt collection indoors
in the space between The Pony Express and Folk Arts & Company on Hood
Avenue.
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Hanson got interested in vintage quilts in 1969 when she saw women at
the Los Angeles County Fair putting backs on quilts from the 1930s.
Most of her collection dates to the '30s. Her earliest dated quilt is
an 1894 Victorian crazy quilt, though she has others with estimated
dates as early as 1845.
- Daniel
Partner, Sisters musician and author, will present historical tunes
from the time of slavery at the Epicure Exchange Internet Coffeehouse
on the corner of Pine Street and Cascade Avenue on Saturday, July 14.
Partner's performance, called "A Quilt Top Chronicle: Quilts
and Escape From Slavery" will feature traditional minstrel melodies
from the time of slavery played on a reproduction Sweeney banjo, a popular
instrument of the time.
In music and story,
Partner tells of American slavery and the resourcefulness of those who
sought to escape.
On display will be
a sampler quilt made by Rita Fishel of Ohio. The quilt, which she calls
the Underground Railroad Tribute Quilt, consists of an assortment of
quilt patterns of the time, which may have been used as signals for
escaping slaves.
Featured Artists:
-
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Quilt
show poster artist Dennis McGregor will sign prints of his "Legend of
the Nine-Patch Horse" behind The Stitchin' Post during the Quilt Show.
- Diane
Phalen will sign her work at Folk Arts & Company, 222 West Hood Avenue.
The painter, whose work features quilts and wildlife, will be on hand
from 3 to 6 p.m. on Thursday, July 12 and all day on Friday and Saturday.
- Soda
Creek Gallery on the corner of Hood Avenue and Elm Street will host
three special artists on the Saturday of Quilt Show.
Robert Free creates
quilt-inspired stained glass; Jean Nave crafts folk art especially for
quilters; and Susan Luckey Higdon does work in soft pastels and fine
art prints.
Readings:
- Paulina
Springs Book Company will host readings from several authors especially
beloved by quilters.
Jane Kirkpatrick,
author of the "Kinship and Courage" series and other books, will be
at the store on Wednesday, July 11, 4 p.m. Sandra Dallas, author of
"The Persian Pickle Club" and "Alice's Tulips" will visit on Thursday,
July 12, 4 p.m.
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"Mad City Quilter" author Jennifer Chiaverini will read on Friday, July
13, 4 p.m. Her "Elk Creek Quilters" series is popular among the stitching
set.
All three authors
will be in the store on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. to sign their
books.
Fund-raising luncheons and
sale:
- Sisters
Christian Church, in an attempt to raise funds to renovate the sanctuary,
will serve lunch on Saturday for the Quilt Show.
The sanctuary dates
back to 1910.
Quilts will be hung
inside and outside the building, and lunch will be served on location
from 11 a. m. until 3 p.m.
Menu choices are:
chef salad or a chicken salad sandwich on a croissant. A drink and a
cookie are included with the meal.
The church is located
at 302 E. Main Avenue, at the corner of Main Avenue and Spruce Street.
Call the church office at 549-2673 for more information.
-
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Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church will hold its annual Quilt Show
Luncheon and fund-raiser on Saturday, from 10 a .m. until 2 p.m. The
menu will include: turkey roll-ups with choice of salad; choice of 3
salads and chips; iced tea; lemonade; bottled water; coffee; homemade
pie; pie ala mode. The church is located a short 2-block walk from Cascade
north on Fir St. to 386 N. Fir.
- The
Friends of the Sisters Library will hold their annual used book sale
at Sisters Library from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. The library is
located on the southwest corner of Main Avenue and Spruce Street.
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