Monthly Archives: February 2009

Tea @ C&T

Tea @C&T

Tea @C&T

Q: What do authors do when they aren’t at home quilting or on the road teaching?
A: They retreat!

Recently, a group of C&T authors were attending a retreat in Northern California, so we invited them over for tea. We love a good get-together, so with all the Editors pitching in, we threw as authentic a tea as we could muster:

  • “Proper” English tea in china teapots, and of course since it is Northern California there was also herbal tea and lemonade
  • Scones, jam, and clotted cream
  • Ginger cookies
  • Lemon mini-bundt cakes
  • Sandwiches – cucumber, deviled ham, and egg salad
  • Cheese biscuits
  • Strawberries
  • Mints, nuts, and chocolate hearts (it was close to Valentine’s day)

teatable2

We love getting together with our authors. We do most of our work by phone and email so sometimes we don’t even get to get to meet them.

We also had a chance to go meet them at their retreat and to see a bit of what they were working on. View more photos of the tea and retreat here.

The retreat happens every year, so we may have to make this an annual event.

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Author Profile: Jan Krentz

Jan is a very popular quilting teacher and the author of a number of books, DVDs, and tools with C&T Publishing, three of which just came out this month: Quick Star Quilts & Beyond, Quilter’s Design Mirrors, and Half- & Quarter-Diamond Ruler Set. We caught up with her long enough to ask her a few questions.

jankrentz2_2008What was your career before you became an artist?
I was a full-time military wife, homemaker and mother. We have lived in Texas, several locations in California, northern Virginia, Tennessee and Japan. My role as home manager was supplemented with quilting presentations and workshops.

What and when was your first experience as an artist?
I have enjoyed sewing, needlework and crafting since early childhood. In high school I was actively sewing clothing and created my first quilts in the early 1970s. I earned a degree in Textiles, Clothing & Design at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, in 1977.

What inspired you to make a career of your art?
Quilt making and instruction was a natural progression of the various needlework and creative textiles I was creating in the early 1970s. The quilt revival in the seventies brought enthusiastic interest in quilts, and a demand for quilt workshops and presentations.

I have been involved in the quilting industry on many levels: student, teacher, judge, author, designer, product developer, guild founder, guild officer, and program chairman.

How has your artistry changed over the years?
I began with the basic skills and classic, traditional patterns. When I started to make quilts, there were limited resources, publications and tools—the introduction of the rotary cutter, an explosion in publications, and improvements in domestic sewing machines created a thriving industry.

Quilt designs, textile arts of all genres fascinate me! Although I am primarily known for traditional designs with a contemporary flair, I enjoy all aspects of quilt making and surface embellishment.

What is your favorite aspect of your artistry and your artistic community?
The quilting community is unique. Quilt makers are not trained in the art form, but come from a wide variety of backgrounds. Each gathering of quilters worldwide features exciting fellowship, creative sharing and inspiration from various artistic backgrounds.

Do you have a process or ritual for starting new projects?
The past decade has trained me to document every new idea and design inspiration, from fabric selection through design layout and construction. I photograph the processes, step-by-step, in the event that I write the pattern for publication, or teach the pattern in the future. Frequently the current design inspires another related project, and I begin working in a series of related patterns until I exhaust the inspirations!

What happens when you finish a project? Do you celebrate?
I’m lucky because I enjoy all aspects of designing and making a quilt. My teaching schedule restricts the amount of creative time in my studio, and therefore I treasure the creative outlet whenever I can sew! It’s always wonderful to finish a project! These days my projects are usually created to meet a deadline—the pressure of finishing on time is a major motivation!

What new projects are on the horizon for you?
I’m fond of embellishments, lettering and layers in textile design and plan to explore these techniques in future projects.

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Weekly Giveaway: Miniatures in Minutes

My own infatuation with miniatures began when I discovered small plastic barnyard animals and then spent hours setting up elaborate farm scenes on the living room floor as a child. The plastic sheep and horses are long gone, but as I look around my place I see I have a whole new set of miniatures– cupcakes in the pantry, mini hamburgers in the freezer, and decorative animal figurines in every nook and cranny. Terrie Sandelin’s Introduction in her new release Miniatures in Minutes begins, “Why miniatures? Because they’re so darn cute!” With other types of miniatures, the appeal might end there. But with Terrie Sandelin’s mini quilts, the cute factor is only the beginning.

Terrie’s Introduction goes on to explain how miniature quilts saved her from a descent into unfinished project overload: “Because not only can I start and finish a miniature in a timely manner, I will“. With Miniatures in Minutes you can make a gorgeous miniature—with perfect accuracy—in just a small fraction of the time it used to take. The secret is the paper piecing techniques, pioneered by Anita Grossman Solomon and updated in this book to bring miniatures within reach of even the most time-challenged quilter. To this, my short attention span says “Hallelujah!”

This week we’ll be giving away a copy of Miniatures in Minutes to one lucky blog reader. Leave a comment below that describes a certain mini thing that you like, have in your house or were impressed by. On Monday morning (March 2), we’ll pick one commenter at random and announce the winner later that day. Good luck!

*Note: Comments will be closed on Monday, March 2, at 9am PST

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Learn Blendable Curves with Peggy Barkle

Spending time with Peggy Barkle at Quilt Market was a blast. Here she shows off her new technique, aptly named after her book, Blendable Curves.

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A Touch of Felt Winner

Congratulations to kimberlee, winner of last week’s book giveaway. Please shoot us an email with your mailing address so we can send you your prize, A Touch of Felt by Lynne Farris.

Thanks to everyone who participated! We’ll announce a new giveaway tomorrow so stay tuned.

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Tea Party—Invitations

The birthday girl

The birthday girl

My Toddler is now a young girl; she just turned 6 years old. Alivia wanted to have a tea party for her birthday so I found a cute little bistro, New Englund’s Bistro and Tea Room in here in Concord, CA. The tea party started off with a presentation about tea etiquette and what a “lump of sugar”  is. The girls enjoyed tea, lemonade, finger sandwiches, cupcakes, a story about a tea party and feeling all grown up in their pretty tea dresses.

Continue Reading…

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Strip & Knit with Style up for interesting award

When news hit that our 2008 release, Strip & Knit with Style by Mark Hordyszynski was up for the 2008 Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title competition out of London, amused chuckles spread through the office. The idea of getting naked and knitting with style seems rather odd to our English counterparts (understandably!), which is why we have been nominated for this out of the ordinary award. You can read the Associated Press article here.

The best part is, the public chooses the winner, and now that we have been nominated, why not try to win? So please visit www.thebookseller.com and vote for Strip & Knit with Style.

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Quilting Tips – Sewing binding strips together with a diagonal seam

te_header

Usually, the last step in making a quilt is to fabricate and attach the binding around the quilt perimeter.  Sometimes, in order to achieve the total necessary length, individual binding strips must be sewn together to create 1 long strip. This is usually done with diagonal seams to reduce bulk on the quilt edge. Use the following method.

Place 2 strips together at right angles, with right sides together. Draw a line from the top corner of the top strip to the bottom corner of the bottom strip. It is important to draw the line in this manner.

Sew on the drawn line.

Trim the excess fabric from the seam, leaving a 1/4″ seam allowance.

Press the seam open.

Binding

This is the method described in M’Liss Rae Hawley’s Scrappy Quilts.

From the Technical Editors

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Everyday Inspiration

A creative life is filled with challenges and rewards, puzzles and curiosities. This ongoing series of poems attempts to express the “Aha’s” and “What ifs”, the deep ponderings and casual observations of an inquiring mind trying to make sense of reality. May it serve, for you, as a bit of “Everyday Inspiration” along your own creative path.

Creative projects
Know
Their own time…

They wait
Like a caterpillar
In a cocoon
Until the time
Is right
Then
Sprout wings
And take flight.

everydayinspiration

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Everyday Inspiration

A creative life is filled with challenges and rewards, puzzles and curiosities. This ongoing series of poems attempts to express the “Aha”s and “What if”s, the deep ponderings and casual observations of an inquiring mind trying to make sense of reality. May it serve, for you, as a bit of “Everyday Inspiration” along your own creative path.

Hoary
White
With little bits
Of dew—
Faded
California grass
Puts on
Its winter
Masquerade…

everydayinspiration

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C&T Publishing is a group of quilters and crafters dedicated to publishing products tailored to our audience. This blog is where we break away from book schedules and marketing campaigns to focus on what drives us to be creative and how this creativity manifests itself in our every day lives.
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