Quilting as an Income Source

Article by Jan Myers

Quilting is a very exciting craft that has an immensely rich history and is currently such a popular art that they are many different things that you can do to earn money from quilting. The world of quilting has always been popular and even more so today with rich patterns, quilting lessons online and more! The first step to making the money with quilting is to join a Quilting Bee or Quilting Guild and become involved in the quilting community.

Quilting Patterns

Quilting patterns are the rage today. Never before have so many different patterns been available to quilters. Instead of the traditional quilts for beds and wall hangings, quilters are finding all kinds of uses for quilting. Project sizes range from small table coverings to huge quilts for beds or wall hangings and from pieced quilts to copies of portraits.

Now, you can take advantage of your quilting skills and create beautiful new patterns. You can use a color wheel to suggest fabrics and color combinations. Patterns should be detailed and well written so that quilters can easily use them. You can even utilize the fabric calculator to let buyers know just how much fabric they will need for the patterns you design. Places to market quilting patterns include: online auctions, Ecommerce sites, local fabric stores, quilt shows and flea markets.

Instruct Quilting Classes

There is a large demand for quilting classes since the popularity of quilting is increasing so much. There can be a great deal of money to be made by offering quilting classes in your community. The first step would be to watch some quilting classes online such as with Lucy at the Quilting Resource Center. You will be able to see how to instruct a class to give your students helpful information but at the same time be entertaining.

Viewing quilting classes will give you an idea of what types of topics to teach in your community. You can contact your local library, community centers and quilting guilds to offer your teaching services. Quilting classes are a great way to make friends in the community while sharing the skills for this wonderful craft.

Quilting for Others

There is a huge market in the metropolitan areas for good longarmers who have the machine and are willing to quilt for others to earn income. If you’re able to do this, check with your local quilt shops and ask how much they pay for longarm quilters. Most shops complete the quilt tops and send them out to be quilted.

Quilting Product Reviews

There are many product review sites on the Internet. These sites ask that you review a product, rate it and tell how much you paid for the item. Quilting products such as threads, fabric brands, sewing machines, needles, footers and more can be reviewed. Once you write a review, you submit it to the product review sites to earn additional money.

Quilting Photography

Quilting photography is also on the rise. People love looking at photos of quilts. Additionally, quilt photos are a terrific way to pass down family heritage and create quilt portfolios for quilts that have been sold. If you have talent for photography and framing, there are many people that would pay for you to create a quilting portfolio for them. You should inquire with the Quilting Bees in your community.

Summing It Up

There are many ways for making money with quilting. To succeed in making money for quilting it is important to learn all that you can about quilting from the Quilting Resource Center or other places on the Internet and at your local Quilting Bees or Guilds. Connecting with others will develop a strong community and professional network and help provide the income you’re seeking through your quilting craft.

Jan Myers is the author of numerous articles and books on topics from organizational development and leadership to quilting. It was her avocation, the love of quilting, that inspired the popular online membership site for quilters known as the “world’s largest quilting bee” at http://www.QuiltingResourceCenter.com.










What’s In A Quilt.

Article by Arend Tibben

What’s In A Quilt.

Quilts are colourful bed coverings made by sewing together pieces of cloth into different designs. Quilts were more than warm protection against cold winters. Quilt making provided women with an important form of creative expression and invention. Quilts frequently celebrate birthdays, graduations, weddings, anniversaries, and retirements and a number of the winning entries commemorate such events. Quilters come together at quilting bees to work on coverings together and to enjoy socialising.

Design

Many quilts are made with decorative designs;, some quilts are not used as bed covering at all, but are rather made to be hung on a wall or otherwise displayed. Crazy quilts are a popular form of quilt design. The stitches can be made in such a way as to form detailed patterns or designs on the quilt. Patchwork quilts are made from many pieces of different coloured fabrics that have been sewn together, or “pieced,” in a design. A quilter can also sew different pieces of fabric onto the top of the quilt to form designs. Quilts designed to be used as bed coverings should exceed standard mattress size by a minimum of 20 inches on the width and length.

American

Brightly coloured quilts are made in virtually every American community, and they are proudly displayed in homes as well as in museums throughout the nation. Why, after many years of near invisibility, have African-American quilts become so engrossing to art historians, folklorists, ethnologists and quilt historians. African Americans have made quilts in this land continuously from the late 18th century, yet their work is conspicuously absent from the many published accounts of American quilt history. Several factors, products of the times, form the basis of the current explorations of African-American quilts. High drama was associated with early research on African-American quilts. Most exciting of all was a linkage between black American quilts and African design traditions believed to indicate an unconscious cultural memory in the quiltmakers of their faraway motherland. African-American quilts became one of America’s newest forms of exotica. Visual criteria for recognising African-American quilts (stitch length, asymmetrical organisation of quilt patches, size of patches, frequent use of bright colours) were devised. One needed only apply the recently created visual criteria to identify with certainty quilts of African-American origin. How could this small sample of late-20th-century African-American quilts represent in its entirety the contribution of thousands of black quiltmakers working at the craft over two centuries. What should one think of African-American quilts, made over such a long period of time that did not conform to the aesthetics-based identification. The casual answer that African-American quilts not in compliance with the criteria were simply copies of white-made, traditional Euro-American quilts was unacceptable. More and more questions about African-American quilts emerged as quilt historians realised that findings gathered in these early studies of black-mad quilts had been extrapolated far beyond what the evidence would legitimately support. Further research began to place African-American quilts in the larger context of black history.

Making

Quilt making provided women with an important form of creative expression and invention. While quilters have many tools and techniques to choose from to facilitate the process, the truth is that making a quilt, particularly a prize-winning quilt, takes time and personal commitment. Some had done other kinds of sewing and needlework, and they found quiltmaking a natural extension of their skills. Others learned from church groups making quilts for charity. Quilting in early America was far different than it is now.

History

Through history, cultures around the world have created quilted coverings and clothing. The study into quilt history is a rapidly growing area of research in American history: the important role women played in our history; domestic life in the 18th-20 centuries; development of the textile industry in the Asia, India, Europe and America; the purpose for making quilts; their pattern and style development over time; current reproduction fabrics; and last but not least, dating a quilt or a single piece of fabric by its dyes and the method used to print it. Quilts also reflect social history, such as the westward expansion, pioneering on the Plains, wars, political and religious campaigns and symbols, working women, interior design through time and more. It is a wonderful way to learn about history.

Conclusion

It is clear from these responses and the original essays, that the process of making and sharing a quilt can achieve many purposes, reflect many and complex meanings and relationships, and warm and comfort the spirit as well as the body. But I am only one of countless many to find inspiration, comfort, warmth, and sustenance in the beauty, history, and folklore of quilts.

When you have the same warm feeling for quilting but don’t know where to get informationor how to start please post a question and I will do my best to answer you asap.When you can’t wait to start and want to make a stunning patchwork quilt then I have aneasy method for you. Please post your comments here: http://www.mybestquiltonline.com










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Video Rating: 5 / 5

Acquire Care Of Those Keepsake Quilts!

Article by Quilt Care

More than the decades quilts have turn out to be cherished objects that are provided and acquired with really enjoy. In simple fact they are extremely almost never employed to present warmth but numerous people give them as gifts simply because they have arrive to symbolize some thing extremely private. In olden days it used to be pretty commonplace, but the scarcity of duvet makers these days only adds luxury and sentiment to quilts. For this reason a lot of people really enjoy keepsake quits! Consider about it, what far better present to give a newborn infant than a keepsake duvet that he/she will have permanently to don’t forget the quite first day they were definitely wrapped in adore?In olden situations quilts have been really used to continue to keep warm in cold climate and many were definitely also utilized as bedspreads. And even individuals that were used and laundered several instances over can even now be observed displayed in properties today with that additional sentiment of the past.Quilts are typically created by salvaging fabric from clothing and other sources and the sewing of these pieces of textile collectively to form 1 large item of cloth. There was no set pattern that the quilt adopted. It virtually was 1 item of textile sewed on to an additional right up until the desired dimension of textile was attained. When the fabric was the dimension that was preferred by the quilt maker, a filing was attached, which usually was a worn blanket or an economical batting material. The end end result was a two sided duvet that was then held jointly by hand sewn stitches or by tying the quilt with yarn.Numerous individuals, simply because of the really like and hard work that went into creating these quilts are likely to maintain them close to as extremely sentimental valuables. And with good cause as well; this kind of things are so uncommon to find!!Some of them are pretty costly and really stylish. And these are the types that are generally granted as infant presents. But even these are not applied for functional functions per se, but are largely displayed on the walls of nurseries or as loved ones valuables elsewhere in the property.A excellent concept to is to acquire more compact quilts and sew them together to make one particular big duvet that you can in fact use as a decorative cover.Not extremely several people realize the accurate beauty of keepsake quilts but they are truly useful and they are some thing that is maybe of better sentimental worth than a photo album.

Visit our quilting fabric site.










www.beverlys.com – Learn how to create your very own rag quilt! Print the written PDF instructions for this how-to at http Here are the names of the prints used in this rag quilt project (Unfortunately one of the prints has been discontined by the manufacturer): Aloha Flannel — Pink Hibiscus: DISCONTINUED Cozy Cotton — Celery: www.beverlys.com Cozy Cotton — Pink: www.beverlys.com Cozy Cotton — Pastel: www.beverlys.com Cozy Cotton — Chocolate: www.beverlys.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5