Sunday, September 20, 2009

“Have Quilt Will Travel” coming to Quilt Show 2009 near you

“Have Quilt Will Travel” isn’t just a play on words from the late 50’s, early 60’s TV show “Have Gun Will Travel.” To quilters of Lebanon, Oregon’s Santiam Scrappers Quilt Guild, it’s spending summer weekends this year, traveling around the Willamette Valley with the guild’s “Quilted Car.” To these hardcore quilters, they are actually living those words!

Creating car quilts is a Willamette Valley thing

The idea to create a true “car quilt” was born when Peggy Christopherson saw a car quilt made by Karen Wells of nearby Jefferson, Oregon. Karen had quilted her PT Cruiser in 2008. She based her quilt on a car in Florida she saw on the Internet.

Taking photos of Karen’s car to a guild meeting in spring 2008, Peggy convinced members that they should make a car quilt for Lebanon. And so it began. The result is now there are 2 quilted cars in Oregon of the 8 to 10 such vehicles in North America.

Springing to life in 2008

The car quilt was made over about 6 months in 2008-2009 by 6 to 8 quilters using 100’s of orphan blocks, batting, backing and binding. All this material came from the entire Guild. The finished cover is “sort of street legal” on a 2005 Honda Odyssey van. At fairs, shows and other events is now takes 5 to10 minutes to get fully “gussied up.”

After they created this cover, they discovered how truly unique it is. Thus they decided to use it to promote quilting, the Guild’s Quilt Show 2009, Oct. 17-18, 2009 and Lebanon in general.

Now it’s a true “traveling quilt

So now the car and a few guild members travel most weekends to show off the car. By the end of September “Have Quilt Will Travel” will have been in more than 15 parades, quilt festivals, farmers’ markets and fairs. In mid July it spent 4 days at the Linn County Fair and early September, 2 days at the Oregon State Fair. One of its biggest audiences was at the famous Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show in July. Future shows may even include the 2010 SewExpo in Puyallup WA.

“Mommy, it’s neat, ‘cause I got to touch it”

At Sisters, when a mom described the famous Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show to her 5-year-old daughter, she told her, “Quilts would be hung all over. They’d be hung on fences, on building walls and even on roofs.” The little girl then asked if they would be hung over cars, Mommy told her “No” because the cars had to drive away. When they arrived at the show, the little girl was so excited since one of the first things they saw were two quilted cars! She was so thrilled that she got to touch the “Quilted Car!”

A quick, late September trip to Portland

Probably it’s final trip before the October quilt show was to Fabric Depot, a giant fabric store, in Portland. Fabric Depot is well known to quilters and others sewers. On September 19th just outside the huge store, Peggy and guild members handed out many quilt show bookmarks, guild info and posed for hundreds of cell phone photos.

Men, young and old, see a car quilt different

In Sisters, at the Oregon State Fair and in Portland, guild “travelers” even gave out many “Guess the Number of Blocks” contest blanks. This contest is to guess the number of blocks in the car quilt. The winning guess will be awarded a prize at the October quilt show.

Interestingly, while women are amazed and wonder, “How long did it take,” many men, ask, “How much would it cost to make me one?” Then when they hear that Karen Wells will make a car quilt for a $1,500 donation to her community center, they decide to enter the “Guess the Number of Blocks” contest.

Oregon rains may help other car quilts “grow”

After Santiam Scrappers annual quilt show, “Rock Around the Block” on October 17–18, the quilted car cover will be put away for the Oregon winter. Peggy says, “It will get really heavy when wet and Oregon can be very wet!”

However, these ladies have more plans for future car covers. They are now talking about a “Quilt for the Cure,” promoting breast cancer research, on a Mercedes Convertible. Another idea is to do a scrappy cover on a PT Cruiser and for the men, a Harley “Fat Boy” Motorcycle.

Since there are only about 10 quilted cars in Canada and the US, based on internet research, Santiam Scrappers believe they may make Oregon the “capital” of car quilts, and, “Adding three more will really put us and quilting on the map.” Watch out Rollin Oldies, theses scrappy quilters may soon show up on the car show circuit!

Quilt Show 2009 "Rock Around the Block" Oct 17–18

The 7th annual fall quilt show in Lebanon, Oregon is more quilting and textile art fun for all. It is the last quilt show in Oregon form 2009. Come to the mid-valley and start your holiday quilting.

  • $250 in Judged Awards—Judged quilts accepted & judged Oct 15
  • $300 in Other Awards
  • Entry form deadline: Oct 1, 2009 to get entry info in program.
  • Late entries accepted up til Show Time, Oct 16.
  • See http://santiamscrappers.org/quiltShow
    Get entry forms everywhere in mid–Valley
  • At local quilt shops
  • Lebanon Chamber of Commerce, 1040 S Park, Lebanon
    9am-5pm, Mon-Fri, 541-258-7164
  • On SSQG website http://santiamscrappers.org/quiltShow

Awards-Prizes

  • 14 Door Prize Giveaways
  • $250 Judged Quilt Awards
  • $300+Themed Quilt Awards
  • Gift Raffles

Talks on

  • Sewing Ergonomics
  • Oregon Quilt History
  • Rock ‘n Roll Era Quilts
  • Quilt Documentation

Featured Quilter

  • Alice Leisy

Quilts

  • Heritage
  • Vintage
  • Traditional
  • Art
  • Crazy
  • Small Quilt Silent Auction & Buy
  • Youth (under 17)
  • Family
  • Baby
  • Wearable Art
  • Old

Classes

  • Fabric Folding Art
  • Make a Purse
  • Dimensional Flowers

More Fun

  • Scissors Sharpened
  • Kid's Quilting, Games, Education
  • Bed Turning
  • Giant Quilt Block Scrabble Game
  • Quilted Car Show
  • Guess Number of Blocks Contest
  • Portland Lace Society
  • Project Linus

Come enjoy Quilt Show 2009, Oct 17–18, at Sand Ridge Charter School, 2900 S Main Rd, Lebanon, Oregon. $3 admission fee, Raffle tickets, Gift baggies, Gift Yo-Yos

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Is a 2009 Fall Festival in Lebanon, Oregon possible?


LEBANON, OREGON, January 16, 2009...A vision of a 2009 Lebanon Fall Festival will be discussed at a lunch meeting on January 16, Friday, at Peggy’s Alaskan Cabbage Patch B&B at 194 S 2nd St, Lebanon, Oregon.
At this noon meeting, Peggy, will present her vision for bringing more visitors and tourists to Lebanon.
“Would a ‘Fall Festival of Quilting and Textile Arts," in Lebanon in October 2009 be a good idea?” That’s the question Peggy posed in her recent email to potential meeting guests.
A True Fall Festival... More than a quilt show
She continued, “The festival would be much more than a guild quilt show. It would have an Iron Quilt contest, a quilting play on stage by the Lebanon Community Players, and a nationally known quilting speaker.”
“Please come to a short luncheon meeting at noon on Friday, January 16th to discuss this idea. I will provide lunch at my Bed & Breakfast, at 194 S 2nd Street,” she concluded.
Build on the show’s 2008 successes
The ideas to be discussed are based on the huge success of the 2008 Santiam Scrappers Quilt Guild show in October 2008.
On October 18-19, 2008, with a bigger, better venue and the big help of marketing dollars from the Lebanon Tourism Committee, the guild's annual quilt show made a giant leap forward. A few numbers show how this 2008 show increased visitors to Lebanon.
  • Over 360 attendees... Up from 'bout 100,
  • Over 180 quilts... Up from 'bout 120,
  • 10 vendors... Up from 2,
  • 13 public quilts... Up from none,
  • 5 children's quilts... Up from none,
  • 2 speakers... Up from none,
  • 18 vignettes... Up from none,
  • 4 Textile Arts entries... Up from none,
  • Food service... Up from none, and all this brought
  • Additional business to Lebanon.... It was up significantly.
2009 Fall Festival brings more fun, more visitors, more business
Peggy closed her email with the thought, “A 2009 Lebanon Fall Festival could take us, the Lebanon community, new places.”
“Where we go in 2009 is more fun, more to do, and more visitors.” Then she listed more specifics to outline her vision.
  • Iron Quilt Contest,
  • Quilt Stage Play by Lebanon’s Community Players,
  • National known quilting speaker,
  • Up to 500 attendees,
  • Up to 15 vendors,
  • Up to 4 speakers/ workshops,
  • Up to 14 textile art displays,
  • Up to 6 textile artists demos,
  • Quilt Block Scrabble,
  • Quilt car show,
  • More public quilts,
  • More vignettes & vendors,
  • More demos & more classes,
  • More marketing & publicity, and
  • More helpers, supporters... All equals...
  • More Fun, More to Do, More, More, More & More & More.
Peggy believes, “These and your ideas can keep the momentum going and bring more visitors and more business to Lebanon this fall and in years to come.”
If you have suggestion, please RSVP
If you are interested, please come for lunch and talk about how this could happen.
There is one last question in her email, “Whom is a contact person in the Lebanon Community Players to come to this meeting?”
Please RSVP Peggy at 541.451.4910, 541.258.1774 or via her cell 541.409.0740, or email.
She wants your ideas to help Lebanon's Fall Festival become the "Sisters' Quilt Show" of the Santiam Valley.
Peggy is Santiam Scrappers Quilt Guild 2008-2009 president and promotion committee chair.