Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Fall Festival

This Saturday October 24th, there will be a Fall Festival at Highlands Presbyterian Church in Grayson, GA. The "prototype" of our first Yellow Ribbon Quilt will be available for you to see. The festival is a fundraiser for the church and will feature delicious barbeque. They have graciously agreed to allow our quilt guild to set up a table to sell tickets to the guild's current fundraiser which is a drawing for a very beautiful quilt. The Yellow Ribbon Quilt will also be on display along with information about the project. Be sure to stop by on Saturday between 11:00 am and 5:00 pm. Enjoy some barbeque, purchase raffle tickets for a stunning quilt and chat with us about the Yellow Ribbon Quilt Project. Look forward to seeing you there.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Quilt Workshop

A workshop has been scheduled to begin consruction on the Yellow Ribbon Quilt Project. The workshop will be held at Highlands Presbyterian Church in Grayson Georgia on Saturday November 14, 2009. The regular guild meeting on Monday night November 16th will also be a workshop. The plan is to have all quilts completed at that meeting so that they can be ready for shipping by the beginning of December. We received another donation of patriotic fabric from one of our Quilters In Stitches Guild members. All this fabric will look great in the beautiful patriotic quilts. We are very excited about this project and look forward to sending the completed quilts to the troops.

Friday, October 9, 2009

How it all began

Several events came together; pretty much simultaneously to give me the idea of making quilts for troops currently serving in the war. My stepson was sent to Afghanistan for his 3rd tour of duty and my son joined the United States Marine Corps. I made a quilt for my stepson and sent it to him in Southern Afghanistan. It made me think that the other men and women in his unit would enjoy receiving a quilt as well. Also about this time, I took over the post of Community Service Chairperson in my local quilt guild. All of these things came together in my head and I started looking for an existing project that we could join in to help provide quilts for active troops. I found several projects that provided quilts for wounded soldiers and for families of fallen soldiers. But, I did not find anything that was exactly what I wanted to do.
When I did not find a project to send quilts directly to active troops serving in Afghanistan or Iraq, I decided that there should be such a project and the Yellow Ribbon Quilt Project was born.
The first step was to make sure that the quilts would be accepted by the troops. As I said earlier, my stepson is in Afghanistan. The wife of his unit commander is acting as a liaison for family members. I contacted her and told her what I wanted to do. She in turn contacted her husband who was very excited about the project. After receiving the “go ahead”, I was off and running with this exciting project.
The next step was to find a quilt pattern. I remembered having a quilt pattern that I thought would be perfect for this project, but of course I could not find the pattern. I also had a quilt size in mind that I thought would work well for the troops…not too big and not too small. I was able to write a pattern using those dimensions and the same general directions that I remembered from the old pattern that I had lost. I then made the quilt, using the pattern I had written. It worked! Wow! I had never written a pattern, so I was very relieved to find that my dimensions actually worked, and the quilt was really nice and simple to make.
I told my employer about the project and my boss went right out the same day and bought all the patriotic print fabric that our local Hancock Fabrics store had in stock and donated it to our Quilt Guild for this project. With members donating solid red and blue fabrics, all of the quilts will be very patriotic!
I will be very excited when we ship our first box of quilts to Afghanistan. I truly hope the troops will enjoy them and know that we are thinking of them everyday and praying for their safe return home.