Archive for the ‘Hardanger’ Category

Designers Wanted

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Please be sure to read “ATTN: All Designers Whose Interest Was Peaked by “Designers Wanted” Article” which is an important follow-up to this article.

The venture briefly known as Designs on Demand (and referred to hereafter in this article as DKR) is currently seeking designers who wish to market their designs through them. This could be a wonderful solution for designers who don’t have the time (or expertise) to create or manage their own website storefronts because DKR provides and handles the storefront operation. This allows you the opportunity to stay focused on the fun part — the actual designing!

In addition, it’s a super way to introduce your designs to customers who might not otherwise ever find you. That’s because, especially when they are able to do so from the comfort of their own homes, and even in their pajamas, stitchers will take the time to look through everything DKR has to offer. And when we stitchers don’t recognize a designer’s name, it’s like finding opportunity wrapped up in pretty paper with a bow — we can hardly wait to find out what beautiful treat may be in store for us! If you market your designs through DKR, stitchers don’t have to know your name to find you, as would be needed in a brick and mortar shop, or to do an online search for you.

DKR will also be a boon for stitchers because they will specialize in instant gratification, otherwise known to the stitching world as charts in .PDF format (requiring only Adobe Acrobat’s free reader) which are downloaded by the customer immediately after payment is completed. Although they do not consider themselves open and ready for business yet, there are already over 70 designs available on the site, including 15 patterns exclusive to DKR.

Designers already signed up include The Art of Stitching, Deanna’s Designs, Rick’s Charts, and Stitch a Painting — definitely good company who will draw lots of customers!

If you are a designer interested in joining this terrific group of designers, please email support@designsondemand.org in order to get more information.

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Stitching Jubilee vs. Celebration of Needlework? I Say They’re Both Winners …

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Having seen this issue mentioned in many places — such as blogs, bulletin boards, and mailing lists — and as someone who is promoting both shows, I am reposting the following, with permission (because to do otherwise would be a copyright violation, and you already know how I feel about those — and why :D ), so more people have access to the official thinking on the matter. Besides, it is far better written than I could do! :) It was originally posted to the Stitching Jubilee Yahoo Group, which is THE place to stay up to the second on news about the Stitching Jubilee.

Fellow Stitchers,

In 2006, the Hershey Festival was held very close the Louisville show. In 2007, the same thing happened. In 2008, we plan to hold the Jubilee one week before the Louisville show. I have been asked why this is.

Many times, in planning these events and shows, organizers are quite limited to dates because of venues. We want to place the events and shows at large enough locations, with good access to extras like shopping and food options. Sometimes these venues are very limited to when they can host particular events.

Marilyn knows that many of you are concerned about the proximity of the Jubilee and the Louisville show. She understands that it can be a time crunch.

All this to say why we scheduled the Jubilee when we did. I thank everyone for their concern on this matter. It’s questions like this that the Moderators are here. We want you to understand the Jubilee. We want you to attend if you can. It’s about the stitching and the fun.

Regards,
Megan Andres
Webmaster
http://www.stitchingjubilee.com

By the way, check out who’s already scheduled to teach at the Stitching Jubilee! I guess Lorri Birmingham isn’t completely retired — yey!

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Announcing the GRAND OPENING …

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

… of the Stitching Jubilee website!

(I am out of town seeing medical specialists for a couple of days, and without the opportunity to check up on this link or make corrections, so if by chance that link doesn’t work, I apologize and please give it a try again later … and also try this one. They should both work very, very soon!! :D )

Lots there already to enjoy, so settle in with a glass or mug of your favorite beverage and start planning — or at least dreaming. You deserve it!

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Very Sad News … And Yet A Ray of Hope

Sunday, December 16th, 2007

Most of us have seen this coming, as we watched the number of Stitching Festival shows around the country be cut back drastically over the last few years … until this year, when there was only one show in Hershey, Pennsylvania, and, of course, there was a great deal of chatter and speculation because it took a rather frighteningly long time for the Stitching Festival website to be updated with 2007’s class and other show information. However, it is still with a very heavy needle that I write of this stitching tragedy: Liz Turner Diehl (Blogroll) and Stoney Creek’s (Blogroll) Marilyn Vredevelt have announced that the Stitching Festivals, previously called the Creative Arts and Teaching Show (CATS), previously called the Creative Arts and Textiles Show (also CATS), have officially closed their doors.

In my opinion, the name changes hurt their business, as did the fact that they never had a location which served midwestern US stitchers well (a very surprising thing, since Stoney Creek, who was one of the main sponsors and coordinators of the show for its entire run, is located in a beautiful midwestern city itself — Grand Rapids, Michigan) — Des Moines was and is just too out of the way and too small to fit the bill. What about St. Louis or Chicago — both cities with huge, dynamic, international airports (and at least halfway decent public transportation, too)? Too expensive? Then go to a suburb of one of those cities instead; just going 15 to 30 minutes from the airport would reduce costs dramatically for both event organizers and event attendees. Too busy and confusing traffic-wise? (What? Compared to New York City or Atlanta? LOL … ) Then what about a city like Indianapolis? It’s got a slightly smaller but still very functional international airport, though it does not have the halfway decent public transportation Chicago and St. Louis do (of course, if you leave the downtown area of either of those cities, public transportation is a crapshoot or non-existent anyway). And there are easily dozens of midwestern cities I’ve never been to which would make great locations for a “traveling stitching festival” — cities YOU know and love because you live in, or have been to them for one reason or another. Please see below, because I want to hear about them.

The good news — at least for east coast stitchers (the thousands upon thousands of midwestern stitchers are still being left out, unfortunately), is Marilyn decided almost immediately that she couldn’t desert us completely. Therefore, she announced Stoney Creek will be organizing a new event called the Stitching Jubilee, which will begin next year. It will start off occurring in only one location: Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, from October 2 - 4, 2008. Marilyn is promising that the new website (Blogroll) will be up and running no later than January 15, 2008. (I’ll keep checking and will make a post to let you know when it IS up and running; right now, clicking on that link will give you an error.) In the meantime, you already can sign up for more information here (Blogroll). Further information will also be available, of course, in Stoney Creek Cross Stitch Collection magazine, which is one of my favorite subscriptions.

I don’t know if I’ll be able to swing a trip to Valley Forge myself (which is a location I personally preferred to the Hershey location. I got the chance to check them both out when I lived in New Jersey, at which time they were conveniently located for me, and I was constantly hungry in Hershey … must have been the smell of chocolate in the air because that’s all I wanted to eat, too! I think I gained twenty pounds every weekend I went there, LOL), but I’ll definitely try. I hope a lot of you will try, too, because if this venture doesn’t do well, clearly, it won’t continue.

Although it makes perfect business sense for Marilyn to select the east coast to begin her Stitching Jubilee venture, as the east coast is where the Stitching Festival was always most successful, I look forward to seeing the Stitching Jubilee grow — and I hope THIS venture will grow WELL into the midwest, too. With that in mind, I want to hear from you, as mentioned above. Despite all my traveling, there are literally dozens of great midwestern cities I have never been to and thus know little to nothing about; I want to help Marilyn select the BEST and most viable choices for Stitching Jubilee locations, but I need your help to do it. So I hope stitchers from all over the midwest (and anywhere else, if you’d be willing to travel to the midwest) will comment on this post with their suggestions for a midwestern location you would find convenient to attend — wherever that may be. Please tell me not only the name of the city, but also the reasons it would make a great location for the Stitching Jubilee. If I get enough responses (at least one hundred) I’ll forward the answers to Marilyn myself — but only if those answers wouldn’t make it look like I’d sprayed buckshot all over the center of a US map! :D So please try to consider traveling instead of having it in your back yard (unless you’re already located in a really good location with a great airport ;) ). The location needs to be within a four to six hour drive of most of the rest of the midwest to be “perfect,” and it must have a really good international airport. (Why international?  Because we want the Stitching Jubilee to be able to bring us designers from other countries to teach classes, too, and because there are always a good-sized number of stitchers from around the world who manage to travel to an event such as this if they are provided with the requiremed means to do so; we certainly don’t want to leave those stitchers out because if they can afford to travel to this event, then they can probably also afford to spend money on classes and in the market to help make it a rousing success! :DA good public transportation system is a huge plus, and having a train hub is also a significant plus, in my opinion.  (Personally, I’d far rather take a train than drive myself — OR fly.  If I were traveling with someone else and thus sharing gas costs and the driving, then driving becomes a bit more attractive … but not much, LOL, as I could be stitching all the way on a train!)  Also, please tell every stitcher you know about this post, so that we get enough comments to make this a worthwhile survey. . Here are the links to this post (just highlight, copy, and paste): http://independentneedleworknews.com/2007/12/16/stitching-jubilee/ or http://tinyurl.com/34v4jg

Please help me help Marilyn bring the Stitching Jubilee to ALL stitchers! After all, this is the season of giving … It’s time to give back to a designer who has given us a great deal over the years.

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Yum !!!

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Surprise!

Product review coming soon …

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Please Consider Donating to Update Magazine Database

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

A while ago, I told you about a valuable resource called the Cross Stitch Magazine Database.

After handling the Herculean task herself for the first 409 magazine issues (that’s 4068 patterns!), Taneya now plans to reformat her website to allow people like you and me to update the database. This will make the database a truly invaluable resource because, conceivably, and with an organized worldwide effort, we will literally be able to catalog thousands of magazine issues in a very short period of time. After that point, we would easily be able to keep the database entirely up to date from then on, and just a handful of stitchers could do that together without much difficulty. The most complicated part will be making sure we have all the magazines covered, preferably by subscribers, so they can each be catalogued as new issues are published.

At the same time, Taneya plans to combine the database with a second website she has set up, which is called The Mirabilia and TIAG/LL/BR Stitchers Gallery. This gallery indexes where numerous stitchers have online pictures available of their Mirabilia, Told in a Garden, Lavender & Lace, and Butternut Road projects.

However, this is an expensive proposition in terms of Taneya’s time coding the database and website. In order to do the necessary coding for this upgrade, Taneya will have to sacrifice quite a bit of her stitching time for a while.

Please consider how much your stitching time is worth to you, as well as how valuable a resource Taneya’s magazine database already is and how much more she is trying to accomplish with it. If those things are as worthwhile to you as they are to me, perhaps you’ll stop by Taneya’s website and send her a small PayPal donation to help make this project possible.

(She has no idea this post is being published, so please mention Independent Needlework News!)

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Open and Ready for Business !!!

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Just a quick note to let you all know the online Needlework show is NOW OPEN.

Have fun looking around, and please let me know what you’re ordering … I’m afraid I’ll miss something good because there’s just so much to see!

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The Online Needlework Show Will Re-Open

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

The online Needlework Show has announced they will re-open at 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, April 24th. (I am guessing that is Tennessee or central time from the area code of their phone number.) It will continue “into the wee hours of Tuesday, May 1st,” as quoted from their website.

That means, of course, that you’ll want to do your browsing and get your orders in to your favorite shop participating in the online Needlework Show a bit earlier. Do check with your favorite participating store, as many of them post deadlines for their receipt of your orders from the online Needlework Show.

And just in case you don’t know what I’m talking about when I mention the online Needlework Show, you can see a preview of what to expect right here on Independent Needlework News!

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Celebration of Needlework Nashua, NH, 2007 - Register Now!

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

Registration for the Nashua, New Hampshire Celebration of Needlework 2007 is now open. This year’s Celebrations will be held first in Nashua, NH from May 2nd to May 6th, and then in Louisville, KY from September 12th to September 16th. Registration for the Louisville, Kentucky Celebration will open in May — and I’ll post here as soon as I hear about it, so watch this space!

New Hampshire has no sales tax, so shopping at the needlework market at the Nashua Celebration will cost you less money — in theory, anyway!

This is a great way to spend a weekend taking time for yourself and your favorite hobby, meeting other stitchers, shopping, and attending classes with world-famous needlework designers.

This year’s teachers are an exceptional list:

Susan Greening Davis of Still Stitching with Susan,

Charlotte Dudney of Designs from the Pep’r Pot (punchneedle),

Jackie du Plessis of It’s Fineally Finished,

Teresa Layman of Teresa Layman Designs,

Robin Laukhuf of Olde Willow Stitchery,

Barbara Jackson of Tristan Brooks Designs,

Sherri Jones of Patrick’s Woods,

Tricia Wilson Nguyen of Thistle Threads,

Julie Norton of J. Designs (hardanger),

Pam Reed of Olde Colonial Designs,

Lauren Sauer of Forget-Me-Nots-in-Stitches,

Marcia Brown Smith of The Binding Stitch,

Betsy Stinner of Earth Threads,

Catherine Strickler of Indigo Rose,

Elizabeth Talledo of Fingerwork,

Cindy Valentine of Cindy Valentine Designs, and

Wendy White of Wee Works.

The amazing selection of vendors you’ll be able to meet and purchase from in the Celebration market include:

Britstitch,

Cedar Hill Designs,

Chris’s Collection,

Cindy Valentine Designs,

Counted Stitches,

Cross Stitch Corner,

Cross Stitch Wonders,

Crossed Wing Collection,

Dimple Designs,

The Finishing Touch,

The Heart’s Content,

Images Stitchery Designs,

J. Designs,

Mimi’s Attic,

The Needle’s Work Antiques,

Olde Colonial Designs,

Olde Willow Stitchery Threads,

Scandinavian Stitches,

Simply Old Fashioned,

Stencil N Stitch,

Sunflower Samplings,

Tokens & Trifles,

Tristan Brooks Designs, and

Yankee Cross Stitch.

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