Lecture Archive

2023   2022   2021   2020   2019   2018

2024 Lectures

January 16, 2024 ‱ Alex Byrne

You’ve made a Quilt – Now What?

After time at the Kent Institute of Art & Design (now “University for the Creative Arts” in the UK) Alex’s career took her into science, not-for-profits, and big-tech, while she continued to create and teach classes in sewing, embroidery, knitting and crochet. In 2023 she launched her company “Lixie Makes It” and organized the QUILT2024 event happening in January 2024. She has used her extensive e-commerce experience to help artists increase their visibility online and to develop new and additional income streams related to their art. At the same time she continues to create and exhibit her quilts and teach craft workshops. You can read more about her at lixiemakesit.com.

For more information visit Alex’s lecture page here.

February 12, 2024 ‱ Kestrel Michaud

Design for Realism.

In this lecture, Kestrel focuses on incorporating principles of good design into art quilt layouts with the intent of creating a realistic piece of art using fabric as a medium. You can read more about Kestrel here.

For more information visit Kestrel’s lecture page here.

March 19, 2024 ‱ Pati Fried

Modern Traditionalism.

In this lecture, Pati explores the principles of modern quilt design and how a traditional quilter might use these to challenge their design skills. By looking at fundamental design elements individually, it is easy to understand how to create original designs with a modern aesthetic. You can read more about Pati here.

For more information visit Pati’s lecture page here.

April 16, 2024 ‱ Jane Sassaman

Quilting Against the Odds.

This visual lecture is about accomplishing your work in spite of obstacles – family life, space limitations, etc. It is a pep talk and slide show which covers my inspirations and my obstacles. I encourage people to do “what you have to do” by using myself and other artists as examples. You can read more about Jane here.

For more information visit Jane’s lecture page here.

May 21, 2024 ‱ Sandra Bruce

Material Matrix.

Sandra’s technique was inspired by painter Chuck Close. It involves using a gridded photograph and interpreting each 2-inch square into fabric, using piecing to achieve the effect. She will present an overview of the evolution of Material Matrix and how it works, along with her colorful visual journey that brought her to this technique. You can read more about Sandra here.

For more information visit Sandra’s lecture page here.

2023 Lectures

January 12, 2023 ‱ Rachaeldaisy

Whizz Bang Quilts!

The name Rachaeldaisy has become synonymous with bold, colorful, eye popping quilts. and it’s no wonder after 20 years of being a florist experimenting and mastering color and form. Whilst honoring the tradition of quilting she continues to find fresh ways and new techniques to interpret conventional designs. Her use of 3D elements such as folded and gathered fabric techniques, yoyo puffs, prairie points, wool felt, appliqued and piece denim create beautifully unique textured work. Her fresh interpretation of the art of quilting has seen her quilts awarded numerous prizes both nationally and internationally. Rachaeldaisy lives with her husband, ‘Mr Daisy’, in the Blue Mountains, an hour west of Sydney, Australia. Take a look at Rachaeldaisy’s work on Instagram at @bluemountaindaisy and on her website.

February 21, 2023 ‱ Sandi DaRoza

Creative Stitching: Endless Possibilities to add Pop to your Textile Art

Reveling in the rich medium of fabric, from bold hues and patterns to the interplay of textures and stitches, Sandi transforms those elements into playful and whimsical textile collages. You can see dozens of her quilts, pillows, bags and other items at her website, Rogers Lane Studio and on Instagram, @rogerslane. Sandi learned to sew at a very young age with her mother, whose creative hands were never still. And her actual family, along with friends and nature, serve as inspirations for her work.

March 21, 2023 ‱ Ben Millett

Learning to Quilt (and Live) in Full Color

If you had checked in on both Ben Millett the Person and Ben Millett the Quilter since 2013, you’d have seen how the Quilter exists as he does now only because the Person finally learned to exist. Ben will share how his art practice developed over the last decade, leading to quilts with different uses (fundraisers) and forms (quilted jackets!) that he wouldn’t have considered possible at the start. Take a look at Ben’s work on Instagram at @benmillett and on his website.

April 18, 2023 ‱ Pattie Klimek

Century of Progress Quilt Contest, a Depression Era Mystery

In 1933, in the middle of the Great Depression, Sears Roebuck launched a nationwide quilt contest. The winning quilts would hang at the Chicago Worlds Fair and the top prize was $1,000. Over 27,000 quilts were entered and were designed and made by the quilter. All except the top winner. How did this happen? And, what happened to the winning quilt? Come see these beautiful quilts and learn how this fraud transpired. Pattie Klimek is not a quilt historian but loves quilts from the 1920’s and 30’s. Based in San Francisco, she is one of the few Traditional hand piecers and hand quilters in a sea of Art and Contemporary quilters located in the Bay Area. She found some like minded quilters amongst the Dorcas Hand Quilters of San Francisco. She blesses these ladies everyday for teaching her these time honored skills and is now traveling around the Bay Area lecturing and teaching so quilters can rediscover the joys of handwork.

May 17, 2023 ‱ Catherine Sherman

Color & Pattern Across Period & Place

Catherine describes quilts as narrative vessels connecting past to present while giving us something to hold in the future. She’ll unpack her journey as an artist/maker and share her recent work and ongoing projects designed to engage the social imagination. Instead of focusing on “how,” we’re invited to slow down and consider “why?”
Catherine has been a member of SFQG since 2006. She joined the guild with big dreams, a fabric stash, and little experience – she found instruction, inspiration, and lifelong friendships. Catherine has led workshops at the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles, BAMPFA, the Randall Museum, and many school & community settings.
Visit Catherine’s website and find her on Instagram @the_official_piece_movement.

June 20, 2023 ‱ Julie Silber

A Trunk Show of Antique Quilts

Julie Silber is a nationally known lecturer, author, consultant, and curator. For more than thirty-five years, she has been speaking on quilts as a way of exploring the rich world of our female past.
She has been selling antique quilts to museums, businesses, and individuals since 1968. Julie was the curator of the world renowned Esprit Quilt Collection in San Francisco and is the co-author of the critically acclaimed books, Hearts and Hands and Amish: The Art of the Quilt. She has curated two of the most respected quilt exhibitions of modern times — those at The Oakland Museumand the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.

July 18, 2023 ‱ Karen Maple

Creativity Takes Courage

Courage is required when standing up to injustice or experimenting with different quilting techniques. Karen, a modern quilter, begins with a fuzzy idea. The idea can transform into a statement quilt or an abstract composition of an elemental concept. She is a member of the Modern Quilt Guild and has shown her work at seven Quiltcons along with four museums. Visit Karen’s website and find her on Instagram @karenmaple .

August 15, 2023 ‱ Meri Henriques Vahl

A Quilter’s Journey

Meri’s will share with us a trunk and slide show where she will talk about how she became an art quilter, and the techniques she uses to create people and places. Because photographs can’t really capture what the quilts are like in person, she will bring some of the actual quilts (to display on quilt stands), her quilt book (which will be for sale), free postcards, and copies of her memoir, ‘Hoosier Hysteria’. Visit Meri’s website.

September 19, 2023 ‱ Karen Bolan

Engineer your Quilts

Free yourself from the need to use someone else’s pattern and appoint yourself head of your own design empire. View a gallery of original quilts and learn how to apply the engineering design process to your quilts. Learn to find and use sources of inspiration, harness nifty software and manual tools, and get inspired by approachable improvisational techniques. Visit Karen’s website here.

October 18, 2023 ‱ Allie McCathren

Exhausted Octopus Raw Edge Appliqué

One of the most delightful things about working with fabric and thread is the element of texture. Raw edge appliquĂ© can be an overlooked and sometimes misunderstood technique in quilting. Allie loves to play with raw edge appliquĂ© in her art quilts because of the incredible textural elements involved in it. Sometimes in quilting, there is a tendency to ask what the ‘correct’ way to do something is, but Allie likes to explore beyond that area of “what is correct” into “what is possible.” Visit Allie’s website and find her on Instagram @exhaustedoctopus.

2022 Lectures

January 18, 2022 ‱ Zak Foster

Memory & Burial Quilts

For our first meeting of 2022 we welcome Zak Foster, a Brooklyn-based artist who made cultural headlines with a quilt that was worn at last fall’s Met Gala. Zak is a self-taught artist with an intuitive style that he uses to make memory and burial quilts. His focus is on repurposing materials with an eye to sustainability. His work has been featured in several magazines and galleries. You can learn more about Zak at his website and follow him on Instagram at zakfoster.quilts.

February 15, 2022 ‱ Kena Tangi Dorsey

Using African Wax Prints in Quilts

Bold and beautiful prints—we love them but they can sometimes seem daunting or even intimidating to use. In this program, Kena shares inspiration and ideas for incorporating vivacious African wax prints into your quilt projects. Using samples from modern, appliquĂ© and traditional patterns, she points out how the fabrics were used to makes quilt shout with joy. Her talk includes a brief description of different types of African fabrics, and she shares recommendations for which might work best for the kinds of quilts you are creating. Learn more about Kena at her website.

March 15, 2022 ‱ Allie McCathren

“Painting” With Fabric: A Focus on Using Scraps

Allie is an artist with a background in marine biology who has recently found her creativity in the quilting world. She will share her journey of learning to use scraps in different ways, out of necessity and exploration. Allie looks at her scraps as if they were paints, seeing fabric for color and value. When scraps are broken down small enough and combined in just the right way, there are endless possibilities for the effects they can have in an art quilt. Learn more about Allie at her website.

April 19, 2022 ‱ Sam Hunter

A Studio Tour, and How to Set Up Your Space Ergonomically

Sam Hunter is a fiber artist and quilt pattern designer, and she is the Chief Everything Officer at Hunter’s Design Studio. She started sewing when she was 7 and hasn’t really stopped since. She spent a lot of time in her teens sewing with her nana on her trusty Singer treadle machine, and embroidering while she knitted. She started quilting in her 20’s, and teaching quilting shortly thereafter. Sam will show you all the nooks and crannies of her studio (and all her creative storage solutions), and discuss how her studio fits her body, her habits, and her process. We talk about the ergonomics of setting up your space so you can continue to enjoy quilting while keeping your body healthy! Learn more about Sam at her website.

May 17, 2022 ‱ Lorraine Woodruff-Long

Commentary Quilts: Evolution and Explanation

Lorraine Woodruff-Long is a self-taught quilter with a primary focus on color, improvisation, and recycled/repurposed fabrics. Most recently she has been developing “Commentary Quilts” that serve as a creative outlet for issues that matter most to her. Lorraine will share her evolution as a quilter, and discuss how she is using traditional quilting techniques and patterns to explore and develop “commentary” quilts to communicate and share issues and ideas that matter most to her. Raised and educated in Texas, Lorraine served in Peace Corps Kenya and afterwards moved to California as a bucket list dream to temporarily experience living in a progressive urban city. She fell in love with San Francisco and never left. She and her husband raised two kids, now “launched” young adults, in San Francisco. Lorraine learned to sew from her mother as a child. She has received numerous awards for her quilts at local, national and international quilt shows. She is a member of the Modern Quilt Guild, San Francisco Quilt Guild, Studio Art Quilt Associates (SAQA), East Bay Heritage Quilters, ArtSpanSF and an active volunteer with the Social Justice Sewing Academy Remembrance Project. Her work has been included in the de Young Museum Open Exhibition, California Heritage Museum Art 2 Quilts,, Sanchez Art Center Left Coast Juried Art Exhibition, the Drawing Room SF Women Rising, and the O’Hanlan Art Center Monochrome Exhibit. Learn more about Lorraine at her website.

June 21, 2022 ‱ Dana Jones

Indigo, Taupe & More: Japanese Fabric from Vintage to Contemporary

In a whirlwind of interviews with multiple generations of Japanese quiltmakers, Dana Jones learned a lot about working with Japanese fabrics, from indigo to taupe and beyond. She talked with master quilters Kuroha Shizuko, Yoko Seito, Reiko Kato and Keiko Goke. In this slide show, we’ll learn how each of these women selects and designs fabric. You’ll see images of quilts by each quiltmaker plus a variety of Japanese fabrics. Dana Jones is a writer and editor who has worked as an editor for Quilters Newsletter Magazine and The SAQA Journal. She lives in Colorado. Learn more about Dana at her website.

July 19, 2022 ‱ Becky Goldsmith

It’s Not a Quilt ’til It’s Quilted

Becky Goldsmith is an award-winning quilter, designer, and instructor with Piece O’ Cake, which she started in 1994 with Linda Jenkins with a focus on hand sewing. Before Linda retired they published more than thirty books and hundreds of patterns, including seven blocks of the month. You may even have some of their books in your collection. Becky still has the pedal to the metal writing more books—including Hand Sewing that was published in March 2021, and teaching—in addition to her online and in-person classes, she will be leading an independent-study workshop at Empty Spools next year called Declare Your Independence. She has also been a returning guest on The Quilt Show. Becky will deliver her lecture where she will share the many lessons she’s learned—the good and the bad—figuring out how to quilt her own quilts over the years. Learn more about Becky at her website.

August 16, 2022 ‱ Carolina Oneto

Befriending Colors

Carolina’s talk will cover many different aspects of color so you can better choose color palettes for your next quilt creations. She’ll discuss the chromatic circle and the three variables of color, and explore five different color schemes that you can use in designing your color palette. By understanding these and a few other considerations, you’ll be ready for the focus of Carolina’s talk: four simple steps, explained in detail, for creating your color palette. Learn more about Carolina at her website.

September 20, 2022 ‱ Fern Royce

One Thing Leads to Another

Improvisational quilting is an intuitive way of creating quilts. Fern often starts her quilts by playing with scraps or an idea, drawing a rough sketch or wondering: What if? In this lecture, Fern describes her quilting process and how each decision informs the next, keeping her engaged, focused, and often unsure of what happens next. Learn more about Fern at her website.

October 18, 2022 ‱ Brandon Wulff

Trunk Show to Biscotti

In this virtual trunk show, Canadian quilter Brandon Wulff talks about his quilting journey, his business ventures, his autism, and his unique “Biscotti” process quilt. He will show images from his quilting art business, his collaborations with interior designers and decorators, and his personal works. Learn more at Brandon’s website and Instagram, where he posts as @justanotherautisticguy.

2021 Lectures

January 19, 2021 ‱ Sandra Johnson

Sandra Johnson’s Wearable Art

Sandra’s wearables reflect creative ways to upcycle favorite clothing, especially denim, as well as hand stitching that makes her projects unique. She’ll present techniques for improving and reimagining clothing to create personal, unique art—comfy to wear and to treasure. You’ll find yourself thinking in new ways about clothing and using and reusing fabric. Learn more on her website here.

February 16, 2021 ‱ Trudy Cleveland

Photographing Quilts with your Phone

Smartphone cameras now rival the best digital cameras on the market, and this Zoom presentation by SoCal photographer and long-arm quilter Trudy Cleveland will serve up a wealth of tips for taking quality photos of your quilts.

Trudy’s advice will help you do more with your smartphone, take great photos to share with family and friends, participate in virtual Sew & Tell events, meet the requirements of online quilt-show applications, and more. You may find yourself using these tricks for all your photography. Learn more about Trudy at her website. NOTE: This lecture was not recorded.

March 16, 2021 ‱ Lisa Walton

Leap and the Net Will Appear

Australian textile artist Lisa Walton takes us through her creative journey, showing her development over the years and highlighting the milestones and “leaps” she has taken. A teacher of quiltmaking and surface design for more than 15 years, Lisa has also published many patterns and books on quilting techniques, surface design and beading on fabric. She is a past president of Studio Art Quilts Associates (SAQA). Learn more about Lisa at her website.

April 20, 2021 ‱ Blair Stocker

Finding Value in Your Scraps

Did your grandmother make quilts using scraps left over from the clothes she made for your family? While today we buy many of the fabrics we use in our quilts, we’re also excited to use found and recycled textiles, from a thrift store, garage sale, or Free Table. Blair is most inspired when using fabric that has meaning or memories. She began her career designing textiles and made her first quilt for her daughter using many of her lovely baby clothes. Blair calls her style “Modern Traditional” and her esthetic appeals to all types of quilters. Her most recent book is Wise Craft Quilts: A Guide to Turning Beloved Fabrics into Meaningful Patchwork. Learn more about Blair Stocker at her web site.

May 18, 2021 ‱ David Owen Hastings

David Owen Hastings on Minimal Design, Maximal Impact

David will show us two techniques for designing whole quilts (or quilt blocks): making stitched paper models, called maquettes, or starting off with an architectural photograph. He will also discuss how to design the quilting itself, using the walking foot, so that sewing lines emerge as key design elements. Lastly, we’ll see his many sample mini quilts that combine pared down, graphic design with purposeful quilting. Learn more about David at his web site.

June 15, 2021 ‱ Valerie Goodwin

A Dialogue Between Quilting and Architecture

On Tuesday June 15th we welcomed Valerie Goodwin’s presentation, A Dialogue Between Quilting and Architecture. As a practicing architect, a professor at Florida A & M University’s School of Architecture, and a renowned fiber artist, Valerie explores elements common to both practices, including shape, composition, ordering systems, color, texture, and pattern. Her quilts are inspired by aerial views of landscapes and cities and use intricate lines and shapes to create complex fiber art maps with both real and imagined features. Learn more about Valerie here.

July 20, 2021 ‱ Mel Beach

Free Motion CREA-TV and Reality

Tune in as Mel Beach shares her love of free-motion quilting and her guilty pleasure of watching reality television! She’ll share her real-life adventures of learning to free-motion quilt, plus her fear factors, extreme makeover story, and myth busting tips and tricks for quilting on a domestic sewing machine. She’ll also show some of her favorite tools and notions. Learn more about Mel here.

August 17, 2021 ‱ Giucy Giuce

A Peek into the World of Fabric Design

Giuseppe Ribaudo of Giucy Giuce regales us from Portland, Maine, with the story of his journey from quilter to fabric designer. With a modern-traditional aesthetic drawn from his childhood learning to sew in his grandmother’s home to his love of sci-fi, he’ll discuss his unique approach to design, tell stories about his years working professionally in the quilting industry, and more. You can see his work on Instagram at @giucy_giuce and find his fabrics online or at your favorite quilt shops.

September 21, 2021 ‱ Lisa Thorpe

Photo to Fabric: Design in the Palm of Your Hand

Learn how to take a photo from your smart phone or tablet, manipulate it in an app and print the image onto fabric on a home printer. Lisa Thorpe shows art quilts she’s created with simple images as a central theme, as well as quilts that “tile” multiple images for a collaged effect. She has an easy way to create a repeat printed fabric in four steps using a smart phone or tablet. And she demonstrates the process of creating and uploading your own repeat fabric design for commercial printing. She provides handouts detailing apps, printer info and fabric printing sources.

Learn more about Lisa here, and visit her Facebook page, Lisa Thorpe – Artist.

October 19, 2021 ‱ Marty Ornish

Controversies in the World of Quilting

Marty Ornish takes on the sometimes contentious question “How can you cut up a vintage quilt?” in a lively talk that explores controversies in the world of quilting. Marty-O, as she’s known, delves into past and current debates, ranging from social justice to politics, sexual identity to censorship. Learn more about Marty on the web and on social media.

Instagram: MartyO_FiberArtist
FB: Marty-O

November 9, 2021 ‱ Cassandra Ireland Beaver

The Whole is Greater Than the Sum of its Parts

Inspiration abounds in Cassandra Ireland Beaver’s journey through quilts that combine modern, traditional, and art aesthetics. Hear the stories behind the creation of her many award-winning quilts, and leave inspired to try something new! Cassandra looks for inspiration in her surroundings, and her life as a theatrical scenic and costume designer strongly influences her quilt designs. She is also a pattern designer, teacher and blogger. Visit her on the web here; follow her on Instagram @cassandra.beaver.

2020 Lectures

January 21, 2020 ‱ Maria Shell

Notes from the Field

Maria Shell started out as a traditional quilter, but soon found herself making abstract pieced art quilts that look surprisingly modern. Maria will share her personal journey in and about the traditional, art, and modern quilt movements. Can you be all three? Come to the lecture and find out. Learn more about Maria here.

February 18, 2020 ‱ Silk & Salvage

Exquisite Quilts, Unexpected Materials

Before easy access to the local quilt shop, before internet shopping, how and where did one obtain materials for quilt making? And once a quiltmaker had a collection of available materials, how did those materials inform design and construction? What can we learn from quilts made with a restricted supply or unusual types or sizes of materials? Sue Fox and Julia McLeod—aka Silk & Salvage—will take a wide-ranging look at quilts made from silk, linen, wool and other fabrics, such as clothing and manufacturing scraps 
 as well as quilts made during times of privation and necessity. Their talk showcases both historical and contemporary makers, and highlights some pretty awesome quilts. The trunk show includes both vintage pieces and some of their own work. Learn more about Silk & Salvage here.

May 19, 2020 ‱ Jane Haworth

Living a Creative Life

Jane learned to sew from her grandmother, studied textile design at college in England, and landed her first real job at a Laura Ashley factory. After setting up a small textile business and working in interior design in England, Jane moved to Auburn in 1998. A trip to Kauai inspired her to transfer the colorful images she saw to fabric. In 2012 she opened an Etsy shop, Happy Quilt Designs, where she sells personalized quilts using her customers’ own t-shirts and other textiles they send to her. In addition to describing her creative journey, Jane will also talk about setting up her Etsy shop and some of the challenges her clients present to her. Her goal: “to inspire quilters to go out of their comfort zone and just have fun creating.” To learn more, visit her website at www.janehaworth.com.

June 16, 2020 ‱ Youngmin Lee

Bojagi, The Art of Korean Wrapping Cloths

Pieced together from small scraps of cloth, Bojagi occupies a prominent place in the daily lives of Koreans. They are used to wrap or carry everything from precious ritual objects to everyday clothes and common household goods and also to cover food. They can also be strikingly contemporary, with designs and colors reminiscent of modern abstract art. Youngmin Lee will talk about bojagi during this virtual lecture and show her own bojagi from her studio. Learn more about Youngmin here.

July 21, 2020 ‱ Julie Silber

Keeping ‘Em in Stitches

A quilt collector for more than 40 years, Julie will dive into her fabulous quilt collection—early Album quilt, pre-Civil War quilts, museum-quality Amish quilts, quilts with thousands of pieces, trapunto’d quilts, and rare pictorial quilts—to spotlight quilts with a great sense of humor, Read more about Julie here.

September 15, 2020 ‱ Sara Trail

Introducing the Social Justice Academy

Learn about the innovative and inter-generational work of the Social Justice Sewing Academy from founder Sara Trail. She’ll share the history of activist quiltmaking and the inspiration that led to the development of the organization. The SJSA is on the web here.

October 20, 2020 ‱ Jody Alexander

The Boro Aesthetic

Jody’s talk will include an introduction to Japanese Boro textiles as well as a look at mending and reuse traditions in other parts of the world. She’ll explore contemporary artists working within the realm of the “art of mending.” Finally, she’ll present her own work, which is greatly inspired by mending and reuse traditions. Check out her web site.

November 10, 2020 ‱ Kathy Anso & Linda Rae

2 Kiwi Quilters, 10 Years of Nancy Crow

Kathy Anso and Linda Rae, longtime fans and students of quilt artist Nancy Crow, join us all the way from New Zealand, via Zoom. The duo will share their quilting journeys and show us how Nancy’s influence helped them develop their artistic voices. Don’t miss this opportunity to see state-of-the-art quilting in the land of the Kiwis.

2019 Lectures

January 15, 2019 ‱ Tara Faughnan

From Cardboard to Instagram

Since Tara began quilting in 2001—using a reprint of the 1931 edition of 101 Patchwork Patterns—she has rocketed to fame in the modern quilting world, exhibiting her work and teaching at QuiltCon and doing textile design for such clients as Michael Miller Fabric and Pottery Barn Kids. She will share stories and quilts of her journey from traditional to modern quilter, with stop-offs in contemporary and art quilting along the way. Her philosophy is about embracing all aspects of quilting to create in the present time. You can read more about Tara here.

February 19, 2019 ‱ Rosalie Dace

Reflections of an Itinerant Quilter

“We are all products of our history and my quilts come directly from my life,” says Rosalie Dace. Her lecture traces views and thoughts of people, places, ideas and objects that have inspired her from her childhood in rural South Africa to the crazy traveling she’s done over the past 30 years. Images of her homes and quilts, the people and places that influenced them, works in progress and more offer insights into her endeavors as a working artist and teacher. Learn more about Rosalie here.

March 19, 2019 ‱ Jen Landau

Wooly Wanderings

Art quilts made with handspun wool? Colorful locks of goat fleece as foliage? Free-standing art quilts without a front or back? Discover Jennifer Landau’s wooly adventure creating art quilts and 3D fiber art out of her spinning and felting. See how “knit felt,” machine felting, and even thrift store sweaters become the foundation layer for piecing, quilting, surface design and embellishment. Whether it is a landscape, Victorian houses, or geometric abstraction, all of Jen’s work includes wool that has been felted in one manner or another. Examples and photos of completed and in-progress works will be shared 
 as well as wooly fibers to be fondled!

April 16, 2019 ‱ Special Appearance

Alex Anderson

A rock star of the quilting world, Alex is perhaps best know as co-host and co-founder of The Quilt Show.com (with Ricky Tims). The 12-year-old program now boasts 27/7 access to more than 220 shows, classes, tips and techniques, patterns and projects for 140,000+ members. Alex and Ricky were also co-founders of The Quilt Life Magazine (2009 – 2014). Author of 30 books, Alex is also a designer of fabrics with RJR Fabrics and co-creater with RNK Distributing (Floriani) of the Quilters Select brand. Alex has been creating more modern-oriented quilts lately and her trunk show for the SFQG will present work that runs the gamut from traditional to modern, with something of interest for every quilter.

May 21, 2019 ‱ Martha Wolfe

Creative Journeys

Becoming a fiber artist has been an exciting journey for Martha. In this lecture she shares the story of her personal creative path, interwoven with experiences from international travels that have inspired her work. She’ll also discuss how you can transform your photographs into artworks as she shares her process and representative quilts from her work. Learn more about Martha here.

June 18, 2019 ‱ Material Girlfriends

Quilter’s Color Therapy: The Psychology of Color

Color plays an important role in our lives. The colors we choose when creating a quilt say more about our state of mind than we realize. A quilter’s stash can represent years of color therapy! Enjoy twin sisters Lora Zmak and Lisa Norton of MaterialGirlfriends.com as they explain color psychology, share the meanings of the most popular colors, and explore different fabric genres in quilting. Be delighted with their trunk show as the sisters share color therapy examples.

July 16, 2019 ‱ Cathie Hoover

A Moo-ving Evening with Cathie Hoover

Utilizing Holstein cows in her designs was a natural for Cathie even before moving to Moo-desto. The graphic black-and-white patterns on these cows and their gentle nature appeal to her. During a presentation covering 21+ years of original work, Cathie shows her quilts and garments, offering humorous commentary about each piece. She welcomes questions about techniques, materials used, even trade secrets! Learn more about Cathie here.

August 20, 2019 ‱ Laurel Anderson

Laurel presents an overview of appliqué history (including an 1850s-style appliqué quilt and a surprising story of the invention of the sewing machine!), as well as her personal appliqué journey.

She’ll discuss changes in styles and how they evolved with the fortunes of our country. She’ll also cover the progression of appliquĂ© methods and her own exploration of those techniques. Find out more about Laurel and see more of her work here.

September 17, 2019 ‱ Nancy Brown

New Animal Quilts

In a talk that is part digital presentation and part trunk show, Nancy discusses her approach to design, the stories behind her up-close fabric portraits of giraffes and dozens of other creatures, and how students can make patterns that look like their own pets. Her quilts are all original designs, pieced by machine, and hand-appliquéd and quilted. Learn more about Nancy here.

October, 15, 2019 ‱ Jean Impey

Finding Your Passion and Running With It

Find out how Jean Impey fell in love with spider web quilts and followed her passion into a seemingly endless series of designs and variations.“The spider web design made a huge impression on me back in 2007,” she says. “I started making one and then found I couldn’t make them fast enough to keep up with all the ideas that originated from this one design. I love sharing my spider webs with others, showing them how one thing leads to another. When you find something that clicks, I think you need to keep at it, and maybe you call it a series.” Her talk includes a tutorial so quilters will learn something while listening to her lecture. Learn more about Jean here.

2018 Lectures

June 19, 2018 ‱ Teresa Duryea Wong

Quilts, Cotton & Indigo from Japan

A passionate speaker and author of three books on Japan’s quilts and textiles, Teresa Duryea Wong will talk about two enduring plants—cotton and indigo—and their dramatic impact on Japan’s culture and textiles. She’ll showcase quilts made with both very old and very new Japanese textiles; explore stories behind traditional folk textiles such as boro and sashiko; offer a behind-the-scenes look inside the world’s finest quilting cotton printing mills; and discuss the making of indigo dye, cotton katazome and kasuri textiles, yukata kimonos and more. You can discover more about Teresa here.

July 17, 2018 ‱ Kathy Doughty

Accidental Designer

The SFQG is lucky to snag Kathy Doughty—the Australia-based quilter, fabric designer, blogger and owner of the renowned Material Obsession shop—during her current swing through the United States. Also a prolific author and international teacher, Kathy has been involved in the industry since 2003 and has contributed to the changing influences in the patchwork and quilting community. In the lecture she shares the story of how all these influences have shaped her experience.

August 21, 2018 ‱ Alice Beasley

The Art of Illusion

The name Alice Beasley is synonymous in the Bay Area with portraits in fabric of people and things—dancers, take-out food, water, soldiers, flowers, race horses, children, swimmers, family members, and more.  Her quilts have a painterly quality, but she works her magic without paints, dyes or surface treatments. Starting with ordinary fabrics, translucent silks and organzas, Alice layers and fuses snippets to create a collaged composition. She’ll describe this process—from inspirations to techniques to completed images—in her talk, The Art of Illusion.  You can read more about Alice here.

September 18, 2018 ‱ Studio Art Quilt Associates

Up Close & Personal: Selecting Quilts for Exhibition

Get up close and personal with a trunk show of small quilts from the Northern California region of the Studio Art Quilt Associates in this hands-on activity led by SAQA fiber artists. The event begins with an introduction to guidelines for critiquing and selecting quilts for exhibition. Then participants break into groups for an up-close look at groups of pieces from the trunk show. Next each group will discuss which piece(s) to propose for inclusion in a show. And then someone in each group pitches their choice to everyone in the room. It’s a fun and lively activity that’ll give guild members a new way of looking at quilts.

October 16, 2018 ‱ Stacey Sharman

Modern Improvisation/Traditional Inspiration

Stacey Sharman is a founding member of the East Bay Modern Quilters and one of the owners of Hello Stitch Studio, a sewing and quilting community makerspace in Berkeley. Always fascinated by the secret stories of old objects, Stacey is drawn to the mystery and individual expression of vintage quilts. She will examine how the works of mostly unknown women have influenced her craft and how her craft has changed her life. She will also talk about the process of finding and forming a vibrant community around cloth, needle and thread.

Affiliates

Affiliates

Our affiliates are local companies that support our guild by

    • Supplying fabric for our Community Outreach projects
    • Distributing information about our guild and events
    • Donating products to our auctions and other activities
    • Supplying space for displaying our Opportunity Quilts

And we hope you’ll consider patronizing them in return.

A Quilting Fool Longarm Studio

Nancy Williams ‱ 6363 Christie Ave. #2525 Emeryville, CA 94608 ‱ 707-291-0496 ‱ nancyquiltingfool@gmail.com
Longarm quilting services


Always Quilting

Kit Morse & Julie McAuliffe ‱ 4230 Olympic Avenue San Mateo, CA 94403 ‱ 650-458-8580 ‱ info@alwaysquiltingonline.com
Fabric, tools, notions, patterns, books, classes, longarm quilting


Sonya Lee Barrington

Sonya Lee Barrington ‱ 837 47th Ave. San Francisco, CA 94121 ‱ 415-666-6627 ‱ sonya@sonyaleebarrington.com
Quilts, pillows, bags and totes, made from recycled textiles


Bay Quilts

Sally & Abbeyshane ‱ 5327 Jacuzzi Street, Suite 3-C Richmond, CA 94804 ‱ 510-558-0218 ‱ create@sfbayquilts.com
Fabric, tools, notions, patterns, books, classes, gallery


Coastside Quilt Studio and Dana Miller Fiber Arts

Dana Miller ‱ 1305–E Palmetto Avenue, Pacifica 94044 ‱ 650-733-7200 ‱ dana@danamillerfiberarts.com
Longarm services; custom, T-shirt, & Memory quilts; classes


Don’t Be Maker Unknown

Alex Byrne ‱ lixieyarnover@gmail.com
Quilt labels, quilt gifts, web consulting, workshops


Dorcas Hand Quilters

Cathey Kennedy ‱ 25 Lake St. San Francisco, CA 94118 ‱ 518-281-0053 ‱ me@catheykennedy.com
Group hand quilting


Golden State Quilting

Buff Jones ‱ 2507 S. Winchester Blvd., Campbell, CA 95008 ‱ 408-866-1181 ‱ quilters@gsquilting.com
Quilting fabrics, notions, classes, and edge-to-edge automated longarm quilting


Joe Cunningham, Quilter

Joe Cunningham ‱ 1587 Sanchez Street San Francisco, CA 94131 ‱ Joe@joethequilter.com
Workshops, books, free Quilt Report video episodes


New Pieces Quilt Shop

Janet McDonald, Marlene Miller, Kenan Shapero, Jane Strem ‱ 766 Gilman Street Berkeley, CA 94710 ‱ 510-527-6779 ‱ Info@newpieces.com
Lots of new fabric, tools, notions, books, classes, longarm services


piecemovement

Catherine Sherman ‱ P.O. Box 460413 San Francisco, CA 94146 ‱ 415-513-9555 ‱ info@piecemovement.com
Community projects, workshops


Sarah Jean Makes

Sarah Cain ‱ sarah@sarahjeanmakes.com
Patterns


Serge A Lot

Sherri Stratton ‱ 1973 Ocean Ave. San Francisco, CA 94127 ‱ 415-715-8405 ‱
924 Ralston Avenue; Belmont 94002 ‱ 650-832-1191 ‱ sergealot@gmail.com
Sales & sewing machine repair, Baby Lock & Bernina retailer, vacuum dealer, classes, fabrics, notions


Sew Bar

Kelly Ibarra ‱ 925-202-6197 ‱ kelly@sewbar.com
Longarm quilting services


Stonemountain & Daughter

Suzan Steinberg ‱ 2518 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley, CA 94704 ‱ 510-845-6106 ‱ info@stonemountainfabric.com
Fabric for garments, quilts, costumes, accessories, and home dec; notions, patterns; books


Textile Dream Studio

Sue Fox ‱ 1201 55th St. Oakland, CA 94608 ‱ 510-393-1271 ‱ foxquilts@gmail.com
Educational resources


Quilt Entry Info

Quilt Entry Information

Welcome! This page provides San Francisco Quilt Guild Members with information about the entry process for QUILT SF 2025. Please read this page in full before proceeding to the entry form. Your entries will not be processed unless you mark a checkbox on the entry form to signify that you understand and agree to ALL requirements and conditions herein. If you have arrived here from your entry form then you can click your browser’s “back” button to return to the form once you have finished reading.

Basic Information

  • You must be a guild member to enter the show; the entry form will be available on the Members Only page.
  • Entry begins TBD and closes TBD.
  • Your entry must be new work since our last Show, completed after April 1, 2023.
  • You may enter up to three quilts and four Wearables as well as one Youth Quilt and one Challenge Quilt.
  • There is no entry fee for items. Instead we suggest a donation of $10 per item for those who are able to contribute to the Guild’s activities.
  • Members may sell their quilts/wearables, with the SFQG taking a 25% commission on items sold at the show.
  • Satellite House drop-off locations and dates will be announced in January on the SFQG web site and in the newsletter. Quilts will need to be dropped off between TBD.
  • You must collect your entries, with your claim form, at the pick-up table about an hour after the close of the show.
  • You are responsible for insuring your quilt(s)/wearable(s) if desired. Neither the SFQG nor The Event Center at St. Mary’s Cathedral will insure any entries and are not responsible if items are lost, stolen or damaged.
  • Please enter quilts in order of preference. Every attempt will be made to display all entries but the SFQG reserves the right to decide the number of items per person to be displayed, in the event of a space shortage.
  • By entering the show, you are granting the SFQG permission to take photographs of your item(s) and use them, along with identifying details, on the SFQG web site, on social media, in promotional activities, and at public venues.

Volunteer Expectations

  • Everyone exhibiting a quilt or wearable is expected to work two shifts at the show. Shifts are either two or three hours long and include sitting and standing roles.
  • You can indicate your preference for work shifts on the volunteer form.
  • Those entering quilts will automatically receive the volunteer form. It can also be found in the Members Only Page when avaiable.
  • We encourage all Members to volunteer! If you are not exhibiting you can still volunteer by clicking this form.
  • Please refer any questions regarding volunteering to Kathy Herr; her contact info is in the Membership Directory.

Quilt Information

Categories

  • On the entry form please choose only one category that best fits your work.
  • Categories are AppliquĂ©, Art~Abstract, Art~Pictorial, Group Quilt, Hand Quilted, Modern, Other, Traditional and Youth. Details are on this page.

Judging & Ribbons

  • You can choose to have your quilt excluded from judging if you would prefer it.
  • Qualified and Experienced judges will assess quilts identified for judging. They will scrutinize entries for areas of excellence and areas needing improvement based on general appearance, design, composition, and workmanship.
  • Ribbons for first, second, third and honorable mention may be awarded in the categories listed above. Special ribbons include Best Use of Color, Best Original Design, Most Whimsical, Best Embellishment, Excellence in Handwork, Judges’ Choice, Viewers’ Choice and Best of Show. Click this PDF for details.
  • All Youth quilts will receive Participation ribbons and will not be judged.
  • Please refer any questions regarding judging to Gloria Miller and Judith Epstein; their contact info is in the Membership Directory.

Youth Quilts

  • The SFQG hopes to nurture a new generation of quilters and encourages teens to join as Junior Members and enter their work in the Youth Quilt category.
  • Members may include quilts made by or with their children or grandchildren (16 years old and under) on their own entry form. (In the quilt description, please include the child’s name, age, how you worked together, and remember to upload a photograph.)

Photographing Your Quilt

  • You must upload a JPG or PNG of your quilt(s) to your online entry form.
  • Each photo should show the entire quilt top, with space around the edges.
  • A free “convert to JPG” tool can be found here.
  • These photos are purely to help us layout the Show and will not be used elsewhere for any other purpose.

Quilt Preparation

  • You must sew a 4″ sleeve on the top of your quilt.
  • All entries must be clean, smoke free and odor free.
  • An ID label must be attached to each item you enter. Download and print this PDF for ID labels and placement information.
  • Your Claim Check is part of the same PDF as the ID Labels. You should complete it before dropping off your items at the Satellite Houses and must present it in order to pick up your item(s) at close of show.

Wearables Information

  • Members may enter Full Ensembles or Individual Articles of wearable art. No items constructed from kits are allowed.
    • An Individual Article is one single item like a vest, jacket, dress or coat.
    • A Full Ensemble is a garment or group of garments that is ready to wear in public without other items. Examples: suit ensemble, dress, evening gown or pants outfit.
  • Members must create their wearable item(s) from start to finish.
    • Commercially manufactured support garment(s) should be included with each Individual Item to dress the mannequin. Examples: Individual Items (vest, jacket or coat) needs a dress, shirt/blouse and skirt/pants.
  • Wearables may be embellished in any way, including quilting, painting and/or surface embellishment. Commercial clothing patterns may be used for the shape of the garment.
  • Members may also include accent or accessory pieces that they create from start to finish, such as a purse, scarf, hat, etc. Jewelry is not allowed.
  • An ID label must be attached to each item you enter. Download and print this PDF for ID labels and placement information, and also for Claim Check.
  • The Claim Check must be presented in order to pick up your item(s) at close of show.
  • The online entry form for wearables is part of the quilt entry form which can be found on the Members Only page. Photographs of wearable entries are required.
  • Please refer any questions to Valerie Lynne; her contact info is in the Membership Directory.

Challenge Quilt Information

  • The Challenge theme for QUILT 2025 is TBD.
  • Challenge Quilts should be approximately 20″ x 20″.
  • Every member is encouraged to enter a Challenge Quilt! They are not judged and it a delightful way to take part in our Show.
  • The online entry form for Challenge Quilts is part of the quilt entry form which can be found on the Members Only page. There is NO fee and NO photograph required to enter your Challenge Quilt.
  • Please refer any questions to ___; her contact info is in the Membership Directory.

Next Steps

  • If you had already started completing your entry form and arrived here after clicking on a link then click your browser’s “back” button to go back to the form.
  • If you haven’t yet started your entries you can use the Quilt Entry link in the Members section to do so.
  • Click here to return to the main quilt show page.

Editing your Entry

  • You received an email with the subject “KEEP THIS EMAIL – Here are your quilt entry details for Quilt, Wearable and Challenge Entry Form” when you entered your quilt. This email contains a link for you to edit your entry up until TBD.
  • Use the “search” field in your email inbox to search for this email.
  • If you can not find this email you can request a new one here.
  • No edits are possible after TBD. The only exception is if you wish to withdraw an item completely from the Show. If this happens please contact Alex Byrne – details in the Member Directory.

Please refer any questions about the quilt-entry process to Alex Byrne; her contact info is in the Membership Directory.

aa-test

This content is for !!levels!! members only.

This page gives you access to our Membership Directory, Quiltermaker Stories, our bylaws, board minutes and other special content. But first 
 you need to sign in.

Sign up Join/Renew

Activities

Activities

The SFQG offers a wealth of activities that foster companionship, learning and fun for anyone in the Bay Area interested in quiltmaking and related arts.

Please visit our Calendar for a comprehensive view of all upcoming events – including details, dates and times, plus the links you’ll need to participate.

Meeting Activities

General Meetings are held on the third Tuesday of the month, except in November & December, when they happen on the second Tuesday. Below are some of the things you might see at those meetings.

Lectures

Guest speakers—from within the SFQG, around California, out of state and even overseas—are a high point of the guild’s monthly meetings. Learn more. You can find descriptions of past lectures in our Lecture Archive, which lists monthly lectures going back to mid-2018.

Sew & Tell

At every in person meeting, you have the opportunity to take the stage with your finished projects or WIPs and talk about your work 
 and enjoy the applause! We also encourage members to use the #SFQGVirtualShowandTell Instagram tag to share your work. Learn more.

Fabric Swap

Bring your fabric to the Swap Table at our monthly meetings and “shop” for something new at the break. You do not need to donate to be able to shop! Contact Christine Reiter to volunteer to help.

UFO Mystery Bag Challenge

Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to create a completed quilted project with the contents of a UFO Mystery Bag curated from other member’s donated UFOs. Learn more.

Library

Our library boasts more than 1,000 books and videos. Click here to learn about our holdings and how to browse. Watch the Calendar for regular open library dates.

Block of the Month

Participating in Block of the Month is a way to learn new techniques, try new designs or patterns, play with fabrics and colors 
 and win blocks. Learn more.

 

Hospitality

The SFQG has a quirky way of supplying snacks at meetings: members are asked to bring treats to the meeting that happens during their birthday month. You are, of course, welcome to contribute when it’s not your birthday month, but this helps to ensure we have snacks and drinks every meeting.

If you have any questions or are interested in joining the Hospitality Team, please reach out to Charlotte Mosher, Mary Padbury, or Loretta Roddy.

Annual Auction

November’s meeting features a live auction and cash-and-carry tables. It’s a lively fundraiser, with great finds. Invite your friends 
 guests are free!

Make & Take

Our December meeting features craft tables where you can learn a clever technique or make a quick project 
 plus there’s a holiday party.

Mini-Workshops

Some months we host several mini-workshops for you to learn new skills or hone those you know. You can learn about and try your hand at the following techniques taught by our own members.

General Activities

If you are interested in participating in any of our general activities, take a look at the corresponding page. Several of the chairs for our general activities host tables at our monthly meetings where you can also ask questions.

Sewcials

The SFQG offers two kinds of Saturday social gatherings: Outreach Sewcials and Sewcial Workshops. At Outreach Sewcials, members gather to work on charitable projects. Sewcial Workshops feature stellar teachers both from within our own guild and beyond. Learn more here, or see our Calendar for upcoming dates.

Sewing Circles

Sewing Circles are groups of guild members who pursue shared interests by meeting regularly, sewing together, working on collaborative projects, and the like. Learn more.

Lincoln Park Quilters

Lincoln Park Quilters is a social extension of SFQG. They meet every Friday – “in person” on the odd Fridays and via Zoom on the even Fridays. Contact Jeanie Low with any questions.

Fabric Postcards

Use up scraps 
 have some fun 
 and help raise money for the guild by sewing fabric postcards. At just 4×6, they’re fast to make. Details and directions are here.

Quiltlets

At just 8œ inches square, Quiltlets are miniature works of art created by members and displayed at our quilt shows. Learn more.

Challenge Quilts

Challenge Quilts are small works that interested members make in response to a theme and are typically displayed at the guild’s quilt show. Learn more.

Round Robin

The SFQG’s Round Robin is an annual group quilt project that runs January through October of years we don’t have a show. Each participant contributes to six quilts over the course of the year and gets to keep a finished quilt at the end. Beginners welcome! For details, examples, and to join the fun click here.

Community Outreach

SFQG members regularly contribute quilts and pillowcases to local hospitals and other organizations through our Community Outreach program. For member convenience, we have a table at the monthly meeting and regularly scheduled Curbside Outreach – visit the calendar to see the specific dates.

Newsletter

The SFQG publishes a monthly newsletter, Quilters Cables, that members receive via email or in print. Back issues and info on how to contribute can be found here.

Quilt Show

Our biennial show features hundreds of quilts by members, special exhibits, featured artists, vendors and more. In the months leading up to the show, find information here. See find the ribbon winners from our last show here.

Outdoor Free Table

A treasure trove of fabrics, orphan blocks, patterns, and quilting supplies. Contributions always welcome! Outdoor free tables will be scheduled approximately once a quarter – members looking to host a free table should contact Val Lienkaemper to schedule it.

Social Media

Follow us on Instagram and Facebook to see fabulous quilts by SFQG members and find out about upcoming events. Learn more.

Opportunity Quilts

A great fundraiser, this collaborative quilt travels to other guilds and events until it is raffled off at our quilt show. See our latest Opportunity Quilt here.

Quilt Retreats

We regularly host QuiltAway & Open Studio retreats. QuiltAway feature classes, while all retreats offer open studio, charity projects, and time for guild members to get to know one another better. Learn more.

Past Activities

Below are several of the activities that members have hosted in the past. If you are interested in reviving one (and being the activity chair), please work with the board to help get it going.

Chunk of the Month

A mystery quilt activity hosted by Julia McLeod, if you followed the monthly installments from March to August you will have 44 components with which to make a complete 48″ quilt.

Secret Palls

Secret Pals are guild members who enjoy gift-giving as a way of getting to know other members. Kind of like Secret Santa, but year-round. Learn more.

Friendship Blocks

Making Friendship Blocks is a way to collaborate with other guild members on their quilts 
 and to get blocks for your projects, too. Participants have contributed more than 900 blocks for 57 quilts in the past decade. Learn more.

Lone Robin

Part progressive quilt, part mystery quilt, and a whole lot of fun! In 2021 & 2022, our Lone Robin Challenge presented six monthly prompts to participants starting in February. Click here for details.

2023 Opportunity Quilts

12 Chances to Win a Silk Opportunity Quilt!

2023 Opportunity Quilts

In a creative twist on our usual Opportunity Quilt fundraiser, in 2023 the SFQG produced 12 quilts instead of just one! Starting in 2019, guild members began donating silks to use in Sue Fox’s workshops on techniques for working with silk in quilt-making. Those in-person workshops never happened. But Sue and her team turned that stash into sew-at-home kits, scores of participants got kits by mail, and they began piecing four styles of blocks. Working with thousands of those components, 12 guild members stepped up to design, assemble, and quilt a dozen quilts, ranging from wall-hangings to bed-sized.


And the Winners Are …

All “12 Chances to Win” Opportunity Quilt prizes are now in the hands of the Winners. Here’s WHO chose WHICH Quilt Prizes
 (listed in order of the ticket pull.)

1) Karen Warner (in the audience) chose C—“Magic Carpet” made by Sue Fox.
2) Joanne Reiter (remote winner) chose B—“Tipsy Silks” made by Dani Lawler.
3) Kathleen Van Dyke (remote winner) chose G—“Spinning ‘Feathered’ Star” made by Carolyn Startup.
4) Sim Thadani (in the audience) chose E—“Ojos de Dios” made by Sue Fox.
5) Jan Etre (in the audience) chose H—“Ruby & Gold Improv” made by Kenan Shapero.
6) Deb Montgomery (remote winner) chose D—“Silver Leaves” made by Tish Chung.
7) Katie Woods (remote winner) chose J—“Rubylinth” made by Jason Horsey.
8) Sandy Thacker (in the audience) chose K—“Inspiration: Bento!” made by Christine Reiter.
9) Beverly Hawks (remote winner) chose F—“Neon Star” made by Holly Gatto.
10) Seema Rathod (in the audience) chose L—“Dragonfly’s Chase” made by Cathey Kennedy.
11) Joanne Reiter (remote winner) chose I—“Silk Stripes” made by Laureen Neilly.
12) Barbara Crawford (in the audience) chose A—”Plans Have Changed” made by Gail DeMartis.

Special Lottery Quilts— Prizes available ONLY to participants of the Community Built Maker Crew and the “12 Chances to Win” Ticket Sales crew were drawn on Friday.
—Gail De Martis (component maker & quilt designer) chose “In Conversation” designed and built by Fern Royce.
—Andrea Segura-Smith (Ticket Sales & the show’s Vendor coordinator) chose “Extra-Vaganza” designed and built by Mary Spadaro.


A Special Thank You 


We are grateful to ALL of the VOLUNTEERS who participated in this year’s Opportunity Quilt Project. We tried something different
 We learned a few things
 and We had FUN!!

2023 Opportunity Quilt winner Karen Warner and project organizer Sue Fox with “Magic Carpet” by Sue Fox.
2023 Opportunity Quilt winner Sim Thadani and project organizer Sue Fox with “Ojos de Dios” by Sue Fox.
2023 Opportunity Quilt winner Sandy T with “Inspiration: Bento!” made by Christine Reiter.

And Now 
 Enjoy the Compelling Designs and Eye-Popping Colors of our Opportunity Quilts!

Prize F: Neon Star
40″ x 40″
Designed & made by Holly Gatto, quilted by Nancy Williams. Holly used humble HST blocks made up in bold Dupioni silks, along with a variety of black background squares (satin, spotted, and plain weave), sprinkled with a few four-patch blocks. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize H: Gold and Ruby Improv
44″ x 46″
Designed & made by Kenan Shapero, quilted by Sue Fox. Kenan’s improvisation features strip-piecing plus “framed boxes” (many of them quartered). Chinese brocades, Dupioni solids, necktie silks, and a few woven stripes. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize L: Dragonfly’s Chase
42″ x 42″
Designed and made by Cathey Kennedy, quilted by Sue Fox. Cathey’s unusual octagon format highlights HST and “framed box” blocks, along with dynamic strip-pieced bold colors. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize J: Rubylinth
47″ x 47″
Designed, made, and quilted by Jason Horsey.
Honoring traditional red and white quilts, Jason’s original labyrinth design utilizes strip-pieced red silks, highlighted by pebble quilting along the white pathways. Cotton batting and cotton backing.
Prize E: Ojos de Dios
85″ x 85″
Designed, made, and quilted by Sue Fox.
A bed-sized quilt composed of black Chinese silk brocade centers surrounded by bold colorful “frames,” all set within black silk gabardine. Wool batting, cotton, and raw silk backing. (Exhibited at Maine Quilts, July 2022.)
Prize B: Tipsy Silks
28″ x 28″
Designed, made and quilted by Dani Lawler.
Dani created this lively small quilt using 64 Half-Square Triangle (HST) blocks in the central layout, featuring Chinese silk brocades and jewel-toned solid silks. Cotton batting and cotton backing.
Prize D: Silver Leaves
23.5″ x 32.5″
Designed, made and quilted by Tish Chung.
Tish‘s lyrical composition features colorful hand-appliquĂ©ed leaves on a silver background with strip-pieced silk borders. Cotton batting and cotton backing.
Prize G: “Feathered” Spinning Star
35″ x 35″
Designed & made by Carolyn Startup, quilted by Sue Fox. Choosing colors to celebrate the SFQG’s 40th (ruby) anniversary, Carolyn featured three of our four basic piecing techniques (HSTs, 4-patch/9-patch, and strip-piecing) in her composition. Dupioni, Chinese brocades and necktie silks. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize K: Inspiration: Bento!
48″ x 48″
Designed and made by Christine Reiter, quilted by Sue Fox. Christine created a tribute to a large collection of Chinese silk brocades, composed with HST and “framed box” blocks and set with plain weave, iridescent, and satin solids. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize I: Silk Stripes
44″ x 42″
Designed and made by Laureen Neilly, quilted by Sue Fox. Laureen’s signature design style—utilizing her own distinctive strip-piecing layout—is featured here in Dupioni and plain weave silks. Wool batting and cotton backing.

Project Background

As an unexpected result of pandemic conditions, the SFQG’s Opportunity Quilt project grew from one quilt for 2021 to a dozen for 2023. Here’s how it happened …

  • Fall 2019. Our project began before COVID, when the guild asked for donated silks to use at the SFQG’s 2020 retreat in preparation for a new Opportunity Quilt. The response was overwhelming—Dupioni, plain weave, habotai, satin, large pieces and small, yardage, bags of Chinese brocades, mostly solid colors, but some stripes and plaids, too.
  • March 2020. Lock-down, and the project came to a halt. For the rest of the year and for much of 2021, we looked for a way to engage guild members who wanted to participate while navigating pandemic restrictions. Our brainstorm was to turn an in-person project into a sew-at-home endeavor using kits of pre-cut materials and how-instructions sent by mail.
  • November 2021—March 2022. Hundreds of kits were assembled for release over four months, with each month’s kit devoted to a different block style. All fabrics were drawn from our fabulous collection of of donated silks.
  • January–June 2022. More than a quarter of the SFQG memberships signed up to receive multiple technique kits. They stitched thousands of block components, while learning four simple, step-by-step strategies for using silk as a quilt-making material.
  • April–November 2022. As participants returned their components, 12 members stepped forward to design, make and quilt a variety of projects. The results display a wide range of design concepts, all using just our four basic block construction techniques.

Opportunity Quilts

12 Chances to Win a Silk Opportunity Quilt!

In a creative twist on our usual Opportunity Quilt fundraiser, in 2023 the SFQG produced 12 quilts instead of just one! Starting in 2019, guild members began donating silks to use in Sue Fox’s workshops on techniques for working with silk in quilt-making. Those in-person workshops never happened. But Sue and her team turned that stash into sew-at-home kits, scores of participants got kits by mail, and they began piecing four styles of blocks. Working with thousands of those components, 12 guild members stepped up to design, assemble, and quilt a dozen quilts, ranging from wall-hangings to bed-sized.

And the Winners Are


All “12 Chances to Win” Opportunity Quilt prizes are now in the hands of the Winners. Here’s WHO chose WHICH Quilt Prizes
 (listed in order of the ticket pull.)

1) Karen Warner (in the audience) chose C—“Magic Carpet” made by Sue Fox.
2) Joanne Reiter (remote winner) chose B—“Tipsy Silks” made by Dani Lawler.
3) Kathleen Van Dyke (remote winner) chose G—“Spinning ‘Feathered’ Star” made by Carolyn Startup.
4) Sim Thadani (in the audience) chose E—“Ojos de Dios” made by Sue Fox.
5) Jan Etre (in the audience) chose H—“Ruby & Gold Improv” made by Kenan Shapero.
6) Deb Montgomery (remote winner) chose D—“Silver Leaves” made by Tish Chung.
7) Katie Woods (remote winner) chose J—“Rubylinth” made by Jason Horsey.
8) Sandy Thacker (in the audience) chose K—“Inspiration: Bento!” made by Christine Reiter.
9) Beverly Hawks (remote winner) chose F—“Neon Star” made by Holly Gatto.
10) Seema Rathod (in the audience) chose L—“Dragonfly’s Chase” made by Cathey Kennedy.
11) Joanne Reiter (remote winner) chose I—“Silk Stripes” made by Laureen Neilly.
12) Barbara Crawford (in the audience) chose A—”Plans Have Changed” made by Gail DeMartis.

Special Lottery Quilts— Prizes available ONLY to participants of the Community Built Maker Crew and the “12 Chances to Win” Ticket Sales crew were drawn on Friday.
—Gail De Martis (component maker & quilt designer) chose “In Conversation” designed and built by Fern Royce.
—Andrea Segura-Smith (Ticket Sales & the show’s Vendor coordinator) chose “Extra-Vaganza” designed and built by Mary Spadaro.

A Special Thank You …

We are grateful to ALL of the VOLUNTEERS who participated in this year’s Opportunity Quilt Project.

We tried something different
 We learned a few things
 and We had FUN!!

2023 Opportunity Quilt winner Karen Warner and project organizer Sue Fox with “Magic Carpet” by Sue Fox.
2023 Opportunity Quilt winner Sandy T with “Inspiration: Bento!” made by Christine Reiter.
2023 Opportunity Quilt winner Sim Thadani and project organizer Sue Fox with “Ojos de Dios” by Sue Fox.

And Now 
 Enjoy the Compelling Designs and Eye-Popping Colors of our Opportunity Quilts!

Prize A: Plans Have Changed
35″ x 44″
Designed and made by Gail DeMartis, quilted by Nancy Williams.
Gail’s improvisational wall quilt features bold colors, Dupioni silks and the strip-piecing technique.  Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize C: Magic Carpet
85″ x 85″
Designed, made, and quilted by Sue Fox.
A bed-sized quilt of Chinese silk brocade squares in “framed box” blocks, mostly composed of solid-color Dupioni silks. Background color is teal blue/green. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize E: Ojos de Dios
85″ x 85″
Designed, made, and quilted by Sue Fox.
A bed-sized quilt composed of black Chinese silk brocade centers surrounded by bold colorful “frames,” all set within black silk gabardine. Wool batting, cotton, and raw silk backing. (Exhibited at Maine Quilts, July 2022.)
Prize G: “Feathered” Spinning Star
35″ x 35″
Designed and made by Carolyn Startup, quilted by Sue Fox.
Choosing colors to celebrate the SFQG’s 40th (ruby) anniversary, Carolyn featured three of our four basic piecing techniques (HSTs, 4-patch/9-patch, and strip-piecing) in her composition. Dupioni, Chinese brocades and necktie silks. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize I: Silk Stripes
44″ x 42″
Designed and made by Laureen Neilly, quilted by Sue Fox.
Laureen’s signature design style—utilizing her own distinctive strip-piecing layout—is featured here in Dupioni and plain weave silks. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize K: Inspiration: Bento!
48″ x 48″
Designed and made by Christine Reiter, quilted by Sue Fox.
Christine created a tribute to a large collection of Chinese silk brocades, composed with HST and “framed box” blocks and set with plain weave, iridescent, and satin solids. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize B: Tipsy Silks
28″ x 28″
Designed, made and quilted by Dani Lawler.
Dani created this lively small quilt using 64 Half-Square Triangle (HST) blocks in the central layout, featuring Chinese silk brocades and jewel-toned solid silks. Cotton batting and cotton backing.
Prize D: Silver Leaves
23.5″ x 32.5″
Designed, made and quilted by Tish Chung.
Tish‘s lyrical composition features colorful hand-appliquĂ©ed leaves on a silver background with strip-pieced silk borders. Cotton batting and cotton backing.
Prize F: Neon Star
40″ x 40″
Designed and made by Holly Gatto, quilted by Nancy Williams.
Holly used humble HST blocks made up in bold Dupioni silks, along with a variety of black background squares (satin, spotted, and plain weave), sprinkled with a few four-patch blocks. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize H: Gold and Ruby Improv
44″ x 46″
Designed and made by Kenan Shapero, quilted by Sue Fox.
Kenan’s improvisation features strip-piecing plus “framed boxes” (many of them quartered). Chinese brocades, Dupioni solids, necktie silks, and a few woven stripes. Wool batting and cotton backing.
Prize J: Rubylinth
47″ x 47″
Designed, made, and quilted by Jason Horsey.
Honoring traditional red and white quilts, Jason’s original labyrinth design utilizes strip-pieced red silks, highlighted by pebble quilting along the white pathways. Cotton batting and cotton backing.
Prize L: Dragonfly’s Chase
42″ x 42″
Designed and made by Cathey Kennedy, quilted by Sue Fox.
Cathey’s unusual octagon format highlights HST and “framed box” blocks, along with dynamic strip-pieced bold colors. Wool batting and cotton backing.

Project Background

As an unexpected result of pandemic conditions, the SFQG’s Opportunity Quilt project grew from one quilt to a dozen. Here’s how it happened.

  • Fall 2019. Our project began before COVID, when the guild asked for donated silks to use at the SFQG’s 2020 retreat in preparation for a new Opportunity Quilt. The response was overwhelming—Dupioni, plain weave, habotai, satin, large pieces and small, yardage, bags of Chinese brocades, mostly solid colors, but some stripes and plaids, too.
  • March 2020. Lock-down, and the project came to a halt. For the rest of the year and for much of 2021, we looked for a way to engage guild members who wanted to participate while navigating pandemic restrictions. Our brainstorm was to turn an in-person project into a sew-at-home endeavor using kits of pre-cut materials and how-instructions sent by mail.
  • November 2021—March 2022. Hundreds of kits were assembled for release over four months, with each month’s kit devoted to a different block style. All fabrics were drawn from our fabulous collection of of donated silks.
  • January–June 2022. More than a quarter of the SFQG memberships signed up to receive multiple technique kits. They stitched thousands of block components, while learning four simple, step-by-step strategies for using silk as a quilt-making material.
  • April–November 2022. As participants returned their components, 12 members stepped forward to design, make and quilt a variety of projects. The results display a wide range of design concepts, all using just our four basic block construction techniques.

Meet the Judges

Meet the Judges

For 2023 we have four judges at the pinnacle of their careers.

Mel Beach

Mel Beach is a San Jose, CA based quilt artist, teacher and lecturer, who loves stretching her creativity through quilt challenges and the successful completion of five 100 Day Projects involving a roll of dice. Her award-winning quilts have been juried into exhibits and published in books/magazines. Mel has been featured on The Quilt Show, Quilting Arts TV and Podcast, and has articles published with Quilting Arts Magazine, Curated Quilts, and The Craft Industry. To learn more, visit www.melbeachquilts.com

Kitty Oliver

Kitty has been quilting for over 25 years. In addition to teaching quilting technique classes and giving lectures, she created the California Sesquicentennial Children’s Quilt Program.  This program brought information on quilting and California history to thousands of school children

Kitty has won numerous honors and ribbons including Featured Artist, Best of Show, Best Use of Color, Judges Choice, Best of Class, and numerous first place ribbons.  She has had quilts juried into several larger quilt shows including PIQF, Quilt Fest of New Jersey, the Mid- Atlantic Quilt Festival, and the California State Fair.  Kitty creates her own patterns and designs, and has a deep appreciation for the creative process. 

As a successful graduate of the West Coast Quilt Judging Academy she has become a very busy quilt judge.  Kitty loves the opportunity to encourage and challenge quilters at all levels, through meaningful and thoughtful comments. 

Kitty is an environmental scientist who works and resides in Sacramento.

Linda Schmidt

Short Attention Span Quilts

Linda comes from a long line of quilting women. She has won over 300 ribbons from local, national and international quilting exhibitions, and teaches quilting both nationally and internationally. Linda was a member of the Alameda County Art Commission for six years, and Chairman of it for two years. She is a musician, a composer, an active member of Amador Valley Quilters, IQA, and AQS. She was a founding member of the Network for Wearable Art and teaches online quilting classes at AcademyofQuilting.com. “There is nothing I like better than to talk to people about quilting, unless it is making quilts and wearable art or jewelry”  As a quilting judge, I strive to encourage our art, not discourage it; I want to help you grow in your art and enjoy the journey. 

Carol L Smith

Carol Smith learned to sew at an early age, began quilting in 1975, and in 2012 completed “A Course on Judging Quilts and Wearable Art” from the West Coast Quilt Judging Academy.  She lectures and conducts workshops for guilds on “Quilt Judging” and has assisted in the judging process for car shows, county fairs and quilt shows.

Carol’s work has been exhibited in Canada, Missouri, at PIQF and in many local shows in Northern California.  She is a California State Fair award winner and is listed in two “Who’s Who” publications. She is a charter member of River City Quilters’ Guild (1977) in Sacramento and Flying Needles Quilters’ Guild (2010) in Woodland, having served on the Executive Board and quilt show committees of both guilds for many years.

Carol lives in Elverta (near Sacramento) with her kitty, Mr. Carroll Shelby.