On the Subject of Gifting

Have you ever thought of not gifting something tangible to the people in your life?  Gasp!  Shock!  Horror!

Why not gift them an “experience” instead?
-Tickets to a concert or play.
-A meal at their favorite restaurant (or a gift card if you’re out of town).
-A gift card to *that* bookstore, coffee shop or stationery store.
-Classes to learn a new hobby.

For sewing folks:

  1. Sewing classes offered by local quilt shops, recreation centers and big box craft stores, if you aren’t inclined to teach the recipient yourself.
  2. Tickets to the big sewing expo if it comes to your town.
  3. Online sewing classes offered by Craftsy or similar platforms.
  4. Annual membership to Pattern Review, Modern Quilt Guild, American Sewing Guild, QNNtv (F+W Media video channel now part of The Quilting Company).
  5. Gift card to their favorite fabric store, complete with chauffeur (you) and lunch.
  6. Subscription to their favorite sewing or craft magazine.

If you give a tangible item(s) as a gift, be deliberate and thoughtful in your giving. Be sure to give them something they can actually use, rather than something that will take up space.

For a beginning/returning sewist:
1. Quality thread in white, natural, light gray or light beige.
2. FQ bundle in solids, a favorite color way or theme.
3. 5 pack of rotary cutter blades.
4. Needle packs (Schmetz Chrome Microtex Size 12/80 anyone?)
5. Nice scissors (Gingher or their favorite brand).
6. Superfine glass head pins and a magnetic pincushion.

If your favorite sewist has some experience, listen carefully. They are bound to tell you exactly which fabric line, book or sewing notion they’d love to have.

Some of my most favorite gifts have been my birthday “day trip” last year to Missouri Star Quilt Company, a weekend quilting class at the John C. Campbell Folk School and my subscription to QuiltFolk.

If you are able to gift the “machine of her dreams” without breaking the bank, then by all means go for it!  You’ll have a very grateful stitcher on your hands.

Merry Christmas!

Peace.

 

Psst – Pattern Designers – Hire a Tech Editor to Edit Your Patterns!

As a quilter whose “sew for me” time is a precious commodity, nothing is more AGGRAVATING than sitting down to start a project only to discover I have issues with a pattern I downloaded as a pdf file.  I mean, at least in the store, I can open the pattern up and look through it before purchasing.

Four friendly suggestions from this tech editor for quilt pattern designers:

  1. Format the pattern so that there are no pages with only a single line of text and the rest of the page is blank.  At the very least, insert a statement like [THIS SPACE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK].
  2. Patterns with lots of half-square triangles and other intricate bits of piecing require using a scant 1/4″ seam allowance.  Put a reminder in the general directions section near the beginning of the pattern. [Use of a scant 1/4″ seam allowance is recommended for best results.]
  3. If your pattern makes use of a special notion or technique – say HSTs using triangle papers – clearly state this on the pattern envelope IN LARGE PRINT.  If offering the pattern as a pdf download, make it clear in the description that triangle papers are needed for this project – especially if fabric requirements, cutting directions and piecing directions are written exclusively for the use of triangle papers. (You may also consider putting an errata sheet on your website listing modifications for sewists who use a different HST construction method.) Putting an asterisk and mice type at the bottom of the fabric requirements grid suggesting triangle papers for HSTs doesn’t really help.
  4. There should be at least 3 photos in an online ad:  front of pattern envelope, back of pattern envelope, and a snippet from the sewing instructions featuring any specialty tools or techniques used in the pattern.

Hiring a tech editor doesn’t guarantee a 100% foolproof pattern – but it does mean another set of experienced eyes has reviewed your pattern and lessens the likelihood of glaring errors that will significantly impact your customer’s sewing project.

A fun time and successful result using YOUR pattern increases the chance that the customer will buy ANOTHER pattern from you.

So, hire a tech editor to help make you look good in print!

In case you were wondering, I am now accepting tech editing projects for January 2018. Easy to intermediate patterns require 2-4 hours to edit and have a 1-2 week turnaround time.   Email:  teresa@comestitchwithme.com

 

 

 

 

Updates & Deadlines

Happy Thanksgiving to those who will be gathering around the table to stuff yourself on turkey and all the trimmings today!  Be sure to rest up and peruse the Thanksgiving newspaper ads to plan your day of shopping on Black Friday! (I won’t be joining you!)

Now that the last customer quilt project for 2017 has been delivered, I plan to take a couple of months off from quilting for hire and spend them quilting for me.  My Black Friday will be spent shopping my stash for fabrics to make a Lady of the Lake quilt I picked up from a shop off my Instagram feed. If I do any shopping this weekend, it will be spent at the two local quilt shops that carry Kaffe Fasset fabric!  I am also going to try my hand at a Cashmerette Pattern with some luscious imported knit fabric I found at Topstitch ATL a few weeks ago (I foresee a blog post on this).  The next 3-1/2 weeks will be a little crazy at the day job, so having a project at the ready will keep me sane.

For your convenience, here’s a short list of services offered and current availability:

Teaching –  Ongoing (scheduled classes @ Stitch N Quilt, private lessons available)
Tech Editing – Now accepting projects for January 2018
Quilting Studio – On break until February 2018
Etsy Shop – Always open (watch for new items!)

I also plan to exhibit at a local community event in late January!  More details on that later!