Saturday, March 24, 2018
PQ 9.6 Use Up and Make Do
The Project Quilting Challenge this week is Scraptastic. We are required to use 12 unique fabrics. That continues to fit my personal theme of Western Expansion. While there are lots of wonderful examples of beautiful quilts made by women on the way West. There were, however, even more quilts made of scraps for purely utilitarian purposes. Use what you have. Make a quilt to keep some one warm.
I really like this picture of Victorian era women quilting. I don't actually know where they are or what year the photo was taken, but it is clearly post Civil War and likely pre 1900. So the time is right. I love the ladies sitting around the quilt frame.
I grew up playing under the quilting frame at my grandmother's house. It was always set up in the living room when she was working on a project. I would take my dolls and my own little sewing project underneath and I would apparently sing away while the ladies quilted. Every now and then I had to find the hanging needle that they 'lost' have to poke it back up through the top. I must have been able to do it with sufficient precision because I don't really recall having to try a lot. My only regret is that I didn't pay attention to the conversations that were taking place above the quilt. I am quite sure I would have a much better understanding of all sorts of family history had I been listening.
This little quilt is about 8 x 10 inches. The image is printed on cotton. The 'frame is made from blocks that finish at 1/2 inch. It has a pillowcase finish and is machine quilted with a simple stitch in the ditch... I hate stitch in the ditch...
Now go and read about all of the amazing quilts made as part of this week's Project Quilting episode.
Sunday, March 11, 2018
The People You Meet: Early Departures
One of the worst things a vendor can do is pack up and leave before the end of the show.
Yes, there are some good reasons a person has to leave early. Medical emergencies and familial crises warrant a hasty departure. Not making any sales or being bored is NOT a reason to leave. You paid your money to be there. You agreed to be there. You need to fulfill your obligation.
The show may be slow. There may not be a customer in sight. You may be bored out of your mind. But it is still inappropriate to pack up and leave early. And the worst offenders of all are the ones who pack up and leave in a huff, making as much noise as possible while blocking aisles and neighboring booths.
Customers see early packers as a sign that the show is over. They will spend less time looking. They avoid aisles that are blocked with a cart and boxes. They leave. Vendors who leave early disrupt the entire show. They ruin potential sales for their neighbors. It is bad form.
Furthermore, leaving early also means you miss potential sales. I have had more than one slow day break even or make a profit because of sales at closing time or even just after. Sometimes, it is from other vendors who were waiting for their final tally before spending. On one occasion, I slow-walked my clean up for the boy with the 5 siblings who kept tugging on his mom's sleeve as she chatted. By the time she was done and they walked over, it was probably ten minutes**** past closing. She quickly bought him the monster he wanted and she bought something for each of the other 5 with her. You never know.
If you have a crisis and have to leave it is best to try and locate the coordinator and let them know your situation. It may not save you from being put on the naughty list but it is the correct thing to do. Quietly letting your booth neighbors know what is going on is also appropriate. They may be able to help let the coordinator know and they may be able to help you get packed up.
The real key if you absolutely have to pack up early is to be as discrete as you possibly can. Start from the back of your booth leaving the easiest thing to pack in front and on display as long as possible. Politely tell any customers who come into your booth or pause at your table that you must leave for a personal reason. Offer them a card so they can check out your on-line shop or tell them when you will be at the next show.
Move your stock and display out of the area as quickly and quietly as you are able. Do not block the aisles. Do not shove your cart through the crowd. Take the least crowded, least obvious path you are able to follow. Do your best not to disrupt the flow of customers to the booths around you.
Follow up with a note to the organizer about why you had to leave. It is only polite.
Otherwise. DO NOT PACK UP OR LEAVE EARLY.
**** Lest you think I am slowed up the works for the organizer, let me be clear that while I was waiting for the boy and his mom, I had organized and packed everything behind my booth. My price tags were stowed. Most of the secondary display items were packed. I'd taken down my sign. I'd picked up my business cards. My paper bags were in their place just open enough so I could get to one. I was ready to go once their purchase was complete. And let me also say that due to the nature of my product and due to the fact I have a bunch of engineers and efficiency experts in the family, my tear down process takes at most 20 minutes start to finish if I am by myself and if I have help we are often in the car 15 minutes after we start packing (it has become something of challenge to see if we can beat the record time). So my stalling for 10 minutes still meant that I was packed and gone in less than half an hour after the close of the show. I would never do that if it took me longer to pack up.
Yes, there are some good reasons a person has to leave early. Medical emergencies and familial crises warrant a hasty departure. Not making any sales or being bored is NOT a reason to leave. You paid your money to be there. You agreed to be there. You need to fulfill your obligation.
The show may be slow. There may not be a customer in sight. You may be bored out of your mind. But it is still inappropriate to pack up and leave early. And the worst offenders of all are the ones who pack up and leave in a huff, making as much noise as possible while blocking aisles and neighboring booths.
Customers see early packers as a sign that the show is over. They will spend less time looking. They avoid aisles that are blocked with a cart and boxes. They leave. Vendors who leave early disrupt the entire show. They ruin potential sales for their neighbors. It is bad form.
Furthermore, leaving early also means you miss potential sales. I have had more than one slow day break even or make a profit because of sales at closing time or even just after. Sometimes, it is from other vendors who were waiting for their final tally before spending. On one occasion, I slow-walked my clean up for the boy with the 5 siblings who kept tugging on his mom's sleeve as she chatted. By the time she was done and they walked over, it was probably ten minutes**** past closing. She quickly bought him the monster he wanted and she bought something for each of the other 5 with her. You never know.
If you have a crisis and have to leave it is best to try and locate the coordinator and let them know your situation. It may not save you from being put on the naughty list but it is the correct thing to do. Quietly letting your booth neighbors know what is going on is also appropriate. They may be able to help let the coordinator know and they may be able to help you get packed up.
The real key if you absolutely have to pack up early is to be as discrete as you possibly can. Start from the back of your booth leaving the easiest thing to pack in front and on display as long as possible. Politely tell any customers who come into your booth or pause at your table that you must leave for a personal reason. Offer them a card so they can check out your on-line shop or tell them when you will be at the next show.
Move your stock and display out of the area as quickly and quietly as you are able. Do not block the aisles. Do not shove your cart through the crowd. Take the least crowded, least obvious path you are able to follow. Do your best not to disrupt the flow of customers to the booths around you.
Follow up with a note to the organizer about why you had to leave. It is only polite.
Otherwise. DO NOT PACK UP OR LEAVE EARLY.
**** Lest you think I am slowed up the works for the organizer, let me be clear that while I was waiting for the boy and his mom, I had organized and packed everything behind my booth. My price tags were stowed. Most of the secondary display items were packed. I'd taken down my sign. I'd picked up my business cards. My paper bags were in their place just open enough so I could get to one. I was ready to go once their purchase was complete. And let me also say that due to the nature of my product and due to the fact I have a bunch of engineers and efficiency experts in the family, my tear down process takes at most 20 minutes start to finish if I am by myself and if I have help we are often in the car 15 minutes after we start packing (it has become something of challenge to see if we can beat the record time). So my stalling for 10 minutes still meant that I was packed and gone in less than half an hour after the close of the show. I would never do that if it took me longer to pack up.
PQ 9.5: A Stitch in Time
I have long said that if my dad had been born 100 years earlier we would have been on a wagon train going West. After a childhood of imagining that revisionist history, I eventually came to the conclusion that I would make a terrible pioneer. I cannot keep track of my needles!
If you think about it, a needle is a very important tool. In a world where you have to make almost everything you need to take care of your tools. Some things you can make or repair, a new handle for the axe, a new edge on the plowshare. A good blacksmith can make nails and forks. But needles? Needles are another story. I haven't researched how needles were made pre-Industrial Revolution. There were stages between sharpening bone and post Industrial Revolution machine production. Even historic needles are fine. From reading diaries of the women who traveled the Oregon Trail I've learned that a needle was a precious commodity.
And I am notorious for losing my needles. I try not to lose them in carpets and furniture and am successful for the most part but where they actually go? I have no idea. And so I would make a terrible pioneer. My clothes would be ragged and the canvas on my tent would be un-patched. It would not be pretty.
So my stitch in time quilt is a nod to those brave women who packed their precious things in a covered wagon and headed west, needle in hand, to face a vast unknown landscape.
The image is of the interior of a covered wagon. Notice the fancy chair, spinning wheel, butter churn and what looks to be boxes of silverware and likely other tools. I love the pretty dresses hanging on the pegs.
The picture is printed on fabric and is embellished with embroidery floss. The binding is a ruffle (new technique for me) made of a modern calico fabric. It measures approximately 8 x 10 inches. This quilt continues my Western Expansion theme for the Project Quilting challenges this year.
You can read more about Project Quilting and check out all the amazing quilts made this week on Kim Lapacek's Blog.
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