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NC Quilt Symposium – Part 1

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

12 Responses

  1. Barb says:

    I'm so jealous that you got to go to symposium. I would have loved to have taken a class with Pat Sloan.
    Love the teapot!

  2. Gail says:

    I, too, have difficulty finishing workshop/class projects. I must have dozens of started, but not touched, since the class. OTOH, I have learned some great techniques along the way.

  3. vivian says:

    Congrats on your wins! Your quilts were even more fabulous in person!

  4. Deb says:

    And the event she went to was the Iron Quilter Challenge where she was the best little "sous chef" to Robbi Eklow! It was all so hilarious and included, silly string, spray coloring for the hair, and whip cream which she accepted on the head very graciously! Leah, you were such a sweet sport to participate in all the bedlam!

  5. Laura says:

    I saw your great quilts and the ribbons yesterday when I was at the symposium–congratulations!! I ran over to the quilt show at the lunch break from my class, and I have to agree that the workshops are good for presenting techniques, but I'll never finish what I was working on, either. I really don't want to make something that 25 other people are making a duplicate of, it has to be something of my own design if Iwant to put the effort into it. Again, congratulations on your awards!

  6. Jennifer says:

    Congratulations – best of show and best machine quilting – that's fantastic! We had Robbi Joy at our guild a few years ago before I was sewing enough to take classes, but I know several people who really enjoyed her class!

  7. ms lottie says:

    You're very modest! Best in show! Wahooo!! Well done you.

    And I'm going to take your advice on workshops. I have lots of little workshop projects sitting there unfinished, but I should focus on the fact that I learnt a new technique – not that I didn't finish a project.

  8. deanna7trees says:

    I agree with you about workshops. I do much better working at home with all my stuff. That is why I prefer online classes. It's the best of both worlds. Love your cup and teapot.

  9. Anonymous says:

    Glad you are having fun…and glad you were kidding about that being a lousy teapot! That teapot and cut has such dimension! Wonderful!

  10. LoieJ says:

    I think my mindset would be the same as yours about workshops: I want the process, not necessarily the product prescribed. But a project does help us get more concrete about the process. I know that I would take off on my own about half way through the process. Oh well.

    But I'm also getting very frustrated at trying to learn things at home with a "guide" present and especially without some of the supplies that I really don't know enough about to buy. I think I need to go to some sort of creative week workshop and really dig into a mess of stuff. Learning on my own is too slow and I don't know whether I'll like a process until I try it.

  11. Wendy says:

    Your "Release Your Light" also got First Place in the 'Studio Art Quilt Large' category, and your "Winter Wonderland" also got First Place in the 'Large Wall Hanging' category! There were ribbons hanging all over the place on your two quilts! =-)
    I loved standing around and listening to what all the people had to say about your quilts. It was great!
    Congratulations Leah!!!
    -Wendy at http(colon)//quiltporn(dot)blogspot(dot)com
    =-)

  12. Loved your quilts and pictured one on my blog! Didn't realize you were the one with this wonderful blog! The Symposium was great — my first but not last time.

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