Archive for the ‘workshops’ Category

A day with the Pelham Quilters

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Saturday was a very special day, because I got to spend it with my buddies, the Pelham Quilters! It was the first time I have “officially” taught my new Improvisational Flowing Lines workshop, and I have to say, it went off pretty well! I have test-run the workshop with my friends in the past (they are my usual willing guinea pigs!). My friend Susan really took off with the technique, incorporating it into her beautiful quilts. My friends Linda and Georgia had a good time learning the technique, but as yet, have not completed their tops.

The ladies of the Pelham guild were very enthusiastic about learning this new-to-them technique, and had all sorts of ideas about how they were going to incorporate it into their own work. Here are some photos that I took during the workshop . . .

This first one shows a very happy Lorraine, the guild president, fondling the beautiful flowing lines that she created:

And here is Millie, hard at work piecing at her machine:

In the next photo are Doris and Evelyn at the cutting table, both seriously contemplating their next cut . . .

And next is Jean, hard at work at her machine.

Here is my friend Renee Fleuranges-Valdes, rotary cutter in hand, ready to add to her beautiful, colorful and soft flowing lines.  See that big smile on her pretty face? It was there ALL day! Renee wrote about her experience at the workshop on her blog. where she had some very kind things to say about me and the workshop — Thank you, Renee, you made my day!


Here’s Lorraine again. She took to the improvisational technique of cutting and quilting like a duck to water. With her background in fashion sewing, she was very comfortable cutting and sewing curves. She had no trouble “loosening up” and choosing from her pile of beautiful fabrics with wild abandon!

Here’s a photo of  Millie’s piece, as she contemplated whether or not to add a some four patches in with her flowing lines — she later decided to go ahead and piece them in, and the result was amazing, as you will see in the group shot at the end of this post.  Aren’t her colors just gorgeous?

And here is the group, proudly showing off their beautiful work. I was so impressed with how each woman made the technique her own by using her own palette of fabrics and colors.

By the way, see what Millie did by adding traditional 4-patches? She’s over on the far left of the above photo. What a creative way to incorporate her own touch into the piece! Doris, standing just to the right of Millie, used just a small amount of bright yellow in her piece, which she appliqued on to her strips before piecing them in.  Cheryl, standing on the far right of the photo, turned her piece 90 degrees and added a strip down the center. It will be one side of a tote bag. Jean, kneeling in front of Cheryl, used beautiful fabrics in earthy colors to make a piece that is so appealing, and so very different from the others!

I’m thrilled that the workshop was a success! I want to thank the wonderful Pelham quilters for their enthusiasm. Also, thanks for the really good snacks. Lorraine is a fantastic baker — her brownies were delicious, and oh, that banana chiffon cake — yummy!!!

Back to work in the studio

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

I’ve just finished sewing the facing onto a sample I’m working on for my new “Flowing Line” workshop. My friend Renee Fleuranges-Valdes has asked me to present the workshop to her guild, the Pelham Quilters, in February.

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Not a great picture, I know… I haven’t figured out the lighting in this new studio yet, please forgive. But the quilt itself is pretty, really! Here’s a detail shot:

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You can tell that I had a really good time quilting it. I decided to use a different quilting design in each fabric, and it was fun! The quilt is approximately 20″ high and 36″ wide. It’s not too big, but it felt HUGE while I was quilting it, because I’d used such itsy-bitsy quilting designs.

Now to sit down and finish it up by hand! My cup of tea should be ready by now, and the plan is to grab it, sit down in my favorite chair next to a sunny window, and get to work sewing that facing down — a perfect way to spend this blustery autumn afternoon!

Friendship Star Quilters of Gaithersburg, MD

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

On Saturday, September 12th, I boarded a plane from Albany, NY bound to our nation’s capitol. This jaded New Yorker was EXTREMELY impressed with Washington, DC. I’d never been there before, having missed the class trip in elementary school due to the measles, then the one in high school due to mono, and somehow never getting around to it after that. What a gorgeous city! My wonderful hostess was kind enough to take me on a driving tour on Sunday evening after I finished teaching my Free Motion without Fear workshop to 24 enthusiastic participants. I was lucky enough to get some beautiful photos of the city at night .

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The Capital Building

and …

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The Washington Monument with planes buzzing around it like flies.

Washington, D.C. made me feel proud to be an American. It was clean, neat, filled with intelligent looking people and very, very impressive. I can’t wait to go back to be able to spend more time enjoying the museums, parks and monuments.

From the very moment my plane touched down at DCA, I was treated like a princess. I was wined and dined by some LOVELY guild members . . .

Lunch at Clyde's with Nancy Rose and Anne Trudel

Lunch at Clyde's with Nancy Rose and Anne Trudel

My first Maryland Crabcake -- A beautiful thing, and an even more delicious thing!

My first Maryland Crabcake -- A beautiful thing, and an even more delicious thing. Yummy!

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Coralyn Colladay, the hostess with the most-ess

The best pizza I've ever had outside of NYC (and Italy, of course)

The best pizza I’ve ever had outside of NYC (and Italy, of course)
A dream come true ... G Street Fabrics!

A dream come true ... a visit to G Street Fabrics!

The workshop was great fun, and all the participants were very well behaved. I’ve always like a well-behaved class! On Monday evening, I gave my lecture “The Goddess Project” to an enthusiastic group of ladies attending their monthly meeting of the Friendship Star Quilters. Here are some of them setting up their gorgeous raffle quilt on the stage of the sanctuary where they hold their meetings.

Members of the FSQ setting up their raffle quilt

Members of the FSQ setting up their raffle quilt

I really enjoyed meeting all the lovely goddesses of The Friendship Star guild. Thank you all so much for your hospitality. You guys really live up to your name!

PS – Thank you, Anne, for the FABULOUS and very generous comment you left on my website. You’re a peach! I have placed it at the very top of my list of “testimonials” at the top of my lectures/workshops page, and I just couldn’t resist adding it here, too!  Thanks again!

“Our Friendship Star Quilt Guild just had Elizabeth Rosenberg visit us in Gaithersburg, Maryland this past weekend.  We had a fabulous experience with her, and encourage any quilt guild to contract with her for a visit.  Elizabeth is a true Goddess.  In fact, I found out all women are.  Our guild had the workshop Free Motion without Fear, and the lecture was “The Goddess Project”.   Both were very informative, and her work is exquisite.   We look forward to her visit again in the future.”

Anne Trudel, FSQ co-chair Programs Sept 2009

Life interfering with quilting

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

It’s been a while since I’ve been able to devote some uninterrupted time to my new quilt. Life, in the form of kids-stuff, groceries, car repair, apartment hunting, etc., etc., has gotten in the way.

I hate when that happens, don’t you? Wouldn’t it be oh so nice if we could just quilt all day, every day? Ahhhh.
Today, though, I have a very fun reason for not being able to quilt. I am traveling to southern New Jersey to present my “Goddess Project” lecture to the Berry Basket Quilters this evening. It’s a five hour trip, so I’ll be spending the night down there and returning home tomorrow. I’m looking forward to meeting the BBQ’s. Hopefully I’ll get some good photos for my next post!

New Jersey State Quilt Show

Sunday, June 14th, 2009
Late last night I returned home from teaching at the New Jersey State Quilt Show. It was a fun time, and an exhausting trip. I drove through pouring, blinding rain to get there on Thursday evening, and then drove back home in a blinding rain storm last night. But the ladies I spent time with made the trip worthwhile.
Today, I’m planning on a quiet day here at home on the sofa with perhaps a little knitting (and perhaps a little nodding!).
Here are some pictures from the weekend. This is Toni, who took my goddess project workshop yesterday, and created a “past and future goddess.”

This is Lisa. She created a lovely “doctor goddess.”

And the day before, Friday, I taught a class of 28 (yes, 28!) how to Free Motion Without Fear. They were a lovely class. This is how they looked when they were well-behaved….

And this is how they looked when they were being themselves….
Only kidding! They were fabulous. If you’re one of them, please leave a comment, I’d love to hear from you. And thank you for being great students — I had a blast with you guys!!!

The beadweaving graduates

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Yesterday evening was the final session of my beadweaving class in Brewster, NY. It was rainy, chilly and generally disgusting outside, but inside the Art classroom, we were nice and warm and dry. And, we got to see some simply gorgeous bracelets that the ladies had done as “homework”. The first one below is by Carrie:


And this one is Paige’s. She thinks it needs more, but I don’t agree. I think it’s done, and done very well, too. I think that Paige is going to add a few more arches, though. And she has a second one planned, too.

And these two are by Sue. They are both very beautiful, don’t you think so?



Karen blew in with the storm, but wasn’t feeling up to snuff, so she didn’t have any show-and-tell. But it was lovely to have her there, and she did a very good job of oooing and aaahing as everyone else showed their work. By the way, Karen, if you’re reading this, I sent you an email, but it bounced back to me . . . please let me know your email address so I can send you your herringbone hand-out, okay?

And to Carrie, Paige, Sue, Pat and Karen . . . thanks so much for spending the last six Tuesdays with me. I had a grand time with you, and I hope that there is a whole lot of beading in your futures!

Freeform Peyote

Friday, May 16th, 2008

The weekly beading class I’m teaching in Brewster was so much fun this week! The ladies learned how to create a freeform peyote bracelet, working from a base they’d created over the past week as their “homework.” Here’s Sue’s bracelet in progress:


And here’s Paige’s:


And Carrie’s:


Pat decided to work on a “trial” piece, and wouldn’t let me take a photo of it. So here’s her beading box, all nice and clean and neat:

I can’t wait to see what they’ve come up with by next week!