CONTENTS:
Announcements -
Ask EQ -
Free Stuff -
Works For Me -
Show & Tell -
Quilter Community -
Quilt University -
A Quilt for Sean -
Club EQ -
Make it Simpler Paper Piecing -
EQ Mac Users Group -
Let's Make Marshmallows -
EQ & HP Sponsor Computer Labs -
Coming Soon from EQ -
Our Booth in Houston
Works
for Me Tips and "Odd EQ Uses" from EQ Users
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| Barbara's
tote with the EQ5 "Doves" block, along with her granddaughter's
haiku |
Printed Panels for Tote Bags Barbara Gilstad,
San Antonio, Texas quilt teacher and coordinator of the 2004 EQ/HP Quilt
Festival computer labs, has been using EQ5, Art-Wear sheets by June
Tailor and her HP 1220 large-format printer to teach her students to
make designs to be sewn to tote bags. In Barbara's class, her students
use EQ5 to design a quilt, then print the quilt out onto fabric sheets
which they sew to the front of small canvas tote bags.
 |
| Mary
Ruth Flores, Ruth Felty and Gundy Cleven (left to right) proudly
display their totes |
A haiku poem written
by Barbara's eight year old granddaughter, Mary, "who is into birds
lately," suggested a bird theme for another tote bag. Barbara used
the EQ5 Doves block. Here is Mary's haiku:
DoveA
Haiku
The
dove is soft white
It
sings so sweetly at dawn
Even
when it rains
At the conclusion
of a recent EQ5 class, three of Barbara's students personalized tote
bags with their own original quilt layouts.
Quilts
for Comfort
 |
| Quilts
on display, made during one of Quilts for Comfort's Community
Quilting Bees. |
Edna
Kotrola is President and founder of Quilts for Comfort in Newark,
Delaware. This amazing group organizes Community Quilting Bees to make
quilts for at-risk babies in Delaware, Pennsylvania and Maryland. To
date they've made well over 2000 quilts.
"We bring in
brand new quilters to our bees. For that reason, the pre-cut quilting
kits have to be simple and easy to make," writes Edna. "That's
my job. I cut the fabrics into 4 1/2" squares, scan the fabrics
and put them into EQ5, then design a simple quilt for the participants
to make.
Over 2700 women,
men and children have participated in 143 Community Quilting Bees....Some
of the people who came to a bee and didn't really know how to thread
a machine have gone on to become really good quilters. Some have even
purchased EQ5 for themselves." Visit the Quilts for Comfort website if you'd like to become involved.
Susan's
Dresses are Successes
Susan Holt uses EQ5 to help design clothing for herself. She imports a
schematic drawing from the back of a pattern envelope and creates a
"block" by tracing that drawing. Each garment section is drawn as a
separate closed patch. To make dart lines (or any other line segment
in the pattern design) she draws a closed patch, then collapses the
two sides of the patch together so they resemble lines. Susan writes,
"Yes, this takes a lot of time (although I am getting better and
faster at it), but since I use only a few basic patterns, I can then
easily alter the design elements." Why does she go to this trouble?
"The greatest advantage is color. I scan fabric and I can then
color each design element of the pattern and decide what I like."
" I have also designed blocks for a valance for our sliding glass door using EQ5.
The capability of resizing blocks is incredibly handy and useful! I
made one for the Christmas season and one for the summer using stars
for a patriotic theme and they are beautiful (my daughter gave her word
of approval!). They were so easy to design and try different colorings
and border widths!" Susan lives in Youngstown, Ohio.
Reproducing
Antique Quilts Gloria Driscoll is using EQ to reproduce quilts her mother left her. Alice writes, "When my Mom passed away, she left me about 30 antique quilts that were made
by several members of my family. I have reproduced these quilts in EQ,
starting with EQ3 and going on from there. Once the quilts were designed,
I have made several printouts for display. I am now reproducing the
actual quilts, plus making miniatures and more modern designs with the
antique patterns. Mom left the quilts to be cherished. Little did she
know how much fun I would have with them. Gloria lives in Richford,
New York.
 |
| Here's one
example of how Shannon uses EQ5 quilt images in her T-shirt designs |
T-Shirts for Quilters
Shannon Haley-Funcke, who makes custom-designed wearables and gift items
for quilters, uses EQ5 to produce the quilt images she transfers to
T-shirts. Shannon's business, Treasured Threads Designs, is in Jefferson,
Iowa.
Do
you EQ? Elizabeth Fulghum uses EQ5 quilt designs to make greeting cards for quilters. Many are
designed to accompany gift quilts. "There wasn't anything out there
directed specifically to quilters. Lots of blank notecards with beautiful
quilt pictures, but no "quilty" messages. So I created some!!"
Visit Elizabeth's
site to see her "Do You...EQ?" card, and other quilter-related cards.
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| click image for larger version |
| Dorothy Milligan's
EQ printout. Her quilt was designed by importing scanned fabric
imported as a photograph. |
Importing
Fabric as Pictures Dorothy Milligan is a fan of Import Picture. "For a square in a square quilt I cut
the fabric just the size for the quilt (six inch blocks), set it on
point on the larger square, scanned it and saved it as a bitmap. Then
I imported it as a picture and set it as a block." She did the
same for her sashing. "Of course this only works for squares and
rectangles, but for more complicated blocks one could actually sew the
block (or just cut it out of fabric without seam allowances as I did.)
That way one could easily audition different colors." My EQ printout
is so close to the real quilt, I was truly amazed."
Dorothy, from Hemet,
California, is often a "cover girl" with her EQ5 quilts. Her
Leaf in a Leaf quilt made the cover of October's Quilter's
World magazine. And she'll soon have a quilt published in a book
on Log Cabin quilts from the House of White Birches. As Dorothy puts
it, "It is almost too much excitement for this old lady."
CONTENTS:
Announcements -
Ask EQ -
Free Stuff -
Works For Me -
Show & Tell -
Quilter Community -
Quilt University -
A Quilt for Sean -
Club EQ -
Make it Simpler Paper Piecing -
EQ Mac Users Group -
Let's Make Marshmallows -
EQ & HP Sponsor Computer Labs -
Coming Soon from EQ -
Our Booth in Houston
|