I'm delighted to be among the bloggers participating in the Hands2Help blog hop !
Avid, committed quiltmakers bestow quilts on their immediate and extended families. They happily make quilts for baby and wedding gifts, graduations and retirements and anniversaries. They have wall hangings and placemats for every season. They may even sell a few pieces. But the inspiration keeps coming -- online, in print, at shops and shows, from fellow quilters. What does a quiltmaker do? Make quilts for strangers, of course.
I've been donating quilts since early in my quilting career. I just went back in the photo album (real, on-paper, with actual photos) and found this entry. The design is by Marti Michell from one of her "quilting for people who don't have time to quilt" booklets. I remember that the back took just one yard of fabric. I felt so thrifty. (I wonder if the agency (named in the photo) actually gave the quilt to a single mother and her baby. That baby would turn 30 this year.)

This was a pleasant surprise back in 2009. From this post A colleague (director of a library in a southwest suburb and a fellow Rotarian) wrote me yesterday: "Were your ears burning this morning? A picture of one of your quilts for Alliance for Smiles was shown during a presentation at today’s Rotary meeting. The presenter read the label off the screen, and it was yours! I told the group that I knew you, and impressed the heck out of ‘em! Guess you’re world-famous now!"
The funny thing is that I did not give the quilt to this project! I e-mailed the presenter, a Rotarian from Oswego, IL, and he sent me the photo that my friend commented on. Obviously it is a quilt that I made. I donated it to the Rotary Club of Boothbay Harbor, ME, which was collecting quilts for Safe Passage (http://www.safepassage.org/) a couple of years ago. The Boothbay club coordinator told me that my quilt was not going directly to Guatemala but would be sold (or raffled) stateside as part of a fundraiser. Evidently it ended up with Alliance for Smiles -- keeping it in the Rotary family.
More recently I've been fairly intentional about finishing quilts which means that as the stack of flimsies goes down the pile of finished quilts goes up. Earlier this year I gave 15 quilts to a transitional living facility in Waukegan and 10 quilts to City of Hope, the cancer hospital in Zion.One of our guild charity projects is wheelchair quilts for an area nursing home. As regular blog readers know I've had great fun with that size -- 14 completed so far.
I could bore you to tears regale you for hours with stories about donation quilts. In return I'd be happy to hear about yours! Please leave a comment about a quilt you donated. What was the pattern? When did you make it? Did it go to a agency, or a fundraising event? Did you ever learn who received it?
Everyone who leaves a comment with a donation story will be entered into a giveway! You'll get a flat rate box with fabric, notions, and a book or two. Note these conditions:
* If you are no-reply or anonymous you'll need to include your email and first name in your comment.
* I can ship only to U.S. addresses. (If you're out of the U.S. you're welcome to share your story.)
* The drawing will be Friday, April 21, at 9 a.m. CDT.
But wait -- there's more! Last week I wrote about the purple triangles left over from a long-ago workshop. After making four placemats (another guild charity donation) I still had purple triangles. I was determined to make them into something. I went modern and emphasized negative space. I used the walking foot to quilt diagonally in the triangle panel and straight horizontal lines in the light gray. 39 x 68.
And so a new donation quilt is added to the Stack of Opportunities.
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Be sure to visit the other bloggers in the hop.
4/23 Bonnie of In Stitches With Bonnie
4/30 Kathleen of Kathleen McMusing
5/7 Leanne of Devoted Quilter and progress check-in on my blog
5/14 Emily of Em's Scrap Bag
5/21 Moira of The Quilted Snail
Linking up with Scrap Happy Saturday Oh Scrap! Design Wall Monday