Both meetings were well attended with several new members and a guest coming to the evening meeting. After welcoming everyone back after the summer and celebrating the success of the quilt show and the display of the “sky’s the limit” challenge at Atwater library until the end of September, we moved to this year. Our next quilt show will hopefully be in two years but fundraising will start this month with a stall at the Beaconsfield Artisans Fair on Sept 21, 12-5pm. Why not volunteer?
New for meetings this year are name tags for all members. Julie P, the new membership contact person, has been very crafty and made a tag for everyone. They also identify new members and members of the executive.
The executive has a lot planned for this year with both online and in person retreats, outreach kits for NICU and Ronald McDonald House quilts and placemats, and a full program of speakers, activities and work shops. Also at our evening meeting, 2 new members stepped up up to take on the evening hospitality coordinator role. Well done. Now we only need a Vice president to complete the executive.
After quilty ice breakers, the coffee break and the pickle jar draw the evening meeting continued with Nicole Brisse presenting the second half of her talk on the feather course she took last year using a development grant from the guild. What beautiful work and the course sounded excellent. Quite a challenge but the results are amazing and quite inspiring.
Next Pat presented this years theme, “Quilting with the planet in mind”, highlighting ways in which we can care for the planet while still enjoying our craft. Many of this years events will examine these ideas of choosing sustainable materials, using scraps, upcycling etc. As well as other ways to help by car pooling for meetings and shop hops, the lending library for tools and our tool time raffles. All ways to reuse and recycle.
Finally, Melanie reintroduced the Quilting bee and told us that we already have enough registrations for 4 hives. Registration finished today (Friday 6th) and we should be hearing from our Bee Keeper in the next few days with details of our hives and Queen Bee timetable. It will run from October to June with each worker bee making one block per month for each Queen Bee. Melanie’s power point with the instructions for participants is available on the website under Program.
Show and tell concluded the meetings with lots more fun coming next month with an in person speaker, inprov quilter Émilie Trahan from Joliette, at the evening meeting and Next Chance, a company providing fabric wrapping, at the day meeting. Both very on point for this years theme.
See you there.






