Getting ready for Festival of Quilts

You’ll know already that I have a stand at Festival of Quilts (K47) and am involved in running The Creative Textile Studio at the show. This is the biggest quilt / textile event in Europe and the biggest event in my dairy. And getting ready for it is involves lots of lists …. the full packing list for the car along with lots of sub-lists. Lists of the equipment needed to ‘build’ the stand - table tops, table legs, shelf uprights, shelves, cross braces, table cloths, display cases, drill, hammer, screw drivers, screws (and gaffer tape and cable ties just in case, well there isn’t much that can’t be held together with gaffer tape and cable ties). Lists of stuff to go on the walls - which quilts to take (with velcro strips sewn on top and bottom), signage, velcro dots and tapes for sticking stuff up, double sided tape as the emergency back up option. Lists of paperwork. Lists of stuff needed to breakdown print on the stand (must, must, must not forget to make the screens next weekend!).

And that’s before I figure out the stuff that I’ll take to sell. Although it is wonderful to take bookings for workshops whilst I’m at the show the reality is that most people want to check their diaries and think about spending what is quite a lot of money before they book. So the cost of the show really needs to be covered by the sale of fabrics, books, dyes, screens etc. Books, dyes, screens etc are straightforward and don’t take too much time to organise. But my printed and hand dyed fabrics do. Whilst I print and dye quite a lot of fabrics during my workshops there is not enough to cover a show like Festival. So these last few weeks I have been topping up my supplies. And I love it! Printing and dyeing fabric to sell isn’t the same as printing and dyeing fabric for use in my art. There is no deep meaning, no controlled development of a colour palette, no sampling of printed fabrics. Instead I can just go for it! And loose myself in colour and in printing. Hard work but deeply satisfying. And the results - well I hope to have about 60 Wonky Print Inspiration Packs and 40 Absolutely Hand Dyed Fabric Packs ready for the show. That’s a bit more than I’ve taken to previous shows so I’m expecting to put the ones that don’t sell onto my website after the show. Maybe not immediately after …. I’m going to need a bit of a snooze after all the excitement of the show!

I’ve also developed something new for the show. Greeting cards that feature my breakdown printed fabrics. I’ve sold postcards before that were printed from photos of my art but have never felt that they really did justice to the intricate marks you get with breakdown printing. My new greetings cards are A5 and each one is completely unique. Some use fabrics which are very easy on the eye and some use fabrics that are a bit more urban and ‘gritty’. Any one piece of my printed fabrics might be used to make multiple cards but each will be unique as breakdown printing doesn’t give you repeated, uniform patterns. Which is why I love breakdown printing. Although they are greetings cards they could also be framed. Little pieces of affordable art. But I’m not sure what to charge. £2.95 would fit in with what a lot of artists charge for their printed greeting cards but there is a lot more work involved in making these fabric cards. There are a couple of examples below … would love to hear what you think?