Tuesday 21 August 2012

You are not on Facebook AGAIN are you?


Having a business page on Facebook is not easy, having a Facebook page and a partner/family is impossible! To make a business page work hours and hours of dedicated networking and self promotion is needed.

Many an evening or afternoon if the children are out/occupied is spent on Facebook networking and promoting my page which causes the now well known phrase in our house "You aren't on Facebook AGAIN are you?" from my husband to be said over and over or "you still doing your work mummy? I want to play a game on your iPad!" from the children.

What looks to the uninitiated as just spending time chatting and socialising on Facebook (which ok hands up, we do a lot of over at the Village), is actually us working and actively promoting our work. Visiting networking page after networking page to promote our makes, get more likes and interact with other page owners and potential customers takes time. Always having to be professional on these pages means replies have to be thought out and sound/look correct, after all you are reaching a huge audience and every single one of them is a potential customer. First impressions and all that...

Although I have met many good friends through networking my business page on Facebook, believe me when I say that I would rather be sat at my sewing machine creating or fulfilling orders rather than being on Facebook AGAIN, but without the networking and self promotion where would the sales come from? Facebook is fast becoming the place to sell your items, getting a much bigger footfall than craft fairs so you need to be in there getting yourself known.

Until I earn enough from my business to employ a PA to do all my Facebook networking I am sorry husband, but yes, "I am on Facebook AGAIN!"

Mrs Fabric   

Tuesday 7 August 2012

It Changed My Life!

Crafty is what I have always been called amongst my close friends and ‘Linda will be able to use it or make it’ is an all too familiar phrase. To a certain extent this is true, I do see a use in most things fabric, and I will have a go, although not always successfully, at making anything. The problem is that once you start making things, and in particular quilts, you are always on a quest for something different, and these ‘lightbulb’ moments can happen at the most unexpected moment of an ordinary day.

The most recent inspiration happened when my son and daughter in law moved into their new house. We went to see it, before any furniture had been installed, and yes the architraves and light fittings were beautiful, the fireplaces were ‘period’ and the staircase was fantastic. However, the thing that jumped up and shook me was the floor. You might have guessed it wasn’t wooden, lino, cushion flooring, and no it wasn’t carpet. It was an original Edwardian Mosaic Floor. I could see stars, squares, triangles and rectangles – a perfect quilt block! I have bought the fabrics and intend to make either door stops or cushion covers (or both!).

I am not a person who very often sits in front of the tv to watch a film. If I do I am always sewing or knitting or crocheting to keep busy. Westerns have been a pet hate of mine for as long as I can remember. Not anymore!!! My war cry is ‘QUILT ALERT’, and with sketch book at hand I draw out the block from a 5 second flash that appeared on a bed in a log cabin in a 1950’s film (colour if I am lucky). My family now help me spot quilts in films. Mary Poppins and Nanny McFee I think have both got examples, but Downton Abbey, Larkrise to Candleford, Upstairs Downstairs have all – I am pretty sure – display fine examples.

I think the strangest time I noticed this happening around me – not to me this time – was in a restaurant in Birmingham. My friend and I had been staying at a hotel while visiting the NEC Festival of Quilts. We had spent two days looking at beautiful quilts, spending copious amounts of money on goodies from the hundreds of traders, buying books with new patterns and generally being overwhelmed by the designs, craftsmanship and variety of quilts. We were eating breakfast. I noticed a group of ladies sit down at the table behind us. They got comfortable and started talking as you would expect. Then it happened. They all got their cameras out and started pointing. Trying not to stare I followed the direction of their stares. It was the floor – again! This time it was the carpet! Circles, lines, oblongs, triangles squares, different colours. We all photographed the carpet with the full intention of making a quilt with the pattern. So quilting and patchwork has changed my life, I now watch westerns – much to family’s amusement – and wonder now if you will too. I also walk looking the floor far too often for my own safety!

If you find yourself shouting ‘QUILT ALERT’ think of me x

Mrs Goose x


Wednesday 1 August 2012

From a Piece of Fabric to a Blanket


The journey from being a lonely roll of fabric in a shop to a part
of a patchwork blanket is long and time consuming.
Decide on the colour and theme of the blanket.
Go through all the boxes, cupboards and shelves of fabric I have in
the house before deciding:
a) they aren't quite right for what I want,
b) they are too nice to cut up,
c) I need to buy some more.
Head off to the shops feeling like a kid at Christmas and buy the
fabric I need plus plenty more I didn't realise I did! I then have
to try and sneak the extra fabric into the house without hubby seeing
or the kids telling tales on me to my husband!
Send the kids off to bed nice and early despite their protesting so
I can get the said fabric out and begin cutting. Then the fun begins
by spending an hour wishing I had paid more attention in maths when
we were using protractors whilst trying to work out how to use my
quilting ruler. Once the air is nice and blue I work out how to use
it and begin cutting, rotary cutter permitting! Many a time mid
cutting a rotary cutter blade has bent, become blunt or the whole
thing breaks - I really should bite the bullet and buy a more
expensive one a it will save me money long term! As the pile of
fabric squares begin to grow so does my imagination, mentally placing
the squares in order ready to sew. After an hour or two of back
breaking cutting I finally have enough, plus extra to start making.
With relief the cutting matt, rulers and rotary cutter is put away
and I can begin to play!
Although the blankets I make appear random I spend a good few hours
playing with the squares until it feels and looks right. Again this
is all done in stages:
Clear and re clean the table,
Fully extend the table and clean the middle,
Pile up the squares into matching piles,
Look at all the different fabrics and visualise it in my head,
Check how many rows and columns I need,
Place the first one,
Look again at all the squares,
Choose a square that compliments the first one - either similar
shades, lighter/darker, complimenting colours and feels right,
Place it,
Look again at the squares,
Repeat process until all the required squares are in place,
Step back and look at the full layout,
Take a picture,
Realise it doesn't look quite right so start moving a few squares,
Take a picture,
Still not happy with it so rearrange again,
Take another photo,
Repeat above steps another two or three times,
End up with a layout very similar to the first one,
Step back, look at it,
Yes, it looks and feels right (hey it is the same as the first bar 2
or 3 squares but I need to be sure!),
Take a picture,
Begin to pin,
Stick a post it note on the top of each pile stating wherein comes
in the blanket - top left square, top row, left hand side 2nd row
down etc,
Clear the table,
Get the sewing machine out and set up,
Get extra equipment out,
Begin sewing,
Finish sewing 2-3 hours later depending on size of blanket,
Iron,
Take another picture,
Cut backing,
Pin in place,
Sew it on,
turn the right way round,
Seal,
Iron,
Take completed picture,
Admire it,
Email customer to let them know it is completed,
Tidy away,
Get a glass of wine to celebrate!
Post the item,
Wait in anticipation to hear the customer has received the item and
likes/loves it,
Big sigh of relief when they do,
Stick a picture and their review on your business page for others to
see and read.
So the journey from a piece of fabric in the shop to bring part of a
beautiful patchwork quilt is long, time consuming and well thought
out. So when you see a handmade blanket for sale, balk at the price
- "£70 for a single blanket?!" think of this - if I were to pay
myself £10 an hour, you would be paying more than £70 for my labour!
At this price I am getting only a third of it for my labour!

Mrs Fabric