My first stop was Tangled Threads in Lynden.
Each shop was giving away the pattern for a block. All of the shops made all 13 blocks and put them together in unique quilt settings. Seeing all of the quilts was like a mini quilt show. This was Tangled Threads’ quilt:
These are the fabrics that were in the “kit” that Cher sent last year after she attended the annual quilt show in Sisters, Oregon. This panel was the official fabric for the 2011 Sisters Quilt Show, and is called “Nature’s Symphony”, by Kathy Deggendorfer. Cher challenged each of the FABs to make a quilt using this panel and the other kit fabrics that she sent us.
I may have found a new addiction–cat fabrics. While at Tangled Threads I found these three cat themed fat quarters. They seemed to call out to me so I brought them home. I also found some teeny tiny black buttons that my Mom and I might be able to use in our snowman blue work blocks. (We seem to be French Knot phobic! LOL)
My second stop was also in Lynden at Calico Country.
This is Calico Country’s quilt using the shop hop blocks.
I found the perfect cat fabric at Calico Country. This fabric is from Loralie Designs and is called, “Spice Cats.”
The third shop I visited was, Folktales, also located in Lynden. http://folktalesfabricshop.blogspot.ca/
This was Folktales’ version of the shop hop quilt.
I came across this cute panel at Folktales. It was on sale for less than half price, so I brought home two. If one is good, then two must be better, right?
I also found small black buttons – a little bigger than the buttons that I had bought at Tangled Threads. This cute Easter stitchery pattern also came home with me–Easter Stack by Kassie Moen.
This was the shop sample of Easter Stack. The woman who stitched this sample was in the shop when I was there and told me that she used Crayola Crayons to colour her fabric, not chalk as had been used in the pattern. I prefer the look of the crayons myself.
That was it for quilt shops in Lynden. I then headed down the highway to Bellingham where I stopped at Fabric Etc.
This was Fabric Etc’s version of the shop hop quilt. They added the name of each shop that participated in the shop hop above the door on the house that featured that shop’s block.
The next stop was Fourth Corner Quilts. This is the side of the shop that you see as you approach the shop from the road. You have to pull in off the busy street and park in the rear of the shop.
This is the view around the corner where you park and enter the shop.
This is Fourth Corner’s version of the shop hop quilt. Fourth Corner’s block is the Maple Leaf block. All of the blocks are arranged in the shape of a tree, symbolic of all the trees in the Pacific Northwest. You can’t see it in this picture but the background quilting contained many images of things you might see in the Pacific Northwest like birds.
The last shop that I visited on the shop hop was Two Thimbles, also in Bellingham.
This is Two Thimbles’ version of the quilt shop hop quilt.
I picked up two fabrics at Two Thimbles–a green and a brown. My daughter is getting married in September and her colours are green, brown, and champagne. I have a lot of greens in my stash, but as I said before, very little in the way of browns. This brown had so many shades of brown in it, I thought I couldn’t go wrong picking some of this one up. The woman in the shop told me that this particular brown is very popular with the local quilters as it covers a wide range of shades of brown.
We probably passed each other some time on Friday. I was not shop hopping but was in the neighborhood of several of the shops sometime during my day of running around. Looks like you had a fabulous time.
I am sorry that I did not find your blog update sooner! What fun you had on your run down to some of the shop! You did well with your purchases. Purpose for a good many of your acquisitions it would seem.
Score on the Mardi Gras stuff, things that can be use for DD and how could you resist getting cat fabric!?
I had to giggle about the french knot phobia, LOL. Your mom doesn’t want to do them either? Not that hard really but beads and buttons work well too.
And I meant to say something about the shop hop quilts—-how different all the same blocks came out with the shop’s spin on thing!! You would barely know that were indeed identical patterns.
Good ideas to file away when you have a setting situation. Well, we did use the chaining block for our Alex redwork blocks but I am still wondering how to set the calendar snowmen.