Posts Tagged ‘Buy Storybook Quilts’

Read Across America Day: March 2nd

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Reading. As adults, we take for granted the ability to read and what we learn from reading. Those of us who love books know that nothing is a better escape than a good one — reality flies away and we inhabit an entirely different world.

Reading, and literacy in general, is an essential component of everyday life. Anyone who’s traveled to a country where the language is unfamiliar is suddenly struck by the importance of reading.

Passing this skill and love of reading on to children is not just a good idea, it’s essential to their development. Brain cells are turned on when a toddler is read to; reading aloud to children is essential to the development of literacy; and learning to read English, a recent study showed, requires “a rich home literacy environment” and that reading “lots of books to children. . . is absolutely necessary.”

Reading the Luna the Turtle Storybook Quilt

So, just how much time should you spend reading to your child? The National Children’s Reading Foundation recommends 20 minutes a day.

A Storybook Quilt is a great way to achieve at least half the daily goal! Each story takes about 10-15 minutes to read; each also provides an additional opportunity for building language and visual skills by matching the events in the story to the fabrics in the quilt.

Oh — one last thing. Do you know why Read Across American is celebrated in March 2nd? Why, it’s Dr. Seuss’s birthday, of course!

Read, read, read!

Grandparents: A Gift Idea to Bridge the Miles!

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

With people spread out all over the country (and farther!) and with the hassle and cost of holiday travel, grandparents often find it difficult to be with grandchildren to celebrate the holidays. That can be rough on both grandparent and grandchild. This week, Grandparents.com published one real gem of an idea in its suggestions for bridging the distance: work on something together that can be shared when you next meet in person.

Let’s take one of our customized Storybook Quilts as an example. Many grandparents choose one to give as a wonderful surprise — but consider instead collaborating with your grandchild to create a handmade, original, customized Storybook Quilt. This is a wonderful way to enhance closeness and create memories that will be treasured for a lifetime (or two!). And NO special skills are required!

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Here’s how it works. For the sake of this story, we’ll assume that “Grandma” is the giver and “Olivia” is the recipient. But, of course, it could include Grandpa, be for a boy, or be two Storybook Quilts for twins!

Step 1. Grandma gives Olivia a Storybook Quilts gift certificate for Christmas (or for Hanukkah or Kwanzaa or a birthday). Olivia receives a special, handmade card with a special message from Grandma.

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Step 2. The holidays pass. January arrives with its sudden quiet and, often, dark and dreary days. The blahs are waiting in ambush.

Step 3. Grandma and Olivia begin to customize their Storybook Quilt, corresponding with us back here in the workshop. (We’ll help with ideas, when you need us, and guide the process along.)

First, Grandma and Olivia think and talk and think and talk — and finally choose one of the eight (soon to be nine) Storybook Quilt themes: Maurice the Cat, Maggie the Dog, Dapper Dan the Snowman, DanZy the Rabbit, Vroom Vroom the Car, Amos the Bear, Luna the Turtle, Winnie the Frog or Per — oops! That’s our January surprise!

Then, they decide what words will be embroidered on the special square in the quilt.
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Together, they write a message to be printed in the storybook and a pick a photograph to include there, too.

Dapper Dan Storybook Quilt Package

Dapper Dan Storybook Quilt Package


And, last but not least, Grandma and Olivia decide how they want to tailor the story, adding in their own names and details about their family’s life. This then is woven into the story by our expert writer.

Storybook Quilts e-mails photographs as the quilt is made
so that Grandma and Olivia both can watch it come to life.

Step 4. The completed Storybook Quilt is delivered in time for the next get-together. Grandma and Olivia open the package together, snuggle up under the quilt and Grandma reads Olivia their story.

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What a gift! What a memory! What a way to overcome the miles! What a great way to fight the Winter blahs! And, of course, your grandchild doesn’t have to live far away for you both to enjoy this creative project.

Storybook Quilts are available in eight themes and with various types of personalization and customization. To see them all, visit us at www.StorybookQuilts.biz Or give us a call to find out more. You can call us free using the Google Voice service on our order page.

We look forward to making your gift the most memorable ever.

Handmade in the USA

Friday, November 13th, 2009

“Handmade in the USA” has a nice sound to it, particularly as we plan for gift giving. It makes me think of a woodworker creating a beautiful table that will be an everyday joy, or a ceramics artist making a mug that feels really good in my hand with warm coffee or tea or, of course, one of our Storybook Quilts, enriching the quiet times that we spend with our children.
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As someone in the handmade industry, I can testify to the care that goes into creating handmade items. Each of us is doing something we choose to do and like to do. That produces dedication to quality – and puts a bit of real love into every item we produce.

Buying handcrafted items not only directly supports American workers, but also enriches lives and often provides the stuff of heirlooms – passed on and loved for generations.

So, how do you find “handmade in the USA”? We’d love to hear your comments and know your sources. We’ll post them here.

A few of our thoughts follow.

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Online, www.stillmadeinusa.com/handcraft.htm is one good source. The owner of the site was one of the judges in our Name the Turtle Contest, held last summer. Her site is not an online store, but includes links to carefully screened sources for a range of goods, both handmade and not.

Online marketplaces include Artfire, where artisans from the USA and elsewhere offer their goods for sale (including us). Other such sites include Etsy, for example, and similar marketplaces appear fairly regularly. The advantages of these marketplaces for the customer is the ease of searching many shops at once and the fact that most require shop owners to abide by rules meant to protect the customer. (Note that not all goods on such sites are handmade and not all are made in the USA.)

Off the web, the possibilities are endless. Local crafts fairs, particularly those that are juried, are a great source of high-quality handmade goods. I almost always find some delightful new item or technique created by an imaginative artist; I also often find inspiration for my own work. Online listings of crafts fairs, and whether they are juried, include this one, for example: http://festivalnet.com/index.html

Church fairs offer another great hunting ground for locally handmade goods, from hand-knitted baby booties to gorgeous quilts, small woodcrafts and more. I always enter the quilt raffles and dream about winning, although I never have.

Most crafts and church fairs are the same weekend each year, so if you find one you like, mark it on next year’s calendar!

Around the country, craftspeople and artisans often concentrate in particular geographic areas – by design or by chance — sharing ideas and offering a number of shops easily visited in a day or so. Some of these are supported by far-sighted organizations, such as this one http://www.handmadeinamerica.org, which understand the important role of handmade in the economy and the culture of this (or any) country.

Remember us, please, as you shop for handmade. Storybook Quilts are entirely original and made entirely by hand in the USA with American-made materials and love.

A Storybook Quilt

A Storybook Quilt

The Best Gifts Come from the Heart

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

This the time of year that we strive to find just the perfect gift for those we love. I think it’s particularly challenging for grandparents who live at a distance from their grandchildren. Knowing their likes and dislikes and their latest obsession is difficult when time together is sparse.

The best gifts are those that come from your heart and that have a bit of your heart in them. If you’re like me, you want the gifts to those most special to you to last, and be loved for longer than a day or a month or two.

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That is exactly what’s so perfect about giving a Storybook Quilt as a gift. It’s not “just” another children’s quilt or “just” another storybook — or even “just” another storybook quilt. The quilts and stories are entirely original. They are so woven around each other that they are inseparable — one doesn’t mean much without the other.

Children become very attached to such visual and aural combinations. With a message from you on the quilt square and in the book, you will be in their thoughts daily.

Storybook Quilts will endure for years. It’s the kind of thing one still has decades later, one that evokes warm, positive memories of childhood and the grandparent who gave the gift.

See our themes on our website or on our Facebook Fan page. Contact us through those sites or on Twitter @StorybookQuilts.

Orders are being taking for Hanukkah until mid-November and for Christmas, Kwanzaa and New Year’s until early December. Order now to be sure your very special gift is in the production queue.

We look forward to making your Storybook Quilt!

The Creation of the [Turtle] Storybook Quilt

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

I often am asked where the inspiration comes from a for particular theme — take [Turtle], for example. The answer is that there is no one source and, importantly, the quilt design and the story are interdependent. What still amazes me is how much my own perception of the quilt changes once the story is written. It’s no longer just a collection of pleasing fabrics. The events in the story and the personalities of the characters become part of the quilt itself. The quilt acquires a life of its own, full of friends with whom I have shared the adventure in the story. By all accounts, the children who have Storybook Quilts feel the same connection.

As for [Turtle] — I thought it would be fun to do a beach theme. And that was the start.

First, I researched what fabrics are available that relate to a beach or ocean theme — and found fish, whales, other sea creatures, flip-flops, bathing suits, beach balls, beach cottages, sand and sandcastles, shells, pirates, waves, boats, lighthouses and on and on. What is available defines the parameters of the design and the story. Fabrics need to fit well together in color and design — too many prints of the same size don’t thrill the eye, for example, nor do colors that are all too similar.

At the same time, I was thinking about the central character. It had to be some creature that appeals to children and also is fairly easy both to make into a shape that will fit the rectangle in the quilt and to applique. Since the shapes don’t have interior features, the character has to have some sort of texture that can be picked up by using the right fabric. A seahorse would make a good story, for example, but it would be a nightmare to design and applique; a pirate ship had the same problems (all those masts and sails!). Most kids like starfish — an easy shape! — and turtles definitely are favorite beings. So, I started designing shapes for both and looking for fabrics with visual texture.


I found a green batik with blocks that seemed to me to echo the squares in turtle shells and I found a yellow batik that reminded me of a starfish’s markings. I liked the batik idea also because it made me think of beaches. I decided to do both themes, but to start with the turtle. The history of the actual design of the quilt is sketched out on our website here.

As for the story, that is both suggested by and suggests the fabrics in the quilt. Since the story incorporates the fabrics, I must find ones that will allow me to write an adventure tale; but they must also work well together in the quilt itself. A quilt full of beautiful fish fabrics, for example, would be lovely — but the story line would be limited.

Once I have a rough story line in mind, I audition fabrics. I gather them from many sources — favorite online shops and some wonderful Amish fabric stores in Lancaster County, PA, not far from my workshop. It is not unusual to discover that a fabric that seemed great doesn’t work at all when it’s up on the design board. Sometimes, the process is delayed for many days until I find the missing pieces for the design.

When the fabrics finally are selected and arranged, I sit in front of the quilt and write out the first draft of the story on my laptop. That first iteration usually defines the story line, but changes in details happen right up to the day of publication — and then again if the order is for a fully customized package. For those Storybook Quilts, the story line includes aspects of the life of the recipient of the quilt, as well as his or her name as the hero or heroine in the story.

As I actually sew the first quilt, the story evolves further — after all, I am looking at the fabrics constantly and new ideas occur. Once all my own revisions are made, I turn to my secret weapon — a friend who is very good (and merciless) at finding the weaknesses in the story and very good at brainstorming ideas for fixing them. Only once did my story pass inspection the first time (see the Vroom Vroom SQ here)!

Nancy Mattison, Designer and Author