Whew! Our third annual workshop is a wrap. This year, we scheduled three days in May to focus on hooking landscapes. Our talented member, Patti W., agreed to teach the workshop. Preparations began last fall. We thought it would be fun to provide an original pattern of our county's landscape to the group. It would be the base from which each hooker could make the rug a work of their own by tweaking the building, trees, seasons, etc. Patti spent months experimenting with ideal pattern sizes, colors, add-ons, etc. We ended up with a finished pattern of 10"x14" to give each attendee. We also provided them with linen, wool cutters on site during the workshop, light boxes on site for tracing patterns, and lots of fabric swatches and assorted silks, yarns, chenille, and velvet for embellishment. Lunch was provided each day along with snacks and beverages. This way, all attendees could focus on the class and not have to fuss with preparing a lunch of their own each day. Of course we had lots of door prizes, exercise breaks, and sharing of experience. We also had another one of our members, Mary H., selling her beautiful, hand-dyed wool.
Patti lives a good distance away so she stayed at my house during the workshop. We were pretty tired at the end of each day so we relaxed on the porch, fixed light dinners, took a walk, and retired to bed at a good time each night. Steve provided good dinner conversation when Patti and I were too tired to contribute much. He put on record albums for background music and helped clear the table each night.Patti gave me a lovely hanging planter from the greenhouse where she works and a tin of oatmeal cookies she baked for the three of us to share. It turned out to be a lovely visit amidst our busy workshop.
In retrospect, there is not a lot we would change. One thing that would have helped is if we had provided Patti with a microphone. She is soft spoken and the large room containing thirty women seemed vast at times. We also ordered too much food. Even though I cut back from the amounts we ordered last year, there were leftovers for people to take home.
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Different views of the Blue Ridge Mountains and Peaks of Otter formed the base of the landscapes. Variations of trees, seasons, and out buildings could be added or deleted. |
Patti made up lovely little bundles of wool swatches that we put into goodie bags for each attendee. We included other embellishments, a yard of sari silk, a little notebook, and candies in the bags. Patti encouraged everyone to use pieces of pantyhose, yarn, silks, or some kind of embellishment in their rugs.
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Thirty-one of our Blue Ridge Ruggers
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Mary made sure to include plenty of pieces of landscape colors in her sale wool. She also thought to have small swatches for sale at one and two dollars because many of us only needed little bits of certain colors. |