Material Donations Are Matched Only By The Spirit Going Into Quilts Of The Heart
Material Donations Are Matched Only By The Spirit Going Into
Quilts Of The Heart
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By Shannon Hicks
Julia Price moved her shop, Newtown Quilts, from its original location on Main Street South to a new location on Glen Road in Sandy Hook a few months ago. When she opened the new location she gained a comfortable working space within Sandy Hook Center complete with creaky wood floors and stairs leading up to work rooms on a second floor, windows that look out onto a gravel parking lot and wooded backyard-like area, and a group of women who spend one afternoon each week working in a few of those upstairs rooms on quilts that will be going out to others.
For five months Sandy Hook resident Lana Patane has been leading a group called Quilts of the Heart. The group meets at Newtown Quilts in what Mrs Patane describes âan open house environment, so if people need or want help they can come in and get help from me and others.â
âIâve always been a volunteer and served six years as president of The Connecticut Piece Makers Quilt Guild, and as co-chair for the guildâs annual show,â said Mrs Patane, who decided to bring that volunteer experience and her knowledge of the quilting world to her hometown. With the help of Julia Price, the owner of Newtown Quilts, who offered the use of her upstairs studio space, Mrs Patane volunteers every Wednesday for three hours, helping fellow quilters with their projects.
âWe start with a free quilting lesson,â said Mrs Patane. âEach week I teach them different techniques and ways of quilting, different blocks they can make, different methods.â
Donations of material come from Mrs Pataneâs collection, from Ms Price, and also from the collections of the women who spend their Wednesday afternoons collaborating and sharing advice with each other. The sounds coming from the upstairs area of the Glen Road quilt shop from 1 to 4 pm each Wednesday are comforting â the whir of sewing machines, the talk between friends, and the laughter that follows many discussions.
âThere are four or five people who come regularly. Itâs one of those things where you donât have to come every week; if you can, itâs fine,â said Mrs Patane. âIf you have to leave early or come late, itâs not that structured. Some of the ladies take their projects home with them and continue working on them. We donât like to put so many restrictions on it that people become bored with it.â
âWe create beautiful, happy quilts that go to different organizations,â she added during a recent quilting session. Hole in the Wall Gang Camps and Quilts of Valor are two such groups that have benefited from the efforts of the ladies who work with whatever donations of material they receive, turning them into love-filled, warming hugs of fabric.
âThis is very much a grassroots effort,â said Carol Mattegat. âThere is no money passing hands. What we get, we work with, whether itâs fabric, batting, or any other donation.â
âThe big one,â said Mrs Patane, âis the spirit, the people donating their time. Itâs been phenomenal.â
The group works with donations, cobbling together quilts from pieces and scraps of fabric that have similar themes or colors.
âThese are literally made from scratch, from anything we bring in from home or that we receive,â Mrs Patane said one recent afternoon while working with Ridgefield resident Andrea Brundage on a new quilt. One donation of fabric with a pink background that featured paper dolls and the dresses that could be fitted onto them started a whole discussion about girlsâ quilts.
âWe do too many for the boys,â said Lucille Baver, who lives in Monroe. âWe need to do some for the girls.â
âWe have to get really girly with at least one,â agreed Mrs Patane. âPink, pink, and pinker,â she said with a laugh. âBut seriously, the more variety the better.â
During their sessions at Newtown Quilts, quilters work on projects that they have started at home or begin new projects. Members often work together on items that will be sent out.
Ethel Meadows recently designed and made the quilt top for a blanket that Mrs Patane then filled with wool batting and backed with flannel. Unlike other quilts that are sent to an organization for distribution, this quilt had a particular recipient in mind.
âThis is for a World War II veteran I know of, who lives on very little,â Mrs Meadows said. âHis heat is supplied by a wood stove, and he also cooks on that. He has a little house of his own, and doesnât ask for much.â
âWe made this heavy and backed it with the flannel so that heâll be warm underneath it,â said Mrs Patane.
Many members enjoy the camaraderie and advice they find at hand while working with others.
âWe had eight or nine people there one recent week,â said Mrs Patane. âPeople do different things â some cut fabric, some organize fabric, some are sewing blocks, others are putting blocks together. Itâs really quite an operation.â
The groupâs first quilt for Quilts of Valor, a nonpolitical foundation whose mission is to cover all war wounded and injured service members and veterans from the War on Terror with wartime quilts, was started in October. Dominated by shades and patterns of red, white and blue, it took the group until January to finish the project.
Mrs Patane also created a fabric case for the quilt to go in what resembles an envelope, and a label identifying the names of the quilters involved in the project â Peege Brenton of Oxford, Jane Conroy of Trumbull, Debbie DeLollis of Sandy Hook, Mary Eddy of Newtown, and Mrs Patane and Julie Price, also of Sandy Hook â was affixed to the lower left corner of the quiltâs front, and by Ash Wednesday the quilt was ready for its recipient.
Since October the ladies have done two projects for Quilts of Valor and have finished six quilts for Hole in The Wall Gang Camp.
âWhen I was president of Connecticut Piece Makers, Hole in the Wall made the request â actually Paul Newman himself called one of our members â and asked if we would consider making quilts for the camp. That was my first decision as president, and I said Yes we would, without hesitation,â said Mrs Patane. âSince then the Connecticut Piece Makers continues to make quilts for the camp, and I continue to do this on my own, personally, and send them.
âHaving other women make them with me assured that all the children who attend the camp receive a quilt,â she added. âWe have six now, and I think by the time weâre ready to bring them up weâll have another six. I think thatâs a wonderful showing for such a small group.â
Mrs Patane and a few other ladies within Quilts of The Heart will drive to Ashford in late May or early June to drop off their quilts. Once camp opens for the summer, the public is not allowed general access to it.
Quilts of The Heart may be based in Sandy Hook, but its reach is far both for those who receive the quilts as well as those who show up at the quilt shop to participate. The groupâs current roster includes residents of Sandy Hook and Newtown as well as Monroe, Ridgefield, and Trumbull.
âThese people come from everywhere,â said Mrs Patane of her fellow quilting enthusiasts. âWe put the word out and itâs like a magnet. They just come.â
Quilters are welcome to contact Mrs Patane at 364-0014 or just drop in on a Wednesday afternoon. Newtown Quilts is at 10 Glen Road in Sandy Hook; telephone 304-2041.