If you are a quilter, why do you quilt? Is it for the companionship of friends or people in guilds? Is it because you like to create unique items that your family and friends will enjoy? Do you quilt because you like to enter competitions? Is it your goal to have a quilt published in a magazine or write a book? Do you want to brighten the life of an invalid or old person, remember a loved one who has succumbed to AIDS or other illness, or perhaps, do you want to create a landscape quilt that serves as a way to remember a treasured vacation spot? Do you quilt because you like to celebrate your ethnic heritage or family’s roots in another country? Do you enjoy re-creating designs that women in other centuries have found joy in making? Do you want to leave some tangible artifact behind when you are no longer here? Do you make quilts for your pets’ comfort? I have only touched on a few reasons why someone might want to make a quilt. I am certain there are many, many more reasons. I’d love to hear yours.
In the last few weeks, I’ve done a lot more quilting than writing, a reversal of my usual activities of late. Spending time making design decisions, choosing just the “right fabrics” in my stash (or else “needing” to take a little shopping trip to a fabric store) are enjoyable activities.Once everything I need is in place, it is fun to use skills learned and practiced over many years to make something I like.
Quilting for me has always been a way to connect with the greater world. First a member of guilds, it has been a blessing to have the Internet and find like-minded individuals there. Quilters are sharing people and caring people. They willingly give their time, their money and their emotional support to others. It’s a natural extension of what they do, and just “who” they are.
We don’t always have to analyze why we do something. If one asked a golfer why he golfs, I suppose he might say that he enjoys walking around in the fresh air, or associating with the other kinds of people who like to golf, or he might just enjoy the prestige of a country club membership and the network it provides. I bet if one were to ask ten golfers the same question, “Why do you golf?,” ten different answers would emerge. The bottom line is that we engage in activities that enhance our lives, that make us feel good about ourselves, and maybe, just maybe, set us aside as individual spirits that have found a way to be creatively expressive.
Your reasons for quilting are your own, but just consider the fact that you keep good company with all of the quilters who have passed through life on the same kinds of pathways. They had the same kinds of dreams, the same desire to bring comfort to others, the same level of dedication that may not be as apparent to anyone else as it is to you as you dutifully push your needle through fabric, one stitch at a time, or hundreds of stitches per minute by machine. The act of quilting seems to hold the possibility of transformation of the human spirit. Cares fly away and a sometimes a meditative state can ensue, enhanced to an even greater extent by music playing in the background. As the ultimate payoff, quilters experience the joys of showing and sharing unique textile objects that represent the gift of one’s time to a greater purpose. Handmade textiles leave a lasting legacy that can define a quilter’s life now and in the future.
Stitch your dreams!
Patricia Cummings
Quilter’s Muse Publications











