The
first several I looked through were from the 90’s and had some interesting
articles and patterns, and I found some things that I flagged with post-its.
The
next several were from the 70’s. These were…interesting. Paper quality not near so good, and aging
poorly and rapidly. Very few color
photos, and the black and white photos were taken with less than stellar care. I imagine some copywriter being told to ‘get
the camera and go take a photo of so and so and their quilt’…not professional
at all!
Apart
from how far we have come in the publishing sector, the articles and columns
are enlightening. There is poetry
submitted using patterns in the poems. Quilters write in wanting to be penpals
still in the 70’s, and wanting to exchange patterns. One wrote complaining that she takes time to
copy neatly and exactly her patterns to exchange, with labels, etc, only to
receive in turn slipshod efforts.
I
feel chastised.
But
today, I looked through some from the 80’s, and the post-its came back
out. In just two issues, I came across
articles about the LQS where I took my first class (Quilt Country), and about
the quilting lady at Shakertown in Harrodsburg, KY, where I use to take my
Brownie Troop, and everyone else whoever came to visit me when I lived in
Kentucky.
And
also this, which I may just have to try.
Baa
Baa Black Sheep
4 comments:
Love the "Baa, baa, black sheep!"
I don't recall the Harrodsburg lady. I guess eating Shaker food was more interesting to me, at the time.
You made me smile with this post! I have a ton of old quilting magazines I pull out once in a while, and I get a kick out of the pen pal ads! I may even have answered one at some point back in the days of the dinosaurs, but I don't know that the person ever wrote back. Oh well. The things we can do with technology today!
Fantastic! I love the Black Sheep. :) If those lazy pen pal'ers were on Ravelry they would virally vilified. Hahah!
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