TheQuiltingCoach.com, resources for beginner quilters
Home | Quilters Talk | Open Forum | Tell a Friend | Text Size | Search | Member Area
 Join Us
Instant Access...
to All Our Quilting Goodies!

 About this Site
TAKE A TOUR
Affiliate Program
About Penny
About TheQuiltingCoach
Join Today
Penny's Postcard Posse
Sample Articles
Sample Audio & Video
Sample Quilting Tips
The Quilting Bee

HACKER 
SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
 DEPARTMENTS
Penny's Inner Circle
Star Members
Quilting Articles
Digitizers' Delight
Quilting e-Courses
How-to Audio Clips
How-to Video Clips
Quilting History
Quilt Block Recipes
Quilt Block Patterns
Quilting Terms
Learn to Quilt Blog
Master Quilter Program
Medallion Quilt Contest
Newsletters
Quilting Bee Advisors
Quilting Tip of the Week
Quilting Tools
Resource Directory
Most Popular
Site Map
Subscribe to our RSS Feed
 RESOURCES
Convergence Experiment
Download Library
Eavesdrop Transcripts
Our Marketplace
Quilting Webinars
Eavesdrop Recordings
Quilting Tips
EQ6 & EQ7
Help
Text Size
Contact Us
Your Account
 Image Gallery
Quilt Gallery
Haunted House Quilts
Star Member Quilts
MQ Adventure Quilts

 PRODUCTS
Quilting DVDs
Business Webinars
Quilting Software
Quilting Supplies
Quilting Books



 Business Coaching
Business Coaching
Business Resources
Written for You
Done for You
Online Seminar incl eBay
Online ShoestringSeminar
Shoestring Seminar
 Other
Our Guarantee
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Tell a Friend


This site powered by MemberGate

| TAKE A TOUR | Business Idea - Quilting Retreats
 





Business Idea - Quilting Retreats
QuiltingCoach Penny
Printer-Friendly Format

Most avid quilters have more than one project going at a time.

Often, there's one quilting project that gets put aside so long that it seems almost impossible to complete. If you find yourself in a quilting rut, maybe it's time to consider quilters retreats.

There are organized quilters retreats in just about every state in the U.S. To learn about quilters retreats near you, contact your closest quilters guild or other sewing club.

Some quilting clubs offer quilters retreats that are one or two day events. In a one day event, you might take your project to work on for several hours while enjoying the camaraderie of others who share your favorite hobby. Lunch or dinner might be part of the one day quilters retreat or it might be a brown bagger lunch where you would take your own. On a two day quilters retreat, you might return a second day for more of the same.

More elaborate quilters retreats are sleep-overs. They might be hosted at a bed and breakfast, a hotel with convention rooms or at a convention center set up with lots of tables for work stations.

Quilters retreats give participants a chance to escape the interruptions of every day life so they can concentrate on completing their projects. Quilters retreats that last several days often include lectures by professional quilters and expos by companies who make fabrics or other quilting supplies.

If your local quilting clubs don't offer one day quilters retreats and if a multiple quilters retreat isn't in your budget, create your own retreat for yourself or a friend or two.

To create your own quilters retreat, find a quiet place in which to work. Unplug the phone or turn it off. Turn your cell phones to vibrate so you can still be reached in case of emergency. If you and your friends like to quilt with music, make sure to keep the air filled with work-friendly tunes.

Make sure you have plenty of supplies for your quilters retreat. Chances are that your guests will bring their own scissors, but it wouldn't hurt to have an extra pair on hand just in case someone forgets theirs.

It would be added fun to have your guests bring scraps of fabric they have had stashed but haven't found a place to use. Your fabric exchange might just inspire a new quilt project for a future quilters retreat.

If you'd like to plan a quilters retreat, but don't really have any outstanding projects to delve into, why not plan an inspirational retreat? Visit your local library and get quilting books and magazines to use as you and your friends search for ideas. If your retreat room will have Internet access, you could search for ideas on it, too. The Internet is a valuable resource for quilters. There are plenty of how-to-quilt websites that offer inspiration and answer frequently asked questions to help quilters along with their projects.

If you are hosting your own quilters retreat, don't forget to provide snacks for your guests. There's no need to be elaborate since the main focus of the day is quilting. Bottled drinks are a good idea so your friends can secure the lids if they're drinking while working on a project. If the bottle gets tipped over, no liquid will spill on their work!

If you work better alone, plan the day for yourself. No interruptions -- just you and your quilting. A one-quilter retreat can be productive, especially if you find yourself distracted by conversations or feel that you would concentrate more on entertaining your friends than on your own quilting projects.

 

Happy Quilting!


Penny Halgren
TheQuiltingCoach

 

 

 

 




Printer-Friendly Format
·  Quilting Business Idea -- Sell Quilting Accessories or Niche Products
·  Why Start a Quilting Business?
·  Quilting Business Idea - Quilt Kits
·  Quilting Business Idea - Give Old Quilts New Life
·  Start a Quilting Business NOW!