“Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show” Wednesday, July 8, 2020 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon WISH Continued from page 22 was the catalyst in convinc- ing her to attend the SOQS and to begin creating Wish Upon a Card postcards. “I made my first card for The Wish Upon A Card Program in 2014. In 2015, I received an honor- able mention, and second place in 2018 and 2020, and first place in 2019,” Jasper explained. “For me just to have a card selected for fram- ing feels like a win.” Longtime fans of SOQS, Jill Huntington and her family have attended the annual show since 1996. Huntington, a quilter, lives in Portland with her husband and four grown kids. “I made my first quilt as a wedding gift for my husband back in 1995. Serendipitously, I found the quilt pattern called Autumn Pines in a book by Jean Wells, ‘Patchwork Quilts Made Easy.’ I first learned about SOQS from Jean’s PHOTO COURTESY SOQS book, which included photos and information about the event. It became a must-go- to, although we missed the quilt show that year because my husband and I were hav- ing a summer wedding on the second Saturday in July!” This is the first year Huntington donated a fabric Since the beginning, High Desert Frameworks! in Bend has sponsored the program and Myrna Dow has matted and framed cards for auction. postcard to The Wish Upon A Card Fundraiser & Fabric Challenge. She displayed quilts in the SOQS in 2018 and 2019. Huntington said, “I wanted to get involved with The Wish Upon A Card Program as a way of con- tributing to the show and to the SOQS Scholarship Fund for the Sisters Outlaws high school students. Also, I had never made a fabric post- card before, so I was eager to try something new and to challenge myself to make a design given a hand-selected collection of fabrics.” Huntington’s postcard design for 2020, “Something Good in Every Day,” fea- tures a vase of flowers set on a neutral background. She said, “My inspira- tion came from Kaffe Fassett designs in which he uses vases as a motif. In my col- lection of low-volume fab- rics, I found a neat fabric with words on it that seemed so appropriate for our cur- rent times. The fabric reads, ‘Every day may not be good, but there is something good in every day!’ When I created the postcard, I centered those words on the top of the post- card design.” The Huntingtons are also the creative team behind Huntington Quilt Design on Instagram, and are mem- bers of the Portland Modern Quilt Guild. SOQS Sponso r YOUTH Tolzman said. “We dedicated the quilt, ‘100 Years Strong,’ This year the theme to all the brave women and for the virtual SOQS is men from many ethnic “My Kind of Town,” and backgrounds who fought to Tolzman’s quilt, “My Kind of legalize the voting rights for Winter Town,” will be shown women.” The project took on a in the East of the Cascade Quilters Special Exhibit in unifying force. The quilt the virtual SOQS on July 11. was designed and pieced There will also be a spe- by Tolzman, Gilda Hunt cial exhibit by quilters that and Jennifer Cannard. The live in Central Oregon who appliquéd women on the are celebrating 100 years of quilt were created by Hunt, and the fabric photographs women’s suffrage. “This quilt was inspired printed by Tolzman. Cannard by the 100th anniversary cel- did all the sewing and it was ebrating women’s suffrage,” machine quilted by Tolzman. Continued from page 19 PHOTO BY DIANE TOLZMAN Jordan became interested in quilting last year at age 5. 23 SOQS Sponso r