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March 2026
Numbers (1 to 17) correspond to the items shown below.
(1) Fancy Steps. Made by Bonnie Miles, Quilted by Holly Blazzard.
(2) Portobello Stars. Made by Bonnie Miles, Quilted by Holly Blazzard.
(3) Olivia & Her Yellow Roses. Made and Quilted by Sue Gilgen.
(4) Restoring the Coral Reef. Made and Quilted by Sue Gilgen and Cheryl Styler.
(5) First Snow. Made and Quilted by Margaret Abramshe.
(6) Roles, Rules, & Royalty. Made and Quilted by Angela Gubler.
(7) Oil & Vinegar. Made & Quilted by Angela Gubler.
(8) Quiet Reflection. Made and Quilted by Lynea Askey.
(9) Swimming Geese. Made and Quilted by Rene Hall.
(10) Lemonade Placemats. Made and Quilted by Corri Theobald.
(11) Sunrise Over the Wasatch. Made and Quilted by Angela Gubler.
(12) A Place Called Home. Made and Quilted by Angela Gubler.
(13) New Socks. Made by Connie Green.
(14) Knot Bag. Made by Marcia Jackson.
(15) Pin Wheels. Made by Mary Evans, Quilted by Donna Helton.
(16) Not Your Grandmother’s Flower Garden. Made by Melissa Ryther, Quilted by Angie Holt.
(17) Kristina’s Bracelets.Made by Jeanette Ivie, Quilted by Sharon Rawlings.
February 2026
Numbers (1 to 16) below correspond to the items shown above.
(1) Mom’s Love
Doris Horan Doris’s mom made this quilt for her 60th birthday from vintage and vintage remake fabrics.
(2) Journey to Quilting
Made and Quilted by Odile Dortch This quilt took twelve years from start to finish. It includes blocks from Judy Martin and Carol Doak, all pieced traditionally.
(3) You’ve Got Mail
Made by Pamela France, Quilted by Anita Eaton
Pamela made one of these quilts for each of her two sisters, and embroidered messages of love and support on each envelope. Moda Charmpack and Layer Cake.
(4) Baby Patriotic Quilt
Made and Quilted by Colleen Adair. This quilt is for the Cedar City Quilt Guild’s project honoring America’s 250th birthday: the Guild will gift all babies born at Cedar City hospitals this year with a patriotic baby quilt in remembrance of being born in this banner year. Please see the upcoming newsletter for more on this story, and contact Colleen if you’d like to participate.
(5) Mom and Baby Lambs
Made by LaDonna Sarik, Quilted by Vicky Huston Gift quilt for great granddaughter.
(6) Scattered Squares
Made by Jane Madsen, Quilted by Joyce Brock.
(7) Stretched Star
Designed by Bonnie Miles, Quilted by RoLaine Bracken. Bonnie designed this quilt for her scholar granddaughter who is headed to BYU Idaho, and will enjoy a cozy, cuddly quilt. Fabrics are printed with word, music, map themes; back is fleece.
(8) I Love You Sew Much
Made and Quilted by Evone Pope Made with a panel from Clover Patch, and patterned after one displayed at the shop.
(9) Spooky
Made and Quilted by Wendy Wright Halloween theme quilt, hand quilted using pearl cotton with the “big stitch” method.
(10) Log Cabin
Finished by Suzan White
Suzan found this quilt top in items of her deceased great aunt, and added the back.
(11) Pinwheel Wall Hanging
Designed and Finished by Suzan White
The squares were made by Suzan’s great aunt. She updated look of the pinwheel squares with added color and contrast.
(12) Stars
Hand Pieced by Thais Ball, Quilted by Pat Kunich Pat’s mother, Thais, hand pieced the squares when she was fifteen years old. Pat finished the piece with the blue, multi-colored star sashing.
(13) Tilda Dolls
Made by Rene Hall. Rene teaches a monthly Tilda doll class at Scrap Apple.
(14) (15) Boundless Carry-All Bags
Made by Lynea Askey
Lynea’s friendship group lovingly calls this the “Doreen Bag” in honor of Doreen Weyland. Lynea made bags for each of her sisters; it was a joy to sew these gift items with her friends.
(16) Tube Bag
Made by Pamela France
Pamela made this bag from fabric scraps and denim jeans. The lining features pockets upcycled from the jeans, with an embroidered closure flap.
Thanks to Vicki Huston for coordinating Show & Tell, to all “Holders & Folders,” and to Laura Arnold for photos.
January 2026
January Program - Board Members' Earliest/Latest Quilts
The Guild Board members showed their earliest and latest quilts, along with tips about what they have learned along their quilting journeys.
THE NUMBERS (1-32) BELOW CORRESPOND TO THE QUILTS BELOW:
Angela Gubler, President
(1) Twinkle, Twinkle (2) Facing the Imposter
Angela continues to move towards purposeful, but patternless, quilt making.
Tip: Don’t put yourself in a box, or accept the labels others want to put on you. Your work is your work, no matter if you follow a pattern or not. No matter if your work trends toward traditional or modern. What you make is defined by you, not someone else.
Evone Pope, Past President
(3) Hearts for my Daughter (4) Dots and Dashes
Evone enjoys hand quilting, and highly recommends the joy and satisfaction of hand quilting.
Tip: She has learned the importance of good measuring techniques for borders, to avoid wavy sides.
Bruce Bussey, President-Elect/Membership
(5) Great Grandmother’s Quilt (6) Summer Retreat Striped Placemats
Bruce is grateful to have a hobby that enables him to create useful items, including blankets.
Colette Thomas, Secretary
(7) Blocks and Ladders (8) Almost a Lone Star
Tip: There’s nothing to be gained by worrying about small mistakes; just keep going.
Sherrill Ash, Treasurer
(9) First Quilt (10) Glass Ceiling
“Glass Ceiling” hung in the Pictorial category of the ’25 Houston International Quilt Festival
Tip: Two most significant techniques: Foundation Paper Piecing (FPP) and Improv. FPP allows creation of wonderful pieces from Sherrill’s favorite pattern designers, and Improv allows her to create many of her original works. Learning to cut without rulers, join unusual shapes, and make decisions as you go takes practice, but provides rewarding results.
Tina Ellis, Assistant Treasurer
(11) A Tribute to our Bears (12)Tiny House Craze
Tina says that “Tiny House Craze” is the happiest quilt she owns!
Tip: Don’t be afraid to choose patterns that make you happy. Save some quilts for you, too!
Sue Licher, Assistant Membership
(13) 1930’s Fabrics First Quilt (14) Little Star
Sue’s recent work uses smaller pieces that her first quilt, but she had the advantage of better tools to work with.
Tip: Sue “unlearned” needle turn applique, which she was able to do on her first project, but cannot do today. She has learned the AppliQuick method, and loves it.
Lynea Askey, Newsletter Editor
15) Mom’s Memory Quilt (16) Brimming Over
Lynea made this quilt in her first quilting class as a gift for her mother’s 75th birthday. Current work is a Kim Diehl kit, and will hang in her husband’s office.
Tip: If you have completed a quilt top — so, before quilting it — and you see an issue that you have to admit is not a “design choice,” fix it! Please fix it! No matter how long it will take. If you don’t fix it, your eye will ALWAYS go to it, and you’ll end up wanting to give the quilt away. Ask me how I know.
Lynda Krupp, Workshops
(17) Rainbow Baby Quilt (18) Mini Moons Wallhanging
Mini-moons was made in the November DQG workshop.
Tip: Lynda enjoys learning new techniques to keep her quilts fresh and interesting.
DeLoyce Tyler, Workshops
(19) Baby Quilt 1969 (20) Scrappy Moda Kansas City Trouble
DeLoyce had no idea of how much she would learn about quilting over 25 years.
Jeanette Ivie, Programs
(21) Andy’s Quilt (22) Sea Glass
Tip: DQG Friendship Groups are fun, and a wonderful place to share ideas, patterns, and fabrics. Jeanette has come home with many fun ideas and new projects.
Corri Theobald, Webmaster
(23) My 1st Jelly Roll Race (24) 78-Cent Forever Stamp Quilt, containing 6,012 one-inch squares
Tip: After 30 years as a custom apparel seamstress, Corri was relieved to learned that quilt piecing does not require backstitching. She also wishes to thank ALL who donated scraps to her project!
Adriana Hall, Assistant Webmaster
(25) Floral Irish Chain (26) Sasquatch
“Seams to Bee” Friendship Group
27 DeLoyce Tyler
28 Vicky Huston
29 Bonnie Miles
30 Gerri Alldredge
31 Glenda Marquardt
32 Lisa Jones
The “Seams to Bee” friendship group decided to make scrappy quilts based on Jen Kingwell’s pattern, “Long Time Gone.” The quilts shown are those completed at the time of the January meeting; the “Bees” plan to have additional quilts completed and shown as a group at the May quilt show. See an upcoming newsletter for more on this story.