By Jody Worsham, co author "Kin We're Not Related To:
All rights
reserved for Cream of Quilt Soup
I entered my
chicken scratch quilt in our Piney Woods County Fair Craft Show. Now what is a chicken scratch quilt, you may
ask, and rightly so.
Chicken scratch is a sewing technique whereby you fill in the squares of gingham print by sewing double X’s over the white squares, then sewing single X’s and connecting them in a circle using embroidery thread.
And what is gingham print you ask as if you understood exactly what I just wrote? Gingham is woven checked material.
Chicken scratch is a sewing technique whereby you fill in the squares of gingham print by sewing double X’s over the white squares, then sewing single X’s and connecting them in a circle using embroidery thread.
And what is gingham print you ask as if you understood exactly what I just wrote? Gingham is woven checked material.
The quilt is going to be auctioned to the
highest bidder at our school’s Fall Festival Fund Raiser in late October, so I
thought this would be a good way to get the quilt seen and to advertise the
festival.
I did not expect to place. I did not expect to win. I did not expect the unexpected.
I shall
explain.
There are
age divisions within the craft show as well as categories. There was no age division for “Jesus was my
next door neighbor” so I just entered as an adult. “Kin We’re Not Related To” has just been
published so if they have not read the book, then my “adult” status would not
be challenged. Category was a different
matter.
There was no
quilt category so I had a choice of: A)
Cross-stitch, B) Miscellaneous, or C) Specialty Sewing, French Hand
Sewing. I had to register my project
before 6p.m. I waited for all of the
other entries to come in before submitting mine, trying to gauge the
competition in each category and working up the courage to enter at all. There were already a bunch of cross-stitch
pieces entered and miscellaneous would have me competing with popsicle ash trays
and scrapbooks. That left category
C.
The ladies
at the registration table were scrutinizing each entry. I decided my best bet was to go for Specialty
Sewing, French Hand Sewing. To be on the
safe side, I threw in a little French accent.
“Si vous
plait. Pleaze, e vish to enter theeze
quilt with zee special cross-stitch in how you say Specialty Sewing for the
French.”
They looked
at me, at the quilt, and back at me. They huddled together discussing the
various aspects of the quilt and my ancestry.
I heard
“It’s a
quilt.”
“No, look at
the cross-stitching. It’s cross-stitching.
Yes, but it
is a specialty cross-stitching.”
“Y’all, I don’t think she’s Southern.”
Then they
looked over at me. I was afraid one of them was going to say “I
remember you. You taught me in high
school as well as my daughter and her daughter and my great-great-grandniece,”
but they didn’t. Finally one of the
ladies handed me a Category C: Specialty Sewing, French Hand Sewing
registration form. I was in.
The next day
while my children were competing in the broiler show, I checked back to see if
my quilt had been placed in a good position for advertising the Fall
Festival.
There in the
corner of the display room was my quilt with a huge purple ribbon with
“SWEEPSTAKES WINNER” written in fake gold letters. I checked around. Nobody else had a fake gold lettered purple
ribbon. Then I saw it. Overshadowed by the loops of the big purple
bow was the coveted blue ribbon.
FIRST PLACE CANNING.
Maybe they thought, since I was French, I
wouldn’t notice. Or maybe they ran out
of FIRST PLACE CRAFT ribbons. Or maybe they read my book.
Anyone want
to bid on a First Place Blue Ribbon Sweepstakes winning canned chicken scratch quilt?
4 comments:
VERY funny, Jody!!
too kind Fishducky!Thanks
Your note was so funny. So glad you won first place for "canning." Beautiful quilt.
Thanks Sharon. Enjoyed learning a new technique
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