Tag Archives: charity

A Hot Month For Linus

Linus Quilt, August 2010

Tomorrow is the monthly meeting of The Linus Connection, which means this is the day of the month where I gather all the things in my house that have been accumulating to take to Linus for donation.  The quilt above made from the leftover pieces cut from a Storm At Sea quilt that was set on point. It’s the same quilt I call Electric Amish. I’ve been hand quilting it for an interminable number of years now, and I sometimes wonder if it will ever be finished. Completing this toddler version with the leftover pieces of Electric Amish is a small victory and it gives me hope to finish the mama quilt some day.

Linus Quilt, August 2010

This next quilt I’ve dubbed Stash Monkey and is made from what I have left from the Log Cabins For Linus collection I held in the earlier part of 2010. There are still a few orphan blocks in my bag, and I hope inspiration will strike again and I will come up with a quilt that’s just as fun as this one! Made from orphan blocks and scraps from my own stash.

Linus Quilt, August 2010

Brand new in my life this month are quilts quilted by me on a long arm machine! Dianne, the owner of Honey Bee Quilt Store, where I have my day job, very generously allowed us to use the store’s HandiQuilter to finish up some Linus quilts. Not bad for a beginner! I also quilted the Baby Storm At Sea.

Go Get Granny Linus Blanket

This granny block ghan is made from the very last of the donations from Go Get Granny (the yarn half of Log Cabins For Linus). All of these blocks were donated. I joined them all together and wove in the ends. As you can see here, I’m experimenting with hanging afghans the way I do quilts. It works…sort of. I just love photos taken in natural light, but afghans are not a fan of being hung. Shared in this TTMT.

Quilt by Laci for Linus

This gorgeous quilt was made from a top donated by the ever lovely Laci. She sent this to me some time ago and it ended up going to a professional long arm quilter that donates her skills to Linus. It’s all done now and the quilting is just lovely. It was featured in this Talk To Me Tuesday (sans binding), where you can see the beautiful quilting close up.

End of 2009-2010 carpool 'ghan

My very last offering this month is my final Carpool ‘Ghan for the 2009-2010 school year (also featured in the video linked above). Both of my kids are musicians and honor students, which simply means they carry a ridiculous amount of stuff to and from school. I drive them back and forth, as well as taking them to music lessons, rehearsals, etc. That leaves me sitting in my little car all by myself more time than I care to count. What’s a girl to do? Well, if she’s crafty, she brings something to work on! I make afghans for Linus when I’m waiting, keeping a bag of yarn and a crochet hooks in the car just for that purpose. You’d be amazed how much I can get done sitting in my car every day! It’s a good thing I finally finished this one, seeing as how the new school year for my kids starts on Tuesday!

The Linus Connection meets the third Saturday of every month at St. Phillip’s in Round Rock, Texas. Check out the website for more information.

Happy Crafting!

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Linus in May

The Linus Connection on Saturday was quite a whirlwind (Linus Show & Tell -there are thank you cards from kids, go see!).  I think that was partially due to my being so busy last week  By the time Saturday rolled around, it was a continuation of The Busy.

If you caught Wordless Wednesday last week, then you know I had 9 quilts to bind between Wednesday and Saturday.  Despite working and having a sick kiddo, I still managed to get them all done!




9 Quilts – binding PWND in less than three days!  Quilted by Marge L. (individual photos below)

This is the end of my Go Get Granny and Log Cabins For Linus posts.  It’s been amazing and I cannot thank you all enough for your generous donations!  Anything I’ve received after the cut-off date has been donated directly to Linus.  Unfinished projects have been and will continue to be shared with other volunteers so they can be turned into finished quilts and afghans without moldering in my craft room until I have time to get to them!

Of course, if I receive a really amazing (finished!) quilt or afghan in the mail, I’ll share it.  It’s just my way!

And now, quilts and afghans that were donated, sorted and distributed on Saturday, May 15, 2010.




Another stunning afghan by Amber’s Originals




Multitudes of Granny Ghans, blocks by Mary, joined by myself and Linda E. (but mostly by Linda!)




Granny Ghan, blocks by auntypsycho and others (Cat’s mum included!)


Donated by Becky G.


Three quilts made from one giant quilt top, which was donated by Shannon Shaw of Rock Creek Quilts, the official quilter of Harry Potter Paper Piecing.


Unquilted tops donated by Becky G.



Made from quilt blocks donated by clumsy_chord, pieced by Shirley B.




Donated by hardhatcat, Australia (the donation from furthest away!)


Log Cabins for Linus!  Individual block donations pieced into tops by me and quilted by Marge L.

Looking for a place to donate your time and talent?  Try searching for “quilt donation” or “afghan donation” and your area.  There are charitable blanket makers and non-profit organizations all over the world!

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charity: Linus In Spring Time

The April Linus meeting saw another round of amazing blankets donated by the ever gracious online crafting community!

Many of these awesome crafters are now looking for places to donate their awesomeness locally, which thrills me to no end!

Log Cabins For Linus and Go Get Granny were an unexpectedly huge success and while I’m not longer collecting individual blocks, I do hope to have all the ones I’ve received so far put together and donated to Linus by the end of May.

Can I do it?  I sure hope so!



Made by Friends of Pren (pictured below!).  They donated 8 fleece blankets.


This is what went out the door with me Saturday morning.  What a haul!



Friends of Pren, who had a Linus Blanket making party!


More Friends of Pren (that’s Pren on the left!).



The official label of The Linus Connection, along with the business address (you know, in case you need it…please note that is NOT my address).



HUGE granny ghan made by Shae!



Huge, colorful granny ghan made by Amber.



This one was so big, I had to move the ottoman to take a picture!  Made by Mary.



Another lovely big afghan made by Mary.



Soft baby ghan made by Mary.



Granny Ghan made by Mary.



Go Get Granny Afghan made from donated 12″ blocks, made by a variety of people. Chenille yarn donated by Jenn F.



Another Go Get Granny Afghan made from donated 12″ blocks, made by a variety of people.



I neglected to get a finished photo of this blanket, so here’s a sneak peak I posted to Twitter.  You can see the full blanket in this TTMT. Blocks made by Mary, joined by me.




I also forgot to take a photo of this gorgeous blanket made from blocks that Janina donated, as shown by me in the above TTMT.  I’m pleading sniffles for forgetting…I’ve been sick!

Thank you, thank you, thank you a million times to everyone that made Go Get Granny and Log Cabins for Linus such a huge success!

If you make a Sew Awesome Craft or any pattern, craft or recipe from sewhooked,  I’d love to see a photo.  Email me or add it to the sewhooked flickr group.

Happy crafting!

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Charity: Go Get Granny and Log Cabins For Linus

Log Cabins for Linus / Go Get Granny

For many years now, I’ve been a volunteer for The Linus Connection*, a small local non-profit charity that makes blankets for children in need in Central Texas. I’m a blanket maker, sorter and volunteer Webmistress for linusconnection.org.  I’ve served a term on the Board, and was the newsletter editor for a time.  Suffice it to say, Linus is very important to me!

Just as many other charities are suffering due to the current economy, Linus is suffering, too. Our demand has risen, while the number of blankets has decreased. When our numbers decrease, that means children that need a little extra security in a difficult time are going without. It’s a very hard call to decide who doesn’t get the security of a handmade blanket. If I had my way, every child touched by severe illness, injury, abuse, homelessness or other crisis situations would know the comfort and love of a handmade blanket.

My blog is a place I share my ideas, patterns, recipes and tutorials with the world for no charge, but this time I’d like to ask for a little something back.  Throughout 2010, I will be collecting quilt blocks and yarn squares through my craft blog to assemble into Linus blankets.

If you are a quilter, please consider participating in Log Cabins for Linus!   Make 12″ log cabin blocks (12.5″ unfinished) in 100% quilting cotton of any log cabin pattern, any color, any style you like.

Here are some patterns to get you started:

If yarn is your forte, then Go Get Granny is for you! I’ll be accepting 12″ knit or crochet blocks made in acrylic yarns of any color or style and will join those into afghans.

When you’re ready to send your block, email me for my mailing address and I’ll send it your way. Donations to The Linus Connection are tax deductible, so if you need a receipt, please include a note with your block and I’ll make sure one gets to you.

All blocks donated will be shared here on the sewhooked blog and on Talk To Me Tuesday as completed blankets before being donated to The Linus Connection.

I encourage you to post photos of your blocks to the Go Get Granny & Log Cabins for Linus flickr group.  You can also see blankets I’ve donated since 2002.

Anything you can do is greatly appreciated.

For more information about The Linus Connection, please visit our website or blog or become a fan on Facebook.

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Disclaimer: This is my effort to increase blanket numbers for my own favorite blanket making charity, The Linus Connection, located in Austin, Texas.  This effort is not in any way organized by TLC.  All blankets will be donated to The Linus Connection by me, Jennifer Ofenstein.  If you have any questions please contact me or leave a question in the comments.

*The Linus Connection is a small, local non-profit located in Central Texas and is not affiliated with Project Linus.

Paper Piecing: Custom Pattern Auction For Charity

The awesome organizers over at help_haiti on Livejournal have found a great way to get fandom (all fandoms!) involved in raising money for charity while getting fun stuff in return.

Crafters, graphic artist, writers and all sorts of other awesome people are donating their time and talents in return for charitable donations.   You can bid in the comments of the item you’re interested in and once the auction is closed on noon (EST) January 20, 2010, the items will be paid for by donating to charity!  Share your receipt and get awesome goodness in return.  The charities win and you win, too!

I’m offering up one Custom Designed 5″ Paper Pieced Quilt Pattern. You can read the full details here.  Be sure to bid in the comments at this link.  I cannot accept bids here.

Also check out these awesome auctions by two of my crafty friends:

Amber (hp5freak) is auctioning off a 3’x3′ custom crochet blanket. She makes gorgeous and unique HP-themed blankets. You can see those here.

Mary (dragonsinger954) is the maker of many a fine Molly Weasley sweater.  She’s offering a custom-made one up right here. You can see examples of her many lovely Molly sweaters here.

Also, the Queen of The Leaky Cauldron herself is auctioning off one autographed copy of Harry, A History.  It’s a good thing, too, because you can’t have mine!

Happy bidding and thanks for supporting this wonderful cause!

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My Favorite Charity: The Linus Connection

April 2006

The Linus Connection is a Central Texas non-profit organization whose mission is to make and deliver handmade security blankets that are for children in crisis situations in the Austin and Central Texas area. The blankets go to children in hospital emergency rooms, in crisis centers, foster care, battered women’s shelters, and to any child who is in need of a little extra security in their lives.

I often make references to Linus or The Linus Connection in my posts.  In recently writing an article about Linus for The Quilting Gallery, I realized I’d never spent a whole post just talking about Linus and what it means to me.

The Linus Connection was the first local craft-oriented non-profit group that I ever volunteered for.    My very first meeting was in November of 2002.  I’d been invited by another mom from my daughter’s Girl Scout troop after being pointed in her direction because I’d made a couple of small crochet blankets and I didn’t have anyone to give them to.  After offering to give her the blankets for Linus, she said, “oh, no, you should come to meeting!”

I was much shier back then, but I went anyway.  I was incredibly nervous when I walked into a building full of much older ladies all working industriously.  Stephanie Sabatini, the founder and Executive Director of Linus met me at the door, and said, “I was told to expect you!”  She put me to work immediately, sewing labels to donated blankets.

November 2002
The first blanket I donated to Linus in November 2002

When I got home, I was so excited to have a venue for my excess crafty energy, I started working on a new blanket immediately. I checked the Linus website for more information only to realize that it hadn’t been updated in over a year.

For my first couple of months at Linus, I sat with the crochet ladies or the label stitchers.  After a couple of months, I plucked up the courage to mention that I had my own website and would willingly volunteer to update the existing site.  By spring of 2003, I was the Webmistress of The Linus Connection, and I have been ever since.

I continued to make crochet blankets to donate each month.  In the autumn of 2003, the same friend that had introduced me to Linus suggested I come to a Honey Bee Work Day.  I’d been talking about making Halloween costumes and she told me that if I could make costumes, I could definitely make a quilt.  Bring your sewing machine, she said.  I did, again, nervous, because I’d never quilted before.  She got me all set up with a pre-cut quilt kit and I started sewing.  Before long I had a quilt top and I was searching online for information about borders and backing and binding.

November 2003

My first quilt, donated to The Linus Connection November 2003

In late 2004, after experimenting with quilting all year, including joining my first (and only!) bee,  I discovered paper piecing.   That was my light bulb moment in quilting and I’ve never looked back.  I was immediately designing my own patterns, one of the first ones being The Linus Heart.

The Linus Connection Heart

The Linus Connection Heart Pattern

In 2004, I was also invited to be  on The Linus Connection’s Executive Board of Directors.  I served for two years as Newsletter Editor in addition to my ongoing position as Webmistress.   During that time I helped organized the first Linus Blanket Challenge, which has just seen it’s fifth year, as well organizing a group-wide project to create a banner for The Linus Connection to put on display at meetings and at other events when Linus needed a physical presence.  The banner (shown at the top of this post) included my own heart pattern, as well as letters from a Carol Doak pattern book.  The layout was designed by me, while individual letters were paper pieced by volunteers from the group.  The banner itself was pieced, quilted and bound by myself and my bee friends.

Sometime during this time, I starting taking more responsibility in the blanket sorting area at meetings, something I still do and enjoy enormously because the sorters get to see and touch all the blankets that are donated.  I’m constantly saying we have the best job, because we do!

Photobucket Sorting Blankets in 2004

When one of the other Board members suggested we start a monthly Show & Tell at the monthly meetings in 2005, I started bringing my camera and adding those photos to the Linus Website.  One thing led to another, and I eventually started posting yearly photo videos to showcase Show & Tell blankets donated over the year.

Since I stepped down from the Board in 2006, I have continued as Webmistress and in blanket sorting.  The Linus Website is one of my pet projects and it’s evolved a lot over the years.  I updated it at least once a month, after meetings, updating photos, adding new information, pattern links etc.  I’ve designed all the banners and graphics, as well as the layout and I take a lot of personal pride in it.

Talking about all this makes it sound like I’ve forgotten all about the blankets, which I certainly haven’t.  This year, I donated my 200th blanket, while I don’t always reach my personal goal of two blankets a month, I do always have at least one to donate.  Just knowing that there have been 200 children touched by the work that came from my hands keeps me going.  That’s what Linus is all about and that’s why I keep volunteering my time online, crocheting and quilting.

Last but not least, I’ve found my best quilting friends through Linus.  Every member of my bee is a volunteer and we often spend our own time sorting fabric and talking about possible projects that would work for Linus.  They’re one of the best things that has come out of Linus for me and I’m thankful for them every day.  Remember that mom from the Girl Scout troop that first invited me?  She and I are still friends.  🙂

You will find me at the Linus meeting every month in the back sorting blankets and taking photos during Show & Tell.  If you live in Central Texas, come by and see what we’re all about!  We’re always in need of volunteers to make, sort, label and deliver blankets!

Some of my favorite blankets that I’ve donated over the years (dates are actual donation dates):

January 2003
January 2003, granny-ghans

May 2005
May 2004, pattern from a magazine, but I don’t remember which!

July 2005
July 2005, Coconut Candy

February 2006
February 2006 Show & Tell, paper pieced center medallion from a Carol Doak pattern.

June 2006
June 2006, log cabin with the Linus Heart in the center

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October 2007, made from an old crochet pamphlet for the 2007 Challenge

Jan 2008
January 2008, various paper pieced hearts, made for a demo I gave in 2007.

June 2008
June 2008, Lion Brand pattern

January
January 2009, The Sewhooked Sampler

Strawberry Ice Cream Crochet Blanket for Linus March 2009
March 2009, Strawberry Ice Cream

September 2009 Linus quilt
September 2009, from Sharyn Craig’s Layer ‘Em Up

See all the blankets I’ve donated to Linus through the years in my flickr

The Linus Connection

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If you make a Sew Awesome Craft or any pattern, craft or recipe from sewhooked,  I’d love to see a photo.  Email me or add it to the sewhooked flickr group.

Quilting: The Generosity of Quilters

I have a little story to tell.

Over on Livejournal, I run a group called hp_paperpiecing, short for Harry Potter Paper Piecing.  I’m sure most of you know by now that I’m a huge HP fan and spent several years designing HP quilt blocks that I’ve shared with the fandom.  That’s been the purpose of hp_paperpiecing, and until recently, HP blocks and block-related challenges were what we shared.

A few months ago, I read about the Bushfire Quilt Project, started by Tia of Camp Follower Bags & Quilts, for making quilts to give to those affected by the Australian bushfires in Victoria earlier this year.

My first thoughts were that I myself would make a block or two and share the project with various quilting friends.  I posted about it on hp_paperpiecing, asking our members to consider sending in a block.

The members did me one better and within a day, my suggestion of sharing blocks morphed into the group itself making all the blocks for a quilt, including the free services of a professional quilter who is also part of our group!

Within a few weeks, we had a full quilt worth of blocks, pieced, quilted and shipped off to Australia.

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Photo by Tia from Camp Follower Bags & Quilts, quilted by Shannon Shaw

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The quilt label, made by me from the Pigwidgeon pattern.

We had to have one HP block on the quilt!

I count myself to be incredibly fortunate to not only know so amazing online crafters, quilters and other fans, but to be part of their generosity.  I volunteer and donate locally on a regular basis, something I find easy to incorporate into my life.  Volunteering to make something that will then go in the mail and travel thousands of miles before it ends at it’s final destination for no financial gain is a true gift.

My virtual hat is off to every single Harry Potter Quilt that participated in the Bushfire Quilt Project.  You are ALL amazing!

You can see more great photos from the hp_paperpiecing group quilt here and many amazing quilt photos in the Bushfire Quilt Project Flickr Group.

Much love,