It started off as an ordinary day in my life: Zumba and then
lunch with John in down town Puyallup. After a couple of sushi rolls, John went
back to work and I headed home for an afternoon of gardening and housework.
The sale section had moved to the other side of the shop. On
the way over there, I found Marti Michell’s miter ruler which I’d seen used on
a YouTube video, so I picked that up. I didn’t put it in my basket because I
didn’t have a basket, since I wasn’t planning on buying any fabric.
It seemed more crowded than usual for a Wednesday afternoon.
There were several women in the back classroom. I assumed they were in a class.
One of the sales ladies asked if I needed help. Out of
nowhere, I remembered an episode of Fons
& Porter’s Love of Quilting TV program. A long arm quilter on the show
encouraged viewers to practice their quilting skills on a panel of fabric. The
panel she had worked on was a gorgeous flower.
I Googled it on my phone, showed it to the sales lady and
asked if they had that panel. They sure did! She said she was amazed at how
many people watched Fons and Porter and came in to get that specific panel.
Then she took me to a row of the flower panels in a rainbow of luscious colors.
Dream Big panel by Hoffman fabrics. |
On my way to the cutting table with the stunning panel, I
found a few more bolts of sale fabric and got a bit of a bicep workout lugging
them across the store. Laura's fabric store wisdom says: When you
can’t carry anymore, it’s time to leave the store. At the counter, I discovered
why they were more crowded than usual.
I had chanced into the last days of the 2019 Western
Washington Shop Hop which would end on Saturday. So of course I had to buy a
poster of the quilt, and a bit of extra shop hop fabric before they ran out.
The passports and the shop’s kaleidoscope block kit was back in the classroom
where I’d thought there was a class going on. Not only did they have their free
8” x 8” shop hop quilt block, they were also participating in the Row-by-row quilt
hop, so I also got those free instructions. And just like that, I went
from a simple lunch with the hubbie, to shop hopping.
What is a shop hop? Independent quilt shops design an 8x8”
quilt block using fabrics specially designed for the shop hop. Then they give
the pattern and instructions out to traveling quilters for free. They also
offer a kit with all the necessary fabric and embellishments to create the
block, usually for less than $5. After getting stamped at 14 shops, you turn your
passport in at one of the shops and it will be entered into a drawing to win
prizes.
Back in the car I studied the passport to see which shops
were participating. There were only 35! I thought back and realized that I hadn’t
done a shop hop since 2012! Why? For many reasons: I already have too many quilts lined up to
make, some years I didn’t like the shop hop fabrics, and for the last few
years, I wasn’t in town.
When I was actively shop hopping, at the peak there were
more than 60 shops in Western Washington participating from the Canadian border
down up north all the way down south to the Oregon border. For one of the shop
hops, a friend and I stayed overnight in a hotel up north near Mt. Vernon to
make it easier to drive to Lynden and Bellingham earlier in the day.
My 2019 Western Washington game plan. |
While I was in The
Quilt Barn, another customer asked which shop she should go to next. I
suggested Parkland Parish Quilt Co, in a former church. The lady cutting my fabric told me that shop had
closed. The owner had retired. That was the same fate for another one of my
favorite shops, The Wild Rose in
Orting.
The shrinking base of Shop Hop quilt shops as well as the
beautiful blue and green Puget Sound sea life themed fabrics, spurred me on.
I plotted how many shops I could visit in the next two days with minimum exertion. If I could collect 12 blocks, that would make a nice little 3 x 4 block wall hanging.
I plotted how many shops I could visit in the next two days with minimum exertion. If I could collect 12 blocks, that would make a nice little 3 x 4 block wall hanging.
My stamped Shop Hop passport. |
There is a fairly new shop on South Hill in Puyallup named The Quilting Fairy. When it opened in 2015, I admired the owner’s gutsy move because she set up shop right across the street from the big girl on the block, JoAnn Fabrics.
Thursday morning I stopped to pick up their Snails Trail block on the way home from Zumba.
The Quilting Fairy has a long arm quilting machine set up in front that can be rented after taking a class in how to use it, and a classroom too. The owner has excellent taste in the fresh, trend setting fabrics she chooses for her shop and a large selection of great clearance fabrics to choose from. Her pet miniature schnauzer searching for her ball among the shelves of fabric won my dog loving heart along with the other shop hoppers.
Next up after a shower and quick lunch at home, was Ben Franklin Crafts in Bonney Lake. The
quilting/fabric section is in the back corner of this store which is packed
with crafting and décor. I especially like to visit them in the fall because
they always have a great selection of Halloween and autumn fabrics.
Once my
passport was stamped and the wavy block pattern along with their jam jars
row-by-row pattern stowed in my purse, I found some must-have fabrics and had a
fun conversation with the gal cutting my yardage. Fellow shop hoppers joined in
joking about how we always lost the battle to resist fabric.
This was the first time I visited the next shop, Front Porch Quilts, in the small town of
Buckley.
It was a cozy shop with one of my top two favorite blocks: a Mariner’s Compass pictured in the center of the shop hop quilt.
It was a cozy shop with one of my top two favorite blocks: a Mariner’s Compass pictured in the center of the shop hop quilt.
I wondered if it was a panel, but it’s actually paper pieced. I’m
looking forward to working on that one.
In the seven years since I shop hopped I got a new vehicle. This was the initiation quilt road trip in my Mazda CX-5. It handled it with style.
The next shop on my
list was in Auburn, Bigfoot Quilts, another
one that I’ve never visited. I put my trust in the built-in navigation
system rather than back track Highway
167. I knew I was out in the country when
the truck in front of me advertised that they were a mobile horse shoeing
business. But a familiar Amazon delivery van turned in front of me, reminding
me that the country has something in common with the suburbs. GPS directed me onto the Auburn-Enumclaw
Road, winding through rolling corn fields, the Muckleshoot Indian Reservation,
and past the White River amphitheater.
It was a little jarring leaving the country and entering the City of Auburn where Bigfoot Quilts
was. This shop was easily within my abbreviated shop hop range, and considering
the ongoing Bigfoot debate between my husband and me (I believe in the
possibility of Bigfoot; he's skeptical.) I absolutely had to visit this shop. It was worth
“squatching.”
The neon “Open” sign sported the silhouette of Sasquatch and the
wall behind the cutting counter proudly displayed a Bigfoot quilt. After getting my passport stamped and grabbing the pin wheel shop hop block, I couldn’t
resist the Bigfoot quilt pattern as well as the pattern for the beer drinking,
grinning Bigfoot on their Row-by-row.
It was getting late and I had intended to finish early to
avoid rush hour traffic, but I had two more shops to get to. I barreled north
on Hwy. 167 to Running Stitches Fabric in
Kent and parallel parked on the street right in front of the shop.
It is a
welcoming shop and the owner must have sensed that I was a bit frazzled when I
whooshed in because she very calmly encouraged me to “come on in, and take your
time.” I took her advice along with a deep breath. In the back of the shop I
found some cute Puffin fabric that made me smile. My daughter and her fiancé
love Puffins. When would I ever find Puffin fabric again? They would make an adorable set of pillow cases.
In addition to Running Stitches Fabric shop hop block, I loved their row-by-row quilt block with a vintage feeling country bee hive on it.
In addition to Running Stitches Fabric shop hop block, I loved their row-by-row quilt block with a vintage feeling country bee hive on it.
My last stop of the day was on the west side of Hwy 167 in
Des Moines. Carriage Country Quilts
is in a charming yellow 1930s bungalow with a view of the Puget Sound from the
front porch.
It is one of my favorites and in addition to quilting, it
specializes in hand dyed wool kits. Downstairs in the basement there are tables
filled with bolts of top quality fabric on sale. I found some fall fabrics at
bargain prices. They also offer refreshments. I nibbled on a couple of cookies
then headed back upstairs to get stamped. Their very cute sailboat shop hop
block was the seventh block I collected. Then it was time to get in line for
the slow 20 mile trek home with all the commuters.
That night I called and asked my daughter to pick up the
whale tail block from Undercover Quilts
in Seattle since it’s less than a mile from where she lives. She agreed and
knows the routine well after being dragged with her brother on Shop Hops as
they grew up. My son was off the hook because the closest participating shop to
him is about 20 miles away.
My plan for Friday wasn’t quite as ambitious in numbers of
shops (only 3 for the day), but in terms of modes of transportation and a late
start, it was challenging. I started off with Zumba again and a haircut
appointment. Then I hit the shop hop road.
First stop Island Quilter
on Vashon Island. To get there I had to drive to Pt. Defiance at the tip of
Tacoma and catch the ferry.
After paying $24.45 (round trip) I got in line for the 15 minute cruise. From the dock at Tahlequah it was a 20 minute drive to my destination: Island Quilter's new shop.
It is another one of my favorites. They closed their
brick and mortar store for three years and re-opened in a new location that I
was eager to see.
I was not disappointed! They still had their extensive
selection of vibrant Kaffe Fassett fabrics lining the walls of the cheerful
house they are in. It’s smaller than their previous location, but as you wander
through the maze of shelves each section reveals more pleasant surprises.
I caught up with Paul, one of the owners, while he cut
fabric for me, including a stunning panel of The Tree of Life by Gustav Klimt.
While we talked, I admired a little quilt made of small flowers and buttons
hanging by the door. When I asked if I could get the pattern for it, he told me
that they kept it in a drawer because it was their most shop lifted pattern. We
lamented, “Who could sleep under a quilt made from stolen materials?”
Along with being my favorite shop, their shop hop block was
also tied for first place of my favorites—a mini landscape of the Puget Sound with Orcas swimming in the
shadow of Mt. Rainier.
Paul’s partner Anja, wasn’t there but I asked him to
tell her hello for me and told him that I was so happy they were open again
(although they were never really closed. They were online and also traveled to
shows with their fabric).
When I got to the ferry landing, I watched the gate close
and heard the blast from the ferry’s horn as it pulled away from the dock
without me. It would be about an hour until the next one. Oh well.
Rather than wait there being the first in line, I backed up and doubled back to a place I’d passed that had piqued my curiosity. It was named Pacific Potager.
Rather than wait there being the first in line, I backed up and doubled back to a place I’d passed that had piqued my curiosity. It was named Pacific Potager.
Was it a pottery place? Nope. It was a plant nursery. There
were tables full of organic plant starts and a sign explaining pricing. Nobody
was there, but there were instructions. I chose some Lemon grass to cook with
and bergamot to brew some Earl Grey tea and then slid some cash through the
slot in the front door. While in line for the ferry once again, I read through the instructions
of the most shop lifted flower quilt pattern.
After disembarking at Pt. Defiance, I drove over to Artco Crafts in Tacoma.
They are another
craft store with décor and fabric similar to Ben Franklin in Bonney Lake. I hurried to the back of the store to
get stamped and pick up their block featuring an appliqued octopus. That’s a
nod to the legend that Tacoma is home to the world’s biggest octopus which
lives in the deep waters under the Tacoma Narrows bridge.
My late start, and missing the ferry meant I didn’t spend much time in Artco Crafts, but it’s fairly close, so it will be easy to revisit.
My late start, and missing the ferry meant I didn’t spend much time in Artco Crafts, but it’s fairly close, so it will be easy to revisit.
My last stop was at the Shibori
Dragon. Originally in Lakewood, they moved to University Place years ago.
They specialize in Asian fabrics and batiks, Japanese fabrics and sashiko
materials. I walked through their door 15 minutes before closing time, just in
time to pick up their block. A fusible precision die cut Orca whale is the centerpiece of their shop hop block.
Their row-by-row
block Time for Tea is a perfect match for me since I collect teapots. When I
got home, I’d steep myself a cup of tea and savor my shop hop goodies.
Row x Row fabric license plates. |
In the final tally, I ended up with a total of eleven shop
hop blocks. (I’ll have to make up a 12th from the extra fabric I bought). I also rounded up eight rows
for the Row by Row quilt. In my mind I've named this the "Panel Shop Hop" since I picked up three of those. And through suburbs, country, and cities, my Mazda now has 300 shop hop land miles
under its tires, and 1.7 seaworthy miles.
Laura Keolanui Stark is finishing up the quilt she was working on before the impromptu shop hop so she can work on new projects. She can be reached at stark.laura.k@gmail.com.