The Joy of Quilting with Your Long-Arm Machine
55
KathyQuilts.com
Keep a Portfolio
Keeping a quilting portfolio or journal is an important step of quilting. Take photographs
of all of your quilts and keep a record of which thread, batting type, and design you
chose for each quilt and why. As you continue in your quilting, you can look back on
previous projects for ideas and ways to improve.
Similarly to a journal of your quilting goals, a quilting portfolio will also serve as a
reference of your progress over time. Small, incremental changes are hard to see
at times, but after several years, they more noticeable. Seeing your improvements
documented in your portfolio will strengthen your confidence in quilting and make you
more excited to progress in the future.
Keeping a portfolio is vital if you plan to quilt professionally. Your quilting portfolio will
serve as a reference tool for yourself as well as for your customers. You can use past
projects to show your clients how you can make ideas come to life through your
quilting. Use the projects you are most proud of and that you feel best represent the
quality of your work to show to your customers. The more detailed your portfolio, even
of the projects you do not like, the better it will serve you when you take that step from
quilting as a hobby to quilting as a profession.
Note from Kathy:
Years ago, one of the quilt shops taught a class. Prior to the class, they asked me to
quilt the quilt that they were using to teach the class. I don’t know why I didn’t think
ahead, but who knew that every person that took the class would want me to quilt
their quilt exactly the same way when they finished it. Do you think I could remember
exactly what I’d quilted on it? Not! I started taking a digital picture of every quilt that I
quilted. EVERY ONE. (It’s bound to happen that the one you’ll want to look at is the one
that you were in too much of a hurry to take the picture.) And then I learned that a
picture wasn’t enough detail for me. I could look at those pictures but when someone
finished that quilt two years later, but could I remember what color of thread I used?
What I charged the person? So, I started keeping a quilting journal besides. Each year,
I write down the year and then as I finish each quilt, I jot down just a little information
about the quilt. I put the date, the person’s name (my name if it’s my quilt), the name
of the quilt (both what the person called it and the name of the pattern if I know it),