Everyone knows how the Amish have their barn raisings--where everyone gets together and contributes to the construction of one barn. Well at AUUF we have the quilt raising. Now Shannon asked for some insights into the years that have gone into the quilt shows and the best I can do is talk about these raisings. And just like a barn raising, a quilt raising is quite a production. There's all sorts of work that goes on before hand--the talking to the quilters, arranging the meetings, the picking up of the quilts, and then there's the production that goes on to putting them up on the walls--the choosing of the date, the arranging of the volunteers--those who will look at the quilts, who decides which quilt goes where, the pinning of the strips on the back of the quilts, putting the supports to hang the quilts (bamboo in "old" days and lathing now) and then the climb upward. There are some stories of having the two "hangers" up on the ladders, on either side of the quilt listening to "a little higher, a little lower, a little to the left, a little to the right" to the point where it was just time to come down and go to the next one! But perhaps one of the nicest parts of the raisings was the lunch afterwards. "Back in the day" when our teens were in the single digits we also had a lunch, where Amy and Kitty and Laura and others I'm sure I'm forgetting would bring homemade soup (potato and tomato basil are two that come to mind), homemade bread, and drinks and desserts and we'd set up some long tables and just enjoy the fruits of our labor. The smell of the food with the sights of the quilts, with the sounds of the families and friends, all came together as part of the quilt raising. And as we fast forward, what has been exciting over the last few "raisings" is how Shannon, Keegan and Doug have used "modern" technology to bring the quilters' "traditional" craft, of the women--who they are, what they were thinking when they made a quilt, how they learned to quilt--to us via their photographs, emails and now blogs--a true combining of the old and the new.