Susan Cane has turned quilting into a profession

NORTH CANAAN — Ever since her mother taught her to sew at the age of 7, Susan Cane has found pleasure and creative satisfaction in it. And now, decades and a career in graphic design later, she is finally devoting herself full-time to quilting.

Working out of a bedroom in the Clayton Road home she shares with her husband, Tom, and their energetic black lab/terrier mix Buster, Cane produces an astonishing variety of quilted pieces.

Five years after her first Canaan Railroad Days arts and crafts show, which she remembers as a disaster, she is being noticed on the national stage; Cane is a semi-finalist in the upcoming 2010 American Quilter Society’s Quilt Show and Contest.  At the Canaan show she remembers sitting in 95 degree heat, “No one came near me. They didn’t want to look at quilts in that heat, or pay what they are worth.â€

That soon changed, the following year, an intrepid Cane brought an assortment of small quilted items; coin purses, eyeglass cases and the like, which customers still can’t get enough of. They invent all sorts of new uses, such as unique holders for cell phones, gift cards and digital cameras. And recently, Cane was accepted into the stable of artists at Lady Audrey’s Gallery in West Cornwall. A wall quilt took honorable mention in the winter show. But, it is her spectacularly unique quilted and embellished purses - “I bead the heck out of everything†- that are currently on display.

When not at home sewing, Cane and her mom, Torrington resident Rose Alfano, love to travel to quilt shows.

“It’s amazing to go and see what creative things people have come up with. And the prize money is phenomenal. Of course, that means its very difficult to be accepted. One of the great things about the shows are that people appreciate the time and effort and skill that goes into quilting. They are willing to pay what they are worth.â€

Cane will head for Pennsylvania, and the Lancaster County Convention Center March 24-27. Her quilt, “Garden Girl,†will be up against 200 others from 38 states and seven countries. Best in Show has a $10,000 prize.

“Garden Girl†started as a challenge kit. But the kit was not what one might think. It was simply an assortment of fabrics that would be the basis for a quilt with the theme, “welcome spring.â€

At this level of competition, one has to really step it up. Cane got busy not just quilting the mostly flower print material, but cutting out the flowers and appliquéing them into her own design.

Quilters can add two fabrics of their choice. Cane made a self-portrait of sorts. She added flesh-colored fabric and one in an auburn hair color so she could quilt herself watering the flowers she loves to grow, while wearing a delicate string of pearls to incorporate her signature beading.

“It’s me in the spring,†she said. “I didn’t have to look hard for inspiration.â€

She is an innovator. Among her latest creative forays are picture quilts. Pinned to a padded, studio wall, is the image of a golden retriever, emerging from 2007 half-inch fabric squares. It can be compared to pixels that make up digital photo images.

“I’ve seen this technique, but with much larger squares. As far as I know, I’m the only one who has taken it this small.â€

She pulls out a tiny clump of fabric; a quilt of even tinier squares.

“I’m experimenting with going as small as possible. The problem is all the stitching starts to clump together,†she said, fingering the piece, and wearing an expression that says her creative wheels are still turning on it.

Amidst all the other ideas and projects, Cane has created benefit quilts for St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital, Ronald McDonald House, the Victory Junction Gang Camp, The Sunshine Camp, and, with her mom, the Berkshire County AIDS Coalition and Quilts of Valor.

When her mother-in-law passed away, she made memory quilts for husband and each of his siblings, using not only old photos printed on fabric pieces, but actual material from her mother-in-law’s clothing.

Cane may be contacted through her Web site thecreativestitch.com.

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