Prize-winning quilter not resting on her laurels

NORTH CANAAN — A golden retriever named Jake, immortalized in a “photo†quilt made of tiny fabric squares, is taking local quilter Susan Cane to new heights.

She will travel to southern California next week and to Pennsylvania in March to premier quilt shows where the quilt of Jake has been accepted as a semi-finalist. Cane is one of a small percentage of entries that made it into each.

Nearly a year ago, the former graphic designer spoke with The Journal about how her dream of quilting for a living had finally come true.

Her Creative Stitch studio is in a tiny bedroom of her Clayton Road home. But big things are coming out of it.

Back then, Jake’s image was taking shape out of 7,200 1-inch squares, much as a digital photo is constructed of pixels. It was Cane’s own innovation, the basis of the idea inspired by quilters using much larger squares.

Jake, by the way, belongs to Cane’s brother, Patrick Mallory, a Norfolk resident. The nearly 12-year-old dog lost a leg to cancer, but continues to be a sweet and loveable family member.

Cane wet her feet in the international arena with a quilt displayed last year in the American Quilters’ Society show at the Lancaster County Convention Center. She goes back again in March with “Jake,†which now bears a yellow, third-place ribbon from the Vermont Quilt Show held last June.

The big question now is can “Jake†take away the $10,000 top prize in Pennsylvania?

She expects to get some idea of how she’ll do when she goes to the privately run Road to California Quilter’s Conference and Showcase, held just outside Los Angeles beginning Jan. 20.

Cane’s mom, Rose Alfano  of Torrington, who taught her daughter to sew as soon as her feet could reach the machine pedal, will travel with her to both shows.

As any creative person will suspect, Cane is busy working on the next thing already, and has lots of ongoing projects. She is a member of the Lady Audrey’s Gallery stable of artists  (the gallery recently relocated from Cornwall to Millerton), where she regularly exhibits and sells work, including her signature beaded purses.

Her next big competition project will most likely be a photo quilt — of a butterfly on a cone flower, taken by her husband, Tom – made with 12,000 tiny squares.

For more on Cane go to thecreativestitch.com.

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