With
a passion for creativity, Carol Bruce refuses to be limited to one medium.
April usually finds her searching the desert for "that perfect wildflower"
to photograph. Then, the next week she may be using the resulting image
as the basis of an oil painting or original quilt.
According to Carol, "When I'm quilting, I feel guilty that I'm enjoying
it so much and think that I should be working to finish a painting or out
taking pictures-but when I'm painting, I feel the same way about photography
or quilting."
When people see her work, she is frequently asked why she doesn't open a
wall mural business or photography studio. Part of the answer: To do either
would be to impose limits, both creatively and with her time. By not opening
either as a business she is able to concentrate her time on projects of
her own choosing.
So then, why Needlesongs?
"I see quilts as meaningful, personal statements of art that most people
relate to-and are not afraid of as 'art'." Says Carol. " This
soft, cuddly art form has a greater impact than photography or wall murals
on most people. Nearly everyone has a story about a favorite quilt handed
down through his or her family."
Since the first pattern she drafted in 1981, other quilters have been asking
for her designs. In the past couple of years, every time she's brought a
design to the local circle's block exchange, someone always asks when the
pattern will be published
After thinking
about it for several years and deciding that it was possible, that a pattern
business actually has a lot of flexibility to work around other pursuits,
plus potential to expand, Carol finally said, "Let's do it!"
She actually began the business while working 40 hours a week backstage
with the Siegfried & Roy show. Then, after the unexpected show closing
in October 2003, she began working on the patterns full time.
Carol has
a BA in English and photography from Northern Michigan University. Her
writing and photography have been published in magazines and calendars,
and she has taught a number of classes and workshops over the years.
Her sewing
began as a child when she begged her mother for a lesson on her Kenmore.
Luckily, Eula Mae had the wisdom to give her just enough instruction and
the freedom-and lots of feed sacks to whip up into all the doll clothes,
Halloween costumes and quilt blocks that she desired. (Yes, she still
has some of the feed sacks!)
Carol married
Olen Bruce in Oklahoma, and the couple moved around the country several
times with the Air Force. They have one daughter, Cassandra, and two grandchildren,
Nicholas and Harmony.
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