I know several planners, doctors, engineers, and now quilters. And I have decided that quilters are the best people - even when you have not met them. Once you meet them, it only gets better. This blogpost is about three quilters. 1. GrammaBabs - Her name is Barbara and she lives in Massachusetts. We know each other through the M* quilting forum. Therefore it came as a surprise to me when she asked me the following: "is that little baby here yet??? Just wondering... can't wait to send something for HE or SHE...:))" GrammaBabs was asking about Harry and Sally's baby. When I told her that Leah was born on February 23, 2017, she sent me the loveliest little pink sweater. Leah is the new-born daughter of Harry (and Sally) who is the brother of my friend Manveen. I have met Harry only thrice. Have not met Leah yet. Of course GrammaBabs has not met anyone - not even me. So what prompted her to make something for Leah? A quilters heart!!! 2. Sylvia - Also met Sylvia on the M* quilting forum. We have met a few times. I try to meet with her whenever I travel to Pennsylvania. Sometimes our schedules do not match up. So when I saw her this time, it had been about six months. Sylvia had been dealing with some stuff, which meant little sewing and no fabric shopping. Come time for our rendezvous, she raided her stash to find the loudest, brightest, wildly happiest fat quarter. For me. Guess, my reputation precedes me. We devoured chips and guacamole, talked about politics and other taboo topics (yes those ones), and split a flan :-) 3. Mari - Mari is the quilter/blogger who blogs at Academic Quilter. She has supported and comforted me with her wise words. We think alike in several ways but then our fabric choices are markedly different. That works, because I'd hate to battle over a bolt with Mari. We agreed to meet at the AQS show in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Lots and lots of eye candy at the show. Mostly awe-inspiring. So many times we squinted our eyes - how did she do that? This quilt was my favorite. It was so festive and reminded me of bridal outfits from India. But that was before I saw this one. I saw the tear in her eye. Mari noticed the churn dash blocks in the background, even when they were faded. That is when I noticed the words on each of the scales. I got goosebumps. Respect, Generosity, Kindness, Service, Tolerance, Love, Compassion, Responsibility Just then another viewer was trying to read the words, but it was hard. The text was subtle and we were behind the rope. So, I took a picture on my phone and zoomed in. As I read aloud the words, on both scales (for the viewer's benefit), I felt hot tears roll down my cheeks. Anger, Incivility, Selfishness, Greed, Intolerance, Fear, Hate, Willfulness At that moment, we all knew. No more words were required. Mari hugged me. The viewer tried to comfort me - "Oh there are more of us than them." And I knew, in my heart, that we will be fine. Eventually. With such an amazing community of creators, who feel so deeply, think so freely and give so selflessly, how can we not? We ended the evening with a fabric shopping spree at Mook Fabric Store. Wish I had taken pictures in the store. But I was so bewildered by the bolts and the low prices. Remnants were $3.99 per yard. Oh, I bought more fabric than this, but let's save that for the next Sunday Stash. I came home to the April Honey Pot Bee and there it was - more inspiration, colors, fabric and pattern. Here is my interpretation of the Stripey Stripe Block. The Starry Sky Block required paper piecing. UGH!!! I printed out templates and followed the instructions. Mostly. And yes, there was waste - both paper and fabric waste. In just one weekend, I experienced enough joy, sadness, hope, excitement, inspiration, kindness and comfort to last me the entire month - a whole color wheel of emotions. I think that is April's goal accomplished. Do I have a quilty goal for April? May be I will finish a quilt or two. There are at least two scrap vortex quilts in the making. Linking with April OMG at Elm Street Quilts and all my favorite linky parties. As always, I'd love to hear about your emotional experiences.