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Nancy Crow
Nancy has been teaching quiltmaking as an art form for over 30 years; she finds teaching both a very creative experience and uplifting. One of her goals is to help students find a path through roadblocks to a more flexible way of approaching composition. Composition is the focus of all of her workshops in which she proceeds sequentially from beginning to very advanced composition while at the same time introducing many wonderful techniques which can be used in machine-piecing. Nancy promotes machine-piecing as one of the most important ways to work for a quiltmaker, paralleling it to oil painting. Nancy was selected for two national honors: Fellow of the American Craft Council and National Living Treasure by the Museum of World Cultures at the University of North Carolina. The National Living Treasure award honors Americans who work in traditional handicrafts. In addition, she has won many Individual Artist's Fellowships from The Ohio Arts Council. She leads art tours to Peru, Mexico, South Africa, France, and Guatemala, and is the author of seven books, including: Self-Portraits: Mono-Prints, Nancy Crow, Nancy Crow: Improvisational Quilts and Nancy Crow: Quilts and Influences.Nancy’s 2-week classes:
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• October 4-9 & October 11-16, 2026 | The NEW Creative Stretches in Compositional Exercises
Open or CloseThe NEW Creative Stretches in Compositional Exercises
• Level: Advanced
• Sewing machine: Yes
• Materials fee: No
• SORRY, class is full To be placed on waiting list, please send in registration & deposit. If space does not become available, a full refund of the deposit will be issued.
Tuition & Meal plan for 2-week class with Nancy:
• $3200 | paid in full before April 1, 2026 | 10-day Tuition ($2500) & Meal plan ($700)
• $3250 | paid in full before June 1, 2026 | 10-day Tuition ($2550) & Meal plan ($700)
DESCRIPTION
• The FOCUS of this class will be on creating strong compositions.
• The FOCUS of this class will push one’s imagination into being more playful and flexible.
• The FOCUS of this class will encourage working intuitively and improvisationally.
• This class is meant to be challenging! It has been developed specifically for students desirous of being far more experimental on an advanced level using machine-piecing techniques.The method of working will be a journey about discovery and will require an attitude of risk-taking and total concentration! The design exercises will stimulate thinking and hopefully help to develop more individual work.
• All participants are expected to gather ideas for creating fresher, more viable compositions! Students will be encouraged to work spontaneously and intuitively with the outcome of their homework preparations which are outlined next.
• HOMEWORK PREPARATION in black & white before coming to class:
Participants must collect together ideas as starting points. Look for photos or take photos in black and white of trees, tree branches, buildings, buildings under construction, magazine pages, art book pages, copies of works by ethnic artists, outsider artists, any artists. File ideas into categories such as: VERTICALS, HORIZONTALS, PATTERNS, REPEAT PATTERNS, GEOMETRIC SHAPES, COLORS, DOORWAYS, ARCHITECTURE, CIRCLES, CURVES, LINES, ETC.
• Next - only in BLACK & WHITE - make “blow-ups” of collected images/structures or parts of images/structures. Double the size or make even larger. Make a variety of sizes/scales. These images must show some sort of structure or geometric element(s) and these images must be usable as starting points for ideas and usable as combined with other images you have blown-up. Bring these - BLACK & WHITE IDEAS - to class. Directions will be given on how to use them once pinned to the wall after cutting and rearranging to find new ideas. Bring many duplicates in many sizes of those you like best as there will be no place to make copies in the barn. To make copies you will have to go to Lancaster or Pickerington.
• Design exercises will be introduced that will rely on the “STRUCTURES” found in the collected ideas/collages above. No matter the results, new compositional experiences will build confidence and better technical skills, and expand one’s ability to handle color and values.
• Be prepared to jog your thinking! Push away mental roadblocks! Step-out! STRETCH! EMBRACE POSSIBILITIES! Embrace NEW possibilities!
NOTE: Any advanced students may bring along fabric sketches done in solid black and solid white but not used before. These will be put through some of the same trials as will be used by black and white blow-ups done on paper earmarked in the homework above. On the other hand, do the homework as it may lead you to new ideas.
PRESENTATION
⁃ Optional but important: Each student should come prepared with a 3-6 actual quilts and be prepared to make a short (3-5 minutes maximum) but articulate presentation about their work including future goals. Digital presentation is also welcome if well-prepared and professional. The Crow Timber Frame Barn provides use of a digital projector connected to a laptop.
SUPPLIES
• Sewing machine/Bobbins
• Size 10 Microtex sewing machine needles
• Thread (Aurifil is best, size 40 or 50)
• Digital camera/Printer (Canon SELPHY printer recommended)/Paper
• Sharp scissors/Rulers
• Swing arm lamp or floor lamp
• 24” x 36” OLFA cutting mat (2 of these if driving)
• 8’ x 8’ Batting/Flannel (white) on which to pin work (optional)
• Several 40” x 60” batts
• Extra large rotary cutter and blades
• Clover ball-head pins - very fine (Clover #2507) and regular size (Clover #2501) - two boxes each
• Spray water bottle for ironing
• Iron/Iron cleaner (optional as Barn has irons)
• Your own ironing board if driving (optional as Barn has ironing boards)
• Short (5’ 1/2”) step ladder or step stool if driving (optional as Barn has step ladders)
• Multiple outlet power strip/Adaptors/Heavy duty extension cords
• Glue to adhere snapshots into sketchbook
• Sketchbook (hardcover)/Pens/Other supplies you want
• Roll of blue painters tape - 1” or 2” wide (not masking tape)
• Packing tape if shipping boxes (plus return labels)
Fabrics:
6-8 yards or more each of:
• SOLID BLACK and SOLID WHITE
1 yard or more each of:
• Reds, Pinks, Blues,Teals, Greens, Limes, Violets, Browns, Yellows, Golds, Oranges, Purples, Maroons, Turquoises, Rusts, etc.
• BRIGHTS: Acid yellow, acid lime, hot pink, turquoise, bright orange, bright red-orange, fuchsia pink, really bright blue
• GRAYS (wide range in light, medium light, medium, medium dark, dark)
• TANS (wide range in light, medium light, medium, medium dark, dark)
• OFF-WHITES (warm white, cold white, cream)
Note: The fabric shop at the Crow Timber Frame Barn will have a very large selection (hundreds) of solid colors in BRIGHTS, GLOWING, FLATS, RELATIVES, and GRAYS … and many medium darks and darks. We will use a lot of solid colors so bring a good range that includes darks, medium and light values of Browns, Blues, Greens, Reds, Golds, Yellows, Oranges, Purples, Violets, etc.
Note:
• Be sure to wash and shrink all fabrics before class if possible. New fabrics contain formaldehyde which needs to be removed. No need to iron though if you fold at end of drying cycle.
• We will use everything listed above so do not decide to leave anything out.
• DO NOT BRING FAT QUARTERS.
• Do not bring prints.
Note: Any color can be GLOWING or FLAT or RELATIVE but only a few colors can be BRIGHT:
• BRIGHTS are super saturated colors with such intensity that they literally stick out in a composition. They command attention. One can find BRIGHTS from light value to just above medium value.
• GLOWING tones are any colors mixed with yellow and which have a glow coming off the surface.
• FLAT tones are those colors mixed with black and which emit a dullness, energy draining very subdued nature.
• RELATIVE tones are those colors that seem GLOWING when next to FLAT tones … OR … RELATIVE tones can seem FLAT when next to GLOWING tones or next to BRIGHTS. RELATIVE tones are chameleons but serve an important part of great composition.
NOTES REGARDING FABRIC SUPPLY LIST
Yes, the rumor is true!!! Yes, I do ask that each student bring lots of fabrics. My personal theory embraces the belief that one will be freer to be creative if one has many fabric choices available in class. After 35+ years of teaching, I consider each class I teach to be on a graduate level and therefore I expect students to arrive prepared with all necessary supplies.
Optional Books:
• NANCY CROW | DRAWINGS: MONOPRINTS & RIFFS, 2020, University of Nebraska Press (catalog from Nancy’s exhibition at the International Quilt Museum) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• COLOR IMPROVISATIONS 2 & CIRCULAR ABSTRACTIONS: BULL’S EYES QUILTS, 2016, (books from two exhibitions curated by Nancy) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• CROSSROADS, 2007, Breckling Press (catalog from one of Nancy’s exhibitions) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• NANCY CROW, 2006, Breckling Press (book covering Nancy's work from 1989-2005) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• NANCY CROW, MONO-PRINTS: SELF-PORTRAITS: FOCUS, 2012 - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
Unfortunately, the following titles are out of print, but your local library may have them or order on Amazon.com.
• GRADATIONS: FROM THE STUDIO OF NANCY CROW, Quilt House Publishing
• NANCY CROW: WORK IN TRANSITION, American Quilters’ Society
• NANCY CROW: QUILTS AND INFLUENCES, American Quilters’ Society
• NANCY CROW: IMPROVISATIONAL QUILTS, C&T Publishing -
• October 18-23 & October 25-30, 2026 | Improvisational Exercises: Parts I & II
Open or CloseImprovisational Exercises: Parts I & II
• Level: Intermediate to advanced
• Prerequisite: Free-hand cutting skills/good machine-sewing skills
• Sewing machine: Yes
• Materials fee: No
• SORRY, class is full To be placed on waiting list, please send in registration & deposit. If space does not become available, a full refund of the deposit will be issued.
Tuition & Meal plan for 2-week class with Nancy:
• $3200 | paid in full before April 1, 2026 | 10-day Tuition ($2500) & Meal plan ($700)
• $3250 | paid in full before June 1, 2026 | 10-day Tuition ($2550) & Meal plan ($700)
DESCRIPTION
This 10-day class has been specifically developed for students desirous of focusing on:
• a more in-depth understanding of composition
• a more in-depth understanding of color & values and how to use them
• a more in-depth understanding of how to construct compositions as a machine piecer.
In addition, students will be required to step outside their comfort zone and be far more experimental as they work through design exercises developed to promote the creation of ideas using geometric ELEMENTS.
Students will be expected to work spontaneously and intuitively with nontraditional quilt-making techniques as they explore design exercises that promote improvisational approaches to composition without benefit of “pre-planning” and “intellectualizing.”
Design exercises will be used as a basis for flexing muscle memory in developing a more fluid approach to cutting improvisationally all sorts of SHAPES and LINES. Emphasis will be placed on forming NEW GROUPINGS that could be used as SUBJECT MATTER of a figure/ground composition. Students will learn construction and engineering techniques.
Color, and the values of color, from light to dark, will be emphasized in all exercises so a great selection of fabrics must be brought to this workshop. Students will be working in SOLID COLORS the entire 10-days so there is no need to bring any printed or marbled fabrics, only solids whether commercial or hand-dyed.
If students want to learn to work more effectively, more efficiently from “instincts” and “intuition” they must come with an open mind and no agendas, ready for growth and for risk-taking!
PRESENTATION
⁃ Optional but important: Each student should come prepared with a 3-6 actual quilts and be prepared to make a short (3-5 minutes maximum) but articulate presentation about their work including future goals. Digital presentation is also welcome if well-prepared and professional. The Crow Timber Frame Barn provides use of a digital projector connected to a laptop.
SUPPLIES
• Sewing machine/Bobbins
• Size 10 Microtex sewing machine needles
• Thread (Aurifil is best, size 40 or 50)
• Digital camera/Printer (Canon SELPHY printer recommended)/Paper
• Sharp scissors/Rulers
• Swing arm lamp or floor lamp
• 24” x 36” OLFA cutting mat (2 of these if driving)
• 8’ x 8’ Batting/Flannel (white) on which to pin work (optional)
• Several 40” x 60” batts
• Extra large rotary cutter and blades
• Clover ball-head pins - very fine (Clover #2507) and regular size (Clover #2501) - two boxes each
• Spray water bottle for ironing
• Iron/Iron cleaner (optional as Barn has irons)
• Your own ironing board if driving (optional as Barn has ironing boards)
• Short (5’ 1/2”) step ladder or step stool if driving (optional as Barn has step ladders)
• Multiple outlet power strip/Adaptors/Heavy duty extension cords
• Glue to adhere snapshots into sketchbook
• Sketchbook (hardcover)/Pens/Other supplies you want
• Roll of blue painters tape - 1” or 2” wide (not masking tape)
• Packing tape if shipping boxes (plus return labels)
Fabrics:
8 yards or more each of:
• SOLID BLACK and SOLID WHITE
3 yards or more of:
• GRAYS in 5 value as follows: light, medium light, medium, medium dark, dark
1 yard or more each of:
• Reds, Pinks, Blues,Teals, Greens, Limes, Violets, Browns, Yellows, Golds, Oranges, Purples, Maroons, Turquoises, Rusts, etc. (wide range in light, medium light, medium, medium dark, dark)
• BRIGHTS: Acid yellow, acid lime, hot pink, turquoise, bright orange, bright red-orange, fuchsia pink, really bright blue
• TANS & OFF-WHITES (warm white, cold white, cream)
Note:
• Be sure to wash and shrink all fabrics before class if possible. New fabrics contain formaldehyde which needs to be removed. No need to iron though if you fold at end of drying cycle.
• We will use everything listed above so do not decide to leave anything out.
• DO NOT BRING FAT QUARTERS.
• Bring not bring prints.
Note: The fabric shop at the Crow Timber Frame Barn will have a very large selection (hundreds) of solid colors in BRIGHTS, GLOWING, FLATS, RELATIVES, and GRAYS … and many medium darks and darks. We will use a lot of solid colors so bring a good range that includes darks, medium and light values of Browns, Blues, Greens, Reds, Golds, Yellows, Oranges, Purples, Violets, etc.
Note: Any color can be GLOWING or FLAT or RELATIVE but only a few colors can be BRIGHT:
• BRIGHTS are super saturated colors with such intensity that they literally stick out in a composition. They command attention. One can find BRIGHTS from light value to just above medium value.
• GLOWING tones are any colors mixed with yellow and which have a glow coming off the surface.
• FLAT tones are those colors mixed with black and which emit a dullness, energy draining very subdued nature.
• RELATIVE tones are those colors that seem GLOWING when next to FLAT tones … OR … RELATIVE tones can seem FLAT when next to GLOWING tones or next to BRIGHTS. RELATIVE tones are chameleons but serve an important part of great composition.
NOTES REGARDING FABRIC SUPPLY LIST
Yes, the rumor is true!!! Yes, I do ask that each student bring lots of fabrics. My personal theory embraces the belief that one will be freer to be creative if one has many fabric choices available in class. After 35+ years of teaching, I consider each class I teach to be on a graduate level and therefore I expect students to arrive prepared with all necessary supplies.
In that regard, I have outlined those fabrics we will use in this class. For some students, my fabric supply list will seem overwhelming in quantity and variety, while for other students, the selection they bring will never be good enough.
About solid colors: the more shades you have to work with, the more you will learn about how to work with color. Color is Joyous!!! Color does not cause pain!!! Take DELIGHT in color!!!
Optional Books:
• NANCY CROW | DRAWINGS: MONOPRINTS & RIFFS, 2020, University of Nebraska Press (catalog from Nancy’s exhibition at the International Quilt Museum) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• COLOR IMPROVISATIONS 2 & CIRCULAR ABSTRACTIONS: BULL’S EYES QUILTS, 2016, (books from two exhibitions curated by Nancy) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• CROSSROADS, 2007, Breckling Press (catalog from one of Nancy’s exhibitions) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• NANCY CROW, 2006, Breckling Press (book covering Nancy's work from 1989-2005) - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
• NANCY CROW, MONO-PRINTS: SELF-PORTRAITS: FOCUS, 2012 - signed/dated editions available at the Crow Timber Frame Barn
Unfortunately, the following titles are out of print, but your local library may have them or order on Amazon.com.
• GRADATIONS: FROM THE STUDIO OF NANCY CROW, Quilt House Publishing
• NANCY CROW: WORK IN TRANSITION, American Quilters’ Society
• NANCY CROW: QUILTS AND INFLUENCES, American Quilters’ Society
• NANCY CROW: IMPROVISATIONAL QUILTS, C&T Publishing