4.20.11
April 20th, 2011 by Abbey
We are an official drop off site for this amazing cause that is helping disaster victims in Japan.
“We want to collect thousands of quilts from all over the country to comfort and warm the grieving victims of the multiple disasters in Japan—and we’d like to make it personal.
Please make a quilt that we can send to Japan—or donate an existing one.
If you’d like, you can safety-pin an envelope to your quilt and enclose a picture of yourself and/or a message for the recipient—anything to let survivors know that you care and that, “This is from me. I made it for you.” We will translate your letter into Japanese!
With every quilt, Quilts4Japan is attaching a message of its own in an envelope with our logo. Our message explains what quilts represent. We send the letter in Japanese, but you can see both versions at this link.
Quilts4Japan is dedicated to meeting the needs of Japanese survivors for many months. We have no deadlines for receiving quilts. Your quilt will go with our next shipment. Even if you can’t send a quilt, please consider making a monetary donation to cover shipping costs.
We are sending all quilts to Patchwork Tsushin, a quilting magazine in Tokyo. The wonderful people there are committed to delivering quilts to survivors on an ongoing basis and have already begun to do so. With each hand delivery, they explain to recipients that a quilt is a gift of love, a symbol of caring that comes straight from the heart. Our correspondence with Patchwork Tsushin has convinced us that we have found the best possible people to deliver quilts to recipients, as the Patchwork Tsushin people share our mission. We’re proud to partner with them.
People have already made wonderful donations to Quilts4Japan! You can see photos on our Flickr page! You can also read Dorothy Brown’s wonderful photoessay about Quilts4Japan on Albany Patch. The story is in the captions under the eight photos.
Just a note: Please try to avoid black-and-white stripes (which the Japanese associate with funerals), as well as red-and-white stripes (which the Japanese associate with celebrations). You’ll see examples of funerary stripes at the link.”
-excerpt from Quilts4Japan.org homepage
Visit their Facebook page to follow all of the kind hearts and donators out there!
Posted in Uncategorized |














