Sunday, February 10, 2013

Carnival Charlotte has come and gone!

María del Carmen, Carmen, Aída, Diana, Alejandra, Mónica, Ana: thank you for your time, your dedication and creativity, which helped  to make last night's event unique and successful.

Some of the heads are gone, and have found new homes... many are still with us; any thoughts what we could do with them in the near future? they are useful conversation pieces in an office or home. They could spark new ideas and open their mind to larger visions. Any ideas? Let me know.

To conclude this blog I am posting pictures of all center pieces we created...

My Harlequin, a wall hanging created originally for Carnival 2008

Still available to decorate a Valentine's basket!


Her new home will be Connecticut




LAWA thanks Howard Johnson for supporting our programs






Thank you Adela, Fátima is i good hands with you!






Thanks Diana, for all you do for LAWA!

Ana, I hope this piece reminds you of Carnival Charlotte! Thanks!

Cathy, a great decoration for your home bar! ¡Gracias!




LAWA recognizes Carmen Hilton's two decades of volunteer work! 



Thanks Mimi for taking Viviana home


Ana, this is my most loved creation;
I am happy she will be in your home now.



LAWA's signature image for Carnival 2014

The captions refer to those persons, who so graciously gave to LAWA by buying raffle tickets and otherwise acquiring our creations!

Thanks for reading my blog, feel free to get in touch with me by looking me up on facebook!
Yours, Anneliese Horst  


Friday, February 8, 2013

Carnival Charlotte 2013 is  tomorrow!

Our heads will be transported to the Hilton Hotel tomorrow. Thanks Diana for lending a hand and carrying the boxes to the Ball Room. 
You will have an opportunity to win one of four heads that will be raffled. Take a peak at them:

Bacchus

Fátima

Ipanema

Olé



































For a $5.- ticket you may win one of these beautiful creations. 

But, that's not all; the other 30 heads are available with a minimum donation of $25.-
Follow Mimi Zelman's example, who already reserved one centerpiece to take home tomorrow! 

Viviana

 
Don't miss my next post with more news, pictures and stories...

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Each tie is some gentleman's memory...


Each tie is some gentleman’s memory…

    Today I will let another voice tell a story. Ila B. Martin is a 88 year old friend of mine. She is a quilter and has specialized in making patchwork with men's ties. 
Ila has graciously donated a tie wall hanging for Carnival Charlotte's Silent Auction. Here is her story told in her own words:
      All ties are not created equal and each tie has a voice of its own. They say to me as I am “the tie watcher”. This is a collection that started in the 1950s right up to last week when I had the Pink Donald Trump tie in my hand that got away just because of a look from his wife.

      When watching old black and white movies such as Marty or some gangster or pressmen, their ties were short and wide, the extreme was a skinny string tie. Fabrics change over the years, silk, wool, rayon, polyester, and blends. For a long time, ties have been 31/2” to 4” front bottom wide, have been longer and extra long, many ties come from other countries…

      Please remember all men “get hot under the collar”; depending on the tie there are 5 to 8 layers in each of them because of the fabric, price, and  according to the designer’s style."
Ila at her work table
     1. With each tie comes a memory, a statement like who gave it to me? I wore this one to … or when… my wife picked it out my tie, I needed a tie… got it in a subway shop. When in San Francisco we rode the cable car… I am a broker of Soybeans and Cotton in Memphis. Executives, men on TV almost like a uniform wore stripes. Think of Jay Leno who must have a new one every night: antique car, fraternity tie, what tie goes best with this suit or the wild ones as a conversation piece; the woolen one came from the north, summer ties with a seersucker suite, solid black for pall bearers or formal wear…
Ila cutting a tie to fit into the new design
 "   2. When you find the three ties with birds I like to recall the story from a wife, whose husband and son hunted birds together. The one that won the most birds bought a tie for the other.
" 3.  The strips between the ties are from my husband’s tailored suits. I never bought a tie; ALL ties have been given to me. The ties across the top were the latest sent to me by relatives from Ohio. They tell a story: on the left is the skinny tie, on the right is a clip-on, do feel the wool from north, the opened ones have been dry cleaned; the crease did not come out.        

      4.   Tie tails tell a unique story…as you lift up some tails the price is still on, they reveal fabric content, sometimes a dry-cleaner's tag. Knowing where they came from has been fun for me. Like the wild flower on the left hand site belonged to a judge, the red, white and blue was from the owner of a car dealership, another from a rancher, politician, lots of sales men, golfers, my husband’s friends. Ask any man who is wearing a tie, he will tell you, because they are sentimental at times, just needed to up-date this suit for a sales meeting, dots are in, my wife bought this one because she does not like what I pick out, wore this one to a wedding, this one was the last one my mother bought for me, this was a retirement gift, some of my ties are so old, but I can’t part with them.

 Close-up of the wall hanging
    And my latest story the One that got away…Pink Donald Trump (with gold tag), just like that big fish that gets away, this was just a look for the wife, you know that look you better not give it away! These days fewer men wear a tie, even men on TV. Guess that industry will be going away like lady’s white gloves…
"  5.     Tie Tales, Ties Made by Ila… is my signature trademark when I showed at the Gallery. My quilts and wall hangings were bought by interior decorators. They told me that wall hangings go best in stairwells, pillows, and laptop throws, are conversation or accent pieces.


     This is my story, and the story of this piece I am donating today to the Latin American Women’s Association."



                                                                              Charlotte, February 6th 2013
Tags, labels and her name

View of the wall hanging









You will agree, this is a unique piece based on a unique idea. 
  It is people like Ila Martin, who make  Charlotte a great place to live. Thanks Ila for your generosity!