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We are growing and changing! Your enthusiasm for our products has been incredible, but it has created challenges for us. To better serve all of our customers, we will become a wholesale-only supplier as of January 1, 2008. Click here for more information. |
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![]() Adopt-A-Machine How You Can Help My First Amani Adventure The Stitchin' Sisters 2007 Trip
Adopt-A-Machine – Help others help themselvesOne of the most important things that we can do is to reach out and support those who are less fortunate. Whether the effort is large or small, it's important to find a way to help that engages your heart and soul. To this end, Cedar Canyon Textiles is proud to sponsor the Adopt-A-Machine program for the women at Amani Ya Juu, a sewing and marketing project in Nairobi, Kenya. The Amani project serves women who have been marginalized by the circumstances in their lives. Many are refugees from other countries in Africa. All have a strong desire to learn marketable skills, support their families, and find some semblance of stability in spite of the challenges they face on a daily basis. For more information about the Amani project, visit www.amaniafrica.org. For women in a sewing project, a sewing machine is a precious commodity. It is a huge investment for these women – and a major expense for the project as well. The purpose of the Adopt-A-Machine program is to raise funds to purchase sewing machines for the Amani project. In the past, volunteers have taken machines purchased (or donated) in the US when they traveled to Amani. Unfortunately, parts and/or service are not readily available for these machines, or they don't hold up to the rigors of a production environment. To resolve these issues, we decided to start the Adopt-A-Machine project and use the funds to purchase machines in Nairobi or to fund specific requests for special purchases such as a long-arm quilting machine. Matching fundsIn 2007, Cedar Canyon Textiles is providing matching funds for the Adopt-A-Machine program. Matching funds of up to $500 are available to groups or individuals who make a donation to the project, up to a total of $5000. To take part in the matching funds program, use the donation form which can be downloaded here. How you can helpYou can make a tax-deductible contribution to the Adopt-a-Machine program or the Stitchin' Sisters 2007 travel team, or you can donate supplies for use at Amani. Click here to download the contribution form. Click here to download the supply list. Watch this spot; we'll be updating the supply list as we receive donations. Please check back closer to November to see the most recent list of needs. My first Amani adventure
I love to teach, and I love to travel, but never in my wildest dreams did I expect to be teaching a paintstik class in Africa! But, when a quilter calls, you never know what adventures will follow... In April of 2005, I got a call from Rosemary Wissink of Fall Creek, Wisconsin. She had just come home from a trip to Nairobi and informed me that I "must join her" on her next trip. Travel to Africa nowhere near the top of my list of things to do, but the more I talked with Rosemary, the more I was convinced that I had to make the trip. In March of 2006, I joined Rosemary's team of four quilters on a trip to Nairobi, Kenya. We spent much of our time working with the women at Amani ya Juu, a training project in sewing and marketing for African women who have been affected by wars and ethnic conflicts. Rosemary and I worked with the "tie and dye" ladies, teaching them to use the Shiva Paintstik colors to embellish fabric. Ce Stow and Arlene Franz worked with several stitchers, teaching them how to construct different styles of tote bags.
Amani ya Juu, which means "higher peace" in Kiswahili, gives the women working there an opportunity to improve their skills and to support their families. The program also strives to sow seeds of peace in the hearts of these women through spiritual support, medical services and counseling. The Amani program is truly an oasis in the midst of the chaos that is so typical in Africa. To learn more about Amani ya Juu, visit www.amaniafrica.org. After much thought, prayer and juggling of plans and life events, Rosemary and I are returning to Kenya at the end of 2007. June Vogeltance (Nebraska) and Bonnie Bosma (Minnesota) will join us on this trip. Read the section below for more information about our trip. Please feel free to download and distribute this article to anyone who may be interested in supporting our trip. The 2007 Stitchin' Sisters tripThe 2007 travel team is actively making plans for a trip to Kenya at the end of November. We wrote the following article to publicize our trip. We sincerely appreciate any support that you can provide in terms of funds or supplies. Use the links above under How You Can Help to make donations.
Download a printable copy of the following article here. How Long Are Your Arms?While most of us are content to belong to our local or regional guilds, four Midwestern quilters are finding a way to reach around the world to share sewing, quilting and business skills with refugee women at the Amani Ya Juu program in Nairobi, Kenya. The Stitchin' Sisters connection
The travel team has a wide range of experience that will serve them well as they work at Amani at the end of this year. Team "mom" Rosemary Wissink, owner of Stitchin' Sisters, has been designing quilting patterns since 2000. Shelly Stokes, owner of Cedar Canyon Textiles, has a background in fabric dyeing and surface design. June Vogltance is a quilt designer and the owner of VOGIES Quilts and Treasures. Bonnie Bosma, owner of Quilting Magic, is an accomplished long-arm quilter, bringing much needed expertise in that area. About Amani Ya JuuAmani Ya Juu is a sewing and marketing training project for marginalized women in Kenya. Many of these women are refugees from other parts of Africa and have endured war, ethnic conflict, abuse, neglect, poverty, and challenges beyond our comprehension. The name Amani Ya Juu is from the Kiswahili language and means “higher peace.” The women are taught sewing, marketing and survival skills, and also learn about the peace that transcends all cultural and ethnic differences through God’s love and reconciliation. At the Amani center, women experience nourishment not only for the body but also the soul, along with the healing of shattered lives. They find value within themselves through the love, acceptance and care of their sisters. These women, in turn, reach out to their African sisters, spreading the peace by helping them establish sister missions in Rwanda, Burundi and other parts of Kenya. To learn more about the Amani project, visit www.amaniafrica.org.
With a specific machine in mind, they decided to start an Adopt-a-Machine program, asking groups and individuals to donate funds that will be pooled to purchase machines in Nairobi. Buying machines in Nairobi supports the local economy and makes it much easier to purchase parts for the machines. It also allows the team to take other supplies in their luggage to be donated to the Amani project. Getting ready to goThe team is working on several fronts before this trip. They are raising funds to defray the cost of the trip and for the Adopt-a-Machine program, including a Nolting long-arm machine that will work with a frame donated by Hinterburg Designs. They are also collecting donations of specific sewing and quilting products that are easily transportable.
To prepare for their teaching role, the team met for a weekend in May to review ideas for wall
hangings, postcards, tote bags and machine quilting designs. They also considered embellishment ideas for
some of the items that are already in production at Amani. The team will refine the ideas for these
projects before traveling to Nairobi in mid-November. Upon arrival at Amani Ya Juu, team members will
be assigned to work with specific women, developing the techniques for each of the proposed products.
These women, in turn, will be responsible for integrating the products (or variations of them) into the
Amani lines by refining the products and then training women from the production teams. How you can helpYou can make a tax-deductible contribution to the Adopt-a-Machine program or the Stitchin' Sisters 2007 travel team, or you can donate supplies for use at Amani. Visit www.cedarcanyontextiles.com or www.vogies.com and look for the links to "Support Amani Ya Juu." These sites will have more information about the trip to Amani, links to the donation site, and a specific list of supplies that are needed for this trip. You may also send a check payable to the Amani Foundation, PO Box 28133, Chattanooga, TN 37424. Please designate your gift to the Stitchin' Sisters 2007 team or the Adopt-a-Machine program. Reaping the rewardsWhile the teaching and fundraising activities are important, the real rewards are the personal connections made between the team members and the women at Amani Ya Juu. The women are truly amazed that people from around the world care enough to send supplies, support the Amani mission, and take the time away from their families and businesses to travel to Nairobi to work with them. It is this human connection, woman to woman, that leaves a profound mark on anyone who makes this type of trip. It is a privilege to be welcomed into their world, to share their frustrations and their joy. Rosemary, Shelly, Bonnie and June hope that you will extend your arms to support our work with Amani Ya Juu. They appreciate your financial gifts, thoughts and prayers as they prepare for their Nairobi trip at the end of 2007. |
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I made my first trip to Kenya in March of 2006, and knew that it would not be my last. Our trip was filled
with work at the Amani project, some sight-seeing around Nairobi, and an unforgettable safari weekend
in the mara of Southwestern Kenya.
On each visit, Rosemary's team takes ideas that can be integrated into the Amani product lines. While
the purpose of the trip is to teach new skills, I found that we were the ones getting the education!
During our visit, we formed an incredible bond with these women in Kenya, who face the struggles of
daily living with courage, grace, and spiritual strength. We are now a part of the Amani family, and
our sisters will always be with us.
Rosemary Wissink, of Fall Creek, Wisconsin, began working with the women at Amani Ya Juu in 2001 when her
daughter was teaching at an international academy in Nairobi. At the end of 2007, she is making her fifth
trip to Nairobi. Her 2007 travel team includes Shelly Stokes of Miltona, MN, June Vogltance of Dodge, NE,
and Bonnie Bosma of Rochester, MN. This will be Shelly’s second trip to Nairobi, while June and Bonnie are
joining the team for their first Amani adventure.
On past trips, Rosemary and her teams transported a number of sewing machines with them when they
traveled to Nairobi. They chose Janome Gem machines because they were easily transported in the team's
luggage. On the last trip, it became clear that the small machines were not heavy enough to use in a
production facility. Shelly and Rosemary ventured into downtown Nairobi to visit the local sewing machine
dealers and found a machine that is heavier than a typical domestic machine but not as intimidating as
industrial machines.




