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Packing The Light Fantastic
by Gail Carolyn Sirna
Originally Published Winter 2006
Okay, you've made the decision to enter the Exemplary this year, and
maybe you've even sent in your Entry Form. Now it's time to pack up
your beautiful, well loved embroidered pieces and ship them to Kansas
City. It's always a little traumatic to do this. Take it from
someone--a certified teacher working the circuit--who knows. I,
and my colleagues, mail our pieces several times a year--at least
once for every seminar for which we have a contract for the
following year, and often for exhibits and shows like the Exemplary.
It's a little like sending your child off to kindergarten. And it's
not easy, I know only too well. Just finding an appropriate box can
be a real challenge.
And there are rules. For the Exemplary they are published in the
Assembly Booklet, and also on line at the NAN website
(www.needleart.org -- click on Exemplary). There are only 10 of them
First of all, you can only enter your own work--in the judged part of
the exhibit anyway. You can certainly enter your grandmother's hand
embroidered tablecloth, but that goes in the Needlework on Loan
portion. Your entry must be embroidery--created with a needle with
an eye. It can't have been in one of our past shows. It has to be
of a reasonable size. It has to be finished. It has to be equipped
with some kind of hanging device or stand.
There are two more rules which give both entrants and committee the
fits. The first is glass. I personally know some judges--not NAN
certified--who disqualify anything with glass on the front,
Personally, I will do my best to give any piece with glass equal
consideration, but, in truth, it is harder to get a good look at the
stitching when it is behind glass. But the committee dislikes glass
because of shipping problems. In one infamous incident the glass on
a piece was broken in transit. The person unpacking did not know
this, and she reached in to remove the piece and cut herself quite
badly. Of course she bled, and the blood got on the stitching. It's
incidents like this that motivate committees to rule out glass on
shipped pieces. So if your best work is behind glass, enter it
anyway, and hand deliver it. If you don't live in Kansas City and
aren't coming to Assembly ship it to a friend and ask her to hand
deliver it.
Now the other bugaboo is packing peanuts! These are the curse of any
exhibit committee. Please do not use them; they are a mess. And I'm
sure you know that. You certainly must have received something
during the Christmas season that was padded with peanuts, and maybe
like me, you're still sweeping them up or finding them stuck behind a
cabinet. Or clinging to your silk pants. Just imagine the Exemplary
committee with its 40 or 50 boxes, all with peanuts. Instead, you
can make air pillows with zip loc bags: blow them up and seal them
and they become excellent, and tidy padding.
I think the problem is that some entrants take their pieces to a
packing store and leave the item to be packed and shipped to the
Exemplary. Then when you are not looking the packing store uses
peanuts, thinking you will never know. But then our committee opens
the box and sees peanuts ! ! ! Your box is closed up and returned
to you, and your lovely pieces remain unseen, unjudged and unloved.
So no peanuts!
The best system for wrapping your pieces is to make an envelope out
of the small bubble wrap. I use packing tape and whatever bubble
wrap I have on hand. Don't make the envelope fit exactly; make it
about an inch larger all the way around, because if it's too tight,
or even just right, it's too difficult to remove, and then repack the
piece. Do NOT tape the envelope shut--this requires the committee
to use scissors and you really don't want anyone with sharp objects
near your stitching. The put some kind of label on the envelope, and
put on your name and address and phone number, and maybe the name of
the piece, too. This will help the workers when repacking, and you,
the next time you want to use the envelope.
Lay the pieces in an appropriately sized box, with another layer of
bubble wrap between the pieces. Put rolls of bubble wrap along the
outside between the pieces and the outside of the box, or use the air
pillows described above. Or twisted up cleaners' bags. More bubble
wrap on top, and you're ready to seal up a neat and easy to work with
package. Looking forward to the Exemplary . . .
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