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Vision-impaired
with glaucoma all her life, Rose became blind as
a result of an accident in 1984, a mere four
days before she was to undergo a cornea
transplant. But not only has that condition not
slowed her down, Rose has used it to serve as a
means to motivate others to achieve their true
potential.
She has used her lack of
sight as a springboard to give motivational
talks both within and beyond the context of her
ministry, Rose of Sharon Ministries. "The way I
look at it, if I can do what I have done,
without sight, how much can you do?" she said.
Her achievements are
considerable. Even without sight, Rose was
heavily involved in the Nashville music scene as
a journalist covering the various aspects of,
and personalities in, country music.
And it's not as if she has
been dabbling at quilting, either. "I have been
doing it since 1998," she said, "and I have made
more than 475 of them."
She also has a goal to make 500 quilts by Aug
14th 2008 which is her 10th anniversary of
making quilts.
In fact, Rose's music
connections have resulted in quilts being sold
to such personalities as country music legend
Loretta Lynn. "The quilt I made her used to hang
in her gift shop," Rose said.

And that's not all.
"President Bush has one of my quilts hanging up
in the office of his ranch in Crawford, Texas,"
Rose said proudly.
So, how does a blind person
make a quilt at all, let alone make quilts that
famous people would want?
"By feel," she said. "The
first quilt I did, I did with polyester instead
of cotton."
What's the difference? "I can
feel the texture of the polyester," she said,
"but the cotton was too smooth to be able to
feel."
And for what does she feel?
"I do a lot of appliqué," Rose said, "and you
can feel where the stitch is because it's smooth
against the main part of the quilt, while the
part that's not yet stitched is not smooth."
Rose acknowledged the parts
that she appliqués to the quilt do have to be
cut for her. But she also noted the most common
type of quilt, that she called the "split rail
pattern," she assembles herself.
"What I do is to lay out four
pieces of fabric," Rose said, "12 inches by
three inches, side by side, and stitch them
together to make a square.
"Then I take them and lay
them out so they alternate between vertical and
some horizontal, so it's like the old split-rail
fences they used to build."
She added a sewing machine is
invaluable for such assembly, and presents
little problem for her to use. "The person who
showed me how to quilt said that if you can use
a sewing machine, you can quilt," she said.
Does
Rose make quilts to order? "Of course," she
said. "I make them anywhere from king-sized all
the way down to baby quilts."
One such made-to-order quilt
she has made for the grandson of the Fosters,
13-year-old Dylan Foster, features big rig-type
trucks appliquéd on it. Others Rose displayed
featured tractors, cats and other items
requested by buyers.
"I don't do wedding-ring
quilts, though," she said, citing difficulties
in getting them to come out correctly.
Not that she had come to town
to sell quilts, nor to sell them during her
ministries and talks at civic clubs. "I use them
to show what I can do, in the face of the
obstacles life has put in my way that God has
helped me overcome," Rose said. "I couldn't do
it without God's talent.
"And if God can help me do
it, He can help you do it.
"You can make something of
your life or you can do nothing with it. It's up
to you."
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