Jinny Beyer | |
Birth Name: | Geraldine Elizabeth Kahle Beyer |
Birth Date: | 21 July 1941 |
Birth Place: | Denver, Colorado, United States |
Years Active: | 1972–present |
Children: | 2 |
Geraldine Elizabeth Kahle Beyer (born July 27, 1941) is an American quilt designer, quilter, author, teacher and lecturer. Considered by the quilting industry and the publishing media to be of the first designers to form a fabric collection suited to the needs of quilters, she began her career in India after she had run out of yarn. Beyer's works have won awards in the print media, and she has written about the history of quilting and her techniques. She has designed collections for fabric companies, and has taught and lectured on the subject domestically and internationally. Beyer was inducted into the Quilters Hall of Fame in 1984.
Beyer was born in Denver, Colorado on July 27, 1941,[1] to artist Polly Kahle and has three sisters. The family later moved to California, and she was taught knitting and sewing by her mother from an early age. Beyer graduated from the University of the Pacific in Stockton with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Speech and French in 1962, and earned a Master of Arts degree from Boston University in special education. After she left Boston University, Beyer offered to volunteer for the Malaysian Department of Education. She commenced a program for the deaf in Kuching, Sarawak with help from the department.[2]
In 1972, while residing in India after spells in Borneo, Nepal and South America, she sought a new project after she had run out of yarn. Beyer was given a Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt pattern, and cut her first quilt into 600 hexagons of Indrian fabrics in the colors dark blue and deep red.[3] Upon returning to the United States, she learned quilting on the top and binding; Beyer was unable to locate another quilter before she came across a meeting held by Hazel Carter near her residence, and showed them a navy-colored Indian Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt top, which they praised. Carter encouraged Beyer to enter the 1976 Quilter's Newsletter Magazine's Bicentennial Quilt Contest, which she won with her red, white, and blue Bicentennial Quilt. The victory launched her career.
She entered Good Housekeeping
She was the first quilter to have her independent line of fabrics after she began designing for V.I.P. by Cranston fabric, and introduced the Jinny Bayer Collection for RJR Fabrics in 1985. Beyer had designed more than 2,000 fabrics by 2000, and averaging four to six collections every year. She filmed three videos on quilting between 1987 and 1991, and works as a teacher locally and internationally in countries such as Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Europe, Canada, and Iceland. She ran the Jinny Beyer Seminar on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina from 1981 to 2009, and lectured at an artist and mathematics convention in Stockholm on symmetry in 2000. Beyer was invited to teach at an Australian quilt seminar from 2010 to 2015 and in Ukraine for three years. She also appeared on internet and HGTV television programs to share her methodology and her color and designs to a wider audience.
She has been married to John Beyer since in 1962, and the couple have two sons from the marriage. Beyer is an avid gardener, plays the sitar, takes parts in debates, Little Theater, and took up running at the age of 40.
Encyclopædia Britannica and RJR Fabrics credited her for being one of the first designers to form a fabric collection suited to the needs of quilters. Beyer uses high-technology computer programs to produce new designs, and used color shading techniques; she told her students to eschew this method in favor by doings their designs by hand as much as possible.[6] She was inspired by Indian designs and fabric,
She was inducted into the Quilters Hall of Fame in 1984 to honor her "outstanding contributions to the world of quilting". In 1995, Beyer was made a recipient of the annual Silver Star Award at the International Quilt Festival "to honor a person who is active in the quilt world today, and whose work presents a lasting influence on today's quilting and the future of the art", and the International Quilt Market named her the winner of the Michael Kile Award of Achievement to recognize her "commitment to creativity and excellence in the quilting industry" the following year. Her Ray of Light quilt was selected as one of Quilter's Newsletter