Sew Expo 2026 Recap
I drove home from Seattle yesterday. Traffic was light and I only stopped twice, so I made it in 8-1/2 hours. Our snow has melted (again) and it was close to 60F. I will be curious to see what March brings.
My trip began after church last Sunday. I drove all the way to Ellensburg (six-ish hours) and spent the night there. On Monday morning, I made it over Snoqualmie Pass with no issues, but I did not time my departure from Ellensburg well and arrived at the Seattle ferry terminal just minutes after the 9:30 am ferry had left. I had to wait for the 10:40 ferry. When I disembarked on Bainbridge Island, I stopped to pick up an order at the hardware store for my son-in-law, then got stuck in an hour-long backup due to bridge maintenance. I made it over the Hood Canal bridge only to get stuck behind someone leading a 30-car backup because either 1) she didn’t know where she was going or 2) she shouldn’t have been driving. I finally made it to DD#1’s house about two hours later than expected.
Such is travel sometimes.
I spent two days with DD#1 and DSIL. She and I went to Costco and their Costco had apple trees for sale. I bought a Jonagold and a Fuji because I don’t have either of those varieties. Having a couple of 5' tall apple trees in the back of the Jeep was a bit inconvenient, but I wasn’t going to pass up that opportunity. Costco fruit trees have always done very well for us.
On Wednesday, I arrived in Puyallup just after lunch and picked up my teacher badge and my thread kits. I was a bit at loose ends because I couldn’t check in to the Airbnb yet, so I messaged Marianne—our store owner—and asked her if she needed a ride from the airport. Her flight was just getting ready to leave Kalispell. I drove up to the airport and got there just as she was exiting baggage claim. Marianne came to Sew Expo to help out in the Bernina booth because they were a bit shorthanded.
My classes started bright and early Thursday morning with my thread class at 8 am. This was a full class but I had excellent helpers. Bernina provides a staffperson and the local dealer provides a staffperson, so I was well covered. Fabian Renteria, a designer from LA who is currently a Bernina Educator, was one of my helpers. I took a class from him at BU last summer and it was great to have him there. The class was full, with 24 students on Bernina sewing machines.
After that, I moved two classrooms down and taught my interfacing class. That one was also full—30 students—and I felt it went reasonably well. I would do a few things differently if I teach it again, but the students seemed to appreciate it. I had quite a few podcast listeners in my classes and it was great to meet people face-to-face.
I went back to the Bernina serger classroom to teach three students in my overflow cording foot class.
The cording foot class was the first class to sell out, and the original session was scheduled for Friday. The overflow session was my last Thursday class. I was glad I had that overflow class as it gave me an idea where students might have trouble. No lesson plan survives first contact with the students, and this one was no exception. I made notes about what I wanted to emphasize in Friday’s class.
Thursday was tough only because I had to run back and forth to the car between classes to return supplies and get supplies for the next class. If I have a similar schedule next year, I may have to bring a wagon.
Friday morning’s class didn’t start until 11:30, so I ran errands and drove the very dirty Jeep through the car wash. The second (original) cording foot class was totally full—24 students—but I thought it went well. Students always fall along a spectrum. There are those who pick up the techniques with no difficulty and there are those who struggle. I told them from the outset that they would have to practice the techniques further when they got home. I am not sure where my head was when I submitted this class proposal because I submitted it as a 90-minute class. It really needs to be a 2-1/2 hour class. We made it, but extending it by an hour would give me some breathing room.
I taught a cabling class at 8 am Saturday morning and was so pleased to see two students who had been in some of my other knitting classes in previous years. That class only had five students and was a relaxing way to end Sew Expo.
After class was over, I drove up to DD#2’s apartment with a stop at Pacific Fabrics. Oh, my! I have never seen it so busy. The parking lot was full but I was able to snag a spot as I pulled in because someone was leaving. It turns out that Pacific Fabrics has a big “20% off the entire store” sale during Sew Expo. The line to check out had at least 15 people in it and each cutting table had lines stacked 3-4 deep. I almost gave up and left, but I toughed it out because there were a few pieces of fabric I really wanted. (Show and tell in tomorrow’s post.)
DD#2 and I got pedicures on Saturday afternoon. (Her boyfriend was away for the weekend.) We started watching “House of Gucci”—one of our favorite movies—Saturday night but I fell asleep halfway through. On Sunday, we went to look at a few condos for sale. One was just down the street from the Airbnb where I usually stay. That condo was twice the size of her current apartment, with a gorgeous view of Puget Sound. It’s a great deal—it’s in foreclosure—but this was more of a fact-finding mission. I’ve been watching real estate prices in Seattle for about 18 months now and things are starting to come down, but I think they will come down even more given all the job layoffs and the fact that the state legislature is determined to tax everything that moves. We toured three properties altogether and it was very educational.
After that, we went to the Alderwood Costco where I had to stop myself from buying three more apple trees. They wouldn’t fit into her car. 🥲 I was very disappointed because there were varieties there I hadn’t see before and I am not sure our Costco will have them (or when).
The husband is happy I am home. He fed Charlotte—the spider—while I was gone because the flies are coming out in force. I am teaching a machine mastery class today at the store, but most of this month is going to be devoted to homesteading stuff with some sewing as I can fit it in. I need to get chicks soon and I have to do some canning. And it looks like spring may come early this year.
