I WANT you to show the quilts made from my designs in your local shows! I love it when you send me pictures! Please consider this public announcement BLANKET PERMISSION for you to do so. You don't need to write me or send me forms in the snail mail to have to sign and mail back to you. (And ones that require me to use my own stamps to mail back to you? FORGET IT! At least some have included self addressed stamped envelopes.. ;c) )
All I ask is that you list me as the designer on the label, and include the ORIGINAL NAME OF THE QUILT if you happen to change the quilt to some other name that suits your own story. Something like this works great:

Carol made her quilt while following along with last years "Carolina Christmas" mystery. She did hers in blue and green and gold, and renamed hers "Happy Scrappy Stars", but included BOTH quilt names on her label.
This is really important when it comes to tracking back a quilt to its origin.
Designers are losing their connections to their own designs as patterns go out there and are constantly renamed by everyone who makes the quilt. So including the designer AND the original name of the pattern keeps all that important information intact, and gives credit to the designer.
You will also notice that Carol gave proper mention of her machine quilter as well! Quilted by Kristy! This is IMPORTANT!
The only thing I would add if I were Carol, would be her own signature somewhere on there, in pigma pen. Future generations are going to be missing out on our personal handwriting, and personal handwriting is very valuable on antique quilts. It gives a connection to a REAL PERSON, not just a computer-generated-die-cut-printed-thing made by a machine. Don't forget to SIGN your labels!
Happy Quilting, Happy Showing!

I have to tell you, talking about this article while at the Colorado Quilt Council retreat sure opened up a CAN OF WORMS!! I think mostly from me...LOL! First off, whoever wrote the article never considered the designer's point of view on all of this "must get written permission to display anything" issue. It has increased my email and snail mail 10 fold and has really thrown me for a whammy.
Luckily, gmail has a "canned response" feature that I have put to good use, and I have also put my reply out there as a blanket statement on my website to try to calm not only my own nerves, but the nerves of those poor quilters out there who just want to show a quilt in their guild show, and are now afraid that the designer will say "NO! YOU CAN NOT SHOW THAT QUILT!" (We all know that there are designers out there like this, don't we? Why, I will never understand, its the best advertising there is for their designs!)
And don't get me started on the need to give credit to a certain designer for a simple "9 patch on point" that has been in public domain for centuries? I don't care if a pic of a reproduction showed up in a magazine. A 9 patch is a 9 patch, I don't think you need to list the magazine's 9 patch maker as your SOURCE?! Who was THEIR source? And who was their source before that who did that same 9 patch on point? It's ridiculous.
The hilarity increased and escalated as we sat around the table at retreat discussing what we'd like to do with this article and the ideas and REQUIREMENTS in it...including stuffing it into places where the sun will NEVER shine....
I really really, while in the thick of this, thought of forwarding every request I got in my inbox on to the author of said article just to give her an idea of what this article had started....and even thought of passing her email address on to other designer friends as well so they could do the same. I thought her article was not very well thought out, and just created so much extra work for those of us who have already put everything we can out there for public use as it is.

Then I thought of grabbing all the Colorado Quilt Council ladies, and going to TP her house since she lives right there outside of Denver *Evil Wicked Grin* but we thought better of it, calmed our nerves with copious amounts of chocolate, and thought we'd rather spend our time quilting!









