SpeckledHen
I would be arrogant and straight forward as that blanket and your time commands and deserves the price you are asking and more! In fact, I think the woman should be honored to get it at the price you stated.
Even from a guys prospective, that is a **** beautiful quilt/spread (and no I'm not Gay) lol. If they cannot appreciate your quality, the hand works and time they are lacking in some reality. Perhaps next time, give them the price and ask them to pay up front. Keep that beautiful piece of work and use it as a display of your quality..... and BRAG!
At the least, I would have dropped the offer at the first hint of her objection to the price...neighbor or not! Then comment its OK I'll just write off the $XXX .00 dollars in materials as a loss on my taxes.....then say "I agree it does'nt show the 15+(?) hours of work I have in it, and remind her of the 0.50 cents an hour labors calculations". Can you excuse me, I need to oil my machine, I wore it out on that blanket and need to get started on another customers blanket...just hope the electric bill isn't too high this month. I would guilt the hell out of them! They certainly don't mind insulting you now did they?
We all know (even we Men) the hard work and love you put into such and the photos show that. The fact that the person was getting inputs from a senior citizen(s) prospective, I doubt that most of them are in touch with the reality of toady's cost so dint take it too personal. I am sure the fabric prices they noted were of some senior citizen discounts of 3 year outdated prints and such that were collecting dust at the fabric shop.
I am as country as you can expect today, but even I can appreciate and respect a good hand made Quilt/Spread and compare it too a Bespoke suit of fine virgin wool's and materials. Not to mention the personal Taylor customized quality.
Thank you for sharing the photos, they were a pleasure!
You made me chuckle. Thanks for the compliments. The nutty neighbor didn't gripe until
after she had paid me for it. And she got a $150-175 bed runner for less than $100, but eh, it's over and done with. I never see that neighbor anymore. She is a complete flake in more ways than one! To me, it was just so rude of those old biddies to comment on something they had not even seen, and then, for her to tell
me on top of that. I pretty much just told her they had no idea what they were talking about, and then, them saying I could get cheaper fabric at some private person's house when they had no idea what I paid for the fabric in the first place. Fabric is not cheap and every quilter can tell you that. I don't buy cheaply made fabric, but I do look for good prices on good quality fabric. I have only paid a quilt shop full price for a yard of fabric once, in that last quilt I did when I wanted a particular shade and was having trouble finding it. I then got the exact same fabric at my online source for about 1/3 the price. I knew then the exact shade it was and I loved it and wanted more of it for myself.
Pricing a handmade quilt is so much more than the fabric. It's the thread and batting, it's the design knowledge, my 30 years of experience, my trained color sense, my time in designing, shopping, piecing, then quilting by hand, quality ever bit as good as those coveted Amish quilts made by 10-20 women and priced at over $1000 for most of the bed size ones.
Oh, well, you know, it boils down to one thing with that situation that started this thread- ignorance has a big mouth!