General
Welcome to the 2023 ANWG Conference Website

The Weaving Guilds of Oregon (WeGO) are excited to host the 2023 Association of Northwest Weavers’ Guilds (ANWG) Conference in Oregon. We’ll use this website to provide information leading up to the conference, keeping you updated on how our venue search and plans are progressing, along with details about events, workshops, seminars, and other exciting aspects of the conference. As soon as we have new dates it will be announced here. The new website https://anwgconference.org/archive/2023/ is up and running now, the 2021 website information is redirected to this site. Please update your bookmarks and we’re happy to say that all of you who have signed up to receive the blog will automatically transfer to the 2023 site blog list.
You can learn about the conference theme, Fiber Connections, and how it celebrates the connections that are made as a result of the coming together of people and fibers. You can also read about the significance behind the conference colors, and how they have been chosen to represent the host state of Oregon and what it is that connects us to the other states and provinces of the ANWG.
It is our hope that the information provided on this website will encourage you to make plans to attend this exiting conference. In addition to traditional events such as the ever-popular fashion show, spirited juried and open shows, wide-array of guild booth displays, lively market hall, and inspiring keynote address, we’ve also lined up unique events and amazing new shows.
As we move closer to summer 2023, we’ll rollout out more information about the conference and events on this website, so stay tuned! Or better yet, if you’re interested in receiving email updates, sign up and we’ll send information to your inbox as it becomes available.
Sue Walsh & Linda Gettmann, Conference Co-Chairs
historical museums by family members.
her home in a variety of locations in the West and has always been captivated by the feel and tradition of functional craft and artwork rooted in each region. From saddle blankets in Nevada’s
cowboy country, to wearable art in California’s Sonoma Valley, most of her work has been focused on weaving. When she moved to Central Oregon, she began exploring the history of pine needle baskets and creating her own. Each of her coiled baskets are unique, made of Ponderosa Pine needles collected near her home. She has found a few special trees that have exceptionally long, beautiful needles. Many of her basket centers are of sagebrush and juniper branches collected in Central Oregon. Other accents (beads, wire, stones), she has collected over the years knowing they would come in handy some day. Her workshop on pine needle basketry is sure to be a delight.
featured in Japanese national magazines and NHK broadcasts, as well as featured in the Textile Museum in Washington, DC, and shows sponsored by the US State Department, Kodansha, and the Embassy of Japan, to name just a few. His passion is teaching and sharing all the wonders of Japanese textiles that he has encountered over the decades. In 1988, he published Make Your Own Japanese Clothes through Kodansha, and has since gone on to publish Salvation Through Soy (soymilk and dyeing),
Singing the Blues (fresh-leaf indigo dyeing), limited edition TADEAI–Fresh-Leaf Indigo Dyeing, A Collectors Guide to Japanese Indigo, A Field Guide to Japanese Textiles, and many more books and textile collections. In spring of 2020, John launched a series of online courses focusing on Japanese textiles and culture. At the 2023 conference, he will teach a workshop on Tsujigahana – this may be the new dyeing technique that you have been longing for.
plain weave, double and triple weave, and mesmerizing transparencies. For the past 25 years, Laura has
been an active member of Texas’s fiber art community. Her work has been exhibited nationally and has won numerous awards. She spent 9 months in 2008 as an Artist-in-Residence at the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft. Laura believes in giving back to the fiber art community. She has served as president of Contemporary Handweavers of Texas, chaired the organization’s biennial conference in 2017, and held numerous board positions in Contemporary Handweavers of Houston, including president. Laura also served on the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft’s Artist-in Residence Selection Panel from 2013 to 2015. She is currently a member of Archway Gallery, Houston’s oldest artist-owned-and-operated gallery. Laura will teach a workshop on creating handwoven transparencies – so come be mesmerized.

