•T h e IF P • H al to n H ill s •T hu rs da y, J ul y 17 , 2 01 4 22 5 Armstrong Ave., Georgetown 905-873-2989 danceco@sympatico.ca www.georgetowndancecompany.com Dancing is like dreaming with your feet • lessons for all ages and genres • recreational and competitive programs • convenient local recital • over 20 years experience Dancing is like dreaming SDRAWA 06 NOW ?4102 DNA 3891 NEEWTEB SLACISUM EBOLG ...TAHT WONK UOY DID snoitcudorPebolG/moc.koobecaf.www ac.snoitcudorpebolg.www 905-873-8196140 Guelph St. Georgetown Summer Sale Summer Sale Limited Quantities $49999 Includes Full Basic Package! Model #7502 Model #099602 Freshly Made & Baked On Premises Breads, Buns, Pastries Meat Pies & More. British Imported Sweets & Treats, That Even Locals Love. 330 GUELPH ST.,GEORGETOWN (opposite Canadian Tire) 905-877-0596 • www.millersscottishbakery.com MILLER'S Scottish Bakery Local Guild member named Canada's Rug Hooking Artist of the Year A member of the Georgetown Rug Hooking Guild has been named as Rug Hooking Artist of the Year for Canada. The Hooked Rug Museum of North America (HRMNA) made the announce- ments for the "Rug Hooking Artist of the Year" for Canada and the United States last month. Representative samples of the artists' work will be displayed as a special featured exhibit at the Museum for the 2014 season. The winners are chosen because of their special attributes and their con- tribution to the contem- porary advancement of the art of rug hooking and its gradual transforma- tion over three centuries of development in North America, according to Chairperson of the Board, Suzanne Conrod. "This assessment of rug hooking in comparison to an early stage of hook- ing, offers an opportunity to learn more about the amazing talents that exist in the art," says Conrod. Conrod announced Trish Johnson of Toronto as the Canadian Rug Hooking Artist while Sibyl Osicka of Ohio is her American counterpart. "Being chosen as Rug Hooking Artist of the year is a dream come true. I've wanted a show of my work for a long time," said Johnson. "Finally, my work will be shown as part of a larger body of work. Every rug has something to say but together they say more. Hopefully the viewer will be able to see the themes I have been exploring. Most of these rugs are about "Home" and what is dear to my heart." Johnson has been hooking since 1988. She was self-taught for the first four rugs then joining the Georgetown rug hooking group in 1999. "I used to live in Fergus and drive to Georgetown to hook. Now I live in Toron- to and still go to Georgetown. It is such an active group. I joined a beginner class of Shirley Lyons after I had been hooking on my own for a few years," she said. She has taken many hooking work- shops and belongs to the teacher's branch of the Ontario Hooking Craft Guild, the Georgetown Rug Hooking Guild and the Upper Toronto Hooking Guild. "I like the feel of wool," Johnson said. " I like the soft warm fuzziness of hooking a rug, especially on a cold winter night. I feel content, hooking at home, alone but I also like hooking with oth- ers. We hook together, share the stories of our lives and have become friends. " Johnson hooks rugs about places that are important to her family history, trying to answer questions about what "home" means to her. Home is where the heart is and all of her rugs are about things and events that are dear to her heart. She de- signs her own patterns, mostly from her own photographs; dyes most of her own wool (especially the skies) and likes to use some recycled wool from Goodwill. Johnson has been featured in Rug Hook- ing magazine's "A Celebration of Hand Hooked Rugs." The Hooked Rug Museum of North America is operated by a non profit so- ciety dedicated to the preservation and celebration of the art and traditions of hooked rugs and is located at 9849 Highway #3 (St. Margaret's Bay Rd.), in Hubbards, Nova Scotia, telephone (902) 858-3060, www.hookedrugmuseumof- northamerica.org. It is open from May to October. TRISH JOHNSON