Sewing became my outlet, passion, and eventual career.” Winning a ribbon at the county fair or a prize through the Make It Yourself with Wool contest, required skill not looks. “Not being the cheerleader or prom court type-that was the ultimate goal in high school, I turned to creating with fabric and thread. As a child I was extremely self-conscious, my mom most recently told me that she prayed that I wouldn’t become introverted. A high percentage of people recover from this paralysis. “During the 1950’s the treatment was to wait it out-it will get better. My eye and mouth on my right side have a partial paralysis called Bell’s Palsy-it happened (due to an ear infection) when I was a toddler I was just over one year old.” The topic-my face! Obviously, I’m not symmetrical. “Perhaps the question that most of you want to ask me, but are afraid to do so, has nothing to do with fabric and thread. It’s just one of the unique features that makes me–me!” I certainly haven’t kept my paralysis a secret after all, I wear it! Yet, many of you still wonder. Nancy was always open to talk about her condition and wrote about it on her blog: “This morning as I was reviewing the key words that you, my readers, are using to search for information about my TV show and blog, I gulped when I realized that within the top 20 search terms were these words: Nancy Zieman Face, Nancy Zieman Stroke, and Sewing with Nancy Stroke. Though this condition presented Nancy with unique challenges in her life (she was extremely self-conscious as a child), it couldn’t keep her from sharing her light with the world. Nancy often referred to herself as “the Poster Child for Bell’s Palsy,” a condition she acquired as a toddler due to an ear infection which caused her face to be partially paralyzed. With over 900 episodes filmed, Sewing with Nancy had run longer than any other sewing program in North America! In the early years, Nancy was the driving force behind the production, developing scripts and even taping the show in her own living room! She remained the host and executive producer of the show until just a few months before she passed away. It wasn’t long before the show was broadcast nationwide, making Nancy an icon in the sewing and quilting world. In 1982, she co-produced “Sewing with Nancy”, a half-hour sewing show that aired on Wisconsin Public Television. As she grew Nancy’s Notions from a small seed into a beautiful tree known by sewers across the country, she was also a well-known author and designer for McCall’s Patterns and Clover Needlecraft. Nancy’s Notions was born as a mail-order catalog in 1979, bringing sewers across the nations a unique and curated assortment of sewing notions and supplies. Many of the jobs early in Nancy’s career centered around her love of sewing, including working for a sewing store in Chicago and freelancing as a sewing instructor in Minnesota. Nancy was born and raised on a dairy farm in Wisconsin to parents Ralph and Barbara Luedtke, and later graduated with a double major in home economics and journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Stout. Though she passed away in 2017, her legacy will abide in the millions that she taught and touched. Nancy Zieman is an unforgettable woman and visionary who made an indelible mark on the sewing and quilting world. Our Library of Sewing Information is sure to have exactly what you are looking for! We are happy to announce that it is still exactly that! Stop by Nancy’s Notions to find more information on all things sewing and quilting. For many years, Nancy’s Notions was the place was the place to find education and inspiration.
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