August 29,2002 -Twinsburg Bulletin - Page 5

Olde Thyme Fayre
will bring past to life

by Julie McMillan
Reporter

TWINSBURG - Hear ye, hear ye: The Olde Thyme Fayre returns
to the city next month, bringing a handcrafted flair and homemade
taste to Twinsburg.
The fair, sponsored by the Twinsburg Historical Society, will take
over the museum and barn on Darrow Road near Twinsburg Town-
ship Square Sept. 14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sept. 15.
The society's members and officers, including Sue Graham, 
Gizella Roddie and Mary Williams, have assembled a variety of 
handmade crafts and more for the event. They said residents also 
will have the opportunity to submit handiwork, baked goods and
 homegrown produce and flowers for judging.
Graham said the fair will include demonstrations of oil painting 
and wood carving. Experts will also show fair-goers how to make
pottery, pickles, apple butter, old-fashioned brooms and a type of
needlecraft called "punch work."
"We're going to have lots of craft demonstrations;' Graham said.
"It's also a good chance to see what we've preserved in this town."
Roddie said $1 fund-raising raffle tickets will be on sale at the
fair for a hand-knitted scarf, an Amish-built rocking chair and an
Amish-sewn quilt. The proceeds will benefit the historical society.
Visitors to the fair on Sunday will listen to the sounds of violin
students from Walker Music of Twinsburg from 1 to 2 p.m., Roddie
said.
Williams said many of the crafters at the fair were "found by
chance," including the Pins, and Needles Cloth Doll Club, which
was invited to participate after doing a display at the Twinsburg
Public Library.
Also on display at the fair, Williams said, will be the First Con-
gregational Church's Knitwitters' items for premature babies, quilts
from Cotton Candy, a quilting shop on Ravenna Road, a demon-
stration of the historical society's printing press and corn-shelling
 machine, as well as aroma therapy by Arc Ancient, a Cleveland-
based company.
"We're trying to find something a little different this year"
Williams said. 
The organizers said many handmade items will be for sale at the
fair, including sweet treats from Amish bakers from Middlefield.
The Amish baked goods have been popular in past years, they said.
Residents who would like to enter homemade and homegrown
items for judging, such as produce, flowers, baked and canned
goods, needlework, jellies and "anything crafty" can take the items
to the society Sept. 13 from 5 to 7 p.m. or the hour before the fair
begins Sept. 14.

E-mail: jmcmillan@recordpub.net
Phone: 440-232-4055

Twinsburg Historical Society Page