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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sewing machine prize a gem

Arline Whitney, left, laughs Tuesday with Sandy Votaw after being presented a diamond necklace she won through a national competition. (Bob Brawdy)
Loretto J. Hulse Tri-City Herald

The diamond necklace sparkling around Arline Whitney’s neck wasn’t any brighter than the happy twinkle in her eyes as she showed fellow fabric artists her prize.

Whitney, a former Othello, Wash., resident now living in Greenacres, won it when her name was drawn this summer in a national Husqvarna Viking sewing machine company contest.

“You always hear someone wins these contests but it’s never anyone you know,” said Sandy Votaw. She and her husband, Frank, have owned Sandy’s Fabrics & Machines in Kennewick for 28 years.

Whitney became eligible for the glittering prize after she and her sister-in-law, Ann Whitney, of Seattle, met at Sandy’s last May to test out the new Husqvarna Viking Designer Diamond deLuxe sewing and embroidery machine.

They both filled out a comment card along with about 28 other Sandy’s customers. The Votaws forwarded them to contest headquarters, never dreaming a card from their store would be drawn.

“There are a lot of big dealers in the country who have multiple stores and must have turned in hundreds of cards. I was flabbergasted to hear it was one of my customers,” said Sandy Votaw.

“I was so glad to hear it went to a customer and a very loyal customer. Arline’s been coming in since the early 1980s,” said Frank Votaw.

When they heard the necklace was on the way, the Votaws began planning a party, which was Tuesday at the store. The real surprise for Whitney was the 30 or so people who came to toast her good fortune with punch and cake.

They’re the core group of dedicated sewers Whitney has taken classes with at Sandy’s for decades. Many, like her, have moved away. But when they heard about Whitney’s win, they made the trip to Kennewick.

Shirley Quist of Pullman was one.

“I came especially for Arline. There’s no one more deserving of this than her. She’s very artistic and very giving and those two things don’t always go together,” Quist said.

Whitney was 13 years old, living in Grandview, Wash., when her mother taught her to sew.

“Pretty soon we were kind of fighting over who got to use the machine, so I saved my money to buy my own,” she said.

At first Whitney sewed to save money and made all her own school clothes through college.

Later, teaching for the Othello School District, Whitney still made her own clothing, but sewing had changed from a necessity to fun and therapy.

“If there was something wrong, if one of my students wasn’t doing well in school, I sewed. Things have a way of working themselves out in the sewing room.”