Top: Peeping Beauty School of Cosmetology; Frida; No Mistakes, Just Happy Little Peeps (Bob Ross). Center: from the Racine city dept. of development; Arthur; "Peepal Conclave." Bottom: Don Quixote; The Scream.
Of course I liked "They Read Banned Books."
In the upstairs gallery at RAM: paper cutting. Exquisite!
The top left and center right are Polish (or Polish-style). Upper right: Japanese. Lower left: I think an American artist. Lower right: I forget.....What I kept thinking was how unforgiving paper cutting is. What if they goof? I am a lot more comfortable with "it will quilt out."
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Saturday: a little cultural fusion: a Rotarian (me) having Kiwanis pancakes at the Moose lodge. I went by myself, but I saw many people I knew.
(The Queens program is about community service and leadership, not beauty. Kaylynn is the granddaughter of Rotary friends Debbie and Bill and Bella (and Laura, next to her) go to my church.)
120 P.E.O. sisters from the thirteen chapters in the Lake County Round Table celebrated the 157th Founders' Day. A three-chapter committee did all the work to bring about the lovely event. All I had to do I'm LCRT president was preside.
Top: with my chapter sisters. This year's theme, Live Like Lulu: Be a P.E.O. Builder, honors Lulu Corkhill Williams, She was among the first initiates into the new society (perhaps the first; records aren't clear) in the spring of 1869. She was influential in establishing P.E.O. in Illinois.A quilt was involved. My chapter raffled Courthouse Steps to benefit P.E.O. projects. Jane T. was the winner. ($335 raised. The decision to have the raffle was almost last-minute. We didn't get a permit, so sales were only at the event.)
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All of these goings-on were during the day. I had evenings to sew!
Villa Rosa Six Quilts Challenge, #3: Boscobel. Finished! I added a border.
Six Quilts Challenge #4: Turnkey. Finished!
The pieced back and binding use the same print as the bars in the blocks. (It's a Laura Ashley sheet, $1.00 rummage sale purchase. I used the sheet to back another Six Quilts quilt, too. Just scraps left.)
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Margaret Finch values routine and precision. Those qualities are helpful in her job as a research assistant to a renowned botanist at a west-coast university, but less helpful in her interactions with other people. When her boss is found dead in his office she suspects he has been poisoned. She's determined to discover the culprit. With the help of a journalist-turned-janitor she succeeds.
If you enjoyed Molly (The Maid) and Elizabeth (Lessons in Chemistry) you'll like this delightful mystery.Linking up with Design Wall Monday Oh Scrap! Sew and Tell Monday Musings
P.S. An array of spring greens at the state park yesterday.