I needed to finish my One Monthly Goal this week. We leave for northern Wisconsin on Saturday morning and we won't return until June 30.
Here it is!
The project began as a way to use up a box of 1.5" batik squares. I thought I'd make 42 blocks for a 6 x 7 straight setting that would end up about 65 x 75. Well, that didn't happen! It turned out to be 84 x 84. It uses 41 of the 42 blocks. I have a handful of 1.5" squares left over. Total fabric used: 7-1/8 yds.
My friend Helen said she was cleaning out cabinets and would I like some fabric? Well, sure! "I've had it for a long time," she added. She brought it to the AAUW luncheon on Tuesday. I've been quilting long enough to remember when mint green and peach were a trendy combination. The assortment includes Cranston/VIP (the good stuff), some Christmas prints, a Jinny Beyer print, and some Waverly light-weight home dec. I weighed it all -- 7 lbs., so 28 yards. For free!
Observations of a librarian and quiltmaker who values the connections between and among people and organizations.
Thursday, June 16, 2016
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Weekly update: RSC, Block Lotto, OMG
I searched around and found a lighter batik. I think it enhances the light stars. The skinny orange strip will be a flap (cut 1-1/2", folded in half, so just 1/4" when the seam is sewn).
I'm linking up with
Rainbow Scrap Challenge
Oh, Scrap!
Monday Making
Main Crush Monday
Design Wall Monday
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Midweek: quilts presented
On Wednesday Irene and I presented them to the manager at Staben House, a transitional living/homeless shelter in Waukegan. One of the young residents joined us for the photo.
Monday, June 6, 2016
Weekly update: stash report, the design wall, and June OMG
I didn't have much time to sew last week, what with P.E.O. convention preparations, plus an AAUW committee meeting, Chamber of Commerce board, and the monthly quilt guild meeting (a very good program on quilt history). I didn't even get time for a beach walk.
Stash report, May:
Fabric acquired: 24-1/4, $32.75
Fabric used: 8-3/8
Year-to-date:
Fabric acquired: 162, $699 ($4.31/yd)
Fabric used: 89-1/4
I need to quit shopping and get sewing!
My One Monthly Goal is to set the batik star blocks. I made 42 of them. The on-point setting uses 41 and results in a square quilt. I am contemplating ideas for wider top and bottom borders to make it rectangular. The red sashes are a rough draft -- I only have two yards of that particular print, only enough for sashes *or* setting triangles *or* borders, but not all three.
See others' quilting progress on the weekly linkups.
Oh, Scrap! (I keep typing this "Oh, Scarp.")
Monday Making
Main Crush Monday
Design Wall Monday
Stash report, May:
Fabric acquired: 24-1/4, $32.75
Fabric used: 8-3/8
Year-to-date:
Fabric acquired: 162, $699 ($4.31/yd)
Fabric used: 89-1/4
I need to quit shopping and get sewing!
See others' quilting progress on the weekly linkups.
Oh, Scrap! (I keep typing this "Oh, Scarp.")
Monday Making
Main Crush Monday
Design Wall Monday
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Weekly update: Making a splash (quilt included)
Ready to go |
Chapters decorated flip flops with short summaries of how they made a splash during the year.
P.E.O. founder Alice Coffin visited us, in the person of reenactor Lynn Rymarz. Alice was a school teacher who never married. She grew up a Methodist but changed to Episcopalian because she loved to dance!
Lettie Corkhill Cunetto and Debbie Corkhill Cortopassi gave a workshop about their Great-great Aunt Lulu Corkhill Williams. Lulu became a P.E.O. in March, 1869, just two months after P.E.O.'s founding. She was the first initiate. After college she helped charter chapters in Iowa. She and her husband Hemmerle moved to Illinois where she again chartered chapters and organized the Illinois State Chapter. The Friendship Fund was started with money left over after the state convention in 1934. (Since then $1,756,000 has been awarded to 1,319 Illinois women and men.)

Each of the 40 chapters that sponsored a Lulu recipient this year got a tiara with a gold star (and the chapter letters).
There are 8 yellow stars appliqued on the quilt -- for the seven founders and Lulu, the first initiate.
(My t-shirt lists the original seven.)
A LCWFF recipient was among the speakers at the Projects Dinner Saturday evening. Angie is a single mom of two daughters who is going to nursing school and working full-time at a suburban hospital. She used her grant to help buy a new car -- reliable and safe transportation. The chapter that sponsored her has generously helped out in other ways, too.
Sue is a double sister -- she and I share Alpha Gamma Delta as well as P.E.O.
It was an honor to serve on the Lulu committee. I learned a lot. I am grateful to all the P.E.O.s who sponsor candidates and generously contribute to the fund.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)