(I still have shelves of family albums in the front closet but now there is one fewer. I tore out pages with 'keeper' photos from this 1994-95 scrapbook and actually tossed the rest. Good for me!)
I remember her telling me about a field trip to Volo Bog once upon a time. We took advantage of the beautiful day yesterday for another visit. It's 27 miles from where we live (30 miles from where she lived, but another direction).
From the website "Formed in an ancient glacial kettle hole lake, Volo Bog features a floating mat of sphagnum moss, cattails and sedges surrounding the open pool of water in the center of the bog. Further from the open water, the mat thickens enough to even support floating trees!"
Top: prairie smoke, black choke cherry, Jacob's ladder. Center: sensitive fern, wild geranium, viburnum. Bottom: golden Alexander, pitcher plant, wild arum (calla).
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I was more successful with stars in my studio. The flimsy is finished. 7 yards used.
I'm not wild about the huge slab border. (Wrinkles are because it's large enough to be unwieldy to iron.) I followed the pattern instructions. My goal was to use the fabric that I won in the guild raffle.
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Tan Yunxian was a woman physician in Ming Dynasty China (late 15th/early 16th centuries). She is known to history because she kept notes about the women she treated. That book was preserved and has been the subject of academic research and publication in recent years. Lisa See uses that research as the basis for imagining the cultural and social milieu in which Yunxian lived and worked. Her father was an elite bureaucrat (providing status and wealth). Her paternal grandmother was a physician, a very unusual role, and she passed her knowledge to Yunxian. There are glimpses into the Imperial court and the tradesmen class (Yunxian's best friend was a midwife).
Some descriptions are difficult to take. Footbinding played a significant role. Women were socially inferior to men but there was a strict hierarchy to the household: the mother-in-law was supreme, and she may or may not have liked her daughters-in-law. Taking a concubine was a regular procedure in even the most loving marriages. It's hard to imagine the seclusion in which these women lived, not allowed to leave the family compound.
To add to the fascinating and informative history there's a bit of dramatic mystery -- and Yunxian is the victor.
Linking up with Design Wall Monday Oh Scrap! Sew and Tell
It looks like a beautiful day. Pat decided to see if we could get pictures of the Northern Lights although we couldn't see anything. Looking on his phone it appeared he got a bit of the magenta-red color. But who knows if it really was. I like your stars quilt. Hum, maybe trim down that big border? It really overpowers the blocks. On the other hand, it's already on and makes a bigger quilt. Good job using up some stash fabric.
ReplyDeleteGood for you for only keeping the photos you wanted - that is a herculean task ( I have trouble parting with the bad ones!!!) I like your star quilt - in that big border maybe you can quilt stars like in the body? We got to see the lights friday nite - but no other nights so far
ReplyDeleteSeconding everything Quiltygirl said. Look at that border as a blank canvas for showcasing some quilting. The stars within are lovely too. Now for a backing...
DeleteBird 'Pie
Your star quilt is beautiful!!! I thought the border was fine. Maybe you'll feel better about it when it's quilted up. We tried to see the Northern Lights, too, but no luck here, either. I'm enjoying the photos that others are posting, too!
ReplyDeleteI guess we missed the northern lights too - forgot about them the first night and then it's been cloudy ever since.
ReplyDeletetoo cloudy here...would have had to venture west to the WV border...nice pic of your mom...
ReplyDeleteIt's not that you look like your mom, Nann, but more that you resemble her, I think. How wonderful to grow up with a gardener!
ReplyDeleteBogs are so interesting. There is a bog at a somewhat-nearby lake which we visited many years ago. It was squishy to walk on and we were asked to stay on the paths because they didn't want us falling into the bog.
When I began seeing photos of the Northern Lights online, I wondered how people were seeing these in the winter. I thought they were a winter phenomenon in the north. I don't keep up with the news very well sometimes and missed the news but my husband said the sun had some disturbance which allowed us to see the Lights. The only time I saw them in person was one winter many years ago when we were travelling to far northern New York. They are an amazing sight.
You were fast making the top with the stars. It looks great.
Thanks for the book recommendation.
I'm enjoying everyone else's northern lights photos too. I'm just happy I did see them in person in the 1970s.
ReplyDeleteThe bog looks like a fascinating place for a walk, Nann! I love your star quilt - very pretty colors. Sounds like a fascinating book - I'll have to put it on my list!
ReplyDeleteLooks like a very fun excursion to the bog. The book sounds really interesting. It's so easy to forget how restrictive a woman's life was in certain cultures.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading all the comments, I feel as though this flimsy just got named: Northern Lights.
ReplyDeleteBird 'Pie