Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Midweek: slight progress + reading

On the domestic front:  every so often a puddle appeared in the basement bathroom (adjacent to the family room, AKA my studio).  The plumber checked the toilet and the seal/collar are good.  This week I saw the puddle again--and heard drip-drip-drip. Turns out it came from the dishwasher (right above the closet that is next to the basement bathroom).  The plumber popped the panel off the dishwasher and said the pipes are fine, the problem is the spray arm/drain assembly.  I called the appliance store (we are so fortunate to have a real appliance store in our town).  The dishwasher is out of warranty and the repair would be $200 .... so I'm giving myself a new dishwasher for Christmas. I'll be gone next week so the installation is scheduled for December 29.  

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Sewing is more fun than plumbing, even when it's a slow project. 

Necktie patchwork isn't hard but it is very fiddly.   I diassemble new acquisitions promptly, hand-wash them (dish detergent works fine), hang them to dry, and iron them.  After that they go into the bin.  It is impossible to keep the slippery silk in tidy rolls.  A full color-sort would require a whole 'nother set of storage containers that I don't want to invest in.   I had one bin of ties with interfacing ironed on -- I found out this week that the interfacing doesn't stay firmly adhered.  (It's interfacing, not fusible web. There is a difference!)   


Here's the design wall at the end of last evening's sewing. (I'm up to season 2, episode 5 of West Wing.)  


Bow ties are 6-1/2" unfinished. 


I like to make half-rects units.  I perused issues of Simply Moderne and found a bed-sized quilt that uses several sizes of these, set horizontally.  

My project is a mini, 24" square. 

Much more to come!

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Stefan Fatsis clearly recalls the copy of Webster's New World Dictionary he had when he was 11. That took me back to my childhood because the New World was our go-to ("let's look it up") dictionary in the 1960's. Like Fatsis, I'm interested in words: definitions, uses, and etymology. It turns out that we have a lot of company.
"We are in a golden age for the study and appreciation of words," writes Fatsis in the introduction to his account of present-day lexicography. He spent time embedded at the Merriam headquarters in Springfield, Mass., drafting ninety definitions, some fifteen of which made it into the online Merriam. He attended a scholarly dictionary convention and participated in the Word of the Year judging. He recounts the history of the American dictionary from Noah Webster to the Merriams to Random House and American Heritage. He writes about challenges: prescriptive vs. descriptive; the uproar about "ain't" in the Third (Webster's Third International--the huge dictionary that my husband brought into our marriage); the F-word and most controversially the N-word.
The paper database still exists in the form of millions of cits (citations, pronounced "cites") still at Merriam HQ. Digital versions began early but a sustainable business model with commercial viability is a constant challenge.
"To lexicographers, words are like abstract expressionist paintings, complicated and demanding of quiet contemplation and analysis. Their power lies in their existence, not their deployment. To others, though, words are armaments in an endless war, the the dictionary is the manufacturer. Two hundred years of marketing have pushed that idea--the American dictionary as influencer, authority, power." (218)
"Studying and talking about words {is] endlessly, enormously, incredibly fun," he says (269). I agree!

Linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss


10 comments:

  1. Merry Christmas to you with the dishwasher!!
    Those half rex are cool - I am learning to make them, they are an interesting unit

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  2. A new dishwasher sounds like a good gift to yourself! Bow tie blocks are a favorite of mine - yours are very cozy in their neck tie colors. Sounds like a very interesting book, too!

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  3. Such pretty Bow Tie blocks! I've never made anything using ties so I appreciate the tips. Thanks for sharing on my weekly show and tell, Wednesday Wait Loss.
    https://www.inquiringquilter.com/questions/2025/12/17/wednesday-wait-loss-463

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  4. Nothing quite so frustrating as mystery puddles! So glad you caught the culprit in the act this time around.

    We had abridged dictionaries in our house, but there were some families I babysat for that had the Real Thing. Once the kiddies were in bed I'd go to town looking up all those words my schoolmates kept throwing, insultingly, at each other.

    Bird 'Pie

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  5. good progress on the ties...i can imagine how fiddly....yes words are a fascinating study...the words we use represent us to others....

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  6. Yes, you are fortunate to have an appliance store in your town. We used to have one and there was also one in the next small town 4 miles away. Both gone now and I miss them.

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  7. Ah, bow ties made of neck ties, very symmetrical. Back in the mists of time I made a skirt out of retired neckties, they were very wide and gaudy as I recall, and because of the bias cut the skirt always hung in a weird twisted way that I enjoyed (this was at the end of the '60s). And a dishwasher is a great gift to oneself, especially when combined with solving the mystery of the puddles. I was thinking frozen pipes, a new dishwasher is a much happier outcome.

    Ceci

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  8. I think some bowtie blocks may be in my future, they're fun to make and it's been several years since I made a bowtie quilt. Enjoy your new dishwasher. Ours is ten years old and still going strong, hoping to never need to replace it since it so quiet we don't even hear it in the next room.

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  9. Glad you found the source of the water problem and that it's a semi-easy fix. A new dishwasher is a good gift to yourself, for sure.
    I used to pick up ties when I was doing a lot of crazy quilting but have gotten rid of my stash now in favour of fabrics that work for landscapes.

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  10. You've been busy on several fronts. Words, where they came from and how we use them is so interesting. I'm currently reading Steven Kings, "On Writing". It's been enlightening to see how one of my favorite authors approaches them.

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