Friday, January 31, 2025

Friday check in: January report

 

"Smile for your fan club!" 


Sunshine and temperatures in the upper 30's and lower 40's were conducive to walking this week.  It was good to stretch my legs!






This is pack ice, covered in sand.



I saw four of the ornaments I hung along one of the paths in mid-December.  This one had a few remnants of its red paint.


# # # # # # 





I had a satisfying and productive month in the studio. 

The Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR) prompt this week was half-square triangles. I have a box of batik HSTs on hand so this was an easy step.  



The RSC pink Ohio Star quilt is finished.  







Earlier this month:  I quilted the 2024 guild round robin, made the Amelia flimsy for the "topalong" I've joined, and made/quilted Cat's Cradle. 





Blue is the RSC color for February.   I made the 8 nine patch blocks for my year-long RSC project.  



I found 10 blue hourglass blocks in the parts department and used eight of them for a placemat.




This latest placemat joined the others for a photo shoot.  20 so far!   


The Stash Report for January:

Fabric IN:   88-3/4 yards, $51.50, average .58 (fifty-eight cents) per yard.   I wasn't going to acquire any fabric this month but there were irresistible bargains.  The final episode of Barb M's estate sale, a great find at Salvation Army, a set of new cotton sheets at Treasure Hunt (the Amazon returns store) . . .

Fabric OUT:  95-1/2 yards.  That included yardage sent to other quiltmakers for their charity projects.  I also parted with a big stack of Heartstrings blocks and five (!!) flimsies. 

Net REDUCTION:   6-3/4 yards.

Linking up with Finished or Not Friday  Stories From the Sewing Room


Monday, January 27, 2025

Weekly update: placemats, pink stars + reading

 The last Monday of January?!  Slow down, 2025! 

The parts department had two 80" lengths of neutral-squares-neutral (6.5" wide) intended for a border that I didn't use.  I added another strip of squares, then sewed the lengths together, and cut into four 20" pieces.   

I'm using the serpentine stitch to quilt these placemats.   The photo shows the borders sewn on but not yet sewn down. 



The pink Ohio Stars are a basted flimsy.  9" blocks = 36" x 45".  


# # # # # #  The ALA Retired Members Round Table Book Club met by Zoom yesterday.   Instead of reading one book and discussing it, we choose a prompt and then read a book that meets that prompt. This time it was "comic relief."  Among the recommendations:    The Bear in the Attic by Patrick McManus;   The Diary of a Wimpy Kid; The Man Who Pays the Rent, by Judi Dench; If It's Not One Thing, It's Your Mother, by Julia Sweeney.   Also, Crooked Heart, by Lissa Evans (my review in this 2022 post) -- and I learned that there is a prequel and a sequel.  

  I chose A Long Way from Chicago and A Year Down Yonder, both by Richard Peck.  The first was a Newbery Honor book and the second won the Newbery in 2000.  During the Depression Joey and Mary Alice travel from their home in Chicago to stay with their Grandma Dowdel in a small town in downstate Illinois.  They thought it would be boring but they soon learned that nothing that Grandma did was boring -- airplane flights, bringing the dead back to life, foiling burglars, and more.  A laugh-out-loud chapter book for kids and grownups.  

Not much on the calendar this week -- and sunshine and warm weather!   Linking up with Oh Scrap!  Sew and Tell Design Wall Monday Monday Musings

Friday, January 24, 2025

Friday check in: catching up with a finish, BOM, SAHRR and more

 On the home front:   Thirty birthday cards arrived this week.  THANK YOU! 

The dishwasher repairman came late Monday.  He pried off the lower panel, plugged a gizmo into a gauge or something, and got a readout that said the dishwasher had run 1,586 cycles since installation.  That was interesting.  He then replaced a water intake valve.  Here's the important part. He said he guessed that I used the economy cycle (51 min.).  He was right. It turns out that's wrong and I should use the normal cycle. That pushes more water through the valve and keeps it running.   So, if you're being economical and using the light cycle perhaps you should not.  (He said he runs his dishwasher on the extra-heavy cycle.)

I finished the annual report of the Zion Woman's Club activity for GFWC-Illinois.  I spent more time worrying about it than it took to actually compile the statistics, fill out the form, and write the narrative. (It's due on February 1, The state board says its goal is to get reports from 75% of the clubs in Illinois so apparently not every club does it. But we do!)  

A couple of months ago the church women had a speaker who specializes in senior care and placement. I called her for advice. She came yesterday.  Stevens was cordial to her though characteristically when he decided he was tired of conversing he told her, "Good-bye!" (He does the same when Curt, the parish visitor, comes to visit.)  Debra will provide recommendations but right now she advises using V (our housekeeper who can do day care) more frequently, since V is willing and able and Stevens knows and likes her.  I will!  

# # # # #  In the studio:  

SAHRR round one.  The instructions were to use a block with your initial.  Nine patch was an obvious choice for N. I have a box of 3.5" mixed-batik 9ps on hand.  At first the green batik seemed too blotchy but now I like it.  

I hope the subsequent rounds will allow me to use what I have in the parts department. 


    








Cat's Cradle is quilted and bound. 

I did not have to piece the backing because it was a full 45" wide.  Remember when that was the standard width? 







Here is the sixth block of the guild BOM with its five predecessors.







Seven placemats are ready to layer and quilt. 









Nine pink Ohio Stars are on the design wall. I've cut pieces for 11 more. 









The five (!!) pink flowers of the Apple Blossom amaryllis have faded but look at the new leaves! 


Linking up at Finished or Not Friday  Scrap Happy Saturday

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Midweek: fifty years ago

 

In January, 1975, I was home in Northbrook between Alpha Gamma Delta leadership consultant assignments. I posed for this photo with my entire my needlework output.

Here are the details.

* The green cross-stitch quilt was the first one I made. It's a Bucilla kit, double-bed sized.  I made it in 1973-74 when I was in graduate school (embroidery first semester, hand-quilting second semester).  It was my bedspread until I got married.  I got a lot of good use out of both the quilt and the degree.  The quilt is still in pretty good condition, considering that it's been washed quite a few times.

* My mother and her brother Bob hand-pieced the sixteen-patches in the 1930's. Mother said Bob's stitches were neater because he was a year older. Someone (Mother?) set them with blue sheeting. The summer of 1974 I took the top without Mother's knowledge and embellished the blocks with feather-stitching (pastel DMC floss) and hand-quilted a wreath and heart in the blue blocks.  I had NO IDEA what I was doing, so it is very inauthentic.  I presented it to my parents at graduation. Mother loved it. After she passed away I sent it to Bob, who was terminally ill. The report was that he smiled when he saw it.  I think one of Bob's children has it. 

* The crewel pillows above my left shoulder and under my right arm were kits.  My Alpha Gam sister Paula and I sent Kleenex or Puffs proofs-of-purchase to get them. (Circa 1972.)

* By 1974 needlepoint was all the rage. It was perfect to take on my Alpha Gam travels.
--The squirrel pillow was a finished-center ("Berlin work") piece. I first saw it at a department store in Ohio, and then again at a department store in North Carolina. It was on sale and I bought it.  (The squirrel is the Alpha Gam mascot.)
-- The red/buff roses picture (small square on the left in the picture) was also finished-center. (Alpha Gam flowers are red and buff roses).
-- The oval-framed picture is the one I don't recall at all.
-- The little railroad cars were gifts to my dad. They were Sunset kits.
-- The lemons-in-a-basket pillow was a gift to my sister, whose bedroom was citrus yellow, orange, and green.
-- The yellow-green bargello pillow was an Elsa Williams kit, made for my mother. (There was a living room chair that color.)
-- The purple-and-white pillow was made from a pattern in The Art of Needlegraph, a book I bought on my travels. I did all the counting by eye--no marking on the canvas.  This was a wedding gift for my Alpha Gam pledge daughter Janet whose favorite color was purple. She and her husband Grant still live in southeastern Missouri.  (I've haven't heard from them for years.) 


After the leadership consultant year, when I began my librarianship career,  I continued to do a lot of needlepoint.
I also sewed most of my clothes.  



 


I found that the supplies for stitchery were relatively inexpensive  but framing or other finishing can be really expensive.  Piping for pillows was a challenge.



I made pillows for wedding gifts and then pillows for baby gifts.  The baby's birthdate is coded in the plaid pattern.  For example, Whitney was born 4/15/79.  Starting in the center: four rows horizontally and vertically; then fifteen; then one, nine, seven, nine.  

(Quilts would have been a lot quicker to make.  I made a quilt for Whitney's wedding and for her older son.)  




 I still have needlework supplies.  


And books. 


In the early 1990's I found out that patchwork could be sewn by machine and I've never looked back!  





The last big cross stitch I made in 2000.  


Thanks for letting me reminisce!

Linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss


 


Monday, January 20, 2025

Weekly update, part 2: in the studio

 See the previous post for Stevens' 85th birthday weekend!

The cat's cradle blocks are assembled. 

 Justification for a ginormous stash: this floral print and the backing fabric (not shown), both just right.






One of my 2025 goals is to make 52 placemats.  Last Monday I posted a photo of two.  I made six more.  (After I took the photo I bound the red and black pair on the left.)   All of these are made from already-pieced panels and units from the box at the left.

None of these are the Old Town mystery, obviously.  That box is sitting on the counter.

Meanwhile I have several non-quilting tasks with deadlines that I have to tackle this week.  

It's probably very cold where you are. It is certainly frigid here today.  Tomorrow will be colder yet and then the temperatures will rise.  I'm grateful we can stay inside.

Linking up with Oh Scrap!  Design Wall Monday  Sew and Tell  Thanks for the shout out this week, Melva.

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Weekly update, part 1: birthday!

 


123 cards
 and counting!  

Neighbors, relatives, church friends, Rotarians, AAUWs, P.E.O.s, Alpha Gams, FB friends, and QUILTERS

more balloons arrived a half hour later

Stevens was surprised at the stacks of cards in the mail each day.  Not only did he appreciate the many personal notes but I did, too.  I am most grateful to all of you!  

Daughter Julie and her boyfriend Josh drove from New Hampshire for the big weekend.  (They're certainly used to winter weather but the lake effect snow around Cleveland was new.) They arrived Thursday evening in time for dinner.  (They stayed at a hotel in Zion.)


We went to Illinois Beach State Park on Friday (the last warm day before the cold front came in).  Lower left: that's pack ice covered in sand. 



We went out for dinner on Friday. Saturday afternoon we stayed in and and looked at family pictures.  

I had never seen this one before.  1942.  The hobby horse says "Cal's Colt." A FB friend said she had one growing up. A Google search turned up many photos and references.  (I'm sure it wouldn't pass child safety regulations nowadays.) 


Pizza for dinner with a carrot cake for dessert.



We enjoyed a performance of Over the River and Through the Woods at the Racine Theatre Guild.  It was fun!  

I got our concert selfie :) 
Julie and Josh stopped in Sunday morning before they set out for a couple of days in Chicago. They've got some other places to visit on the way back home.  

In sum it was a wonderful birthday weekend and again I am SO appreciative to ALL of you who helped make it so!  

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Midweek: WITB rediscovery


The moon this morning.  The phone camera shutter doesn't like the cold!   










Our kitchen counter this week.  The 5-year-old dishwasher is on the fritz (error code "H20" meaning that the water pump isn't pumping).  The repairman can't get here until next Monday.  I had a dish rack but no drainboard; fortunately I had a large plastic container in the cupboard.


# # # # # #


WITB = what's in the box?  Though technically this project was in a drawer.  

A long time ago I began to deal with a ziploc bag of 1.5" HSTs by making cat's cradle units. (I looked that up and I think that's a widely-used term for them.)  I put units together, added a large triangle, and made a dozen blocks before I put them away.   

It turned out I had enough of the pink print to make a total of 44 blocks (12 already made + 12 made this week = 20 to go).    I had enough of the pink print to make 10 more blocks for a total of 34.  I learned this AFTER I made 132 cat's cradle units. I only need 60. 



Blocks are 6.5" unfinished.    I anticipate a 6 x 7 5 x 6 setting with two four blocks to piece into the back.


Linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss

Monday, January 13, 2025

Weekly update: RSC pink + SAHRR

 

The weather hasn't been conducive to walks . . . hope I can get out this week.  Meanwhile, in the studio: 

My 52 Placemats project is underway with these two in pink.   

I came across a design for my 2025 RSC project.  Eight 6-1/2" 9Ps each month.



I started a batch of Ohio Stars just because. 


(I am avoiding dealing with Old Town.) 





I'm determined to stick with the Stay at Home Round Robin this year.   Here's my starter block.  It was the starter block for the guild 2018 round robin that I switched up (see how it began and ended in this post).  




Linking up with Sew and Tell  Design Wall Monday  Oh Scrap! as well as SAHRR 2025



Friday, January 10, 2025

Friday check in: top-a-long + reading

 



Thanks to everyone who's asked for our address for Stevens' birthday card shower. It's not too late--PM me to send the address. 

Quick post this morning.   The Running Doe top-a-long (what is that? read details here) is a flimsy.  

I cut into a few Kaffe prints, including the spashy center flowers.  I used up the large part of several others.  (I'm trying to get over the "can't cut this!" hurdle.) 

# # # # # #

 

In a small outport town in Nova Scotia in the last months of World War I a dead whale is stranded on the shoreline.  In a hotel in town Elizabeth Frame shoots her husband on their wedding night. She then goes to the whale carcass and shoots the revolver into its blowhole.   Halifax newspaper reporter Toby Havenshaw is dispatched to cover the trial.   Though there is no doubt of Elizabeth's guilt, Toby is determined to uncover her motive.  Things get more complicated when Elizabeth runs off with the court stenographer, a shell-shocked veteran of the war.   Toby's wife Amelia (a surgeon in Halifax returned from the European front) is his sounding-board, anchor, and soulmate through all of this.  

The narration is excerpts from Toby's reporter's journal, told with bemusement and irony. His turns of phrase and observations are wonderful.  "There are missed opportunities to be a better person. To dignify an undignified situation. You miss one of these, it doesn't come back." (p. 34)

"A person sizes up each situation as it comes, and you're either charitable toward it or you aren't charitable." (p. 118)  "Wherever you sit, so sit all the insistences of fate. Still, the moments [hold] promise of a full life." (p. 190) 

One of the Christian Science Monitor's best books of 2024, and rightly so.   And, bonus! This fulfills The Page Turner 2025 prompt for "a book with chapter titles."

Linking up with Finished or Not Friday and Off the Wall Friday

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Midweek: 25 blocks, OMG 2025, top-a-long

 



All 25 Old Town blocks are assembled.  I think the design looks good this way but the sashing, which I have yet to make, kicks it up several notches.  I will persevere.



I've begun something new. 



I signed up for the Top-a-long with Running Doe Quilts .  She is a designer for Villa Rosa. One pattern a month with the goal of making a flimsy.  Getting it quilted is not required.  The January pattern is Amelia . 

These are big blocks -- 17" finished -- and that 8-1/2" center square called for the jumbo Kaffe flowers.  

My One Monthly Goal for January is, as usual, two goals:

(a)  finish the Amelia top

(b)  get started on my 2025 placemat project 

Sunny and cold today.  AAUW book group meets in person this afternoon.  Quilt guild meets by Zoom tonight. 

Linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss.  (I missed the sign up deadline for January OMG.)

Monday, January 6, 2025

Weekly update: card shower request, Old Town, estate sale + bargains

 I'm starting this week's post with a personal request.

 Stevens will be 85 on January 18.  Can you mail him a birthday card?  If you don't have our address, indicate that in your comment and I will PM it to you.  Five years ago he was quite surprised to get so many cards.   This year he's alert but he's declining, so now is the time.  THANK YOU! 


# # # # # #


I've made 12 out of the 25 blocks for Old Town.  I haven't begun to cut, let alone sew, the turquoise and neutral units for the sashing.  






Yesterday was the 15th and final sale of Barb M's estate.  Each sale has benefited a different charity. That $27,171 is after expenses (1400 wash loads, storage unit, and hotel meeting room rental).    Not only have I enhanced my stash but I’ve also enhanced my friendships.


There wasn't much left but I managed to buy a few pieces. (Note: more of that Hoffman 1985 orchid print, used for the zig zag quilt.) $25 for fabric and $5 for the set of patterns (Moda U 2007-2008 mystery).




It's been too cold to hike in forest preserves but it's important to get Stevens out so on Friday afternoon we got groceries and went to two thrift shops. Bargain day! How could I resist? The butterflies and the cars are 108" wide--$3.99 each. I count a yard of 108" as 3 yards (3 x 36") -- so all of this works out to .19 (nineteen cents) per yard. Yes, I'm going to share the bounty!

Linking up with Oh Scrap! Design Wall Monday Sew and Tell