Easter Sunday was cool but the sunshine was abundant.
I went to church in the morning and had a nice long walk at Van Patten Woods in the afternoon.
Sumac, fungus, mullein. The place names Des Plaines and O'Plaine are corruptions of "eau pleine" meaning "full of water," which is how the early French explorers saw the river in flood. You can see why.
I had to work off some of the gustatory delights of the day. I made a half-batch of pancakes, our customary holiday breakfast. The pancake mix (Christmas 2024 gift) still had enough baking powder oomph to cook up nicely. I'm a dinner traditionalist -- roast lamb, roasted new potatoes, asparagus, and cheesecake. I'll have some leftovers this week and freeze the rest for later.
(I was invited to celebrate the day with friends but decided not to.)
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In the studio:
Villa Rosa Designs announced a Six Quilts in Six Weeks challenge. Finish a UFO or start and finish something new and post photos to the VRD FB group each week . Any size, but all must be from Villa Rosa patterns. I can do this!
#1 I had one VRD flimsy in the box -- Sky Dancer from the April 2025 top-along. I call my version Garden Path. Now it's quilted and bound.
It will be just right for the raffle at the upcoming Zion Woman's Club Bunco party.
That leaves five quilts to start and finish by early May. I decided I'd make the five flimsies first, then quilt them all. I perused patterns on the VRD website and splurged on a few that might be good for the challenge. I'm going to use what's on hand (stash, of course, but also units from the parts department if possible).
Yes, many VRD designs are easy to copy from the photos. I'm respecting copyright and purchasing those I'm using in the challenge. (Just $2.00 each, after all.)
So here is VRD Challenge #2. The common fabric in each block is that bed sheet. (And there is still a lot left.)
The pattern has 24 blocks (10.5" finished). I made an additional column.
VRD Challenge #3.
Rachelle (Rachelle Handmade) is a VRD designer who lives in Wisconsin. Many of her patterns have Wisconsin place names. Here's my version of Boscobel.
The pattern uses 3.5" finished HSTs set 9 x 10. I had a box of 4.5" unfinished homespun HSTs on hand. I added a row and a column (10 x 11). This is a good wheelchair size.
I'm on a roll! I have strips cut for the next VRD and hope to have a flimsy for Wednesday's post.
Linking up with Design Wall Monday Sew and Tell Monday Musings
P.S. I won a Hobbs wool batt from the SAHRR sponsors!
looks like a fantastic start on the challenge....i had veal for dinner as it was a food pantry item otherwise i would have bought lamb....i do miss ham tho....sigh
ReplyDeleteGood work Nann. I have some Villa Rosa patterns too but I am not participating in the challenge. I'll be going to Europe on vacation!
ReplyDeleteYour Easter dinner looks amazing. Love the hikes too - so pretty out! Wow - 6 tops in 6 weeks!! you have a great start!!
ReplyDeleteI’ve eaten lamb a few times as gyros but never cooked it myself. Yours looks appetizing. We freeze a lot of leftovers here, too. You are moving along with your six quilt challenge. My daughter gave me a personal challenge for her benefit. It was good to get moving again. Stay well. Enjoy your hikes.
ReplyDeleteYou are such an amazingly prolific quilter! Your Easter menu looks very inviting on the traditional Fiestaware. We've had a set of mixed colors for 15 years or so, and I've picked up a few extra plates when they appear at our local thrift store. Use them every day, they bring a note of cheer especially on dreary winter and early spring days.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds like a good challenge for you and great that you can use pieces from the parts department. It was brisk out yesterday but the sun felt good.
ReplyDeleteYou're off to a great start on the Villa Rosa challenge! I collect their cards and some year...it will be the year of Villa Rosa patterns. :)
ReplyDeleteBoscobel is very intriguing - it's nice to feel that way as I have been very low energy about my quilt projects this year! Now that spring is starting to feel real it would be nice to think about a new start.
ReplyDeleteCeci
It was windy, cold and cloudy here on Easter (it had hit 75 degrees on Friday). We even had some snow flurries this morning. If anyone could make 6 quilts in 6 weeks, it would be you (well, there are a few other like Wanda and Cathy). My Easter dinner was a ham slice, cheesy scalloped potatoes, sauted asparagus with sliced almonds, and cole slaw. The daffodils are in full bloom and the hellebores are magnificent this year, but the crocuses and iris reticulata were devoured by the deer and rabbits.
ReplyDeletePat