Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Holiday Weekend

It was a pleasant weekend, both at DH's and at my house. We had our first long rambling walk of the season though the riverside park. (No mosquitoes yet.) I put in some tomatoes and basil. I am so not a vegetable gardener but maybe this year I'll get a crop. It was nice to sit out on the patio yesterday afternoon! (What a contrast today: it's 38 as I type this, going up to 60. Brrr.)

A half-step forward, a couple of steps sideways, and a leap back . . . that's my stash story. I spent much of last week working on a quilt that will be a wedding gift. After I got the blocks assembled I realized I didn't have the "right" border fabric. Joann Fabrics had a holiday sale with 10% off the entire purchase so I got fabric for the border and the back AND 10 yards of quilt batting (also on sale) AND just a few other yards. But it was all on sale!
I used up a stack of 3" squares making mini 9-patch blocks. I have discovered that these are fun to have on hand when "just sew something!" urge strikes. 200 mini 9's uses 1-5/8 yards of fabric.

Here is Step 5 of the Crush mystery. The orangey fabric is one of my purchases from England specifically for this project. The purple just looked right, and I used the same purple in all the blocks (rather than a variety of purples). I'm not going to try to figure out how the entire quilt is set--I'll wait until Bonnie tells us!


P.S. As for that border fabric (see second paragraph): it did not pass the audition. I'll have to ponder the design, and my stash, some more.


Friday, May 23, 2008

Gifties


Next weekend is the long-anticipated PieFiesta Dos in Las Cruces, New Mexico! This morning I finished the favors I'm going to give to my fellow Magpies. These little pouches are made from neckties, of which I have a few hundred (vbg). They were easy to make and they are sooooo cute!

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Caught up on the mystery


Here are my "Cream Crush" blocks!   












Sunday, May 11, 2008

Pentecost, and this week's sewing accomplishments

I'm not a mother so I don't get all worked up over Mother's Day. This year it coincided with Pentecost. DH acknowledged the former but emphasized the latter, using Acts 2 as his preaching text. (We also observed, privately, that the sentiment "God could not be everywhere so He created mothers" is inaccurate, bordering on the blasphemous: God can be anywhere God wants to be. God IS omnipresent.)

My lawnmower is still at the shop awaiting its annual tuneup. (Every March I remind myself to take it in early, and every April I eventually do.) Meanwhile the grass is getting high, more so because I fertilized it last week. But without the mower and in this chilly, blustery weather, I've done more sewing!












(I don't know how these got lined up this way. If I try to move them I will surely lose them.)
(1) Seven 5-1/2" basket blocks (two are reversed). These were presented at the
annual staff anniversary reception last week. The pocket on the back held a cash card (which we give rather than a plaque or a crystal bowl).
(2) Summer tote bag, adapting the "Newport" tote by Lazy Girl.
(3) "Nine Patch Cross," using 125 of the 3" 9- patches from the BlockSwappers . Both the cheddar/red-brown print for the setting and the larger cheddar/brown border fabric came from my stash. It's 56 x 56.

48 of these 4" bowtie blocks came from a SewManySwaps exchange. I made more blocks (they are soooo cute and so easy!) to create this 44 x 52 top. (I did this at the beginning of last week but didn't photograph it until today.)

....And I did NOT buy any fabric this weekend!



Saturday, May 3, 2008

"We ARE AAUW" and $375!


The Twist 'n' Turn Stars were one of the Blockswappers' exchanges last year. I contributed the finished quilt to my AAUW branch to raffle, with the proceeds going to AAUW's Legal Advocacy Foundation (http://www.aauw.org/advocacy/laf/). The AAUW-Illinois state convention was yesterday and today. Ticket sales were brisk! The final tally was $375 and the winner was delighted.

This year's convention theme was "We ARE AAUW." A=Advocacy, R=Research, E=Education, which summarizes what AAUW has been about since its founding in 1881. I've gone to enough state events that I know many AAUW members from other parts of the state, so convention is a time for renewing friendships. Eight women from our branch attended this year, several of whom were first-time attendees.

The keynote speaker was AAUW's public policy director, Lisa Maatz. "We know the world can be changed by one person," she said, "but it's so much more fun to do it in groups." Legislative success requires perseverance, she told us. An example: it took 14 years (7 congresses) to get the Violence Against Women Act passed. "You never know if it is your call or letter that tips the balance for your legislator." Lisa said that AAUW has a reputation as a progressive and moderate organization. AAUW is reasonable in what it seeks; its members are multipartisan. The AAUW Capitol Hill Lobby Corps is the only women's group that lobbies weekly when Congress is in session. Often AAUW is the only gender lens at the table for federal issues: we talk about education in the women's issues committees and we talk about women in the education committees. AAUW's Public Policy Program is determined by the members, who approve the program at the association convention (odd-numbered years).

The Women's Global Education Project was featured in today's breakout session. (http://www.womensglobal.org/) The speaker, Joan Sherman, is a board member of this project. She said that in the developing world 150 million children do not complete primary school; of that, 100 million are girls. Secondary education is a key factor in women's and family success: smaller families, less domestic violence, higher income. She said that these countries have ministries of education and have schools but resources (particularly in rural areas) are scarce, families often undervalue girls' education, etc. The Virginia Gildersleeve Fund (which I mentioned in an earlier blogpost) has given the WGEP grants. Obviously there is more that can be done.

AAUW-IL was instrumental in having December 10 be designated Jane Addams Day in Illinois.
http://www.aauw-il.org/jane.html Watch for an upcoming quilt featuring a block called the Jane Addams Star!

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Another finish


This is "Bright Chevrons."
A couple of months ago I cut a large quantity of 2" x 9" strips from my stash of bright fabrics. I sewed five strips together and trimmed them to 8" square. I cut the square diagonally and then pieced the resulting triangles.
I quilted it this weekend with simple in-the-ditch outlining the squares. It measures 64 x 82. It will be one of the items in the silent auction at our Rotary Golf Outing on May 16.
[P.S. The quilt brought $150. The successful bidder has purchased a half-dozen of my quilts at previous Golf Outings. I've asked her if she'd like to specify a colorway or pattern, to which she replies that she'll take potluck.]

Sunday, April 20, 2008

A couple of other photos....



Our Falmouth hostess took me to Truro on the train to go fabric shopping. This was the outlet store for Truro Fabrics.
L3 & L5 per meter here!






I purchased fabric for "Devon Cream Crush," my version of the Quiltville mystery project.







The Falmouth Library. Built in 1894 with the library on the ground floor and the municipal offices above. The library is still there; upstairs is the municipal art gallery.







Rotary International "Shelter Boxes" provide tents and cooking equipment all in a box, for people displaced by natural disaster.
They are assembled and distribted from a town in Cornwall. This photo is of a display in a shop window in Falmouth.








Exmouth Library (a former school)

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Oh, to be in England





(This post was begun April 2, but I'm finishing it on April 20.)
Suffice it to say, our first trip to England will not be our last. I've been home for a week; my husband will return April 28. Our hosts were (and his continue to be) most accommodating, taking us to see many sites in Cornwall and Devon. I took many pictures of beautiful countryside, rugged-down-to-the-sea cliffs, churches, and libraries. They'd clog the blog, so I'll spare you all of them.
(1) Stonehenge, on our first day (March 31). No, it's not in Devon or Cornwall, but it's on the way. That's as close as people can get (obviously they don't want people taking chips as souvenirs).
(2) Gwennap Pit,
(3) Come to Good, a Quaker meeting house
(4) Gorse. It's prickery, it's a weed, and at this time of year the moors are full of it. Beautiful yellow flowers.
(5) Merlin's Cave at Tintagel, the legendary birthplace of King Arthur.
Places we saw, all of which are google-able if you'd like to know more:
· Stonehenge
· National Marine Museum in Falmouth
· Come-to-Good Friends meeting house (built 1710)
· Trelissick Gardens
· Tintagel (reputed to be birthplace of King Arthur)
· Gwennap Pit (where John Wesley preached in the 1780’s—a terraced former mine pit that held as many as 2000 people)--we forget what a radical he was!
· Land’s End (farthest west point in Britain, 865 miles to John O’Groats in Scotland, now a big tourist trap….saw Dr. Who’s telephone booth)
· The Lizard (southernmost point in Britain, a National Trust site, fr. Cornish meaning “high place”)
· King Harry Ferry to Portscatho for church service
· The Eden Project (reclaimed china clay pit, now the world’s largest conservatory)
· Plymouth (from which the Pilgrims left)
· Buckfast Abbey
· A La Ronde (the Parminter sisters’ 16-sided house) and Point in View (their chapel and cottages
· Exeter Cathedral
· Exeter quayside
· Sidmouth shingle beach, lined with Victorian-era hotels

And
· Public libraries in Falmouth, Truro, Exmouth, and Exeter (the first three very like New England libraries, all built in the 1890’s)
· Truro Fabric Shop and its outlet, Yellow Patchwork Shop (fabric there a bargain at L3 and L5/meter)
· Train from Falmouth to Truro
· Bus from Exmouth to Exeter
· Bus from Exeter to Heathrow
· Meals included pasties at a local bakery in Falmouth; several old English inns; a converted mill (Otterton St. Mary).
· Cream tea in Cornwall: cream first, then jam; in Devon: jam first, then cream (or is it the other way around??)…..”chudleighs” are a variation of scones, but made with yeast (I can’t find a recipe, though)

Impressions
· Yards are small. Some are not so well-tended, but most are beautiful.
· No basements. (Parsonage in Falmouth built in the 50’s; house in Exmouth built in the 1920’s)
· Kitchen fixtures (stove, dishwasher, fridge) are smaller than in the U.S.
· Parsonage had a heat-water-as-you-go shower.
· Season three weeks farther along than Chicago. The south coast is warmed by the Gulf Stream so there are magnolias, camellias, and even palm trees in gardens.
· Gorse is a weed, but it’s pretty. (Yellow flowers.)
· English robins are soooo cute. (I got within 3 feet of a young one at the Eden Project.)
· NARROW streets. Parking allowed in either direction on either side, unless there’s a double yellow line along the curb.
· NARROW country roads, with hedges and stone walls on either side. If you meet someone coming the other direction the person who got there second must back up to the next turnout.
· Many places will take cheques but not credit/debit cards. (Cash, too, of course.)
· Lots of children! (It was half-term holiday in both Cornwall and Devon.)
· No Spanish-speakers/Latinos. Mostly Caucasians, a few Indians.
· Older women wearing mid-calf skirts, beautifully wool.
· Most people carrying shopping bags, everywhere.
· THRIFT SHOPS!! For all manner of charities (“Mare and Foal Association”)
· Emphasis on organic and Fair Trade food products (coffee, tea, more).
· Temperature is metric, but distance is imperial (miles). Fabric sold by both yard and meter.

National Trust and National Heritage are two different (competing??) organizations.
The Rotary Club that we visited (Penryn Club) had no women members.
We went to a public meeting about a Tesco (supermarket) expansion that would affect one of the churches in the Exmouth parish. (Tesco would build an entirely new building to replace the drab 1955 structure.) It was just like public meetings in the U.S.
ASDA/Wal-Mart wants to open a superstore in Exmouth. It’s very controversial.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Frolic!

"Wild By Design" is a catalog of 48 quilts from the International Quilt Study Center at the University of Nebraska. (www.quiltstudy.org) The selected works range from the 1820's to the 1990's. They are spectacular and inspiring.

In the introductory essay, art historian and quiltmaker Janet Catherine Berlo writes, "In the early 19th century, 'quilting frolic' was the name for the communal efforts that later came to be called quilting bees....'bee' was reserved for more mundane tasks, such as the corn husking bee or the fruit paring bee. Frolic, in contrast, suggess the excitement and high spirits present in a gathering of friends and artistic peers. The quilt frolic was the female equivalent of the art academy and salon....Women brought their pieced tops to be assembled and hand quilted. These would then be admired, discussed, and used as creative fodder for the next quilts to be made within a community of intimates."

I think we should all campaign to make "quilt frolic" part of our vocabulary -- and to practice frequent frolicking!

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Honors, Daffodils, and Disappearing 9-Patches

"Women's Art, Women's Vision" is the theme for National Women's History Month, 2008. The Lake County Women's Coalition (http://www.lakecountywomen.org/) invited each of its member organizations to nominate one of their members for her contribution to art. AAUW chose me! The honorees were recognized at a brunch yesterday. I was the only quilter. The others were a musician, three artists (oil, watercolor, pencil), a graphic artist, a "sewer" (meaning a seamstress), a photographer, a floral designer, a beauty consultant, and a jewelry designer. It was a lovely event, and I am grateful to my AAUW friends for nominating me. Quilty progress: I finished six daffodil wallhangings. They'll be hostess gifts when we go to England next month. The pattern is adapted from a quilt by Nancy Breland in QNM (5/02). Last year I was in a swap for 9-patches made from solids and 30's fabrics. I decided to "disappear" them. The result, with borders, is 54x66 and DONE!

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Therapeutic value of quilting

QuiltDivaJulie mentions this on her blog:
http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/social/20010324/msgs/5323.html

I can recollect two very distinct "ah-ha" moments when I realized
what the act of sewing did for my peace of mind/psyche. I say
"sewing" rather than "quilting" because the first was in 1973, before
I was a quilter. I was sewing a skirt (pink poly doubleknit....hey, it
was the 70's!) and I had a sudden feeling of "I really, really like doing
this." The second was President's Day, 1994 -- I know the date
because it was a holiday. We had moved to North Dakota just weeks
before, living in rental properties (DH in Bismarck, I in Fargo), and
I just felt unsettled. The second bedroom of the little rent house was
devoted to storage and sewing. I needed curtains for one room but
didn't want to spend any money on them, so I cut up an old bed sheet.
As I sewed a feeling of centered-ness came over me.

Of course there are times when sewing is just frustrating--the pieces
don't fit together properly, a garment sleeve doesn't set in evenly,
or the buttonholer stitches one side short and the other long--but on
the whole, sitting at the machine and attaching one piece of
fabric to another to create an entire new assemblage is a wonderful
act!

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Bermuda!







Photos:
(1) At Horseshoe Bay
(2) From the ferry (Hamilton to Dockside)--the water really is that color!
(3) The group on the steps to the residence hall at BIOS.

We had a splendid time at the Elderhostel at the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences. We left two weeks ago (2/10) and returned last Monday (2/18). That gave us a day before and a day after the Elderhostel itself.

The theme was "The Real Bermuda." We learned the history and ecology of this 21.5-sq-mi island nation, which never had indigenous people. Europeans discovered it in 1505 (Spanish) and the English colonized it in 1609. Over the centuries its native cedar was known as a superior wood for furniture and shipbuilding. Its gardens provided produce for 19th/early 20th-century New York (Bermuda onions). Tourism began in 1883 when Princess Louise wintered in BDA. Now the major industries are tourism and being headquarters for many reinsurance companies.
BIOS was established in 1903 by Harvard oceanographers. It hosts the longest-running ocean water quality project, used as a benchmark by oceanographers worldwide. The BIOS research vessel was in port so we got a tour. We also went out on a smaller craft, with one of the BIOS scientists, to collect plankton which we viewed under microscopes. (http://www.bios.edu/)

We learned about the Bermuda petrel, or cahow, which was nearly extinct. Ornithologist Dr. David Wingate who led the preservation effort still monitors the preserve where they nest. He gave a presentation for us. (www.audubon.bm/bird%20conservation.htm)

We were there in the "low" or off-season so shops had reduced hours and there were no cruise ships in any of the ports. Yet it was in the high 60's each day, even the day that that a gale came through with rain and very high winds. (The day we were at Dockside, the historical museum complex.)


Bermudian architecture, both residential and commercial, requires that roofs are made to catch rainwater. Houses have underground tanks to store the water, which is used for drinking, etc. (Toilets are flushed with saltwater.)


Last Sunday we worshipped at St. Peter's Church in St. George's, the oldest continuing Anglican church in the New World -- est. 1612. (www.anglican.bm/j3r.html)

Our cohort of 27 had the mix of interesting people we've come to expect and enjoy when we travel with Elderhostel. It was a grand trip!

P.S. I found a place to buy fabric--the crafts dept. at Gibbons Department store had about 100 bolts (all U.S. manufacturers). I bought four different fabrics, total four metres, of the most "island" looking prints.

Little Dipper



Little Dipper has 8" Drinking Gourd blocks. The big Drinking Gourd has 12" blocks. I used the same setting with the cutaway triangles creating the inner border. They are 1" (fin.) in the smaller version. I got the outer border fabric in Philadelphia. (That fits into the whole theme of these two quilts: the Drinking Gourd is another name for the Big Dipper, which guided slaves who were escaping via the Underground Railroad. The quilts are in CW reproduction fabrics. PHL, with its large Quaker population, was a major center for abolitionists.)

Caron at the Valley Quilting Studio did a fabulous job quilting the Drinking Gourd. I put the binding on this weekend.

Here is a comparison photo of the two.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Ava's Stars


I finished quilting and binding "Ava's Stars" this evening (while NOT watching the Super Bowl). Ava will be 3 at the end of March so this is two months early! Her grandmother is my college friend Alex. I've done needlework for Alex's three children (back in my needlepointing days) and quilts for her grandchildren. The quilt is 51 x 59. The pattern was in the 4/99 issue of McCall's Quilting.


Crossroads with borders and Bargello



When it came time to put the borders on Carolina Crossroads I found that I had only one purple fabric that looked right and I didn't have enough of it. I did not have the creative energy to come up with something clever so I bought another "perfect" purple. Glad to have this one to the "flimsy" (unquilted top) stage!


I had to join the gang for Bonnie's Superbowl Bargello project. The 2.5 strips from the BlockSwappers' exchange came in handy. I pieced most of it last night and put the borders on after church and before lunch.

In preparation for our Elderhostel trip next week I bought a new digital camera. It replaces the Kodak EasyShare that dates back to 2002 ( all of 2 megapixels and no zoom). The new one is a Sony, same model as the ones we use at the library. I used it to take these pictures. (My challenge now is retrieving them. My desktop computer is too old for the software so I'm using the new laptop, which I'm still getting used to.)


Friday, January 18, 2008

All but the borders!


I'm not sure how I'm going to border it, but I love the way it turned out.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Carolina Crossroads Step 6



It was good to get back to my studio last evening. I finished Step 6 of the mystery quilt and here are the photos.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Carolina Crossroads progress




Here are photos of Steps 3, 4, and 5. I did 3 and 4 last week and completed 5 last evening. (I don't know why the photos are such different sizes!)

I used the Companion Angle ruler for the first time. (I had purchased it long ago but had not taken it out of the package. I'd completely forgotten that I had it, but was pleased to find it before I bought another one.) The ruler makes it easy to cut quarter-square triangles from strips, but I learned that the strips have to be lined up precisely.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Final Piecing for 2007 and The Annual Reckoning

I finished "Quad 9 Patch" on December 31. The blocks are from the BlockSwappers exchange. The size (72 x 81) was determined by the amount of sashing fabric I had. There was no rhyme or reason to the arrangement of the 9 patches.
And now, for the Annual Reckoning:

I began keeping track of fabric bought/fabric used in January, 1998. By then I had been a serious quilter for four years and had a considerable stash underway (fueled by 25 years of garment sewing). At the beginning of each year since I have been brave enough to post the results to the supportive and appreciative audiences in my online quilting groups. This year I’m being braver (or more foolish) by posting the results on the blog, where just about anyone can see them.

In 2007 two quilting friends and I bought a quilter’s estate. My share was 1400+ yards for which I paid $650.00. In addition I bought 318 yards for $1,252. Total: 1718 yards, $1902, avg. price $1.11 yd.

I used 335 yards. Here's what I accomplished:
I completed 41 quilts. (Some of them had been started prior to 2007.) Of those, 12 were gifts, 9 were donations, and 4 were sold (for $430!).
I completed 8 tops which are not yet quilted.
I made and donated 100 tote bags to Care Bags for Kids. I made 200 HeartStrings blocks. I completed 2 24-block quilts and 3 24-block tops, and sent the rest to the HS coordinator. I made 44 coasters and 15 pillowcases. (6 of the latter were a commission —I got paid to make them!)
I remembered how to sew with a 5/8" seam and made a blouse, a dress, a pair of slacks, 2 jackets, and a tote ag for myself. I emptied 83 spools of thread.
Here’s to a wonderful, fiber-filled 2008!

Friday, December 28, 2007

Some reminiscing



Today would have been my mother's 82nd birthday.

We used to tease her about the gift-giving challenge caused by having a birthday three days after Christmas. (To add to that, their wedding anniversary was December 14!). I look around at all the things I have that came from our parents, either as gifts or as inheritance--from the family antiques to the bathroom wastebasket. That purchase (post-Christmas 2001) was her way to demonstrate that even though she was so ill she could keep up with the ads and want to have some home improvement, however modest. She gave me the money and asked me to go to Kohl's to buy the wastebasket. IIRC it was $35, way more than she would ordinarily have spent, but she decided to keep it. That's a lot more than I'd spend on a bathroom wastebasket, too! (I can imagine her saying, "I'm glad you're getting good use out of it, dear.")
Far beyond things, of course, are the values that she and Dad taught. Another piece I kept is a cross-stitch picture that I made for Mother. The message, attributed to John Wesley, describes her so very well.

The picture and the wastebasket (!) are pictured here. The wastebasket is on the counter just for photography purposes . . . My next blogging lesson is to figure out how to put photos into the middle of posts.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Pieceful Christmas



Ours is a small congregation. In recent years we have settled on having a Christmas Day service rather than a Christmas Eve service. That allows those who have families who belong to other churches to spent Christmas Eve with them, and then on Christmas Day to come and celebrate Christ's birth and participate in the sacrament of Holy Communion. DH's homily emphasizes God's gift to all of us, the Son.

That means that we are unscheduled on Christmas Eve! This year we watched "A Christmas Story." (The screenplay evolved from a combination of several chapters in Jean Shepherd's "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash." All of Shepherd's books are classics of American humor.) The movie came out in 1983. I'm was curious and I looked up Peter Billingsley, who played Ralphie. He's 36 now.)

While we watched, I sewed. After the complexity of "Storytime Readers" I was ready for something simple. I cut up contents of the 1.5" strip box into 7" lengths. I sewed them into 6's, then trimmed them to 6.5", sliced them in half, and reassembled them. I pieced the resulting squares randomly--no layout, just one square attached to another. The top is 60 x 60--and I quilted it last night. How nice to have a started-and-finished object ready for the next charity request! [The quilt was contributed to a Boys & Girls Club fundraiser in February, 2008, where it brought $125.]

Santa (in the person of DH) was VERY nice to me with two triple-digit gift certificates, one to Royce Sewing in West Bend and the other to Willett in Fond du Lac!!!



Saturday, December 22, 2007

UFO COMPLETED!!





Shout it from the housetops! This UFO is done!

It started in 2005. The library received memorial donations for Mrs. G, who was the mother of Mrs. L who is one of our most devoted volunteers. Mrs. L and I talked about what to purchase with the contributions. A piece of artwork for the youth services room? Hmm. Mrs. G did a lot of needlework, as does Mrs. L. What about a quilt? I found a pattern called "Storytime Readers" by Cathy Wierzbicki (http://www.timetoquilt.com/quilts.htm). I began making blocks. Another library staffer made a block. And then I got stuck. Big time. No excuse, just frozen up. The blocks stayed in the box, growling quietly at me whenever I looked that direction.

I finally got tired of losing sleep over the embarrassment of this unfinished memorial gift. I decleared it to be my #1 Christmas vacation project. I took the blocks to the library and talked with the youth services coordinator about where the finished quilt might hang. Good thing I did, because we decided the most flexible way to set the blocks was as two panels. On Thursday of this week I made a special trip to Patched Works (http://www.patchedworks.com/) to get border and backing fabric. I sat down to sew. And the two panels are done!

BTW, the panels are 30 x 88.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

"Drinking Gourd"




When I saw the Drinking Gourd block in Barbara Brackman's book on quilts and the Underground Railroad I knew I had to use it. I also wanted to make a quilt with a "butternut and blue" color scheme.
(Historical note: "follow the drinking gourd" was a folk song. The drinking gourd was the Big Dipper. Slaves headed north on the Underground Railroad would look for that constellation.)

I volunteered to coordinate a quilt to raffle as a fundraiser for the Illinois Library Association. The days got away from me and I never got around to contacting other quilting librarians. A call from the ILA fundraising committee chair saying that they'd like the quilt in January got me going. I made the entire top myself. The blocks are 12". The middle border is made from the cutaway triangles of the flying geese. The top measures 92 x 92. Yes, I'm sending this out to be quilted!

Dawn http://dquilts.blogspot.com/ also loves this block. She and I have made a pile of 8" blocks, though knowing her she's a lot farther along with them than I am. We're getting together next week so we can compare.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Carolina Crossroads Mystery



I've finished the first two steps in Bonnie's mystery. My color scheme is purple and lime, with yellow. I began collecting a palette of purples and limes last summer without a particular project in mind. What I've accomplished, of course, is to accumulate a big stack of fabric! This mystery project seemed like a good time to start to use them.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Stashbuilding for a good cause

We are starting a Boys & Girls Club in our community. (I say "we"
because I have gotten myself on the board. We really, really
need a safe, supervised, positive place for kids to go after school.
(We welcome kids @ the library but when they get bored they
get restless, and then they misbehave.) We have to raise
$100,000 in order to open the doors.

Last evening the Chamber of Commerce had a fundraising event
for the BGC: CommuniTies. Everyone who attended paid $5 at
the door and got a necktie.There were tie-related games:
ugly tie contest; a team effort to come upwith ways to use a used tie
(our team had 36--from belt, dog leash, and noose to g-string, jock strap,
and Boys & Girls Club fundraiser); and a novelty tie auction
(the Chicago Bears tie went for $400).

I said I would buy all the ties no one wanted to take home.
That turned out to be almost all of them (some were hideous!)
I got about 25 silk ties and have boxed about 50 polyester, etc.,
to give to Salvation Army.I'm happy to give (again) to this good
cause.

BTW, I wore my necktie patchwork jacket.

And, with my Rotary president's hat on, I was pleased
to present a check for$10,000 as our club's contribution.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Snow!

It's December. This is northern Illinois. Snow is expected, and it happened last night.

I got up at 5:00 this morning, bundled up, and went out to clear the stuff away.
The snowblower started right up -- thanks to (a) having it serviced two months
ago and (b) DH's trying it when he was here at Thanksgiving. I finished the job
when the metal ring/hook that attaches the spring & chain for the auger to
the deadman's bar BROKE. It would best if Pete-the-repair-guy affixes a new ring (I'm not
good at jerry-rigging such things) but I'll need help lifting the snowblower into my car.
Hopefully I won't need to blow any snow until after Friday, because until then I don't have
day- or after-work time to go to Pete's shop.

As I was using the shovel to trim up the edges of the snowblowing I slipped
(ice from last weekend's storm) and fell. I hit my left shoulder -- ouch!--nothing
broken, just tender.

(I realize I have just written one of those day-in-the-life blog posts. Other
bloggers would insert a photo of the snow here, but it's still dark outside.)

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Putting my toe in . . .

. . . into the Blogpool.
Let's see how this works . . .