Thursday, December 28, 2006
My Other Obsession
This year all the stars aligned themselves in my reading favor and I received many, many books for Christmas. Thank you, thank you, friends and family!
Something that I like to do when I get a new book, or even a book from the library is spend some time looking it over. I check out the title page, see if it has a table of contents, look at the pictures, scope out the maps (always a good sign if a book has maps), and riffle through the pages. I like to be acquainted with a book before I dig myself into it. So that is what I have been doing this afternoon, as I try to tidy up the post-Christmas clutter in the livingroom.
This year I want to keep a journal of the books I read. I have tried to do that in the past, but one thing or another always seems to intervene. Having this blog might help--it gives me a place to think aloud about my reading as well as my quilting. Reading, a lot like quilting, is a solitary activity. You may discuss the books you've read with others, but they're not there when you're actually doing the reading. (I know I've bored my family to tears when I've suddenly insisted on reading what I thought was a particularly wonderful passage aloud to them.)
This pile of books is not my only material. I also have a shelf in the diningroom bookcase dedicated to "next reads." And then there is the pile on my bedside table.
On the top of that pile is Lost City of the Incas by Hiram Bingham. It is his account of the discovery of the Incan city, Machu Picchu. I got interested in this after I saw a documentary about South American exploration on the History Channel a few months ago. According to the reviews, most of Bingham's conclusions about the Incas were flawed, but the account of his discovery is worth reading the book. I haven't had a chance to get much farther than the introduction, but it looks good so far. It also contains Bingham's original photographs and drawings, which is a plus.
Another book I'm reading is at the top of the stack pictured above, The Best Christmas Pageant Ever, by Barbara Robinson. It was a gift to myself last year, because I had always wanted to read it, and the copy in our school library is always out. I just love this book and it is a treat to read around the Christmas holidays. For anyone who hasn't read it or seen the movie, it is about a family of "bad" kids who nearly take over a Christmas pageant and in doing so, teach the "good" kids a thing or two about the real meaning of Christmas. That sounds sentimental, but the book isn't.
On the quilting front, I think I have been able to get the fabrics for the mystery quilt to play nicely together. The green is what I had planned for the border, but I'm going to use it in the blocks instead. I had chosen another green, but it fought with the pink. I want the colors to be distinct, but able to blend in well with each other. Dreamily harmonious is the look I want. Pastels are not usually my first choice, but I have been eyeing this fabric in the quilt shop for months.
I spent the morning chain sewing the first few blocks with my new friend the quarter-inch foot and I have a good start. I want to have the top pieced by the end of January. We'll see!
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
My New Friend
Say hello to my new friend. It is a quarter inch foot for my vintage Featherweight. I got this little baby just before Christmas, but it took me until yesterday to have a chance to try it out. Wow, does it make a difference!
You see that little black fence on the right side? It rides just outside the seam as you sew, and it actually makes it difficult NOT to sew a quarter inch seam. I was feeding little HS triangles through the old gal WITHOUT pinning first and getting nice even straight seams. I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
I spent yesterday cutting out fabric for the guild mystery quilt and trying a first, test block. Unfortunately, two of the fabrics just won't play nicely together, so I am going to have to use something else for the second color. I think what I was planning to use for one of the borders is going to work. I just have my fingers crossed that I bought enough of it.
Sunday, December 24, 2006
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Christmas Break!
The Swedish star above is my favorite Christmas decoration. My husband gave it to me a couple of years ago after I mentioned seeing it in a catalog. Doesn't it look like a feathered star? Once this goes up, I really feel that Christmas is at hand.
My Christmas break starts this morning, which is why I am sitting here with my second cup of coffee instead of madly dashing out the door for school. My husband just left for work and I am sitting here contemplating what I am going to do today.
The first thing is pick up my son at the airport. He is flying in from Texas today for a nice long Christmas visit. We haven't seen him since Thanksgiving and that was only for the long weekend so we are all looking forward to having him around for a while.
Second, the house. We are back home with a newly refinished and workable (!) bathtub, so I need to get busy cleaning and decorating for Christmas.
Third, shopping. Groceries and, yes, Christmas presents. As usual for the past few years, we're not exactly sure how many will be coming to Christmas dinner here, but I've ordered a 16 pound turkey and we'll be ready for whoever shows up. With the Christmas presents I am at the point where I just need a few more things. Hopefully that can be accomplished with a trip through the mall and a couple of other stores close by.
I am furiously working on one last Christmas present which I will probably be able to finish tonight. After that it should be smooth sailing through the weekend. My daughter and her boyfriend arrive on Friday night, and we'll all be together for the holiday. That is MY best and favorite Christmas present!
Since this is supposed to be a quilting blog I thought I'd add at least one quilty thing this morning. When I returned to Hancock's for the binding material for the little Christmas mat I made for my secret Santa pal, I saw these beady eyes staring at me from the fabric racks. Could I resist? I could not. The opposite side of the panel is cats with the same quizzical eyes. Wallhanging? Table mat? Pillow? Who knows? My sister-in-law gave me a book about sashiko quilting last year, and I thought...well, you know how THAT goes. I'll find a home for it somewhere!
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Power Shopping
I hit the stores this morning and managed to get all the out-of-town presents bought. Wrapping is for tomorrow. Mailing out is Monday.
We are inching toward actually being ready for Christmas. My daughter came down last night in order to run a race across the river this morning. She and my husband found a beautiful little Christmas tree this afternoon and it is set up in the livingroom. Not decorated yet, but that's for another day. I found this wreath at a roadside stand during my travels today.
We are still camped out at my in-laws' house. The shower door assembly is here, but it will be tomorrow before my husband begins to install it. It then needs to be caulked, and that means another day or two before we can move back home, since we won't be able to use the bathtub until the caulking is dry. Did I mention we have only one bathroom? People I know are astonished that we managed to raise two children in a house with one bathroom. I think it taught all of us courtesy and respect for the privacy and rights of others, not to mention the meaning of a QUICK shower!
I finished binding this little table mat the other day. It is a gift for my instructional assistant at school, a woman of patience and kindness who I know will appreciate it. I tried to get a picture of the quilting in the border. I am rather proud of it because I did it freehand, rather than going through the tedious business of marking it. I am never satisfied with quilt marking tools. I am thinking of trying pounce next, since chalk, soap, and marking pencils all drive me batty.
I went to the fabric store this morning intending only to buy pearl cotton to make the hangers for the lollipop ornaments (yes, I finished 25 of them last night!), and found this beautiful Christmas fabric, made by the same company (Alexander Henry Fabrics) as the lovely orange and green fabric I bought last week. I was already in the checkout lane when I spotted it, but I just had to go back and get some. I cut off a small piece and just finished sandwiching it so that I can make another small mat. (Sorry, the picture is not great, but the light here is fading.) I don't say this very often, but this material is too pretty to cut up and piece, so I am just going to quilt around the designs. It is for my secret Santa. I think (!) I can get it done in time for the reveal on Wednesday. I just needed one more holiday project to work on...
Our dog Shiloh seems to be adjusting to her new surroundings. She went blind about two years ago, so a new environment is a little stressful for her. Luckily my in-laws' house has a fenced in back yard, so she can wander and sniff to her heart's content without us worrying that she'll fall into something. She used to be terribly camera-shy, but now our only problem taking a picture of her is getting her to sit still long enough.
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Stressed!
I've got a couple of projects that are nearly complete--little crafty things I am doing for friends and family, but the rest of it comes from stores. Which you have to drive to. And go into. And shop in. And buy in. And then bring home and wrap. Then mail. Yikes! Just thinking about it makes me want to pour another cup of coffee and consider other options.
Part of the problem is that we have been camping out in my in-laws house for the past few days while we had our bathtub reglazed. It was only supposed to be a 48 hour deal, but then, as always with home projects, the timeline got changed. Now we're going to get a new shower enclosure. Which has to be ordered. And delivered. And installed. Oh my.
Saturday, December 9, 2006
Love in the Afternoon
We drove up to Indianapolis today to see the Gee's Bend quilts at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. This sculpture greets you as you enter the museum grounds.
We had never been to this museum before and I wasn't sure what to expect. It is definitely worth a trip if you are ever in the area. The museum and grounds are in the suburbs in a large parklike setting. There is too much to see in just one afternoon. We're going to have to go back for an even longer visit sometime.
But the quilts, oh my goodness, the quilts! This exhibit has 70 quilts, and they are magnificent!
Pictures weren't allowed in the gallery, but you can see some of them at the Gee's Bend website.
The photos don't convey the dynamic colors and what the catalogue calls "unexpected compositional variations". The ones I liked the best were the older ones because they look more spontaneous than some of the more recent ones.
We ended up not having enough time to get to Indy's north side to Trader Joe's, but didn't even care!
Organized Chaos
Last year I bought a bunch of semi-opaque plastic shoe boxes to use to store my fabric and put them on the shelves in my daughter's old bedroom. I also moved our old kitchen table in there to hold my cutting mat and other supplies. When I began to use the featherweight I moved it in there also, along with a smaller utility table and the ironing board. Her old bed serves as a fabric storage table/design board. You would think that a whole room would be sufficient for anyone, but no..... Projects keep inching their way downstairs to take up residence in the dining room (where the TV is) and the living room (where they get moved when I straighten up the dining room) and then the steps (where they sit, waiting to be moved upstairs again).
One of my goals for this year's Christmas break is to try to find a way to put things away so that I can find them again when I want them. So far, inspiration hasn't hit me as to how this can be accomplished!
Today we are heading up to Indianapolis to see the Gee's Bend Quilt exhibit at the museum of art. I am really looking forward to this, having read quite a bit about the quilts on the net. My husband is coming too, with the added incentive of a quick trip to Trader Joe's for some wine.
Sunday, December 3, 2006
Butterfly Quilt
This is the butterfly quilt that my husband brought home night before last. His aunt made it, although we don't know when. My mother-in-law had it for many years. It is hand-quilted and it looks to me as if the butterflies are hand appliqued on with a blanket stitch. She did really beautiful work.
Friday, December 1, 2006
Winter Blows Into Town
I can't ever get used to winter. Sigh.
This weekend I guess we'll just hunker down and do indoor things. I decided to use some of the wrong size log cabin blocks to make a table mat for my instructional assistant for a Christmas present. I got it finished, sandwiched, and basted this afternoon and I started quilting it just after dinner tonight. I know she'll like the vintage fabric and the log cabin pattern. I just hope I can get it finished before winter break! It's going pretty quickly because I am just stitching in the ditch, although I'll probably do something a little fancier in the borders once I get there.
My other goal for this weekend is to make the rest of the Christmas yo-yo's so that I will have them ready to make the lollipop ornaments for the people at work. We all exchange little token gifts with the others at school, and each year I try to come up with something different.
My husband brought home a beautiful quilt his aunt made. I'll post a picture later--there isn't enough light right now. It has appliqued butterflies which look to me as if they were blanket stitched by hand and is all hand-quilted. It is a delight.