Wednesday, July 31, 2024

End of July

July saw another month of using more fabric than I brought in. I used 6.36 yards and brought in 1.11 yards for a net loss of 5.25 yards. A small amount perhaps, but still outgoing. H'ray! 

Two small pieces came to me, though I didn't ask for or purchase either one!

One fabric piece was a fat eighth red print from the local Sew Together quilt shop. I stopped in to get some Misty Fuse and received a "Christmas in July" gift. 

The other was this one-yard print of cocktail drinks (What in the world will I do with it?). It was a gift from Quilting Guild of The Villages for attending the July Ice Cream Social. 
July Fabrics Used

1 - July BOM blocks for the Seattle MQG's free BOM called Like Totally. I arranged all the blocks I've made thus far. You can see the holes that remain to be filled in the next five months. By the way, those darker pieces are actually purple; the color didn't photograph well. 

2 - Some not-very-pretty brown (ick) prints were used to make fabric bags, as required for quilts submitted to QuiltFest Jacksonville. That show, which is an amalgamation of several quilt guilds, for the first time will have a Modern Category! I'm entering my Maximalist quilt Feelin' Groovy, and a two-color improv quilt, Alternate Route. The show is September 19-21.

3 - The only fabric counted as "used" in my 61" X 73" Bibliography quilt top, is the French Blue Painter's Palette. I decided not to include selvedge strips as "fabric." But I sure love how this turned out! 

4 - For my 100 Days (self) Challenge Quilt Your Life, 31 days in July found me making another 46 blocks representing 10 different activities in which I regularly engage. Those are my four "F's": Faith (worship and bible study); Friendship (Central Florida MQG and Big Cypress Quilters); Fitness (line dancing, power walking, and exercise with weights); and Fun (playing my ukulele. listening to audiobooks, and blogging). I make a block every time I engage in one of those activities. 

I'm 61 days into this 100-day commitment (last day is September 8), and have made 96 blocks that are 5½" square, unfinished. In no particular arrangement... 

Book Recommedation
My last audiobook listen in July was Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy. If you've read any Anne of Green Gables books, you'll understand that this is a prequel to Anne's story - about Marilla, and how she and her brother spend their entire lives at Green Gables on Prince Edward Island.

It's the mid 1850's. Marilla is a no-nonsense girl, dutifully engaging in chores and appreciating the beauty of life on the Cuthbert family farm in Avonlea. Marilla's mother is expecting a baby; Marilla's Aunt Lizzie comes to help before the baby's birth. 

Marilla's quiet life means being close to her brother Matthew; regularly attending the Presbyterian church; and occasionally participating in social activities such as the Sewing Circle where she meets her new best friend, Rachel. Marilla wants to complete her schooling and pass exams, but she has missed school due to helping her mother. John Blythe befriends Marilla, their friendship deepens, and he takes her to the spring picnic. Later he tutors her so she can pass school exams. 

This was a sweet story about a beautiful place. The only thing that made it less than a happy read was the narrator. I groaned when I started listening, because I knew immediately who I was hearing - Cassandra Campbell. Perhaps because I've listened to her through many books (apparently she's a top narrator and has more than 900 titles to her credit) I'm tired of her voice. I also think she's not good at giving a distinct personality to each character; rather, she gives every voice the same inflections and emphases.

Linda's score: 4.1/5.0

Of the eight audiobooks I listened to in July, I gave five of them a score of 4.0 or better.
  1. Julie, Catherine Marshall, 4.4
  2. Nothing Else But Miracles, Kate Albus, 4.3
  3. Marilla of Green Gables, Sarah McCoy, 4.1
  4. The Clinic, Cate Quinn, 4.0
  5. The Book of Lost Names,  Kristin Harmel, 4.0
Here's Central Florida MQG's small group of Kawandi makers from last Saturday's workshop.

Though we stitched for three hours, we didn't accomplish a lot, though that's just the nature of Kawandi. To make Kawandi, you begin along the outside perimeter of whatever size piece you choose to make. Scrap fabrics and big stitch hand quilting are added as you work toward the center. Thus, it's the first round that always takes the longest to accomplish.

Still, we had a great time talking about different fabrics, threads, what can be done with finished Kawandi pieces, and a few other things. 😁 On my "someday" list is making a lap or twin-sized Kawandi. Linda

Friday, July 26, 2024

Summer Days

It's been a week since I posted because I haven't felt very productive lately. Blame it on lazy summer days,

I completed big stitch hand quilting and binding on a second wedge for the modern potholder quilt, we're calling Pot Luck. It has been in the hands of 16 modern quilters, and I'm adding wedge shapes on four sides to make the whole thing tilt, and give it more interest. 

The latest wedge I added is on the bottom, so now that top and bottom have wedges. I will sandwich the two sides, big stitch hand quilt them, and bind one side to add to the quilt center. When all four sides are attached, I will bind the entire perimeter. Just not sure yet whether that binding fabric will be Aruba (blue) like the wedges, or the gray-white stripe. 

In assembly line style, I'm piecing the last six blocks of 30 blocks for the Bibliography quilt (an Amy Friend design) made mostly from selvedges. As you can see, I will have lots of selvedges left over. (sigh)

Lastly, my go-to handwork continues to be my #30DaysofImprovQAL quilt from 2023! I thought I would be done with it by now, but I find myself big stitch hand quilting more densely than I anticipated (no machine quilting). Besides straight line and curved quilting, I'm adding decorative stitches like X-stitches, herringbone, and fly stitches. With August 1 coming very soon - typically when #30DaysofImprov QAL begins - I wonder if Shannon Fraser @shannonfraserdesigns will be repeating this activity. 




Central Florida MQG has two group charity quilt efforts going on that were introduced in the past month. Coincidentally, they're both using a theme of lines and bars in a "Dreamlines" (à la Brenda Gael Smith), and are in very similar color palettes! One group quilt was spontaneously planned by several members, and the other group quilt is for QuiltCon's Community Outreach Challenge. 

These two strips on the right are those I made for the "spontaneously-planned-by-several members" group quilt. We were to use two colors from their palette, and add a "dash" of Oyster (Painter's Palette). 

Gosh, I love me some curves!



At last Saturday's Central Florida MQG meeting, during Show and Tell I share my finished 66½" X 72" Large Scale Minimal Improv quilt, begun in a QuiltCon workshop in late February. It's name is Infrastructure thanks to a suggestion by my friend, Amy Friend @duringquiettime, who has a real knack for giving a quilt a one-word name. 

The quilt is labeled too! I use EQ Printables to make labels. And yes, the quilt is bound following my "No Tails Binding: Mitered Corners by Machine" blog tutorial here, that one Anonymous commenter recently wrote unkindly about. 

On Saturday I'm teaching a small group of Central Florida MQG friends how to make Kawandi. My samples, demo piece, and notions are all set to go.

Book Recommendation
My latest audiobook finish is The Book of Lost Names by Kristin Hamel. It's yet another novel that mostly takes place in WWII France. The story begins with octogenarian Eva Traube Abrams, a librarian living in Florida. A newspaper article about books found and confiscated during WWII that are now in Berlin, makes Eva rush to Germany. As she does, she remembers what took place in Paris and Aurignon when she was in her twenties.  

Back then, Eva and her Jewish parents were living in a Paris apartment when French soldiers took her father. In spite of forged papers to obtain his release, Eva learns he's already been taken to Auschwitz. Eva and her mother then use forged papers to flee to the Free Zone of France. Intending to create forgeries that will get them to Switzerland, Eva is pressed into staying to help the underground by utilizing her remarkable forging skills. Eva remains, putting in long hours to create documents to save innocent people, mostly children. All the while Eva's mother, Mamusha, frequently reminds Eva that she's being selfish and uncaring about her family. 

This was a good story, and I had warm feelings toward Eva who faced her fears in order to help others. But Mamushka... I didn't like her. She had no compassion, and her attitude made me want to slap her. I had a difficulties believing a mother would make such self-centered demands of a daughter.  

Linda's score: 4.0/5.0

Driving my golf cart home from line dancing Thursday afternoon, I found myself following this golf cart. It never ceases to surprise me what you'll see on a golf cart around town... groceries, a dog, a ladder, a person dressed as a clown, and even an airplane!
 
Linda

Saturday, July 20, 2024

Dancing, Space Center, and Selvedges

The past week was mostly about activities other than quilting. 

Monday afternoon was spent in a three hour line dancing workshop. A local instructor arranged to bring Niels Poulsen from Amsterdam to teach. I attended his intermediate level workshop, and boy, did his dance routines test my ability to recall 64-count dances! Here's a line dance Niels choreographed called Ghosted. Or you can watch Niels dancing it here.

On Wednesday hubs and I headed to Titusville where we stayed for two nights to revisit the Kennedy Space Center (KSC). We'd been there in March 2017 when Di came to visit from Australia, but it's a place worth visiting again. 

The all-inclusive price allows visitors inside a number of buildings where videos and exhibits can be seen. A bus will take you past the ginormous vehicle assembly building, where it appears that on this Thursday morning, many people were hard a work. The bus unloaded us at the Apollo/Saturn V Center.

There you can see actual capsules and rockets used in different missions. 

After a while, some of the rocket and shuttle names became blurred in my mind. A rocket is used only one time; the next generation is shuttles that rocketed upward, but then flew like a plane to land on earth. No waste!

Being at the Kennedy Space Center, and watching numerous video presentations about the space program since 1962, including President John F. Kennedy's speech about it, made me really think about what we've already experienced. Anyone else besides me remember July 20, 1969 - TODAY, 55 years ago - watching Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walk on the moon?!

Now we're seeing what the future holds as other companies join the journey into space. Here's a model of the Artemis II that will send a crew to the moon for "a long term presence for science and exploration." 

The KSC IMAX theater program is about the James Webb Telescope - more powerful than the Hubble telescope. It was fascinating to learn about! After $1 billion was spent designing and building the Webb telescope, it was launched from French Guiana (because the location was near the equator) on December 25, 2021. It has been sending incredible images back to earth. 

The Boeing Starliner has been in the news. After experiencing a helium leak and thruster issues during docking with the International Space Station, it's not yet in condition to return two astronauts - Suni Williams and Butch Filmore - to earth. I can't imagine being in their space shoes!

Honestly, some of the space stuff is unbelievable, yet dozens and dozens of astronauts keep going. The "Heros and Legends" building is an impressive acknowledgement of everyone who's been in space.

After that well-spent day, we were ready for food. A search found Grills Seafood Deck and Tiki Bar in Port Canaveral. Turns out it's on the Royal Caribbean cruise ship dock! In port was the newest cruise ship in the fleet - the second largest cruise ship in the world, Utopia of the Seas - 6,700 passengers; 21 places to eat; 23 bars; 5 pools; 3 water slides, and 2 casinos. No, thank you!

We sure enjoyed our meals at that green-roofed restaurant though! As I've mentioned before, I'm not much of a fish-eater, but I was definitely won over by the delicious fish reuben recommended by our waitress. Can you imagine? Swiss cheese and sauerkraut with fish? It was amazingly good! The fish was cobia, a lean, mild-tasting whitefish. A Key Lime Colada went down real easy too. Hubs ate a shrimp Cuban.

It's nice to have these mid-week getaways, which affirm that: 1) crowds are thinner; and 2) motels are less expensive. Our Wednesday and Thursday night stay at a Hampton Inn jumped $70 more on Friday night. 

Not much happened in my sewing room this week where I focused only on making foundation paper pieced selvedge blocks for the Bibliography quilt. Thus far, 24 blocks are made. I'll stop at 30. 

Specifically using selvedges with text that includes a year, I was happy to find 2015 and 2013 selvedges for this block.

But when I found a selvedge from 1997 - whoo-ee! I texted Amy Friend (the pattern designer) to tell her. She texted back, "You win!" 😀 The 1997 date was on a selvedge of pink Moda Marbles. Were you quilting back then too?
 

Book Recommendations
A Novel Proposal
 by Denise Hunter is a sweet story about Sadie, a writer. She's already received a $20,000 advance on her next book, and must switch from her favorite Western genre to romance. She's never read a romance, let alone written one. Sadie's best friend suggests getting out of NYC to really focus on writing. She finds herself in one half of a duplex on a South Carolina beach with a stack of romance novels to read. 

Sadie meets the handsome landscaper, Sam, who lives next door. He seems to be a curmudgeon and will barely speak to her. She continues to meet friendly people, and decides (with the duplex owner's permission) to build and install a Little Free Library next to the duplex, right on the beach access boardwalk. While tending the library, Sadie finds the book Christy by Catherine Marshall (I read this book about 25 years ago. You too?). When she opens the book to leaf through the pages, she finds a space cut out of the pages and a box within it. 

What follows is a quest, with Sam's assistance, to return the book to its original owner. You might guess where all this is headed, and you'd be right - a predictable romance. Apparently this book has been made into a Hallmark movie. 

I appreciated the book recommendations Sadie made to people using the Little Free Library which is what prompted me to read my next book - Julie by Catherine Marshall. 

Linda's score: 4.9/5.0

Julie
 by Catherine Marshall was written in the 1970, but wasn't published until after her death in 1983. It's based on Catherine's own life during the Depression, and is definitely worth reading, even decades later. 

Julie Wallace is 18 years old, the oldest of three children. Her father was a pastor, but they've left that church in Alabama to live in Alderton, Pennsylvania where Ken Wallace is the new owner of the Alderton Sentinel. Though he knows nothing about the newspaper business, the whole family have jobs to do. 

As Julie learns more about her father's business, she becomes privy to concerns in the community - the risks and treatment of men working in the steel mill; living conditions of workers in a flood-prone area called The Lowlands, and questionable practices of the community's elite. When a engineer's report is missing - about the condition of an earthen dam, holding back water above several communities, including Alderton - Julie and her dad raise concerns. Their family is threatened, and all of Alderton is at risk. 

Julie is a captivating story that's a good reminder about how far we've come since Depression-era working conditions and safety standards. Scripture and Bible lessons are woven into the story too. I know this book will stick with me for a long while.

The only negative thing I'll say is that the narrator is Cassandra Campbell. After hearing her read dozens of books, I'm a bit tired of her voice which is okay, but not a favorite.

Linda's score: 4.4/5.0

Friday, July 12, 2024

Binding the "No Name" Quilt

I'm absolutely delighted about finishing my 65" X 71"minimalist quilt - the one that's certainly not minimalist, and I've called by several names.... none of which are keepers. So, my No Name quilt is done and currently lies across the guest room bed, awaiting its outdoor, styled photo shoot with better pictures to come.

For binding, I used my favorite binding method. First, I marked the quilt perimeter.

Then, measured it and a strip of binding, to make both the same length. I sewed binding, separately, to four side.


















Corner are left free, for machine-sewing.

After sewing corners together...

... ⅜" from the sewing line, I rotary cut to trim batting and backing.

I have a 2009 tutorial for this "No Tails Binding: Mitered Corners by Machine method here, but I'm wondering if it's time to write a new one... though I wouldn't be telling blog-readers anything different. 

Here's an honest picture of my sewing room today! Since finishing the quilt (It still needs a name; did I mention that?) I've continued to make a few Bibliography selvedge quilt blocks (royal blue blocks on the far right and bottom left). Yes, that's a heaping, messy pile of selvedges on the table.  I'm keeping up with my 100 Days of Quilt Your Life - 42 days into 100 days. I have made 63 blocks, and am only (at the moment) four blocks behind. 

I'm also hand-quilting the second of four wedges for the modern potholder quilt. See the last picture of Pot  Luck here
Book Recommendations

Nothing Else But Miracles
by Kate Albus takes place in the Lower East Side of Manhattan (a place I've never been), where 12 year-old Dory and her brothers - one older and one younger - are trying to get by on their own. Their mother has died, and their father has been called-up to WWII service. 

Head-strong Dory often does things her elders tell her not to do. They're getting along fine with their father's monthly paycheck and people in the neighborhood who offer baked goods or a weekly meal. Their landlord is kind and understanding. But when he suddenly dies, the children find themselves in difficult circumstances, in the watchful eye of a new, unyeilding landlord. It's through Dory's tenacity that they find a place to hide, beyond the prying eyes of the landlord and the authorities to whom he's reported them. 

I found this is a deliciously charming tale about plucky children, fending for themselves as best they can in unfortunate circumstances. This story is unlike any you've read before. 

Linda's score: 4.3/5.0

Signal Fires by Dani Shapiro was a reflective story about families growing up on the same street, and how neighborhoods turn over and change through the years, yet how people remain the same. 

Dr. Ben Wilf and his wife have raised two children on Division Street. Ben unexpectedly meets his new neighbors, the Shenkmans, as Mrs. Shenkman goes into premature labor. The son who's born, Waldo, is one of the main characters, an 11 year-old who's noticeably quiet, unusual, and has a fascination for star-gazing. Though Waldo's father loves him, he's doesn't "get" him, so when Waldo encounters Ben with whom he finds understanding, an unlikely relationship forms. The same night they meet, another encounter changes Waldo's and Ben's lives forever. 

Woven throughout the story is the Wilf family's terrible experience - a tragedy they never talk about, but haunts all their lives. 

Linda's score: 3.8/5.0

The Clinic
by Cate Quinn is a somewhat far-fetched, yet engaging story that will draw you in.

Readers go with Megan to a remote, coastal part of the Pacific Northwest to The Clinic, where celebrities stay in a plush, exclusive facility for rehabilitation from alcohol and drug abuse. Meg's going, under cover, because her sister, the famous singer, Haley Banks died while in The Clinic. Though Haley's death is ruled a suicide, local police investigate to learn that more is going on than a suicide. 

While Meg promises her partner, Harry, that she'll give up her alcohol and drug habit while she's in The Clinic, she will also find her sister's killer. Meg comes to know the other guests - three women and two men - as she receives threatening letters warning her to leave. Then her life is in danger too. It comes to light that everyone in The Clinic is involved in rehabilitation using a new, experimental treatment that dredge's up painful, traumatic memories. 

Linda's score: 4.0/5.0

I've been playing Wordle for a while now. You too? In fact, I've played 891 times, but I've lost several times. My longest streak was 164. No doubt you've got longer streaks than me! 

Anyway, it doesn't often happen that I can guess the word in two guesses, so I had to document it.






I've been following Debbie J aquilterstable as she's been making pieced chairs. Her project brought to mind an old pattern I kept (one of a few) of a set of pieced chairs. The pattern, called "Come Have a Seat," was published by Four Corners in 1994 (!), and when I recently opened the pattern sleeve, I found an extra chair I'd made in 1995 when I made and gifted this quilt to a co-worker at Drake University. One of these days (ha!) I'd like to make this little quilt again. 
Linda

Friday, July 5, 2024

Same, and disappointing

To me it seems that not much is being finished, though I am daily in my sewing room working on something. 

I continue to machine quilt - a combo of walking foot, ruler quilting, and free motion quilting - the minimalist blue quilt. What's left now is a little more big stitch hand quilting in strategic places. 


Louise Wackerman @imfeelincrafty released July block instructions for the Like Totally BOM, so I made those half-rectangle triangles.

Also I finish, very disappointingly, the Irina dress made in the Bernina sew along. On the hanger, it looks nice enough.

And I'm pleased with the chicken scratch I did on the bodice and sleeves.

But when I tried on the dress... ugh! I look terrible wearing it. It's too high-waisted. The loose-fitting style makes me look very frumpy. Hubs commented that I look like someone from the 1930s. I'll never wear the dress. It's utterly "not me." So much wasted time, effort, and money spent on linen fabric. Sigh.

This week I mostly exercised, trying two new-to-me line dance classes with two different instructors. Both went okay, with me fumbling through quite a few new-to-me line dances that everyone else knew. Thank goodness for Copperknob, where I can access step sheets and videos of dances, for practice at home. 

I finished only one audiobook this week, and it too was very disappointing.

Book Recommendation 
In The Locked Room, by Frieda McFadden, the reader meets Dr. Nora Davis, a surgeon who is still trying to put the past behind her. Twenty-six years ago, her father, "The Handyman" was put in prison for life for murdering at least 18 women, and severing their hands. Nora must live with the fact that he performed these atrocities right under her nose, in the basement of their family home.

Now, two of Nora's patients have been found murdered, both with severed hands. The police come to her to make inquiries, expecting Nora to provide explanations. She isn't sharing anything, including that someone is leaving notes, in her father's handwriting, inside her door; that she found blood on the floor of her basement; and that she found a hand in the trunk of her car. Is the person behind all this the man she's begun seeing? 

I would have given this book a higher score if the narrator, Shaina Summerville, hadn't done such a poor job reading it. Each character seemed to have the same voice, and certainly the same inflections that made everyone sound angry or pompous. I'm not alone in my opinion, and found this comment on this post about the book:

I kept trying to listen past the narrator, for the quality of the story, and just couldn't do it. Read this one in print! 

Linda's score: 3.7/5.0

Linda

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