"I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with unfailing kindness" Jeremiah 31:3
Friday, August 19, 2011
FNSI
it's Friday Night Sew-In! if you are looking for me, i'll be at the old viking working on my red/cream north wind....and watch tomorrow for photos of my progress!
L is for....
lobster, of course! on our way to the beach, a lobsterman sells his catch out of his garage. i've been watching the prices slowly decrease until yesterday when they were rock bottom. so, i stopped and picked up 6 of the lovelies for a late summer feast. this time of year, the lobsters shed their shell and grow a new, larger one. there is a little less meat in a "shedder" as opposed to a hard shell lobster, but it is sweet and succulent; hence, the lower price. at the fish market, cooked lobster is about $35 a pound, usually only claw and knuckle meat. i picked out these 6 and got just over 2 pounds of cooked meat for about $28, which included the bodies as well. i even sucked out the legs, which have only a sliver of meat but oh so good! it's a labor intensive task but for the price, certainly worth the effort. one of the benefits of our coastal locale is the abundance of fresh seafood year round.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
block #3
block #3 is done BUT i see after photographing that the dark green is more of a green/brown value, so this will be a do-over. i might have to find a FQ of this color as i don't think i have any repros that will suit. off to marden's i guess......what a hardship.....LOL! it would be nice if i could get 2 blocks done every week, though that's more of an ideal situation than a firm plan, especially when i go back to work. since there's no rush, just have to see how it goes....
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
119 to go
with 121 blocks, the civil war diary quilt is akin to a dear jane EXCEPT the blocks are larger, very little applique and no complicated border. the challenge is to match the colors and to execute the blocks precisely. i've gotten these 2 blocks done already. i'm not working in order front to back (of book) but rather building my confidence by starting out with simple geometric blocks. no time frame at all to get this done, simply to do it well and have fun with the patterns and those luscious repro fabrics.
it's coming....
that's right, just a few months away we'll be gathering together to celebrate thanksgiving. happy to say i got invited out! not sure if we'll have turkey or not, but it doesn't matter. ****** no real sewing to report from tuesday, just a bit of this and that. today i hope will be different as i do have a few (!!) projects that need attention. ***** rain has finally gone and left us with a good day today. i have the window open and have just heard the plane for baltimore take off; it's the one i usually take when i go. wish i lived closer to DD and her husband but the plane trip is only 1.5 hours so that isn't too bad at all.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
just like a quilter
Monday, August 15, 2011
Brrrrr
no photo today as i'm sure everyone has seen rain, which is what it has been doing here all day today. we have no danger of flooding where we are, but not far away on the coast it does happen. it is chilly! to go from nearly 80 to 62 is noticed here, even though cold is relative in maine. for a february day, for instance, this would be balmy! had to don the thermal, long-sleeve top and kept my socks on all day long. it's an ideal night to quilt on the lovers' links, which is exactly what i am going to do. ***** my new read is "caleb's crossing," about the first native american graduate of Harvard, a Martha's Vineyard Wampanoag, though much is fiction. the book came out at the ideal time as a descendant of his graduated Harvard this past june. as a native new englander, i know much about the area's history, so the locale is familiar. oh yeah, the overnight temp is predicted to be 57!
Sunday, August 14, 2011
early sunday sewing
Saturday, August 13, 2011
the latest
this is the first thing i've made from the Lori Smith book bought earlier this year (half price!). i hardly ever use these colors but they caught my eye in february, the nearly end of an endless winter and so they found their way into my stash. there's a small pieced border top and bottom to add and the little flimsy will be done. i'm pretty happy with it considering it's a HST nightmare, but it measured twice and cut carefully and it does make a difference. after this i really need to get back to quilting the lovers' links, finish piecing the pinwheel runner and working on those amish pinwheels as well. these little projects will end up on my 2012 UFO list, which means i'll have lots of finishes as they won't take as much time. next up is piecing the red/cream north wind, i promise.....
Friday, August 12, 2011
book recommendation
have been reading this book and which i can recommend heartily for its historical and documentation purposes. lots of delish info on quilts at the Winterthur Museum, built by DuPont (yes THAT DuPont) in Delaware. The museum owns over 300,000 textile pieces, 300 quilts. There is a full-page photo of a huge sunburst quilt made in 1827 by Rebecca Scattergood Savery that has never been washed so the colors and condition are pristine. There's also a quilt that was made in Hallowell, Maine, a port city about one hour north of here and also a quilt made by the cousin of John Quincy Adams' wife. **** gotta go, job interview this morning.....now where ARE those pantyhose?
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