Friday, July 13, 2007
Good stuff in my email box
I got an email from Caity to let me know that she had posted a picture of a quilt she finished, using a pattern I designed many years ago. I wrote about that quilt here, as the "most famous quilt I never made." I don't need to make it, when people like Caity do such beautiful versions of it.
I just love the connections this blog has created for me. And I really love the people who have taken the time to write.
Finding the cool



The long bridge crosses the Columbia River at Astoria to Washington state on the other side. Just beyond the bridge the Columbia empties into the Pacific Ocean.


Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Hot

I was kind of pleased with the other moon piece that I did, so decided to try another. This was a different piece of blue fabric and it discharged to a different color than the first one. That is one of the mysteries and surprises of bleaching fabrics. The branches in this piece are all done with the satin stitch on my machine. I started them at a wide stitch and gradually made it narrower for each branch. This is another technique that I've wanted to try. I think of this as Liz Berg's technique. She uses it to great effect.
Ray used one of the grocery bags today and declared it a success. He said an added benefit was that it was just the right size to stick into the side of the grocery basket at the store. I had quite a few people request the pattern. I hope it works for you. Let me know if any of the rest of you want one. If you make one, send me a picture!
Today's littles:
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This looks like something fun to do:
Paying it Forward
Paying it forward, a la Jane Ann:
I will send a handmade gift to the first 3 people who leave a comment on my blog requesting to join this PIF exchange. I don’t know what that gift will be yet and you may not receive it tomorrow or next week… LOL… but you will receive it within 365 days, that is my promise! The only thing you have to do in return is pay it forward by making the same promise on your blog.
Monday, July 09, 2007
Will that be paper or plastic?

I've been meaning to do this for a long time and today I finally made two cloth grocery bags. They are slightly larger than a large size paper grocery bag. I made them nice and sturdy and washable, from a cotton duck with cotton webbing handles that wrap under the bag for added support. Each has a corrugated plastic insert to give the bottom a little more support as well. I did not make them cute or pretty, so that I would not feel bad when they get dirty and worn and also so my husband, who is not into cute and pretty, will be comfortable using them. Ray thinks we should each keep one in each of our cars. I have seen the canvas bags that most of the stores sell, but they are quite small. I have several small canvas bags I can use for smaller purchases, but these will hold a lot of groceries. It is a small thing I can do for the environment. Or maybe a big thing—my house seems to be overrun by both paper and plastic grocery bags

If you would like my general directions, email and ask me to send it to you. I have put it together in .pdf format. I won't even care if you make yours cute and/or pretty.
Saturday, July 07, 2007
Saturday stuff

When I figured out I could take it apart and quite easily recover the upholstered parts I searched my fabric stash and found a piece of awning-striped denim I picked up from the remnant box awhile back. It seemed perfect to liven up the chair and I still have enough left to make the tote bag I originally bought it for.

Isn't it just—well "divine" isn't a word I use, but if I did I'd call this divine. You can't have much more fun on a Saturday for $5 than this.
For anonymous, who left the comment on the studio yesterday—If you look to the right, up at the top near my picture you will see "view my complete profile". Click on that and on that page is a link to my email address. That is an excellent way to get in touch with me. Then go back to the blog page and scroll down below the long list of "favorite places" in the sidebar to "other links" and click on "my fusing method tutorial". Click on that and it will take you to a post that shows how I use the lightbox for my work. Thanks for stopping by!
Friday, July 06, 2007
Would you like the tour?

Just inside the door, to the right, is the closet where the rest of the stash lives. This closet is very deep to the left. There is a lot of stuff in there. The closet didn't have a door on it, so I made a curtain out of an antique sheet with beautiful tatting across the top edge. The little plaque says, "when life gives you scraps, make quilts"—a long ago gift from my friend Muriel when I first started quilting.
Here's my work table. It is counter height, so it's very comfortable to stand and work or cut on. The flannel-covered board has current projects as well as that mandala piece that didn't work for a piece I made years ago, but I like it so well I keep it out, hoping I will figure out something great to do with it. I thought about making it into a clock. It has 12 points. The crow is my journal quilt, which I am not supposed to show on my blog or web site. Forget you saw it. You can only see part of it, anyway, so I don't think this counts. The gray thing on the right is my lightbox. My favorite tool. I use it constantly. I bought it at a yard sale. What a find.
And in this drawer—oh wait—I wasn't planning to show that. Avert your eyes. Move along.
Ray came up to admire the cleaned up room and suggested he take my picture. Then he made me a tall, cold drink. What a guy.
Thursday, July 05, 2007
Amazing color in the garden

This red crocosmia is new this summer. We have had yellow ones, but were noticing the incredible reds around town and Ray found some to plant. The red color is delicious in itself, but combined with the purply buds and teal blue/green stems it is glorious. These grow quite tall, on slender, gracefully arching stems, (you can see then in context in the last picture in the previous post) and I learned they are native to South Africa and related to irises.
A couple of days ago Ray and I went out to Al's Garden Center, which has become one of our favorite nurseries. We had discount coupons to use on bedding plants and I found these little flowers, which I had never seen before. I fell for their soft, coral color.

They are called Diascia and I learned they are also native to South Africa and are a recent import to the US. I love the color combination with the lavendar.
This is a mystery plant, purchased at the plant sale earlier this spring where we sold garden art.
Update: Jeannie identified the purple leaf plant as Persian Shield Strobilanthes. Lots of info on the web. It is native to Myanmar (formerly Burma), not South Africa. I guess not everything beautiful and colorful comes from South Africa! Thanks, Jeannie.
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Monday, July 02, 2007
Tea and a plum


Sunday, July 01, 2007
Lazy Sunday
Here's another Japanese Garden piece. Same size and format as the previous two.

I have had this idea of trying to depict the moon for awhile now. I discharged the circle behind the moon with a bleach pen. I was surprised that it discharged to purple, but it was OK. Below are the littles I made at the same time. My scraps were looking awfully somber, so I dug around and found a piece of orange and purple hand-dye to liven them up a bit. I am noticing there is a lack of any kind of yellow in the littles I've done so far. I need to remedy that. Though I am using up scraps as I work, it is not a rule that I limit myself to only those scraps. Hey, I'm making this project up as I go along. There are no rules!

Meeting the neighbors

Friday, June 29, 2007
Happy Birthday Becky

Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Still doin' the wabi sabi

This was a larger piece that I showed (and sold) at the Japanese Garden show in 2003. I reuse ideas from time to time, but never in exactly the same way. I keep my sketches for just this purpose. Once I was asked to duplicate exactly, three small pieces that I sold at the Japanese Garden show for someone. I did it, but I found little pleasure in doing that.
Here are my littles using some of today's scraps.
Monday, June 25, 2007
Littles—waste not, want not

Sunday, June 24, 2007
More little treasures




Saturday, June 23, 2007
Little box of treasures



Thursday, June 21, 2007
Wabi Sabi is kind of like the Hoky Poky

The theme is "Wabi Sabi" which is a concept we all seem to be struggling to wrap our minds around. Gerrie's idea is hilarious, but a very loose interpretation! Wikipedia says Wabi Sabi "represents a comprehensive Japanese world view or aesthetic centred on the acceptance of transience. The phrase comes from the two words wabi and sabi. The aesthetic is sometimes described as one of beauty that is "imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete"
They go on to quote someone named Andrew Juniper: "if an object or expression can bring about, within us, a sense of serene melancholy and a spiritual longing, then that object could be said to be wabi-sabi." I like the way that sounds, but I still am not sure whether my bird's nest quilt is Wabi Sabi.
I really like birds' nests. We have a lot of birds around our house and they build nests up in the eaves and on the porch pillars. When Ray is cleaning up in the spring and finds the old nests he has been putting them out on the porch. Here is the current collection. I love the way they look and how amazingly intricate they are. I'm pretty sure the real nests are Wabi Sabi.
I have a post up on the Ragged cloth cafe blog, where I am a contributor, about the murals of Diego Rivera. You can see it here: http://junomain.wordpress.com/