It's that time of year - it seems everything comes ripe at the same time. Strawberries are done but blueberries, cherries, black and red raspberries, are leading the way now. Corn is very tall so will be early.
a little quilting, reading, and an occasional cookie
It's that time of year - it seems everything comes ripe at the same time. Strawberries are done but blueberries, cherries, black and red raspberries, are leading the way now. Corn is very tall so will be early.
Before I begin with this post's subject I have to ask. Ceci is thinking of her quilt because I told her to begin thinking while I'm working on Adelaide's. While she was here over the weekend she talked about some of the things she would like. Turns out while she is thinking of the images she is also certain in requesting some of the fabrics she had in her previous quilts, starting with the one I made when she was born. I gulped.
Her job will be to get pictures to me of the fabrics she wants and then I have to see if I can find them - I thought almost certainly they won't be in my stash anymore as scraps and if they are they will be just that...scraps. I did find a few. Can't believe it!
So. My question to you is how do I search out fabrics that could be 15 years old? I told her I'd do what I could but no promises and some might just have to be close but not the actual. Any ideas? Websites?
Today was the Lowell Museum's day camp for kids. We had a good size group and we kept them very busy. They chose what they wanted to do from a list of activities.
Friend Laurie and I brainstormed for months about ours. We were going to sew a first flag of the colonies, mostly referred to at the Betsy Ross flag. Over the months we thought of every twist and turn we could imagine. Our ideas morphed and simplified and finally given we would have the kids for a little over an hour, came up with felt.
We tested our idea on three kids we knew who were of the age. We tweaked even more, taking away the concept of the kids placing the stripes with US placing the stripes and dotting a bit of glue on the ends so they stayed in place for the sewing. Wrong. Glue doesn't hold felt, it sinks in and forms a glob that dries like cement and no needle would go through no matter how hard I tried.
I started over and basted the strips at the beginning and the end of each stripe and that worked.
Time for my annual post about strawberry picking. I went first thing this morning, arriving just as they were opening for the day at 7:30. The field was quiet, sun was shining, it wasn't hot yet. It was perfect.
I don't know about you but I'm tired of the squirrel problem. They've gone again so I have a break. While they love the sunflower seeds and can smell that they are in the feeder from two hills away, they do not like the hot pepper treated seed so I'm doing ok with my battles if I keep the seeds hot.
Done with squirrels so here's an update on the sunflower quilt. It's wrinkly because I am scrunching it into my hand to stitch and the pieces are pinned down. I know, I know, there are other ways but I don't use those ways. No glue, no fusing, no machine, just thread basting for first placement and then pinned like a suit of armor that come out as I needle turn applique. Works for me.
Adelaide is guiding my hand with every step. Every one of them. I put something down, take a picture and send it to her and she edits. Or while she is here and can move something. I had pulled out the bright orange petals in the third flower but she put them back in.I AM following how the original picture of these flowers did the vein in the leaves. The photo shows flat sided ends, and we all know points can be a pain so this works, looks good, Adelaide approved and so much easier.
We all know Jo knits scarves using tea bag strings. That absolutely intrigued me and after her post telling how she does it, needle size, weight of string, I decided on January first to start saving my tea strings.
I drink a lot of iced tea. A lot. So I was curious about how long it would take to save enough strings. Sometimes I use string bag tea, sometimes the bags don't have strings and sometimes I use loose tea so doing the math wouldn't work. Besides, Jo doesn't count them, she weighs hers.
This little knob is 7 grams and as you can see, a few of the strings have the little staple attached so I am aware this will affect the weight.
Before we went to London in January I asked Brian to save his strings. He said tea sold domestically comes in bags without strings. Only restaurants have stringed bags. While we were there, I saved those. And, Jo, he laughed hysterically when I told him why I wanted them.
Everyone I tell thinks it's about the craziest thing they've ever heard of.....till I show them the pics on her blog post. Then it's, "ohhh, it's really not that crazy!"
By the end of the year I may have enough for a bookmark, I am sure there won't be enough for a scarf.
I love the birds. I love feeding them and watching them and listening to them and always have.
If one decides to build a nest on the house both PH and I alter our movements to accommodate the new momma and her family. If they build very close to our spaces we talk to momma and she gets used to us and doesn't fly off. In spring when they wake us with their dawn chorus we don't mind. We love it. It's just fine.
But I don 't like the squirrels horning in on and emptying the feeders and since we live in the woods now there is no stopping them. If there is one there is a whole regiment out there. The tiny red ones are tenacious and I've done everything I could think of to deter them. Nothing worked. Not one thing. NOTHING.
I tried them all. The sprays, the baffles, feeding them their own lunch, I even bought one of those toy orbi guns last fall to shoot little orbi gel balls at them and when that didn't work I tried a powerful squirt gun. Nothing worked. They would simply step aside, wait for me to close the door and be back before I put the toy down.
But. But one day I thought I figured them out. I had bought some feed that is treated with hot pepper. After all, the hot pepper suet is left alone so maybe the hot pepper feed? It works for this feeder. No one touches it but the birds. So I thought if I filled the house with this feed maybe the squirrels would leave the house alone, too.
Lousy weather lately so I put the houses together in rows. The strips are still loose but so far this placement is good. It went together very quickly because the blocks were all constructed and waiting.
I made blocks with people in the doorways, enough for another row if I had added them but I changed my mind on that so this measures eight squares by 8 rows. It won't be big and I will put a border on but that's another day. I've seen so many variations of the house quilts. Trees interspersed, sashing here and there, but I kept going back to just the houses. If all the blocks were the same it would look like a condominium complex. This looks more like Lowell. All the houses are different.