This weekend the high school's musical production of Chicago: Teen Edition played. Our Adelaide was Mary Sunshine, a very appropriate character for her to play because she IS sunshine.
a little quilting, reading, and an occasional cookie
This weekend the high school's musical production of Chicago: Teen Edition played. Our Adelaide was Mary Sunshine, a very appropriate character for her to play because she IS sunshine.
Comments are coming through my email again! Hooray! Thanks for the tips and patience, I don't know what I did but it worked!
The bottom line is daughter loved the way they turned out, we proved to ourselves we can get this through the kids' project and give them choices in how to design their own. Our next step is to give this project kitted to three kids in the age range and time them in completing the task.
Check this off the list!
For some reason Blogger decided once again to fix something that wasn't broken so your comments are not coming through to my email. If you know how to fix this, please let me know, otherwise I'll start pushing buttons on my own and who knows what will happen? In the meantime, I apologize if I don't respond to your kind remarks.
Hugs. We need them.
I avoided this one because of a preconceived notion it was too sweet. Something along the Mitch Albom genre. I like thick, meaty, original fiction. Someone tell me a story. Escape.
But friends handed this to me last week hoping I'd like it and one of them said her brother said it was the best thing he'd read in a year. I had just that evening before finished the book I was reading so timing was right.
Well. Do you do Lent? I once knew a priest who read Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown for his Lenten reading. That's a book that stares you in the face.
If you haven't read Theo of Golden this is a simple synopsis. A man mysteriously travels to the town of Golden in a southern state and notices in a coffee shop that a local artist sketches, draws, creating people's portraits - their faces - and they hang on the wall of the coffee shop. Theo decides to purchase each painting and give them to the subjects as a gift. And listen to their story.
This simple act transforms people. They feel seen. A complete stranger is telling them of their worth, something none of them thought they had. He remains mysterious, offers just the one name, refuses publicity or thanks. Just take the portrait and feel seen.
Immediately upon reading those first few pages I thought of a Michigan artist who has a studio and gallery in Saugatuck, Michigan. His name is James Brandess and on the wall of his shop/gallery/studio he has lined the walls with the residents of Saugatuck. The portraits are small, maybe 5 x 7? 4 x 6? In the winter quiet he paints these people and sometimes their dogs and hangs them on the surrounding walls. They belong to James. I'm quite sure while he is painting there are stories being told. So, in a small way I connected with the book.
In this horrid time of ridiculously dangerous people (I refuse to call them leaders) beating their chests, playing at war, the anxiety in my brain is trying so hard to take over. As friends march and protest I do not. I feel it a complete waste of time - who is listening? Who cares? The more we do the meaner and worse he gets. I am hiding under a rock, every morning asking PH "Well? are we still here? Is the world?" I truly don't know how much more we/I can take.
Then this little book was put in my hands and after thinking of James Brandess's studio I started thinking Lent. Someone put a small, tiny, spark of light in my hand. Hope. Someone has to have some. Will this change anything? No. Nothing will tame the dragons, I truly believe that, but I can hope.
The Thinking Bed is empty. (By the way, that white quilt is keeping the sun off the tops of the other quilts that are piled onto the bed that is next to a window.)
Once the museum classes ended last week I went into hyper drive with the free days and got things moved to the next level. When working with the kids, which is fun and interesting always, I am standing for four hours and talking for four hours and come home exhausted so not much energy for anything else.
Liberty circles have a binding sewn on but not down, quilting has begun on the green and blue scrappy and I'm doing big stitch quilting so it's going fast, several smaller pieces have been layered, the blue snowballs are layered.
I don't use glue. I don't fuse. I know that's stubborn on my part refusing to use what's so commonly used. I'm not judging anyone who does glue or fuse. I just personally don't like the idea. I will baste the little buggers down very well to hold them in place and if a petal veers a little here or there, who's to know? Has anyone actually ever gone out and measured the space between or around a real sunflower's petals? I already warned Adelaide she will get what she wants but with MY interpretation. This isn't a photograph, it's a quilt.
Another email response was that I should be able to roll the extra fabric into my palm and hold it that way. I'm going to measure and baste the circle size onto the dots and try that before I buy that plan. But she might be right. I tried to remember how I handled Charlie's quilt and remembered I DID gather the extra into my palm to hold it. If anything, the petals will be one piece of fabric and the stems and leaves another MAYBE being able to hide the seam under some of the leaves. We'll see.
There's a lot of measuring to be done, the only parts that are cut are the petals, nothing is final yet. The Thinking Bed will be put to use in placing the flowers because it's about a twin size. I went back to the store and broke my fast on purchasing fabric but I did buy more of the dots. I have been kicked by THAT mule a few too many times. I would rather have more than I need. The store still had what I wanted, I bought the last of it (2 yards) and now feel comfortable making a mistake or ending up with a pillow case for her if I have leftover.
Till then I will start prepping these after this week. Until then, more classes at the museum.