Sunday, March 18, 2012
Triangle tablerunner
A few years ago, my Dear Jane secret pal Karen sent me some triangles made of heavy paper for piecing similar to hexagons. I used a charm pack called "serenity" and found I could get two triangles from each square. The basting was easy after Kim showed me how to use paper clips to fold the edges over. But slip-stitching took me a long time. Perhaps it was the colors, perhaps it was the size of the pieces. But I just couldn't see to sew them by hand that well. I finally finished this very small tablerunner on Flimsey Friday a couple of weeks ago. It didn't take long, and it looks quite sweet on the guest room bureau. I can re-use the triangles and probably will someday. Those triangles make a nice take-along project.
The Hunger Games
While on vacation I read The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, a book all the kids seems to be devouring. I am curious to see how the movie coming out this week will do. It is a very captivating story with a plucky heroine. All the popular elements are there - dystopia, war games (albeit with humans rather than on a hand-held device), survival, a little romance, family loyalty. I'm going to order the next two books, Catching Fire and Mockingjay, to see how or if the trilogy concludes. I hope it's a happy ending like the Harry Potter series had because I do think we all, regardless of age, need a sense of hope for the future.
The society that heroine Katniss Everdeen lives in is extremely restrictive and focussed primarily on survival. Freedom is a thing of the past. Schooling and, therefore, thought appear to be discouraged. Only in the capital (somewhere near where Denver is now) do people have enough to eat or any culture at all. People in the outlying 12 districts serve very distinct roles - producing food, mining coal, etc. - in order to provide the capital with luxuries. Yet every year they gather round their TVs to watch the Hunger Games where two children from each district ("tributes") compete to the death. The districts sacrifice their children for entertainment. The underlying themes of the book are sad, yet Katniss and her co-tribute, the baker's son, prevail. I am looking forward to seeing what comes next.
The society that heroine Katniss Everdeen lives in is extremely restrictive and focussed primarily on survival. Freedom is a thing of the past. Schooling and, therefore, thought appear to be discouraged. Only in the capital (somewhere near where Denver is now) do people have enough to eat or any culture at all. People in the outlying 12 districts serve very distinct roles - producing food, mining coal, etc. - in order to provide the capital with luxuries. Yet every year they gather round their TVs to watch the Hunger Games where two children from each district ("tributes") compete to the death. The districts sacrifice their children for entertainment. The underlying themes of the book are sad, yet Katniss and her co-tribute, the baker's son, prevail. I am looking forward to seeing what comes next.
Not Shop Hopping... so far...
Friday was the first day of the Vermont Shop Hop, featuring 16 shops around the state. The first couple of years, I tried to hit at least the northern shops, but now that I'm retired and have plenty of time to bomb around the state shopping (and less cash to do so), I stay home. The good thing is that the participating shops are open on Sunday and Monday during the hop, so if I need something on those days I can run down to my LQS, A Quilters Garden.
When I popped in there a few days ago, there was definitely excitement in the air. I just needed some fat quarters for a gift basket and thread to finish my stack and whack, which is now a "flimsey." After I finished it, I laid it on the bed to decide about quilting - do it myself? take to Lisa? I finally decided to defer my decision until I get the two quilts Lisa is longarming back. But I think I will do it myself although it is twin sized, a little larger than I usually tackle. It's a traditional layout with sashing that I can anchor before perhaps stipling the stars. I've been looking for a 1930's print with peach in it for the back, but that can wait. The flimsey is now hanging in the closet with two others which I will quilt myself this spring.
Friday I decided to play around with the left over stacked fabric to make pinwheels, and I have almost enough 6" blocks for a table-topper. Oh oh... another flimsey!
When I popped in there a few days ago, there was definitely excitement in the air. I just needed some fat quarters for a gift basket and thread to finish my stack and whack, which is now a "flimsey." After I finished it, I laid it on the bed to decide about quilting - do it myself? take to Lisa? I finally decided to defer my decision until I get the two quilts Lisa is longarming back. But I think I will do it myself although it is twin sized, a little larger than I usually tackle. It's a traditional layout with sashing that I can anchor before perhaps stipling the stars. I've been looking for a 1930's print with peach in it for the back, but that can wait. The flimsey is now hanging in the closet with two others which I will quilt myself this spring.
Friday I decided to play around with the left over stacked fabric to make pinwheels, and I have almost enough 6" blocks for a table-topper. Oh oh... another flimsey!
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Spring mug rug
I signed up for a seasonal mug rug swap this year. Each of us receives a different "secret pal" each time and, since Cathy in Florida has received hers, now I can show a picture of it. I was going through quilt magazines as I do periodically to weed them, and saw a baby quilt with kites. I had a small piece of blue sky fabric (it looks gray in the picture but it really is light blue) and thought a kite would be just the thing for spring. I love the binding on this best of all. Have had a yard in my stash for a long time, and am hoarding it for bindings.
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Charleston, continued
About a mile up Meeting St. from the Battery is the Charleston Museum which we enjoyed. There was a collection of botanical quilts and historic clothing, as well as a good display of artifcats from early Charleston. Videos discussed the cultivation of rice in the area which the slaves brought knowledge of from Africa. The Civil War was also covered sensitively. We wished we had visited the museum before our last day, but when we went earlier in the week the building was full of school tours. There was a food and wine festival going on in Marion Park, named for Revolutionary War hero "Swamp Fox" Francis Marion.
Friday, March 9, 2012
Cobblestone Quilt Show
As Paul and I were walking to catch the ferry to Ft. Sumter, we spotted a banner announcing a quilt show in Charleston. I was so pleased when he suggested we go on Friday. It was in a large auditorium with plenty of space for larger quilts and vendors downstairs and wall-sized and smaller quilts in the mezzanine.
Charleston, part one
Paul and I went to Charleston, SC, for a few days last week. It has been on our "bucket list" for a while, and when we were deciding on a trip to someplace warm, it seemed like a good choice - walkable, no car needed, relatively warm to us northerners, lots of historical sites. And we weren't disappointed. It was charming and a nice break. Temperatures were in the 70's for the most part, and our hotel was centrally located. A free trolley circulates through the city, and we rode it several times to get nice views of things we'd like to go back to as well as of the Citadel, which is a little farther out.
Even though it was overcast and a little rainy, we took a ferry to Ft. Sumter on the first day. Situated right where the rivers come together, it served as a strategic point throughout the city's history, until after World War II when German U-boats sailed along the Atlantic coast. Built with fill, there's very little land there and all supplies had to be brought in, including water. There are nice little museums there and at the ferry dock.
After our tour of Ft. Sumter, we needed to get back to the hotel where Carole & John were waiting for us. So we took a ride with Dustin! He wove in and out of traffic handily, and we enjoyed chatting with him. We all bemoaned the cancellation of Triple Rush by the Travel Channel. It featured my brother's bicycle messenger company where a couple of Dustin's biking buddies work.
After drinks in the hotel lobby, the four of us went to a rib place for dinner and shared a free peach cobbler. Truly a nice day! After breakfast the next morning, Carole & John headed northward while we walked up Meeting St. to the Visitor's Center and more...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)