Saturday, August 29, 2015

AUGUST: A lovely Year of finishes!

I actually completed 2 block rows this month... 

Don't ask me how... I have barely stepped foot in my sewing room.  :(

But I did it!!! 

I've traveled graduation to graduation... 
family visit to family visit... 
and tried to pick up a block from each state along the way!


I got the idea at our first stop in Littleton, New Hampshire at 
One Stitch, Two Stitch
Great Ladies, cute town, lovely shop!



Her is My "BOBBIN ALONG" ROW



My daughter earned her Masters in Education from Notre Dame! 
This is the block from
Stone Soup Batiks in South Bend, Indiana
Batiks to explore everywhere!!!

Here is my JUST BATIKIN' ROW


2 down... 

and a souvenir of further travel rows await









Friday, August 28, 2015

Dining Room Renovation: Week 2 & 3

I missed a week of blogging...

Frustrating, really... because I have been so careful to keep up to date with posting our home renovations. 
They are so intense
It is my hope- that by blogging, I will not only always recall where I've been, but all it took to get here. 
Also, to perhaps prepare another for what lies ahead in a major remodel.

I last blogged 2 weeks ago about PAINT & Week 1 in the dining room remodel... 
or as our daughter eventually called it...
The Tardis of Dining.

Dining Room Renovation Week 2 was All about What Lies Beneath.

The floors were completely stripped of previous flooring 
and the wood slats prepared for installation





Over a period of 3 days,
 the boards are individually adhered in place 
and weighted down with cement buckets whilst the dry.

**separators were placed at wall seams to allow space for expansion








Dining Room Renovation: Week 3 was about touch ups

3 weeks later:
And the dining room is now (mostly) updated!

New windows, floors, & paint!

I was in Florida this past week visiting family.

Over a one week visit we shared exploring a few quilt shops...



 dinner theatre



My baby sister hospitalized 3 days for an emergency procedure


After 3 days she was discharged and all is good now 


When I returned last night, 
much of our son's music & instruments had been removed from the front room 
and 
it is once again accessible and ready for further unpacking.


The dining room furniture is back in place, and as I continue to unpack, I am sure it will begin to look more & more like home.


All paint is Sherman Williams. 

Trim & wainscoting are SW 7006 Extra White
The ceiling is SW 7070 Site White
The walls are SW 6811 Honorable Blue

Acacia Wood Flooring








Friday, August 14, 2015

Dining Room Renovation: Week 1


After a few weeks to get settled in to our new kitchen while they continued to "tweek" this & that, it was time for the dining room renovations to move forward.

I had packed up the dining room months ago when I packed up the kitchen and it had been waiting for attention ever since.


Monday was a day of "GLASS".

While a member of the crew prepped the dining room for the days activities ahead, 
2 others finally put glass fronts in my "double wedding ring" kitchen cabinets.



precut glass fronts were eventually glued in place!



Still awaiting glass shelves... 



Then they started with the window. 

We needed to maintain the original ranch style appearance of our house for our region, so we stayed with multi paned windows.



our original dining room window
as viewed from kitchen





the new window at the ready



view from dining room:
glass and frame free... 
if I could keep the bugs, dirt, & heat out--- I would keep it like this! 







our new window






They painted 6 samples on the walls that I stared at day & night.
My husband was very supportive & helped me choose. 
My son (who is home for a few weeks) insisted they were blue... all of them were blue and he saw no difference!





After days of debate... we made a final decision 
and then the painters got busy.



Sherman William 6811
"Honorable Blue"


Day 1 was spent spray painting the whites for wainscoting and borders.

(We will continue our kitchen gray & whites throughout the house)


They sprayed it in place & "bubbled it in"


commercial paint sprayer








They took off yesterday to let things dry some.
Today they returned for ceiling and walls









a memory of my samples that were... peeking through


They'll be back again in the morning for another coat... 






All paint is Sherman Williams. 
Trim & wainscoting are SW 7006 Extra White
The ceiling is SW 7070 Site White
The walls are SW 6811 Honorable Blue




























Monday, August 10, 2015

Quilting freely- with purpose

Just back from a weekend visit to Austin.
I had an "AHA" moment I wanted to share with all of you quilters reading this.

On Saturday we went to the Bullock Museum of TX State History.
Much to my surprise & delight, there was a quilt show in the special exhibits room!
Gleefully, I sent my family on their tour- and planned to enjoy my unexpected treat.

It was a collection of fiber art quilts about black history.
As I walked from quilt to quilt the same things popped out at me again & again.
It was a curated exhibit in a major museum...
and while interesting, informative and very creative...
I could not understand how the majority of these quilts made it past the quilt police!

Seriously! 

Bindings were crooked...
corners not mitered...
stitches uneven...
clashing fabrics with disregard of color wheel... 

They did not hang flat…
Blocks and entire quilts were not squared up.
I can go on and on about what I viewed.

Had I become one of those judgmental bitches I not so affectionately call the “quilt police”?
I hoped not.
But I wish some of you had been there because I had no one to discuss it with.

For those of you who knew me when I started taking workshops to improve on creating facial features 
& my disturbing obsession with the eyeballs looking good in my own portrait quilts... you will understand my reaction.

I have been frustrated enough to toss otherwise nice looking portrait quilts dismissively to the (never to be picked up again) WIP pile- because of those damn eyes!

In the majority of the facial features used in the quilts I saw: the quilter’s had painted them in, or used prints on fabric!

They combined all sorts of fibers, and frankly- I think they had a hell of a lot more fun than I have had getting quilts ready for "show standards” to satisfy the “quilt police”.

At some point in my own quilting journey... I gave in?
I resolved I would do 2 types of quilting.
I would create cuddle quilts & show quilts...
& the two have really not overlapped since.

BUT-
What I realized as I looked about this room that shared such an important message through the quilters artistry.
It would be exciting to partake in a museum exhibition! To create based on their challenge and commit to 
entering for consideration.

And perhaps what made this exhibit even more inviting to this observer… 
the quilt police were obviously NOT invited!!!


So…
I am setting a new goal for the remainder of 2015...
Or better yet… for the quilts yet to be.

A goal just for me:

To remember the early days, when I was so excited to make a quilt, just its completion made it perfect & I was so proud.
When I look back at those early quilts they are a mess! But I loved creating them…

I will let the advertised challenges & contests inspire and encourage me to participate.
I plan to enter quilts more when appropriate without obsessing over a stray seam or stitching.

Children create freely… like no one is watching…

I am determined to let myself remember what that feels like.