Monthly Archives: March 2009

Spring in New England

wagon-water-snow

We had a brief snow squall over the weekend, and frigid temperatures yesterday and today.  Great light, though.  Really great light!

street-lamp

I am beginning to collect some urban textures for a next project.

fence

turnpike-textures

Also, I am really looking at roof lines, because as I continue with house quilts, I want to vary the simple triangle roof I have been making for way too long.

newtonville-rooves

waiting-for-ortho-two

It felt good to step out of the very, very crowded orthodontist’s office (door to the far left in drawing above) and pull out some packing paper I had garbage-picked a few weeks back and DRAW.  Which means to LOOK, and SEE.  Shadows, lines, the cold, cold wind — so much better than flipping through an old Redbook (they don’t even get PEOPLE at this orthodontist) in a stuffy room full of other annoyed people.

Tomorrow — the Small Town quilt update…

Workshop — the good, the bad, the ugly?

One of my first Village Quilts

One of my first Village Quilts

This weekend I took a daylong workshop with internationally renowned quilter, Sylvia Einstein.  I have long been a fan.  She has such a good eye and makes wonderfully dynamic, painterly quilts.  This was her “Small Towns” workshop and even though I have been making what I call “Village Quilts” for almost ten years, I decided to take it.

First, the good —

  • Seeing Sylvia’s quilts up close… I had studied them online and they were so much more exquisite in person!
  • Hearing her opening remarks… “I like very active skies” … “don’t try to pick all prints in the same scale — use large leaves, for instance” … “I work slow” ….
  • The invitation to become an avid collector of images. One of the teacher’s favorite sources?  Christmas cards!
  • Getting critiqued by the instructor (plus she gave me a couple of to-die-for scenery fabrics!).
  • Seeing other student’s work.
  • Getting new ideas on how to finish a quilt.  Sylvia uses very bold prints, often, for the edges of her pieces, and then binds them.

Now, the bad —

  • It was crowded.

quilt-draft-on-wall

The ugly —

  • My quilt.  But that just means ‘unfinished’ — right?!

Here’s what I will bring to my next class —

  • 12″ ruler and mini-cutting grid
  • Drawing pad, so that if I’m not in the mood to deal with major space restrictions, I can draw
  • Hand-sewing (for the same reason)

And, here are suggestions that spring to mind from the experience —

  • Experiment with scale.  I am excited, for instance, as someone who’s favored size is 2’x3′ to make a village that is 18″ by 20″.  A lot changes when you do this.
  • Collect images!!  MY challenge will be to put them all in one place.
  • I often use ‘sky’ fabric for buildings and ‘building’ fabrics for sky, so as to really play with what is inside and what is outside… but I’d like to make one quilt where building is building and sky is sky.

Does Decay Sell?

compost-heap-march

Think of your death now. It is at arm’s length. It may tap you any moment,
so really you have no time for crappy thoughts and moods.
None of us have time for that. The only thing that counts is action,
acting instead of talking.
Journey to Ixtlan, Carlos Castanedas

An aesthetic debate with philosophical undertones could be found in the etsy forums a couple weeks back.  A photographer intrigued by the delicate and subtle appearance of rotting vegetation asked — “Would you buy this photograph?”  Many indicated that though they liked the pictures, they wouldn’t want the images on their walls.

I took this picture not long after reading this thread and am impressed with how much the skin of the rotting pumpkin looks like fabric.  It was wet from the rain and indistinct in a gross way — it almost could have been ANY dead thing.

I know a couple of quilters intrigued with rust.  I like rust, too.  The way rust eats at the edges of things is cool and its powdery residue can be interesting, too.  One of those quilters (when I remember her name, I’ll post it) actually ‘rusted’ her fabric — not unlike those surface designers busy with wax, dyes, fabric paints — except she would wrap fabric around rusted objects and bury them — to stain the fabric.  Hop on over to Kimberly Baxter Packwood‘s blog for instructions on how to rust fabric.

tarp-water-wiffle-pole

Beautiful abstractions are everywhere, of course.  The tarp pictured above is in service keeping my younger son’s mini-half-pipe free of snow and moisture.  The average sidewalk offers lots of opportunities to find abstractions.

fort-paint-drips

I guess a little mold belongs in this discussion as well.

Birthday Buns

cinnamon-buns1

The title made you wonder, didn’t it?!!  No, this is very innocent, and briefly delicious.

For Danny’s birthday on Monday, I made cinnamon buns Sunday night.  They were delicious Sunday, puffy, light, gooey with glaze and sugary cinnamon, but sadly, overnight turned into rock-like lumps.

Dan is officially a teenager now.

In a week, we go through —

  • 3-4 gallons of milk
  • 3 half gallons of OJ, plus another fruit juice
  • a container of two of ice cream
  • a couple of boxes of cereal
  • many pounds of chicken, beef, and fish (combined)
  • 2 dozen eggs

The refrain, “Mom, I’m hungry!” can often be heard!

I’m sorry (in a way) that gas prices came down, because it took the heat off of the push for sustainable technologies and fuels.  But, when it comes to buying the groceries each week, I am certainly glad!!

15 Candles

15-candles1

This year, C’s birthday gave me a gift — a reminder to go with the flow a little more.

All week, I peppered him with ideas for Friday night — should I call this friend, or that friend?  How about the shared birthday of J?  Nothing sparked much of a response, so I resigned myself to a quiet dinner with the four of us.  I THOUGHT I had accepted this but really I hadn’t.

cary-bday-dinner

His Dad was brining a salmon and I was assembling the ice cream cake, when one of C’s friend’s called and said they were planning a surprise party for him.  They brought snacks, had a cake delivered.  I made pork chops  (recipe from Caprial and John’s Kitchen) for a small army, K. grilled the salmon (a la Cooks, using my friend Elizabeth Germain‘s incredible recipe) and it turned into a party!  Not only was my worry for naught, it could have forced a plan that would have gotten in the way.