...from lush, green Wisconsin where we are visiting family.
Sunday, July 13, 2025
Hello...
...from lush, green Wisconsin where we are visiting family.
Sunday, July 6, 2025
Mesoscale Convective Complex, AKA Rain Bomb
"Texas is a land of perennial drought, broken by the occasional devastating flood." - State Meteorologist, National Weather Service, 1927
This post has nothing to do with quilting. Instead, it is for personal cathartic and record
keeping purposes.
First, heartfelt thanks to my blog friends for checking to
see if we are okay. We were very
fortunate. It was scary, but we came
through it largely unscathed.
Those a few miles from us in any direction were not nearly so fortunate,
as reported in the national news.
This time, Ground Zero was to our southwest in an area close
to the Guadalupe River and populated by several church campgrounds. The combination of rain and flash flooding
did the unthinkable. As I write this,
the death count stands at 80 as the search continues for those still unaccounted.
We carefully monitored weather radar all day and could see we were on the fringe of the worst. However, the chief of our local volunteer fire department was swept away while attempting an emergency rescue. Even in our less impacted area low water crossings washed away, homes flooded, lives lost.
There is one blessing. The lakes and aquifers that sustain our households were approaching dangerously low levels. This should have a positive impact there. I don’t feel like celebrating, though.
Earlier in the week I did some quilting and began preparations for our upcoming trip to Wisconsin. One of Bob’s brothers is having serious health issues and his sister will be celebrating their 50th anniversary. Thankfully, our grandson has kindly agreed to house and dog sit while we are gone, so our house will be occupied and the mutts get to stay in familiar space.
I cannot end this post without at least one positive note. Butterflies have discovered our Greg’s Mist Flowers.
Sunday, June 29, 2025
New Project
A quilter cannot live by 2-inch Thrift Blocks alone, much as
I enjoy making them. So, I decided to
start cutting for a project inspired by one Wanda completed early this year. The pattern I selected is set on point and I
am using mostly Kaffe Collective fabrics.
This should be a good project to take on retreat in late
July. My projects are usually so tiny
they rarely make it up on the design wall.
Maybe this one has a chance. The
blocks are large and set on point. I
made a few test blocks and put them up on my design wall just to see if I
wanted to proceed. A friend showed a quilt made from this pattern at a recent Guild meeting. She assured me that it is easy, even though it is set on-point.
Only 15 Thrift
Blocks for the Scrappy Meets Thrift Challenge were completed last week.
Sunday, June 22, 2025
Thrift Blocks Are Happening Here
My sewing time this week focused on more 2-inch thrift
blocks for the Scrappy Meets Thrift Challenge Sew-Along sponsored by Repro Quilter. I finished 38 this week. I should have pushed just a little harder and
finished two more since I’ve been bagging them in groups of 20 to help me keep
count.
This is a peek at my very messy sewing station these
days. I’ve been watching lots of YouTube
videos while stitching away. Paper
piecing creates lots of tiny scraps from trimming up squares and I haven’t even
started de-papering any blocks yet.
Speaking of messes, the city was repaving the streets in our neighborhood this week. That combined with the hot weather made staying inside very appealing though I did manage to make it to my monthly Guild meeting as well as my Tuesday quilting group.
I’ll be pulling out the cutting table again this week. An unexpected opportunity to be part of
another quilting retreat late in July has surfaced and I need to start prepping
for that as well as our other travel plans in early July. July is shaping up to be a busy month.
Monday, June 16, 2025
Lots of Cutting
Not much sewing machine work happened last week.
But I spent several hours at the cutting table. These should be enough units for the Scrappy Meets Thrift Challenge to keep me in mindless sewing for a while. Each pile is approximately 10 blocks.
I also got the fabric for the alternate blocks cut into strips and ready for sub-cutting into 2 ½ inch squares.
This is one of those times I really appreciated my die cutter.
We had some rain in the past few weeks, and we could tell that enough dirt had washed into the skunk hole that it was not active. I filled in as much dirt as I could. Then I layered old gutter guard webbing and weighted it down with concrete chunks and rocks. It’s not pretty, but is positioned between the AC unit and house wall, so well hidden.
Sunday, June 8, 2025
Turtles, Thrift Blocks and Orchid Blooms
I managed to piece more than 50 blocks this week. That just about exhausts the kitted blocks I prepared prior to the quilt retreat a couple of weeks ago. They go a little faster now that I'm working on them at home and using my preferred sewing machine. The cutting table has been pulled out of its nook in the laundry room. I hope to get more blocks kitted for stitching this week.
Last Tuesday was a two-turtle day. Every year about this time, the turtles in
our neighborhood start getting frisky. I
think both these were probably females looking for a place to lay their
eggs. This one was in front of the house
and I let him/her just keep on trucking.
This one, however, required a rescue because he/she was
inside the backyard fence. All I’ve ever
seen my dogs do is stand there and bark at them continually, but I was happy I discovered
this one before they did.
For the third time this year, the orchid Julia gave me for my
birthday several years ago has put on blooms.
I think it really likes being surrounded by glass bricks on two
sides. It recently lost two leaves, so I
am a little concerned about it.
This was a week of catching up on yearly commitments, and I
elected to cut back on attending some activities in order to keep from being
overwhelmed. One commitment was putting
new flowers on my parents’ and grandparents’ graves in the family cemetery. Then we stopped by to see the cousin who owns
the property where the cemetery is located in order to leave our annual donation for
upkeep.
Sunday, June 1, 2025
More Thrift Blocks
I managed to stitch up a batch of 14 Thrift blocks last
week. I would have made more, but
several unplanned interruptions, including a chance to visit a quilt store in
Buda, kept that from happening. The
fabric below the blocks is one I am considering for alternate blocks. Since it is a tiny plaid, I may decide it
would be more trouble than it’s worth to try to cut and stitch the blocks so it doesn't look wonky.
Our Tuesday group finished binding the quilt we completed for our deceased member. All that is left is a label which will be done on an embroidery machine. All of us made sure to put in a few stitches and it went much quicker than expected. When I had finished my turn, I resumed handwork on the borders for my Kim McLean project.
This 1,000-piece puzzle of a sewing room took up a lot of
time too, but it was fun. I expect it
will be a while before I tackle another one as we are trying to finalize plans
for a trip that will be coming up shortly.