Monday, July 25, 2011

Trying again



Okay, let's try this again. Life has settled down a little, for the next few months anyway.

Ten months to go until we move to Arkansas. I am enjoying this last summer in South Texas. Like the rest of the country, we have had some real scorching days, but we're used to that. Next summer I will be too busy unpacking to enjoy the weather very much. We have already sent two PODS full of stuff to Arkansas. One load went into our shop building there at the house; the other was split between the shop and a climate-controlled storage unit we have rented. All paper goods and fabric goods go there, things like my collection of mystery paperbacks, linens, photographs, etc. Much of that POD load came directly from the 10' x 10' storage unit we had here. It will be "fun" unpacking all that stuff next year. I anticipate a large garage sale next fall, although I did try to weed stuff out that I knew I didn't want anymore. Goodwill has been the beneficiary of most of that.

This past week I reorganized my sewing room, labeling everything clearly and making sure everything was put in its place. Not only will I be able to find everything easier, but it will help tremendously when I pack it all up and then unpack it again. The bins and boxes will just go in large cardboard boxes, labeled and sent up in the last POD which will go up about a month before the move.


The pillowcases on top of the shelves are encasing my finished quilts. I buy zippered white cotton pillowcases at BB&B, then add a clear vinyl pocket to one side. I take a photo of the quilt, print it out, and put the photo in the pocket. I can then tell what quilt it is without taking it out of the case.


Now to keep it looking this neat!


Oh, and I bought a new Baby Lock Quest Plus sewing machine since I last blogged much. I like it, except for how hard it is to find extra feet for it. It came with several, but I like to have a few specialty feet, you know? Pintuck foot, stitch-in-the-ditch foot, cording foot, etc. The shank ankle on this machine is wider than most, so the feet I have for my Husqvarna Viking Rose won't fit, and neither will most other Baby Lock feet. What's up with that? Otherwise it's a great machine, even if I did have to travel to San Antonio to get it.

I've been going through old videotapes and dubbing the good ones to DVDs. I had several years worth of sewing and quilting videos--Nancy Zieman, Eleanor Burns, Martha Pullen, Fons and Porter, Sue Scheewe, Donna Dewberry, etc, etc. Those have now been dubbed. Now I'm going through the tapes we don't want to keep, making sure there are no unlabeled "gems" on them before they hit the recycling bin. Right this minute I am watching the first day of "Operation Iraqi Freedom." Talk about a blast from the past! All the speculation about how many casualties there would be, the weapons of mass destruction they expected to find, the dangers of biological warfare, in hindsight sound a little alarmist but were very indicative of the fears after 9/11. We taped the CNN coverage because my husband was a Navy reservist at the time and our son was on the USS Enterprise.

To catch up with when I stopped blogging--our Bedlington Terrier, Copper, is doing well. My husband has put on some weight but is still in remission from his Goblet Cell Carcinoid. He has stopped his plant growing business in preparation for the move, and is only taking care of plants that we may be able to take with us. He has already sent a few boxes of bulbs to our renter, who has set them in the ground for us. We'll put them where we want them later.

I am in better health now and have a lot more energy. I had been having a lot of problems with high blood pressure, heel pain, and other problems related to obesity. This year I decided to get more active. I bought a treadmill and have been using it regularly, 5-6 days a week. I am also eating a high protein, low carb diet. My BP is back to normal. I am still using a CPAP machine, but the pressure has been reduced on it. I still have the heel spurs but they are not bothering me as much.

I am scheduled to have arthroscopic knee surgery in two weeks to repair a torn meniscus and generally clean out the joint. I have limped for over a year, and took a bad fall in February that probably caused the torn meniscus. I'm anxious to get this surgery done and get my knee back to normal.

I am no longer involved in Eastern Star, although I am a life member and still have friends there. I let my health get to the point where I could no longer enjoy that type of activity. Now that I feel better I am too busy getting ready to move. I do still attend the Red Hat events and the book club with some of the Red Hat members. I get so much from those friends--I will really miss them when I move! I hope some of them will keep in touch. I intend to.

I found this lovely tray at a thrift store last Saturday. I couldn't pass it up. Isn't it pretty? The bottom is made of ceramic tiles. It's in perfect shape--the white spots are glints from the shiny tiles.


I have been saving my sons' old T-shirts for several years now, intending to make quilts out of them. I finally got around to it because I didn't want to move the shirts to Arkansas. This one is made of a lot of school shirts, Boy Scout shirts, and various others that were favorites.


This one, on the other hand, is exclusively made of Eskimo Joe's tees. My sons both enjoyed these while they were growing up. At one time Eskimo Joe's tees were the second most highly desired tees after Hard Rock Cafe. The chain is based in Stillwater, OK where my DH grew up. My MIL used to get the shirts for the boys at every holiday, so they always had several.


These are still just tops. My sister in Arkansas will quilt them for me later. For those who don't know how to make quilt blocks out of t-shirts, I'll explain.

1. Launder the tees, no fabric softener. I use even the shirts with stains and small holes in them, as well as the ones that are faded as long as the design is clear enough to see.

2. Buy lots of middleweight fusible interfacing, non-stretchy. I mean lots--I had to go buy more twice for the two quilts above. One yard will do two 15" blocks. I had a 15" square ruler that I used for the template.

3. Cut off the sleeves and neck ribbing of the shirt and open at least one of the sides so you can lay it flat on your ironing board. The sleeves and plain backs make good cleaning rags. If the back or sleeves have designs on them, use them for the quilt too.

4. Lay the design area face down on the ironing board and press it to remove wrinkles and to square up the design if it's a little cattywampus. (yes, that's a real word!)

5. Cut a piece of interfacing the size you want the finished block to be. Mine were 15" squares.

6. Center it over the design area of the shirt. Most of the time the top edge of the interfacing will be at the neckline edge of the shirt. Press the interfacing in place using the manufacturer's directions. Don't be afraid to use the extra pieces of interfacing by piecing them onto a block. It won't make a difference.

7. Cut out the interfaced area from the shirt, using a template or ruler. Now you have a quilt block! If some of the designs are bigger or smaller, you can either cut into the design and only use part of it, make one row with larger blocks, or add pieces to the smaller blocks to make them all the same, etc. You can see what I mean in the pictures.

I used sashing on one quilt to tie it all together because I had to add some strips to a couple of smaller blocks to make them fit. Since a few of the shirts were tie-dyed, I interfaced the remaining tie-dyed pieces and cut them into strips to use for the sashing. I like the look. Don't try cutting out the pieces before interfacing them--trust me on this one.

I will say that these are rather heavy quilt tops. I've chosen regular cotton backings and will use very thin cotton batting. Polyester would be too bulky. These are going on the kid's guest room beds when we get to Arkansas and have the addition built on the house.

Boy, when I do get around to blogging I really talk a lot, don't I? I'd better save some for later.

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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Keeping it Open

I haven't felt like blogging for many months now. I do want to hold this blog open, and will try to start using it again very soon. Sometimes blogging becomes a chore, and is no longer fun or interesting. That is the way this blog has gone. Problems arise, attention is diverted, and it feels like nothing is worth blogging about. I expect that to change soon.

We still expect to move to NW Arkansas in about 15 months. In the interim, I am concentrating on improving my health, which has slowly deteriorated over the last few years. I have made great strides in that direction, and I hope that I will soon feel up to talking about it.

So bear with me! I will be my old boring self again, soon enough.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Trips


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We recently returned from our ten-day vacation to Oklahoma and Arkansas. It started out rather badly; just south of Waco we were knocked off the interstate during a rainstorm. No one was hurt, but we learned how the PIT maneuver works when used by the cops to stop a car. The white car below did exactly that, hydroplaning into us hitting first our left rear, then swinging us around so that it collided with the left front of our car; it knocked us onto the grass verge where we did a 360 degree spin before limping across the access road into a driveway.


You can see the damage to our Suzuki Aerio below.


We limped into Stillwater and had the scraping wheel well trimmed. After attending my husband's fiftieth high school reunion (much fun!) We went on a tour of the OSU athletic facilities. Below is hubby at Boone Pickens Stadium. We got to see the VIP skyboxes used by Mr. Pickens and the President of OSU.


This dark photo was taken inside Gallagher-Iba Arena. Both these facilities are the best that money can buy.

We then toured the OSU Botanical Gardens. WOW! What a gorgeous garden! Very well presented and maintained, with lots of ideas for garden art and arrangement.


Then we traveled to Fayetteville, AR where we stayed with my sister and brother-in-law.
She has a longarm quilting machine, and was kind enough to quilt my granddaughters' quilts for them. These were the sampler quilts they made in their quilting classes. She also quilted one of my own quilts.


Below is her Maltese, Salty. He poses so well! He is a real sweetheart, and kept us from missing Copper too much.


My sister gave me a couple of snapshots my uncle had sent her of me as a child. This one was taken when I was barely three. The brown dog was mine, the other was my sister's. I only threw that dog away about three years ago, when I realized that it was mostly stuffed with dust mites.

We then traveled to Bristow, OK where we met with all my husband's cousins. Hubby wasn't well by this time (he had developed bronchitis.) We left a day early so we could get home sooner.
All in all, it was a good trip. Now we are dealing with the car repairs, but our insurance company has been very good and it will be fixed very soon.

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Last Friday I traveled to Rockport, TX to test-drive the new Janome Horizon sewing machine.
It's very large, and very nice; but I felt it was more machine than I really needed. So on Monday I drove all the way to San Antonio to test the Babylock Quest. I really liked it. The size is more manageable; the controls more intuitive. Altogether more user-friendly. Plus it was only a little more than half the price of the Horizon. So I bought it (it is now upgraded to the Quest Plus.) It should be delivered sometime next week. I can hardly wait! I spent a couple of hours today rearranging my sewing room to make space for it. I intend to make it my main machine, and turn my old Viking Rose into an embroidery-only machine. I rarely use the embroidery unit bacause it has always seemed such a hassle to convert it from sewing to embroidery. This way I may be able to use it more.

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My sister found an old Kenmore 1560 free-arm machine at a garage sale for $15. It is very clean and looks as though it was used once or twice, then stuck in a closet for years. She cleaned it, but found the stitch length control dial was broken. I bought it from her for my granddaughters, and took it to my Singer dealer to be repaired. They called me and told me they couldn't find the replacement part, so I picked it up this afternoon. This evening I found someone selling parts from a 1560 on eBay, so I asked him if he might have the dial I need. He does! I paid for it and it should arrive in a week or so.

I also took my Touch and Sew 600 in for repair. Once fixed (or not, as may be) it will probably be sold in a garage sale or given to a family member who wants it. It has been an excellent machine since I bought it on eBay about 10 years ago, but I no longer need it. I hope it can be repaired. Right now the needle position control is broken.

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Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Long time no see!

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Wow, I didn't realize how long it had been since I had posted! I have been uber busy, what with sewing classes with the granddaughters, and going through 31 years of accumulated stuff before our 2012 move. We've already had one large garage sale, and have another planned in late July with more than enough stuff already boxed up and ready to go. We figure we'll have 3 more garage sales before we move! That's a lot of sorting of stuff, folks!

I had some blood work drawn recently, and everything turned out normal. I had asked the doctor to do an A1C test for diabetes, since my dad was a diabetic and two of my sisters are as well. The test result was 5.9--enough that I need to start watching it, but not enough to call "prediabetic" yet. I guess a diet and increased exercise is in the cards.

Poor Copper has had a rough time lately. He had a blow-out of his left anal gland about a month ago, and last week the right one blew out. He was miserable, poor boy. If it happens again we may have to resort to surgery for him. He feels much better now after his antibiotics.

The girls' classes have gone very well--it has been hard to keep up with them, they are progressing so rapidly! I am turning them loose for the summer, then this fall we will tackle garment sewing. It's not my favorite thing, but I am proficient enough to teach them the basics. I already have their curriculum planned out--very ambitious for one semester of work--seven projects plus some extra classes that won't be covered in the projects, like alternative fasteners, mending, taking measurements, and recycling used clothing (field trip to the thrift stores!) It seems like a lot to me, but at the speed they learn, It may not take them the three to four months I had envisioned. Remember--this is on top of all their regular schoolwork! No wonder they are being homeschooled, there is no way public schools could keep them occupied.

Our vacation is coming up, two reunions and a trip to check on our new properties in AR. I hope to post some pictures next time!

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Sunday, April 4, 2010