We have about a dozen monarch caterpillars on our milkweed plants. This is one:
I'm hoping when they get big enough I can take a not-blurry picture. The biggest now is about an inch long; the smallest is less than a centimeter long.
This is the leaf I removed. I felt bad, but according to what I could find, this caterpillar for the milkweed tussock moth will defoliate the host plant. Sorry, guys. I need the milkweed for the monarchs.
No quilty pictures, but quilty gratitude. One of the members of the Quilt Art list offered old magazines, and she lives about 2 miles from my house! She had THREE BOXES of magazines. I'm in heaven. A lot of them are older, but those were my lost-to-children no-quilting years.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Our fun Saturday - Part 2
Our fun Saturday - part 1
July UFO done!!!
Started in the mid-80s by me and my Memaw:
(My holder is taller than me by a few inches and still isn't quite tall enough.)
The back:
I think you can see some of the quilting pattern for the sashing - I just did pointy lozenges that met (sort of) in the peachy setting blocks. The blocks were quilted in the ditch in the print parts of the bear paw.
(My holder is taller than me by a few inches and still isn't quite tall enough.)
The back:
I think you can see some of the quilting pattern for the sashing - I just did pointy lozenges that met (sort of) in the peachy setting blocks. The blocks were quilted in the ditch in the print parts of the bear paw.
Husband and middle son are still alive
But I could've killed both of them Friday night. The mid-kid got his goo all over my quilt in progress (and I was mad at TMOTH for letting him buy it).
SO - I worked like mad, quilted the last block, finished the binding, and threw it in the washing machine. I managed to get all of the goop scraped off and it appears to be gone...
Good thing, too, because our well died Saturday morning. We finally admitted it was not fixable by us Saturday afternoon. TMOTH was going to wait until Monday, but NO, dammit, I do NOT bounce out of bed every morning and head off to work so that I can't get my well fixed when I want it. I'm sure it cost us a couple of hundred more to get it fixed now instead of next week, but it's worth it to be able to shower in the morning.
SO - I worked like mad, quilted the last block, finished the binding, and threw it in the washing machine. I managed to get all of the goop scraped off and it appears to be gone...
Good thing, too, because our well died Saturday morning. We finally admitted it was not fixable by us Saturday afternoon. TMOTH was going to wait until Monday, but NO, dammit, I do NOT bounce out of bed every morning and head off to work so that I can't get my well fixed when I want it. I'm sure it cost us a couple of hundred more to get it fixed now instead of next week, but it's worth it to be able to shower in the morning.
An unexpected gift
While doing the FabShopHop, I signed up for the e-newsletter at The Quilting Cottage. "Sign up and I'll send you a free gift." Well, I'm thinking a coupon, something like that. Well, THIS lands in my mailbox on Saturday!:
Two lovely coordinating fat quarters (how'd they know I like sage green!). Something simple, but I'm sure to remember them the next time I'm shopping online.
Two lovely coordinating fat quarters (how'd they know I like sage green!). Something simple, but I'm sure to remember them the next time I'm shopping online.
Saturday, July 19, 2008
The milkweed post
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Photos, not quilty
NO quilting was accomplished tonight. It was kind of discombobulated - late getting home, had to run out for hamburger because the chicken was dicey, had to take the tween's BFF home...but I found the camera.
So here are some squash! The curly one is tromboncino, the three pale green & yellow are Zephyr, and the bright yellow and green funky looking one (far left) is our own special mutant. I know that I didn't order this, and don't think it even exists in any seed catalog that I receive. It looks like a cross between Zephyr and a couple of OTHER types of summer squash. It is currently taking over the garden, even more than the tromboncino, whose spreading I tolerate because the fruit is so tasty.
Patterns! The only issue is which one to make first...
This one is from 1966:
This one is copyright 1967:
This one (my favorite) is from 1971:
The yummy batik:
So here are some squash! The curly one is tromboncino, the three pale green & yellow are Zephyr, and the bright yellow and green funky looking one (far left) is our own special mutant. I know that I didn't order this, and don't think it even exists in any seed catalog that I receive. It looks like a cross between Zephyr and a couple of OTHER types of summer squash. It is currently taking over the garden, even more than the tromboncino, whose spreading I tolerate because the fruit is so tasty.
Patterns! The only issue is which one to make first...
This one is from 1966:
This one is copyright 1967:
This one (my favorite) is from 1971:
The yummy batik:
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Freecycle goodies
The camera is MIA, so no photos :(
I responded to a freecycler's posts for "sewing supplies and vintage patterns" and picked some up Friday, some today. The patterns are GREAT - classic "little black dresses", some jackets, a bathrobe pattern...the sewing supplies were not so much great - some polyester thread and some bias tape. AND, buried in the pile of humdrum fabric, about a yard of a stunning blue batik. JACKPOT!! There's quite bit of beige that may work for curtains as well.
Quilting is slow but steady - one block and one row yesterday, two blocks and one row tonight.
I responded to a freecycler's posts for "sewing supplies and vintage patterns" and picked some up Friday, some today. The patterns are GREAT - classic "little black dresses", some jackets, a bathrobe pattern...the sewing supplies were not so much great - some polyester thread and some bias tape. AND, buried in the pile of humdrum fabric, about a yard of a stunning blue batik. JACKPOT!! There's quite bit of beige that may work for curtains as well.
Quilting is slow but steady - one block and one row yesterday, two blocks and one row tonight.
Sunday, July 13, 2008
A productive weekend
Well, the grand dream of FINISHING the quilting was clearly not to be, but progress was made. Three sashing rows quilted, and 5 or 6 blocks.
Also some gardening time. I've mostly been watching this squash plant grow:
It's in the "finished" half of our compost bin:
Also in there are some tomato volunteers:
We love all kinds of volunteers. Here's one of the milkweeds, with a bee buzzing away. No butterfly caterpillars yet this year :(
At any rate, the ones I planted ON PURPOSE in the garden are farther along. I picked a Zephyr on Friday - actually two that had grown together - and have a tromboncini growing along. I'll have to start checking regularly now.
Some fun in the sun with the Small Man and the kitties:
Cheese!:
Running inside:
Cookie:
Cotton:
And then it rained! YAY!
Also some gardening time. I've mostly been watching this squash plant grow:
It's in the "finished" half of our compost bin:
Also in there are some tomato volunteers:
We love all kinds of volunteers. Here's one of the milkweeds, with a bee buzzing away. No butterfly caterpillars yet this year :(
At any rate, the ones I planted ON PURPOSE in the garden are farther along. I picked a Zephyr on Friday - actually two that had grown together - and have a tromboncini growing along. I'll have to start checking regularly now.
Some fun in the sun with the Small Man and the kitties:
Cheese!:
Running inside:
Cookie:
Cotton:
And then it rained! YAY!
Saturday, July 05, 2008
Productive 4th
- took one strip (4 blocks) off one end of the quilt
- broke the strip into blocks
- embroidered our family's names onto a blank block
Hopefully today I can get the top (back) together. I may decide it needs a border, so will have to make a JoAnn's trip. I also need to find an anniversary present - Monday is #18 for us.
- broke the strip into blocks
- embroidered our family's names onto a blank block
Hopefully today I can get the top (back) together. I may decide it needs a border, so will have to make a JoAnn's trip. I also need to find an anniversary present - Monday is #18 for us.
Friday, July 04, 2008
Photos - all to do with yesterday's post
So, this is the quilt my Memaw and I made:
This is a close-up of one of the blocks:
My Uncle Buckshot and Aunt Donna have both passed away now, but I think all my cousins listed are still living.
This batik with flowers will be most of the backing:
This is the Log Cabin:
I think this is probably my baby brother's birthday or Christmas gift when it's quilted.
Last but not least, the big bag-o-batting:
This is a close-up of one of the blocks:
My Uncle Buckshot and Aunt Donna have both passed away now, but I think all my cousins listed are still living.
This batik with flowers will be most of the backing:
This is the Log Cabin:
I think this is probably my baby brother's birthday or Christmas gift when it's quilted.
Last but not least, the big bag-o-batting:
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Long weekend ahead, yay!
I started it off with a bang by leaving work early and heading off to Jo-Ann's for their big sale - 50% off batting, notions, interfacing, cutting supplies, and clearance fabrics - PLUS a 10% off everything coupon. I wound up with 5 yards of Warm & Natural, 5 yards of light-weight fusible (in case I decide to make a t-shirt quilt), 3 4-yard pieces for backing, a cool remnant, lots of needles and bobbins, a bigger cutting mat, a smaller rotary cutter, and some safety pins. Also some clearance beading supplies. Also a t-shirt to try fern printing as an anniversary present for TMOTH.
I have 3 quilt tops I need to start working on - one is an orphan top I picked up at quilt guild, one is the July UFO (a signature block quilt my grandmother and I made together), and a king-size log cabin top my grandmother made.
I have 3 quilt tops I need to start working on - one is an orphan top I picked up at quilt guild, one is the July UFO (a signature block quilt my grandmother and I made together), and a king-size log cabin top my grandmother made.
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