Agriculture Report, Special Events

Agriculture Report and a Concert

AGRICULTURE REPORT

What is an “Agriculture Report”? Well I was inspired by  @quiteayarnblog‘s ongoing series of posts titled “Agriculture Report” (and this title always cracks me up) that are actually updates of what is going on in her garden. I just had to adopt this same title for updates on what is going on in my garden/my “garden report“…

I figured I would get one more “Agriculture Report” in for the year now that the growing season in Colorado’s Front Range where I live. I think this is the only update I am providing since my July 19, 2024 post Agriculture Report: Plantings Gone Wild .

As I mentioned in the July post, the free seeds I got from one of my local libraries really took off! Here is what the plants looked like in the raised bed John built at the end of September:

I’d routinely been getting tomatoes from the upstairs porch tomato plants and I started getting tomatoes AND our first cucumbers from the seed planted crops in the raised bed!

John made a Cucumber Salad with our first cucumbers (which are the first cucumbers I’ve ever grown!):

We recently returned from a trip to the Oregon Coast and the weather at home had changed radically (getting colder and colder at night) and there is rumor of a big freeze and possibly snowstorm at lower elevations (we live at 6000 ft above sea level). It has already snowed at the higher elevations (we have a lot of 14,000+ ft above sea level mountain regions in Colorado). So it was time to shut down the garden for the season. Plus it was time to “blowout” our sprinkler system/winterize it, so the plants wouldn’t be getting any more irrigation and where going to die out.

We harvested a bunch of tomatoes, cucumbers and zucchini (but only a little as the rest did not ripen they were planted too late) from the raised bed:

John made pickles with the cucumbers and so far they taste delicious (they are still aging in their “pickling”):

In addition to the cucumbers from our raised bed, John used a hot pepper (not sure what I planted) and fresh thyme from our garden.

Besides vegetables, we had some luck with free flower seeds we got from the library. It took awhile but the Cosmos flower seeds I planted really took off:

We plan to put in a couple more raised beds next season, and I will be more organized in my free seed plantings (I hope the library hands out free seeds again next year). I did overcrowd the one raised bed, and the carrots, onions and spinach I planted from the free seeds did not grow.

Oh and would you like to see some photos of real harvests? A couple weeks ago we went to the Sunday Farmers’ Market in Parker and the fruits and vegetables were bountiful!

They have one stand at the Farmers’ Market that allows you to fill a large bag for $15 with whatever they have at their stand (and they have a lot of choices). They are very liberal on how the interpret “fill a bag” and they let me balance a very large head of cauliflower at the very top of the bag! They were also giving out free acorn squashes with purchase (I made a nice soup from mine) – I think they had more squash than they knew what to do with.

CONCERT

October 12 we went to see an awesome outdoor concert by our favorite Icelandic band, Kaleo.

We did see them at Red Rocks Amphitheatre this summer, and it was wonderful to get to see them again but at a smaller venue – Breckenridge Brewery’s Littleton Colorado Campus’ Farmhouse Concert Venue.

Here is a little clip from the concert I took:

And here is the full performance of this song that made John fall in love with the band as much I did when I first heard them around 2016:

But our favorite of their songs is not sung in English, it is sung in their native Icelandic language – Vor í Vaglaskógi – and based on Icelandic folklore:

Hope you enjoyed the music! The lead singer, JJ Julius Son (Jökull Júlíusson) has quite the voice/vocal range, and we love the musicianship of the band.

Outside Adventures!, tierneytravels

Breckenridge and the Continental Divide

Well it’s time to start catching you all up on our travels this Summer into Fall. It might justify why there’s been very little “tierneycreating” except for projects that I can take on trips!

It’s going to be in random order as I think of what adventure I want to share when I write the post. So this post I feel like sharing our trip in early August 2024 to Breckenridge, Colorado with a stop at Loveland Pass on the way where we stood on a section of the Continental Divide.

Loveland Pass

The Continental Divide as defined by Wikipedia :

The Continental Divide extends from the Bering Strait to the Strait of Magellan, and separates the watersheds that drain into the Pacific Ocean from those river systems that drain into the Atlantic and Arctic Ocean, including those that drain into the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean Sea, and Hudson Bay

Here we are at Loveland Pass at 11,990 feet above sea level (yes the air felt a bit thinner up there!)

It was a gorgeous day and we hiked a bit around the Continental Divide area:

We even found some patches of snow in early August!

Breckenridge, Colorado

After a couple hours at Loveland Pass we headed to Breckenridge, Colorado one of the many skiing towns of Colorado (like Vail, Telluride, Keystone, Steamboat, Aspen, etc) for an overnight visit.

Here are some photos from our time in Breckenridge:

I also found some cool old structure that were just screaming to be Black and White photos 😉

Fabric Scraps Obsession, ScrapHappy

ScrapHappy October 2024: Recycled Hope

It’s the 15th of the month and time for my monthly “ScrapHappy” post as part of the ScrapHappy group I belong run by Kate and Gun. At the end of this post I have a link to the other blogs participating in this monthly event in case you’d like to check out their ScrapHappy posts.

The 15th of the month came around quicker than anticipated and I already blogged about the 22nd block I made for the very scrappy Farm Girl Vintage quilt I am working on September 26 (see post I Sewed Something! ) so I couldn’t use that for my October ScrapHappy post, sigh.

So instead I will discuss my series of art quilts made from scraps of recycled denim, clothing and home decorating fabrics – Recycled Hope; and update on you that latest quilt I am working on in that series.

The Recycled Hope Series

Recycled Hope an ongoing series of improvisational art quilts using recycled materials to include denim as the primary fabric on many of the pieces, combined with other recycled materials.

“Hope” and the interpretation of the word “hope” is the primary theme of infused into these pieces. Most of the fabrics were not reusable as clothing or home decor and were destined to end up in a landfill. Reimagining recycled clothing and other materials into art quilts satisfies my hopeful desire to honor the environment and make art that is eco-conscious. Ending up in an art quilt is a better outcome than ending up in a landfill.

My first quilt in the series, Recycled Road, was made for annual art quilt show for the local SAQA (Studio Art Quilt Associates) group I belonged while living in Central Oregon:

This quilt was made using my late husband’s clothing that he no longer wanted, several recycled jeans, a little recycled scrap home decor fabric and this awful pair of orange corduroy pants someone gave me to use in an art quilt. The pants were too hideous to donate to be work as clothing but worked in a quilt! The quilt measures 18 inches by 40 inches which was the required dimensions for the art show which was titled “Pathways”.

I no longer own this quilt, it was purchased by a friend who wanted to support my art.

The second quilt I made in the series was also for an annual art quilt show for the local SAQA (Studio Art Quilt Associates) group I belonged while living in Central Oregon and titled Recycled Door:

This quilt is composed of recycled denim, recycled home decor fabric, and a little of those awful orange corduroy pants (I got a lot of use out of those pants, fabric wise). It also measures 18 inches by 40 inches which was the required dimensions for the art show which was titled “Doors”. This quilt was purchased by a private collector.

The third quilt in the series was also for an annual art quilt show for the local SAQA (Studio Art Quilt Associates) group I belonged while living in Central Oregon and titled Recycled Love:

Made from recycled jeans and home decor fabric, the Artist Statement for this quilt is as follows:

The first law of thermodynamics states that the total amount of energy in a system cannot be created nor destroyed, it can only be changed from one form to another.A quilt is made from changing the existing “love energy” from the quilt maker’s heart into a pieced textile; ultimately recycling that love energy into the quilt’s recipient heart.

It also measures 18 inches by 40 inches which was the required dimensions for the art show which was titled “The Threads That Bind”.

I have this quilt hung in my hallway next to my studio to remind me that “Quilts are Love”.

Here are the rest of the quilts in this series which were not created for a specific show.

Recycled Windows of Conversation:

This quilt measures 55” W x 59” L; and is made from recycled jeans, various recycled clothing, and recycled home decor fabric. It was the largest recycled denim quilt i’d made to date.

It was purchased by an art dealer on behalf of their client, and it now sits in the common area of an upscale apartment complex in downtown Seattle, Washington (see post Oh So That’s What Happened to It!).

Recycled Windows:

This quilt measures 18” W x 39″ L, and is made from recycled clothing, recycled denim, and recycled home decorating fabric. It was juried into the New Mexico Arts Art in Public Places Program but was not selected by any of their public buildings for purchase. So it hangs in my bedroom and I enjoy looking at it everyday!

Recycled Business Casual:

Somewhere in this series of quilts I made this quilt from recycled jeans, recycled wool blankets and menswear wool suiting scraps (this is where I got the name “Recycled Business Casual“. It was more of an experiment than an actual art quilt but it did show along with many of the other quilts shown above in my first solo show: The Wardrobe Meets the Wall in April 2019 at the Seattle Municipal Tower in Downtown Seattle, Washington.

Current Project Update

And finally let’s get to my current project in progress to add to the Recycled Hope series – a denim quilt made with lots of recycled jeans and recycled home decor fabric scraps:

The tentative name for this quilt is “What Direction Do I Go?” but I am rethinking the name as my head is in a different space now than when I first started the quilt in October 2023 (What’s on the Design Wall: An “Upcycled” Work).

I have it back up on the design wall and it is set up for quilting with the backing and batting attached.

I am working out what quilting design I want to use. I created a sample square of scrap denim, backing and batting to try out some designs:

I am really looking forward to completing this quilt and I have a place on my living room to upstairs stairway reserved to hang this approximately 55 inches by 55 inches quilt.

After I finish this quilt, there will likely be more recycled denim quilts in the future as I have a nice stash of recycled jeans in my studio:

Earlier this year a local charity thrift shop had an “All Jeans $2” sale and I stocked up!


Here are the other bloggers that participate in the ScrapHappy monthly posting event, check out their blogs linked below for their ScrapHappy posts:

KateGun, EvaSue, Lynda, Birthe, Turid, Tracy, JanMoira, SandraChrisAlys,
ClaireJeanDawnGwen,Sunny, Kjerstin, Sue LVera, Ann, Dawn 2, Carol, Preeti,
NóilinVivKarrin,  Alissa,Lynn, TierneyHannah and Maggie

Knit and Crochet Away!

My First Pom-Pom Hat

Here is a follow up to my post from the end of September about running out of yarn towards the end of knitting a hat and using a variegated yarn to complete the hat – Ran Out of Yarn But the Hat Continues… .

As I mentioned in that post, adding the variegated yarn to the top of the hat makes it sort of look like an Icelandic sweater yoke ‘colorwork’ (well if you squint your eyes, ha!). In addition to the unusual finish of the hat, I added my first pom-pom on top of a hat using the variegated yarn.

First here is the hat at my favorite part of knitting a hat – using the double pointed needles at the crown/end of knitting a hat:

And here is the photo I always take before I finish a hat – me wearing the hat with the double pointed needles:

(I am holding the yarn in my hand, not the pom-pom)

And here is the finished hat with my first pom-pom that I made using a Pom-pom Maker:


Postscript

Speaking of hats, I gave my friend K a hat I knitted when we visited her in California early September for a California roadtrip (I’ll blog about that California roadtrip we took with her and her husband in a future post).

The hat is knitted from a cool rainbow variegated wool yarn.

Yes it’s the one hat pattern I know. Perhaps someday I will try a different pattern!

Bags Bags Bags

Sushi Bag!

Recently I made a cute drawstring bag as a gift for my stepson Z who loves sushi.

Z relocated to Portland, Oregon a couple months ago for a big promotion and moved into a new place. John and I wanted to send him a little package of some of his favorite tasty treats to celebrate.

I figured one of my handmade drawstring bags would be the perfect holder for the treats, and I found some cool sushi themed fabric in my fabric stash (who knows where and when I got it)

The treats for Z fit perfectly in the bag:

I had enough left over fabric to make a second one that I might sell someday on my Etsy shop (when I re-open it).

A Crafter's Life

Still Winning Halloween

October 2023 I posted about a house in the neighborhood I often walk in that I felt “won HalloweenThe House That Won Halloween – due to their extensive and creative decorations (tastefully done and not too over-the-top):

(see the October 5, 2023 post for all my images of their awesome decorations)

Well, I was walking by the house the other day and once again they have their awesome Halloween decorations out but this time they added a BIG item to the group – a GIANT skeleton coming out of the ground!

It is massive and just compare it in the image to the house in the background which is a large house to give you an idea of the size of this skeleton!

Yes this house is so fun to walk by; and it continues to “Win Halloween” in the neighborhood!

A Crafter's Life

Hello Autumn

The leaves are really starting to change in my section of eastern section of the Denver Metropolitan area of Colorado that we live in. I thought I would share a couple photos from my recent daily walks and a hike we went on at Castlewood Canyon State Park.

And of course I had to take a Black & White photo of the Autumn foliage scene during my daily walk:

Looks mysterious in B&W!

We’ve had some lovely Autumn evenings enjoying the cooler weather. Here is a photo from last week when John and I were hanging out at our friends’ home on their patio visiting with one of their dogs. We still miss our Mike the Miniature Schnauzer terribly but we appreciate our friends sharing their dogs with us!

Independent bookstores, tierneytravels

Simultaneous Adventures: Richmond, Virginia and Louisville, Kentucky

I am backdating some posts as I see my posting was sparse in October (and September) due to travel. I like having my blog be a record of my travels so I am going to catch up on sharing my Summer and Fall 2024 adventures.

In the middle of September I went to Richmond, Virginia to visit my sister while John went to Louisville, Kentucky to meet up with his friends to attend a Bourbon Festival. Below is a little photo travelogue of my trip to Richmond along with a couple photos at the end of John’s visit to Louisville.

Richmond (Tierney’s Trip)

My sister lives in Richmond but we wanted to have a “Sisters Trip” where she didn’t have to travel far (as she’s been very busy her work as a Construction Project Manager for a local University) so we rented an AirBNB place in Carytown so she could feel like she was on vacation too!

We spent a lot of time wandering around Carytown which is according to the tourism website:

Nestled in the heart of Richmond, Carytown is a unique shopping, dining, and entertainment district.  With a focus on small, locally-owned businesses, Carytown is home to the historic Byrd Theater as well as several unique dining and boutique shopping destinations. Adjacent to the Museum District and Byrd Park, Carytown is a necessary stop for a day well spent in the city.

My sister knows how much I love independent bookstores so we stopped at a couple:

First there was Shelf Life Books which had a resident bookstore cat:

I didn’t get to pet the cat as customers were sort of lined up for cat petting. I did grab a quick photos when the cat was taking a break from endless pets:

I found a wonderful used book at this shop.

Later we visited Small Friend Records and Books, and I had a delightful wander in that shop while my sister found a cozy chair to relax in while I shopped. She was so sweet telling me to “just take your time, we are not in a hurry” (she is my kind of people!).

Although the store was called “Small Friend…” I didn’t see any “small friends” wandering about, but still it was a lovely bookstore.

We stopped for a wander around the The Jefferson Hotel to admire its historical architecture and decor; and relax a bit with a hot beverage in their lounge area.

We picked up some fun items from the gift shop including a little pewter pineapple for John who likes little cool things for his desk.

Some movie lore about The Jefferson Hotel: The classic film “Gone With the Wind” was allegedly filmed on the Jefferson Hotel staircase according to the Historic Hotels of America website.

We also visited the historic downtown Richmond, Virginia Public Library which was built in the early 1900s funded by philanthropist and steel baron Andrew Carnegie. The library sort of looks like it hasn’t been updated since the 1900s; and they had “old school” card catalogues!

My sister loves thrift store shopping like I do and we spent some time at Carytown Thrift as well as a couple other thrift shops around Richmond.

We ate at many cool places including a pizza place The Mellow Mushroom which had fun decor and 1970s vibe:

Finally here are a couple photos from an afternoon we spent lounging on a rooftop deck of a restaurant/bar in Carytown with a tropical/”Tiki Bar” theme (I do not remember the name of the place). We pretty much nested there for a couple hours and I pulled out my crochet and worked on my Sunflower Granny Square Blanket (see post Update on Sunflower Granny Square Blanket and Cool Community Garden) while we had cocktails and visited. (I always travel with a portable craft project!)

Like the Rino District in Denver (see post Playing Tourist in My Town: Wandering Around the RiNo District), Carytown had some amazing Graffiti Art on the sides of buildings including this piece:

Louisville (John’s Trip)

Here are some photos from John’s simultaneous trip to Louisville, Kentucky to attend a Bourbon Festival with a couple of his friends who are also Bourbon/Whiskey connoisseurs. One day they spent a couple hours at the Maker’s Mark Distillery and the photos below are from that visit.

In the first photo above, John is dipping into the famous red sealing wax a bottle of special edition Marker’s Mark Whiskey he bought at the distillery.

John also took a group of photos in Black & White on this trip for us to print out and frame for his bar area in the basement. Here is an example of one of those photos:

John and his friends stayed in a really cool Bourbon/Whiskey themed AirBNB house that I found for them (I have better AirBNB skills than John, ha!) so they were able to have a nice time visiting each evening after a day of attending the Bourbon Festival or touring distilleries. (Oh and they were smart/safe and did not rent a car, they used Ubers/Lyfts to get around so they could enjoy safely sampling at the distilleries!)

Knit and Crochet Away!

Ran Out of Yarn But the Hat Continues…

I’m not sure which I enjoy more: crocheting granny squares or knitting hats so I usually have a crochet (see post Update on Sunflower Granny Square Blanket and Cool Community Garden) and a knitting project going at the same time.

For the past couple months I’ve slowly been working on knitting a hat with a ball of pretty turquoise yarn I found in my stash. Little did I know it was not enough to finish the hat to the size I wanted.

I got this far before I ran out of yarn to do the decrease to the crown of the hat:

I am on a plane during one my recent travel adventures that I will eventually blog about

I looked through my stash to see if I had any yarn that would work to finish the top of the hat. I found this interesting variegated hand spun yarn someone gave me which had turquoise in it:


And here is my progress on the hat after adding this yarn:

I like it because it sort of looks like I did colorwork, like in the yoke of an Icelandic sweater, though real Icelandic sweater level colorwork would be nearly impossible as my knitting skills are far away from that level of skill!

I am trying decide it I should add a couple rows of the variegated yarn to the brim/bottom of the hat too. I am also thinking about adding a pom-pom/bobble to the top of the hat with the remaining variegated yarn.

Just making it up as I go along (and using up some random yarn in my stash!)

A Crafter's Life, Outside Adventures!

First Visit to Denver Botanic Gardens

Oh my, it’s already Fall/Autumn! I meant to write this post while it was still summer but I am not sure where the summer went as it seemed to fly by!

In early August I visited Denver Botanic Gardens for the first time.

Of course I took a ridiculous number of photos and I thought I share a few (giggle) in this post, to provide you a little bit of full summer bloom floral color added to your day!

I think we spent many hours there, I lost track of time. It was an overcast day but that did not detract from the beauty of the gardens.

They had wonderful structures and sculptures throughout the Botanic Gardens including these whimsical/fantastical animal structures:

They had an amazing Dale Chihuly glass structure in a beautiful pond:

Throughout the Botanic Gardens they had structures for pollinators, which are very important to gardens!

They have a large number of lily ponds, well at least for a non tropical climate. My friend L told me most of the water lilies are in pots sitting on the bottom of the pond so they can pull they inside during the cold weather.

I love the reflections on the water in the water lily ponds. In the image below you can see the overcast sky reflected on the water:

The Botanic Gardens has a breathtaking waterfall display with mist rising around it:

And to close out this post here is a tiny sampling the amazing and beautiful flowers and foliage at Denver Botanic Gardens – enjoy :-). (Visiting made me want to run home and plant flowers throughout my entire yard!)

Nature is pretty magical!

Fabric Scraps Obsession, ScrapHappy

ScrapHappy September 2024: The Curation of Scraps

It’s the 15th of the month and time for my monthly “ScrapHappy” post as part of the ScrapHappy group I belong run by Kate and Gun. At the end of this post I have a link to the other blogs participating in this monthly event in case you’d like to check out their ScrapHappy posts.

This month’s ScrapHappy post will be sort of lame because I’ve been doing everything but working on textile projects it seems! By the time you read this post (yes I am writing this ahead of time while on vacation with my sister in Virginia) I will just be returning home from another trip. We’ve also been working on some house projects and life has just been busy.

Okay so onto my lame post – ha!

The Curation of Fabric Scraps

Over the past several years I’ve been working on curating my crazy fabric scrap collection. In my earlier days of quilting I would indiscriminately accept any decent fabric scrap from fellow quilters as evidenced by the quilt (see post “All the Trimmings” is all done) that was made entirely with scraps from fellow quilters, most aquired at quilt retreats:

I used to have all my scraps in a HUGE bin, then I organized them by color into various bins:

Then I organized them by collection/type of fabric.

Then I gave a lot of them away and significant reduced my collection.

Now I have them in a series of baskets, organized by collection or type of fabric in a couple areas of my studio.

A couple months ago I bought some little wooden tags to label some of the baskets.

In addition to those type of scraps labeled above, I also have a collection of “art quilting fabric scraps”, shot cotton scraps, flannel scraps, ethnic fabric scraps, and “general” fabric scraps (doesn’t fit into any category):

And denim scraps:

So that’s my current collection of fabric scraps and I am looking forward to making projects with them. I probably have 1/3 the amount of fabric scraps I used to – yay!

Next month my ScrapHappy post will be about me actually making something again with fabric scraps!


Here are the other bloggers that participate in the ScrapHappy monthly posting event, check out their blogs linked below for their ScrapHappy posts:

KateGun, EvaSue, Lynda, Birthe, Turid, Tracy, JanMoira, SandraChrisAlys,
ClaireJeanDawnGwen,Sunny, Kjerstin, Sue LVera, Ann, Dawn 2, Carol, Preeti,
NóilinVivKarrin,  Alissa,Lynn, TierneyHannah and Maggie

Shows and Exhibits

Langston Hughes: Pioneer Poet moves onto another venue

Wow I’ve gotten a lot of mileage out of this one piece. My quilt Langston Hughes: Pioneer Poet moves onto it’s 5th venue in October 2024.

It will be shown as part of the show Black Pioneers: Legacy in the American West at the Upcountry History Museum in Greenville, South Carolina October 26, 2024 – March 2, 2025.

Image credit: upcountryhistory.org

From the museum’s website:

“When thinking about the American Wild West, many imagine characters from a classic western movie. But the reality is, the West is – and was – a melting pot. This ground-breaking exhibit fills in the mostly missing historical record of Black people in 19th-century America.”                                                                                                                – Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi

The Upcountry History Museum will invite visitors to experience a first-of-its kind exhibit when it hosts Black Pioneers: Legacy in the American West. The national touring exhibit, organized by The James Museum of Western & Wildlife Art, St. Petersburg, FL and Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi, artist, renowned historian and one of the foremost experts on African American quilting history and traditions, explores Black history in the American West.

The exhibit follows the path of Black history in the West through a timeline of original pictorial quilts. These colorful, richly detailed works of art chronicle the arrival of Africans in the American West in 1528, all the way through the Civil Rights Movement, bringing to life forgotten stories and lesser-known chapters in history. Dispelling the myth that Black people in the old West were mostly cowboys, Black Pioneers reveals the breadth of their occupations and achievements in society, religion, education, and the arts.

Quilts were chosen as the visual medium for the exhibit to highlight the intersections of African Americans in the Western Frontier while informing visitors about the art form and its important role in African American history. For African American women, quilts have always been at the core of artistic expression, taking form in the social, economic, and spiritual lives of the women who make them.

The 50 quilts, designed for the exhibit, were created by the Women of Color Quilters Network (WCQN) especially for the exhibition. Each quilt features a different Black pioneer, their life story researched and depicted in fabric by the quilt’s creator.

Founded by Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi in 1985, WCQN is a non-profit national organization whose mission is to educate, preserve, exhibit, promote and document quilts made by African Americans.

I have a lot of posts about this piece but you can check out my News page for more stories about the piece and the venues its been show.

Here’s a list of the 4 other museums the show has traveled/this quilt has shown:

If you’d like to see the Artist Statement for this piece it is as follows:

52″ W x 52″ L cotton, cotton flannel, image transfer fabric

THE STORY OF THIS PIECE:

Decades before the political rhetoric of “Make America Great Again”, American poet, novelist, activist and playwright Langston Hughes (1902 – 1967) challenged us to “Let America Be America Again” in his poem named the same .

Langston Hughes was a leading figure in the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s (Smithsonian.com) and his writings focused on the African American experience. He wrote the poem that inspired this quilt, Let America Be America Again, in 1935. It was first published by Esquire magazine in 1936 (classicesquire.com). Langston Hughes has a special significance to my family: he is the namesake of the first grandchild born into our family, Langston, named after his late grandmother Gina’s favorite poet.

This quilt shares the opening four lines of the poem’s first stanza which challenges “let America be the dream it used to be (for)…the pioneer”. These four lines are followed by a powerful statement in parenthesis: “(America was never America to me)”, summarizing the plight of African Americans historically not having access to the “American American .  The entire poem is powerful and worth a full reading (poem resource: Poets.org).

Using a B&W public archive image from the Smithsonian taken by photographer Carl Van Vechten in 1939, I recreated in cotton fabrics and image transfer fabric, a section of the scene from that photo, creatively reimagining his shirt to contain words representing he was a writer. In the backdrop of the image of Langston Hughes is the American Flag merged with African fabric to represent his African American heritage. The quilt is also bound with African fabric. Across the top of his hat I placed the word from the poem “pioneer” as I see Langston Hughes as a “Pioneer Poet”. He was the “pioneer on the plain” of writing relevant to the African American experience.

“Let America Be America Again” was written in 1935, however it remains quite relevant in 2021.

Allegedly the piece will stop touring after this 5th show and then it can return back home. I always have a wall section picked out for it in my house.

Special Events

Okay a reveal on the surface design piece….

Here is a quick little follow up to this post Misadventures in Fabric Surface Design.

In that post I shared the “hot mess” that my first piece looked like after I completed by surface design activities:

But I didn’t show what it looked like after the whole process was done.

My piece went through a series of soakings after I made it, then was laundered and dried.

And here is how it came out….

(drum roll)

Yes, even worse. But a new kind of awful. I like variety in my awful – ha!

Thanks in advance for your kind words like you shared on the first post about my misadventures in surface design, however I will not believe them on this reveal – ha!

But I am keeping the piece and will cut it up and use it in something…someday…I think…

A Crafter's Life

Sweet Surprise in the Mail Today: Handmade Bag!

When you are a crafter and someone gifts you a wonderful handmade craft it can really make you smile!

Back in August 2023 my friends J and MJ came for a little retreat at my house (see post Another Scrap Happy Quilt Retreat (Sort of)). J had this amazing bag she had made and I was obsessed with it. She said she would make me one someday.

Well today in the mail, a year later, an amazing surprise arrived in the mail – a handmade bag from J!

Here are the photos I took of it to include inside the bag and the bottom of the bag:

J is an accomplished pianist and she put a little piano zipper charm with the words “make your own music” engraved on the back of the charm:

Here’s a little clip of J playing her piano I included in the November 2022 post Guest Blog Post: The Fayetteville Friend’s Studio Project, Part II from when our mutual friend MJ and I spend a couple days in Fayetteville, North Carolina helping J reorganize her studio.

J also included this nice strap if I want to travel with the bag and attach it to my suitcase:

This bag arriving in the mail today was an exceptionally awesome surprise!

I actually have the pattern for this bag (I bought it after I saw J’s bag) and I might try and make one someday!

If you are curious the bag called the Poppins Bag (I am assuming Mary Poppins was the inspiration!) and the pattern is Poppins Bag by Auntie Two

Studio

The Reveal: New Studio Floor

Here is the follow up to the post – In the Midst of Chaos on the 2nd Floor.

John finished installing the new floor in my studio on Sunday and then installed a new built-in shelving unit using industrial pipe on Monday.

Here is John working on the floor installation (and yes he watched a lot of YouTube videos as he likes to do with most projects he’s never done before):

I took lots of installation photos but I will spare you and skip right to the finished floor photo:

I have no words to describe how excited and pleased I am to have the carpeting gone and have a floor in my studio.

Then I began the process of putting the studio back together (which took a couple days to finish up):

While I was working on putting the studio back together, John built a new shelving unit for my studio using industrial piping and recycled wood from another project:

And here is the reveal of the mostly put together room with it’s new floor (I am still refining my organization):

It feels so light and airy now with the carpeting gone.

I showed the progress on my @tierneycreates Instagram and someone comment: “Awesome, now back to work”.

Yup, with the new studio floor I need to get myself in gear to start making things again!

Special Events

Misadventures in Fabric Surface Design

I joined a group of quilters for a Surface Design workshop.

In case you are not familiar with the term “Surface Design” I looked for a formal definition, found many variations but essentially fabric “Surface Design” is creating original patterns and prints on fabric using various mediums which can include dyeing techniques, printing techniques, drawing, painting, embroidery, etc.

Little did I know this was not my thing and that I would be happy to continue purchasing commercial designed fabric after my MISADVENTURE IN SURFACE DESIGN!

The other quilters were very experienced fabric surface designers and their quilts made with surface designed fabrics have shown and been award ribbons at Quilt National, been show internationally, and have graced the covers or pages of Quilting Arts Magazine.

Here is an example of one of the quilter’s amazing collection of fabrics she has surface designed to use in her art quilts:

And then there is me who was totally clueless.

They threw me right into it and I was introduced to the equipment and chemicals involved in fabric dyeing, screen printing, and manual surface design including how to mix dyes and how to prepare your fabric with a soda ash solution soak. We dried our prepared fabric on the clothesline.

Here I am trying to “surface design” (but only making a “hot mess” on fabric):

So I failed at surface designing but perhaps I will try it again someday like in a formal class and not with a group of expert surface designers, ha! For now I will stick with commercially purchased fabric that someone else has designed!

Studio

In the Midst of Chaos on the 2nd Floor

My studio is located on the second floor of the house and is located in the former “Primary Bedroom” (I discovered there is a shift from using the term “Master Bedroom” to “Primary Bedroom” in the world of real estate) – see post A “New” Studio about the change to the Primary Bedroom for my studio in Spring 2022.

The studio has a carpet which is not in the best condition and for a couple years I’ve dreamed of getting rid of the carpet and putting in some type of hard flooring.

See the ripples in the carpet

We found a great deal on high quality wood laminate flooring and John plans to start working on removing the carpeting and then laying the new floor down this weekend, so it was time to clear out my studio.

Oh my. There was more stuff in my studio than I realized and we had to scatter the stuff all around the 2nd floor to include the primary bathroom closet, the upstairs guest bedroom/office, our bedroom, and the upstairs hallway.

It took me 2+ days to get the stuff moved out of the studio. It started slowly with moving in some fabric to the guest bedroom:

But then more and more stuff went into the guest bedroom…

Then it grew to this…

Until it finally ended up like this:

Here is the evolution of cleaning out the studio in photos:

The last image above shows how icky the carpeting is and why it needs to go!

The hallway is filled with stuff and it looks like chaos upstairs!

I’ll share photos again when the project is done and I will surprise you on what the flooring looks like as I forgot to take a photo of the large stacks of flooring currently in the Primary Bathroom closet.

tierneytravels

Playing Tourist in My Town: Wandering Around the RiNo District

A couple months ago…not sure – from May to now has become a blur…on a Friday (John now has Fridays off work as he prepares for eventual retirement) we went wandering the RiNo District near Downtown Denver.

The “RiNo District” is short for “River North Art District north of Downtown Denver”.

Google maps image

It is an amazing place to wander about on a sunny afternoon and has many eateries, shops, breweries and amazing graffiti art. It is known for it’s graffiti art on the side of buildings and I thought I would share a sampling of that art with you.

While we were we got to witness a graffiti artist working on a new piece on the side of a building:

We returned to the RiNo District last weekend while we had out of town visitors and got to see the piece completed:

While in the RiNo District during our wander a couple months ago, we stopped the Denver Central Market an amazing inside eatery with various food vendors/little restaurants to choose from.

I had a yummy seafood taco sampler with a different sauce/topping on each taco (okay don’t cringe those of you who live by/close to the ocean, I am fully aware Colorado is completely “landlocked” and the fish was frozen not fresh before they prepared it – ha!)

Later we had gelato at my favorite gelato place in Denver – Heaven Creamery. It’s not like the spiritually transcendent experience I had eating gelato in Italy the first time many years ago, but for Colorado it pretty darn good!

One of our favorite pieces of building graffiti art in the Rino District is the piece below which changes as you walk along the building. It’s difficult to capture on photo but it is such a cool effect in person!

I just love the RiNo District and look forward to returning for a wander when we have cooler Autumn weather!

A Crafter Needs to Eat, Bags Bags Bags

Recycling a Vest into Little Wallets

Those of you who’ve followed my blog a longtime might (and it’s okay if you don’t) remember when I was obsessed with making “little wallets”. Here is a batch of them from a post in September 2017 titled Little Wallet Madness:

Well recently I’ve made some new little wallets, this time from a recycled indigo batik vest and here is the background on how it came to be.

We visited friends in Asheville, North Carolina in October 2023 (see posts Greetings from Asheville – Blue Ridge Parkway and Folk Art Center, Asheville, NC) and our friend S knew I liked to work with recycled materials so while we were visiting she gave me an old indigo batik vest of hers that she was about to donate to a charity shop. She challened me to make something out of it.

It took me nearly a year to revisit the material (and the pressure of these friends coming to visit in August 2024) to finally make something – a set of little wallets. I made 5 and gave 3 to S when they visited us last week.

Unfortunately I did not think to take a photo of the vest before I cut it up to become material for the little wallets, so you’ll just have to use your imagination.

S was delighted with her 3 little wallets – one to keep and two to give as gifts.

We had a very fun 3 day visit with S and her husband E and we took them on various Colorado adventures including a visit to Fiction Beer/Brewery where you can borrow a book (or take for free) while you have your delicious craft beer!

They loved it and S is a big reader like I am so she left with a book.

John made lots of good while they visited including using his new outdoor griddle which he loved to make breakfast on; and a wonderful dish called Mexican Picadillo with simmered meat and potatoes served in corn tortilla with various toppings:

We ate outside nearly every meal as the weather has been nice in the Denver area, especially in the mornings and evenings.

S lives a “gluten-free” lifestyle so I challenged myself to do some “gluten-free” baking while she visited and made my first “gluten-free” cookies – peanut butter cookies without flour:

They were delicious but very crumbly!

Our non-stop summer of traveling or out-of-town visitors in nearly coming to a close. We’ve had fun but we are looking forward to a semi-quieter Autumn and tentatively a very quiet Winter…perhaps I can even get some “tierneycreating” done 🙂

Knit and Crochet Away!, Sunflowers!

Update on Sunflower Granny Square Blanket and Cool Community Garden

This post is an update on the June 27th post Update on Sunflower Granny Squares and an Agriculture Report, and I wanted to share a cool community garden I stumbled across.

Sunflower Granny Square Blanket Progress

I’ve completed 21 blocks for the sunflower themed crochet blanket I am working on. Here they are on the “design carpet”.

Here is a close up of one of the blocks:

I am using 6 different yarns: a variegated brown for the center of each flower; 3 different yarns for the petals in oranges and yellows; a green for the “partially opened flowers”; and an oatmeal for the background.

It’s been fun coming up with different color combinations (but making sure they still sort of resemble sunflowers) as I work on it. I might add a 4th petal yarn if I find another one in my stash that works.

I think I will make 100 granny squares and I’ve already started 20 more centers to make my next round of 20 or so.

Cool Community Garden

I was killing time before my dentist appointment last week and went for a little walk in the area near the dentist office, and discovered a cool community garden at an apartment complex.

I am not sure how it works and how the apartment community residents split up the harvest but here are some photos from my walk around of the garden (and I was smiling the whole time).

Special Events

International Quilt Museum, Lincoln Nebraska, Part II

Continuing the story of my first trip the International Quilt Museum in Lincoln, Nebraska  to the that I began in yesterday’s post International Quilt Museum, Lincoln Nebraska, Part I .

After we finished our “behind the scenes tour” (see yesterday’s post for more on that) we had some time to wander about the museum before we needed to get back on the road to drive 7 hours back to Denver.

Okay so now back to my experience wandering the museum’s exhibits.

Below are photos from some of the exhibits I really enjoyed while we wandered around after the behind the scenes tour.

Sue Spargo: A Journey in Quilting Exhibit

Sue Spargo is known for her amazing hand embroidery work. The images below that I took do not do the quilts justice, they were amazing. When I lived in Bend, Oregon she used to come to Central Oregon all the time and I could have easily taken classes with her, too bad I missed out on the opportunity!

Feed Sacks: An American Fairy Tale Exhibit

I got teary eyed viewing this exhibit because I thought of all those women that make quilts (and clothes) with what they had available – feed sacks. If you aren’t familiar with “feed sacks” there is an explanation in one of the images below. The exhibit had examples of actual feed sacks they used which was amazing!

The 4th image below is a modern quilt honoring those Pioneer women who made quilts from feed sacks and the Pioneer men of the same period.

Trek – Victoria Findlay Wolfe Exhibit

I actually took a LOT of photos of this Victoria Findlay Wolfe exhibit but the photos did not do the experience of the exhibit justice. When you walk into the exhibit it has it’s own large gallery room with high ceilings and you are visually overwhelmed with these HUGE quilts covering “floor to ceiling” with some quilts that spill on to the floor of the gallery.

Manhattan Quilters Guild – “Rebound. Renew. Reimagine.” Exhibit

I really enjoyed this exhibit and fell in love with a recycled denim quilt (Renaissance by Emiko Todo Loeb) in the exhibit which is in one of the images below.

So that is a little on our experience at the International Quilting Museum. Here is a YouTube video (courtesy of the PBS series Craft in America) if you’d like a little more info about this amazing museum.

Special Events

International Quilt Museum, Lincoln Nebraska, Part I

A couple weeks ago I went on a road trip from Denver, Colorado to Lincoln, Nebraska and attended a “behind the scenes tour” of the International Quilt Museum.

From the museum’s website

The International Quilt Museum’s mission is to build a global collection and audience that celebrate the cultural and artistic significance of quilts. The International Quilt Museum is located on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s East Campus at 33rd and Holdrege streets. The museum has the world’s largest publicly held quilt collection, dating from the early 1700s to present and representing more than 60 countries. 

We had an amazing tour guide, a retired high school teacher, and did the behind the scenes tour with another group of visiting quilters. Here I am about to go on the tour:

Our first stop was the room where they handle quilts in their collections for various archiving activities or setting up for exhibit. The staff of course wear gloves when handling the quilts and we were only allowed to view the quilt they were evaluating from afar:

In the other group on the tour with us, there was a family group who had requested to see ahead one of their relative’s quilts that are part of the International Quilt Museum‘s collection. We chatted with them and their mother/grandmother (who was passed) was a renown quilter and several of her quilts are at the museum. This specific quilt was made for her grandson, now a grown man, and they wanted him to see it in person after all these years. It was a sweet and very emotional family moment for them and I enjoyed chatting with the family and learning more about their family matriarch the renown quilter.

In the room where they archive and evaluate quilts, they had a humorous wallhanging that gave us a smile – a traditional “Sunbonnet Sue” but she was wielding a knife!

If you are familiar with this famous antique quilt block pattern then you might get a giggle (or fright) out of the knife wielding version!

We also toured where the museum stored it’s huge quilt collection in special moving racks/vaults.

I’ll continue the story and photos about my first visit to the International Quilt Museum in my next post.

A Crafter's Life, Miniature Schnauzer Adventures

Adjusting to Life Without a Dog

Well it’s been 2 weeks since Mike the Miniature Schnauzer passed and I thought I would give it a go on returning to blogging. I struggled to decide what to do first: 1) catch up on my blogging buddies’ posts; or 2) write a post myself. I decided to just go with writing a post first and then work on catching up on others’ posts.

The BIG Decision

They say that the best way to heal a broken heart from the loss of your dog is to bring a new puppy or adult dog into your life. John and I have made the decision not get another dog anytime soon. I am going to ramble on a bit about that decision.

Before I met John over 5 years ago when I moved to Colorado in 2019, he’d lived without a dog (he formerly also had a Miniature Schnauzer) for a couple years. His dog had passed and a couple years later his wife passed after a long difficult illness. But when I added Mike to his life he was very happy and realized the intense grief that followed his wife’s passing might have been eased a tiny bit if he had a dog to comfort him.

I’ve lived with at least one dog since I was in my mid 20s when my late husband Terry, a dog-person like me, insisted that we adopt a little Miniature Schnauzer Kerie that had been found in a drainage ditch by firefighters during a hurricane when we lived in Houston, Texas, and were volunteering with a local shelter as Animal Assisted Therapy Volunteers.

Terry and I adopted many rescued Miniature Schnauzers over the years and for the past 30+ years I’ve not had a period without at least one dog in the house. Usually we had two dogs and as soon as one passed we got another one as soon one was available (usually through Portland Miniature Schnauzer Rescue contacting us that they had a Miniature Schnauzer that needs a home!).

When Mike passed, I realized that for over 30 years my life decisions (primarily travel plans) have been guided by the fact I had a dog(s). There were many trips I did not take because of not having someone to watch the dogs or not wanting to be away from the dogs very long, etc.

John and I discussed: what would life be like if we could just travel when we wanted and not incur the cost of dog camp/dog sitters. What would life be like it we could just go out to dinner, see a movie, wander around Denver, etc. when we wanted and for as long as we wanted during our free time?

I never considered life without a dog as it is all I’ve known since being a young adult, and there are so many benefits (and just basic joy) that comes with having a dog that outweighs any sacrifices you have to make. But John and I made it through the greatest losses of our lives (our life-partners of over 30 years), what if we took a break from “responsibility” and just lived life for ourselves for a while?

Later on when we’ve gotten the travel and adventure bug out of our systems we might add a dog to our life (no cats, John is very allergic and I am mildly allergic); but we don’t have to decide anytime soon.

I’ve spent what seems all my life (yes actually all my life as I loved dogs as a child) as a “dog person” and it will be strange not to be a “dog person”. But I realized I am still a “dog person” as we recently returned from a couple days visiting Breckenridge, Colorado and I visited with many dogs wandering about – dogs are part of my heart, I just don’t have to live with one to still love them.

So not having plans to get another dog right now is a HUGE decision for me and I wanted to share my musings about it.

Dealing with the Loss of Mike

Mike was a huge part of our lives. He was more than just a “guest blogger” (ha!) on this blog. Our lives sort of revolved around Mike. So life without Mike is very strange but we’ve been adapting. The grief comes and goes and John and I both remind ourselves that we made it through the loss of our life-partners, so we can make it through this loss.

We’ve been trying to distract ourselves with various projects including re-arranging the furniture in our basement where Mike laid in his cushion everyday next to John while he telecommuted for work. It was difficult for John to go to the basement and log into work each day without Mike by his side. (By the way, Mike was the “dog love” of John’s life – see the Postscript section of the post Misadventures in Ice Fishing) So we moved his desk to another area and rearranged the basement layout.

John’s been staying busy with woodworking projects and recently a couple of small and lovely 3-D cutting boards, one of which I had to keep for my own:

I’ve been working on some crafting projects and will share them in future posts.

It was difficult to clean out Mike’s stuff (his stuff was integrated into the whole house) but we were able to donate his stuff to several other dog households including a couple who is actively involved in animal rescue and have 3 rescued dogs themselves.

I appreciate all the thoughtful comments people made on the blog post about Mike’s passing. I received thoughtful condolence cards and e-mails; as well as an out-of-state group of friends sent us a delicious box of ice cream from Salt & Straw that we got to share with a local group of friends at a dinner party we had last week.

This same group of out-of-state friends sent us a custom wind-chime with a Miniature Schnauzer on it and Mike’s name which we hung in our backyard where Mike loved to play ball.

John and I have begun planning/discussing some big trips in the future now that we no longer have a dog to include an across Canada train trip, and traveling to Japan and New Zealand. We’ve listed out all the places we’ve ever wanted to travel and we are constantly discussing what to do with our new “freedom”.

We get to test out a life of just being caretakers of ourselves (John raised kids and then was primary caretaker of his late wife who had a long illness; and I cared for an endless stream of rescue dogs…which was of course a much easier undertaking than of course John’s journey) for once in our adult lives.

Remembering Mike

Many of your have followed our adventures with Mike for many years and I thought I would close out this post with a gallery of photos of Mike from my blog posts over the years. Thanks for sharing my Mike journey with me and if you want to read the story of how Mike originally ended up in my life see this post – Taking Chances: The Mike Hogan Chronicles (re-post).

I like to think that Mike’s spirit is traveling around in the afterlife in a grocery box and a shopping cart/trolley, his favorite mode of transportation…perhaps my late husband Terry, the reason why Mike was even in my life, is pushing that shopping cart.


Postscript

Perhaps to end this post with smiles instead tears, here is a classic moment from “Dog Camp” where Mike was always popular with the ladies…

Feature photo credit – Pexels Free Photos

Agriculture Report

Agriculture Report: Plantings Gone Wild

What is an “Agriculture Report”? Well I was inspired by  @quiteayarnblog‘s ongoing series of posts titled “Agriculture Report” (and this title always cracks me up) that are actually updates of what is going on in her garden. I just had to adopt this same title for updates on what is going on in my garden/my “garden report“…

Some of my US based blogging buddies who are of a “certain age” might remember a series of awful late night infomercials selling videos of female college students making curious college and Spring-Break partying decisions called “Girls Gone Wild“.

I haven’t thought about these informercials for years and then it popped into my head when I was checking on my garden the other day because I have PLANTINGS GONE WILD!

Tomatoes, Tomatoes

I am on my 4th summer of growing tomatoes on my upstairs deck in Colorado. This year my tomato plants have GONE WILD and are the biggest they’ve ever been! I didn’t do anything different this season than previous seasons but the tomato plants are growing like crazy.

I hope I have a large enough tomato harvest this year to make a pasta sauce as well as salsa with my tomatoes!

Free Seeds Out of Control

In my April 2024 post Explored a new library, tried a new group I shared that a local was giving out free packets of seeds (vegetables and flowers) – 3 packets per library patron per day.

Well after John built me a raised bed (see post John gets “ScrapHappy” too – new raised bed) in June, I planted most of the vegetable seeds in the raised bed to include cucumber, squash, carrots, spinach and onion. However I thought it was too late in the season in Colorado to get a decent harvest so I thought the seeds would help “seed” my new raised bed with organic material as a base for next year’s garden.

So I haphazardly planted my seeds and did not label what was planted in the different areas of the bed.

And now I am dealing with SEEDS GONE WILD! Every seed seems to have sprouted and some plants are exploding everywhere…and I don’t know what they are as they are crops I’ve never planted before!

Yikes! At least I recognize the marigolds I planted for pest control! We put netting over the bed to help keep birds and squirrels out of the garden and so far it appears to be working.

I tried early on to thin the bed once I realized the seeds were sprouting and growing like crazy but the new sprouts were too delicate and some did not survive the replanting. So I just left most of it as a “hot mess”.

I guess I will have to wait until it is time to harvest the vegetables to find out what some of them are! Oh how sloppy my raised bed garden looks!

In Other Agricultural News

Although it looks a bit crowded, my herb container gardens seem to be flourishing this year and I am continually enjoying fresh herbs for cooking this season. For example I’ve harvested all the parsley and basil twice and it keeps growing back!

I love when a recipe calls for “fresh parsley” and I can go grab it from my deck garden!

I’ll close out my Agriculture Report with this inspirational quote I found in a magazine that I put up in my studio:

tierneytravels

July 2024 East Coast Adventures

As I mentioned in another recent post, I’ve had a very busy summer so far.

It feels like I’ve been traveling out town monthly since April 2024, sometimes several times a month. We are either flying somewhere to visit someone, go somewhere on a weekend getaway, or do a Colorado road trip (we’ve done at least 3 since May so far). Now we are at home for a while but we have a series of 3 different out-of-town guest visiting over the next 2 months.

Sounds insane, right? We didn’t actually plan for this, we just kept saying yes – ha!

So in early July 2024 John and I traveled to the Eastern Coast of the US to visit my brother and his family who lives outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (or “Philly” as us East Coaster call it); and went to the Bronx in New York to see a baseball game at Yankee Stadium. We also visited with my long-time blogging buddy some of you know – Claudia McGill of Claudia McGill and Her Art World who also lives outside of Philly.

In this post I share stories and photos from some of the highlights of our recent East Coast Adventures.

Trip to the Bronx to see the Yankees play at Yankee Stadium

The second day of our visit with my brother, he droves us to New York, to the Bronx to see the New York Yankees play baseball against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. This is an iconic/legendary match up (not a lot of love between these two teams) and this was John and my first visit to Yankee Stadium. My sister-in-law did not attend as it was a swelteringly hot day (nearly 100 degrees F and humid) and she decided to stay cool at home!

Here we are outside waiting on line to enter the stadium:

And here we are inside the stadium as we tried to watch the game while melting from the heat!

My brother found a place near a set of concession stands that had air conditioning (sort of) and we moved to that area to finish watching the game as we were turning into piles of sweat! John took my nephew Austin to get Yankees hat so he could be an official looking Yankees fan!

John absolutely adores my nephews (my brother and my sister each have one son) like I do and we always have a wonderful time with them.

The Yankees beat the Red Sox so there were a lot of happy New Yorker fans in the stadium!

A Visit with Claudia

On the last day of our trip before heading to the airport, my brother dropped us off at the beautiful home (filled with so much amazing art) of my long time blogging buddy, Claudia McGill of Claudia McGill and Her Art World.

John and I spent the afternoon with Claudia and her wonderful husband. She gave us a tour of their home and her studio filled with her art and inspiration.

Here is a photo of a section of her studio that was in her recent blog post, Tiny House 24!.

We got to spend a lot of time talking about art and life while sitting around her living room having tasty snacks.

If you follow her blog, you might recognize this photo of Claudia as an image similar to her inspiration for one of her sketches or paintings (by the way she had fabulous lamps in her house, they all looked like they should be in her sketches/paintings).

And as a nearly overwhelming surprise, Claudia gave me one of her Tiny Houses art pieces that she made for me! Below are photos that do not do the piece justice. She will have a future blog post with much better photos about this house:

I couldn’t fit it in my suitcase so she is mailing it to me and I cannot wait for it to arrive!

Claudia in person was just as wonderful as I imagined she would be. She is the fourth person from “bloglandia” that I’ve now met in person.

Fiber Art in the Philadelphia Airport

I love the Philadelphia Airport. It isn’t more convenient or better laid out than most airports I’ve traveled in, but it always has fantastic art exhibits. When traveling alone to Philadelphia, I’ve spent an hour or more while awaiting my flight, wandering the concourses to see the different rotating art exhibits.

They have an ongoing (for a couple years at least) exhibit of fiber art, primarily crochet as well as new pieces that have been added. Thought I would share some of those cool works:

It was an awesome trip!


Postscript

Mike was at “Dog Camp” while we were traveling and here is a photo of him with his friends playing: