I was inspired by other bloggers’ year end recap posts and I thought jump in. I have a paltry amount of “makes” for 2023. Below are photos of projects that I either finished or at least finished the quilt top on:
Oh and I didn’t make all the handmade Christmas gifts I had planned, but I did make a Dallas Cowboys (American Football team) tote bag for one person who is a huge fan:
I did have to include a little bit of humor and added this tag on the side which states “Dream Impossible Things” – ha! She got a kick out of it.
My excuses for an underwhelming amount of makes in 2023: I broke my ankle in January 2023 and have my first under anesthesia surgery when I had a surgical repair of my complex ankle fracture; as well as immobility for several months…so yes I am using that as one of my excuses – ha!
Another excuse for a lack of “makes” in 2023 was that once I was able to be mobile again I did a bit of traveling. I’ll share a recap of my 2023 travel in a separate post.
WORKS IN PROGRESS (WIPS) HEADING INTO 2024
Here’s what I have on my plate to start out 2023:
1) 3 finished quilt tops to quilt (the first two below I will machine quilt and the 3rd one I plan to hand quilt
2) 2 granny square blankets to finish
3) A new table runner in progress
And then I have like a million (ok perhaps a little less than that) projects in queue.
There were 7 of us for Christmas Eve and we were going to make do with our 6 person seating kitchen table, with one person (#7) either crammed in or sitting at the kitchen counter.
We don’t have a formal dining room, just an open room when you first enter the front door which we turned into the library (previously it was a “sitting room”).
Well I came up with the semi “hare-brained” idea on December 23 that we should go buy an actual dining room table and put it into the library. It would serve as both a library table (it’s always been my dream to have one) and a dining table when needed.
So off we went to IKEA on 12/23, which was surprisingly empty so close to the Christmas holiday, and bought a table which seats 8 (but you could fit 10 at the table).
image credit – ikea.com
Yes John could have built a table in his woodshop but we figured it would cost the same or more to build from scratch a 92 1/2″ x 39 3/8 ” table (234 cm x 100 cm approximately) and he wouldn’t have it ready for December 24th!
We got the table home and before you know it we had it set up and made up for Christmas Eve (including Christmas Crackers):
And the table worked perfectly for our Christmas Eve dinner of 7 people (we used the loveseat in the library as seating for 2 of the 7 people; and the chairs are the existing kitchen table chairs):
In addition to candles on the table, I set up tea lights on the bookshelves in the library for a nice atmosphere during our festive dining.
And the two dogs that attended (Mike and Ajax) enjoyed foraging under the table and begging for food:
Christmas morning I was having some quiet time sitting at the new table in the library having tea and looking at library books with Mike the Miniature Schnauzer…
…and I thought: this table needs a table runner! (And a new larger rug under it…I am looking into one of those Ruggable rugs that remove from their pad and are machine washable).
Luckily I had in my stash a group of blocks my friend Wendy gave me (see post Quilter Distractions: Good Mail filled with “Taupe”) from a quilt she made for a magazine article/pattern she wrote for October 2010 edition of The Quilt Life called SuperSymmetry.
It is not enough blocks to make a quilt but it was enough to start a table runner!
I used up all the blocks Wendy sent and I am only at about a 6 foot table runner. The table is over 7 1/2 feet long so I am going to have to piece more blocks. Luckily Wendy sent me a bunch of coordinating fabric scraps!
I plan to add some type of thin border to the pieced blocks to float them. I don’t plan to make the table runner very wide as I just want to run the center of the table.
I’ll update you on the progress.
Oh and I’ll close this post with something sweet I saw this morning on my walk.
We have a lot of deer in the area so there are a lot of “deer crossing” warning signs as crossing deer (who like to randomly cross the street when you least expect it) are a dangerous traffic hazard.
Well someone decorated one of the “deer crossing” signs with a red nose (like Rudolph the Red Noses Reindeer!) to make it festive!
This bit of whimsy gave me a huge smile on my walk!
Hello! This is the tierneycreates Beastie guest blog posting (if you are new to this blog, my story is on this post – I’m A Monster!!! and you can see all my posts at this link: Beastie Adventures).
The main reason for this post is my husband John Beastie (Guest Blog Post: Mail Order Groom) and I would like to wish you and yours a very Happy Holidays!
If you are admiring our “Ugly Christmas Sweaters“, Tierney and John (aka “The Humans”) picked them up from Hobby Lobby and they are actually Christmas tree ornaments and hang from little hangers!
I think John Beastie and I looks so cute in our sweaters I will share a couple more photos for your enjoyment:
Yes it’s pretty much the same photo but Beasties love photos of themselves!
Well the other day Tierney and Mike the Miniature Schnauzer were on their daily walk and noticed the house had a friendly and sweeter look for the Christmas season:
What a big difference!
And a little more – Tierney thought you all might enjoy photos of Mike the Miniature Schnauzer (even though I am cuter) out holiday shopping with John and Tierney the other day:
Once again they snuck him into the Food Court (like in the post Mike in Macy’s). I think he is pretty spoiled. They are yet to take John Beastie and I to the mall.
Ok…they did take us to Ireland in October 2022 so that might be more significant…
It’s the 15th of the month and time for my monthly “ScrapHappy” post as part of the ScrapHappy group I belong. 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.
For this month’s ScrapHappy post I thought I would honor a legendary scrap quilt and it’s maker.
Harriet Powers is recognized in the African American quilting community as one of the “Mothers of African American Quilting” and is known for her famous Bible Quilt (which is a scrap quilt) first exhibited in 1886.
Image from the Smithsonian Museum website
According to the Smithsonian Museum, “Harriet Powers, an African American farm woman of Clarke County, Georgia, made this quilt in about 1886. She exhibited it at the Athens Cotton Fair of 1886”.
Two of her bible themed quilts which are considered icons of American quilt making are in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, DC.
Here is her Bible Quilt from the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston:
Image from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston website
Last yearDr. Carolyn Mazloomi, founder of the Women of Color Quilting Network (WCQN) to which I belong, sent out a request to WCQN members to contribute to purchasing a headstone for the gravesite of Harriet Powers.
Harriet Powers passed away in 1910 and the small cut stone marker, inscribed by one of her sons (she had 9 children with her husband Armstead Powers) originally marked the grave for her and her husband who passed in 1909. In 2008 this fragile marker was broken and removed.
Members of the WCQN, including myself, contributed to purchasing a beautiful headstone for Harriet and Armstead Powers gravesite and on December 2, 2023 there was a “Recommittal and Dedication Ceremony” at Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery in Athens, Georgia.
I was invited but could not attend. Dr. Mazloomi kindly sent me the pamphlet from the ceremony.
When I lived in Central Oregon in 2016 I took an appliqué quilting workshop at the Stitchin’ Postin Sisters, Oregon with the amazing teacher Janet Storton (who runs the Sisters of the Heart Foundation helping women in Uganda empower themselves through craft making).
In this appliqué workshop you could work on making a Bible Quilt inspired by the one made by Harriet Powers or another project. Janet brought in a bag of her scraps, which included African themed fabrics, to share with the class.
I ended making my wallhanging sized quilt Tree of No Hurry based on the Lao Tzu quote: “Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished” with the new appliqué techniques I learned in the class.
Here are my blog posts from 2016 – 2017 related to the process of making this piece:
Here is one of the Bible Quilts made by Ugandan women that Janet works with as part of her foundation that was exhibited at the 2016 Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show (Janet shared the quilt top before it was quilted during our workshop):
As promised, here are the bloggers that participate in the ScrapHappy monthly posting event, check out their blogs linked below for their ScrapHappy posts:
I’ve been working on some handmade holiday gifts so not much to post right now, but I thought I’d get you in the holiday spirit with a collection of delightful Christmas trees!
My beloved local library (yes after 4.5+ years in Colorado I have finally fallen completely and madly in love with a library...I thought no library could replace my beloved Deschutes Public Library in Bend, Oregon but finally I am able to love again!) has a delightful and whimsical display of Christmas trees inspired by literary classics and popular culture.
There are 32 decorated Christmas trees are scattered around the first and second levels of the library and are called the Forest of Stories. I tried to see every tree during my weekly visit to the library; and here are the trees that I found most intriguing:
BARBIE TREE
NANCY DREW TREE
Oh how I loved reading Nancy Drew books as a kid!
THEHUNGER GAMES TREE
JURASSIC PARK TREE
If you’ve only seen the movie and never read the book, I highly recommend reading Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton! This is where I first learned about “Chaos Theory”.
FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDY’STREE
Here’s a terrifying movie I do not recommend (and I like scary movies). We went to see it a couple weeks ago with John’s granddaughter and son who have played the video game. It was disturbing and a movie I never care to watch again, ick!
WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS TREE
A magical book from my childhood I will not forget!
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES TREE
THE NIGHT CIRCUS TREE
I highly recommend this delightful book! I keep a copy in my home library.
TREASURE ISLAND TREE
STUDIO GHIBLI TREE
MAYA ANGELOU TREE
Beautiful tribute!
TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW TREE
I’ve heard many good things about this book by Gabrielle Zevin. A friend gave me their copy and it is sitting in my queue to read.
BRIDGERTON TREE
Complete with “Lady Whistledown” gossip sheets! I’ve never read the books but did enjoy the Netflix television series which was sort of mindless but juicy entertainment!
20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA TREE
HG WELLS TREE
His novel The Time Machine (1895) is quite the science fiction classic!
There were a lot more trees (32 in total as I mentioned earlier in this post) but this post would go on forever if I shared all the photos I took! I chatted with the library staff and they said they had so much fun decorating the trees!
OUR TREE
Speaking of Christmas trees, here is our set up for this holiday season. We put and decorated our right after Thanksgiving:
Can you spot the Miniature Schnauzer (Mike) staring at me?
Let’s zoom in closer…
Our Christmas tree is not even closely creatively decorated like those trees at my local library; but we do have some fun additions to our tree to this year.
Last year during a holiday together, we had our guests including John’s sons and granddaughter, decorate pre-made/printed ornaments with “bling” and colorful markers. We had such a fun time doing it. Everyone signed their ornaments and left them behind with us.
Well now we get to display them on our tree each year! Every time I look at them I smile and remember the laughter and joy decorating them!
Our group was most adults and it was fun to watch the adults have so much fun coloring and decorating simple cardboard ornaments. We had so much fun doing it we are going to do it again this year!
I’ll close this post with the reference for the title of this post. “O Christmas Tree” is the English version of the German Christmas song “O Tannebaum”.
Let’s transport you back to my childhood Christmas for a moment and my parents are playing Nat King Cole’s Christmas album on the record player…
I finished the quilt top for the quilt “What Direction Do I Go?“ which I most recently posted about in this post – Update on Various Projects.
The quilt top measures 55 inches by 55 inches (140 cm by 140 cm). I am still thinking through my plan on how to quilt it but I did decide what fabric to put on the back of it:
I have this awesome vintage Kas Richloom light weight upholstery fabric in my stash that I found at a charity thrift store shop a couple years ago. I think it will add a bright and happy touch to the back of the quilt.
The quilt is meant to be a wallhanging/art quilt so it is okay if the quilt ends up being a little stiff with the recycled denim and home decor fabric on the front and the upholstery fabric on the back.
I have some handmade items I am making as Christmas gifts so I need to set the quilt top aside for now and get to crafting gifts, but I’ll pick it up again after the new year (can you believe it is nearly 2024?!?!?)
A Fun Brewery Discovered
Thanks to one of the quilters I met at theRocky Mountain Quilt Museum Reception for quilters in the October 2023 issue of Quiltfolk Magazine, we discovered an awesome brewery near our house that seems to be custom made for me!
Fiction Beer Company! Two of some of my favorite things combined: craft beer and reading! This brewery was already in Denver and it opened a second location in Parker, Colorado in May.
The brewery is DOG FRIENDLY (we were able to sit inside on a sofa with Mike the Miniature Schnauzer), has a free lending library (take a book or donate a book), delicious craft beer, free bookmarks, and a friendly bartender who came and visited with us and Mike for a while when the bar service slowed up!
This brewery is Miniature Schnauzer approved (no worries we did not give Mike beer, but the bartender did bring Mike over a bowl of water and some dog biscuits!)
Finally I’m sewing together the blocks on my recycled denim and home decor fabric quilt “What Direction Do I Go?“
I am trying something new to sew the 81 blocks together by working on 9 blocks at a time, numbering them and then semi-chain-piecing them into a square:
So far I have three squares, which is 27 blocks total, sewn together:
I really like the look of the individual blocks sewn together:
In the postBlocks Completed for “What Direction Do I Go?”, I mentioned I was trying to figure out the layout for the blocks on this quilt. Well I decided to make it look as if light was coming from the center and radiating out…sort of…well as best I could with the blocks I made. I put the blocks with the lighter or more faded denim in the center and the darker ones on the outer areas:
It is a fun project to work on while watching TV and hopefully soon it will cover more of my lap (photo above) than it does right now (because it’s cold now in Colorado – 28 degrees!)
PANTRY UPDATE
A couple years ago John redid the pantry and built in shelves. Recently he repainted the pantry to a white with gray undertones and added a new butcher block shelf. He also added a motion sensor light that will turn out when you enter the pantry and turn off after a while when there is no motion; and 4 outlets so we could keep a couple appliances in the pantry and use them in there.
It’s the 15th of the month and time for my monthly “ScrapHappy” post as part of the ScrapHappy group I belong. 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.
What better way to celebrate our love of fabric scraps (what keeps us “Scrap Happy”) than to share some images of a wonderful exhibit I saw at the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum on Scrap Quilts?
While I was at the reception for Colorado quilters featured in Issue 28 of Quiltfolk Magazine: Colorado (see postRocky Mountain Quilt Museum Reception) I viewed and photographed some of their current exhibit: 25 Years of Scraps by the 19th Century Patchwork Divas.
Below is the placard on the exhibit if you want to read the background on this show:
There were so many wonderful scrap quilts at this exhibit, it was difficult to select which photos to share.
But here are my favorites – enjoy!
Scrap quilts are awesome, eh?
As promised, here are the bloggers that participate in the ScrapHappy monthly posting event, check out their blogs linked below for their ScrapHappy posts:
As I mentioned in the first post on this quilt (ScrapHappy October 2023), I’ve tentatively named this piece What Direction Do I Go? and it is made from recycled denim jeans and recycled home decorating fabric scraps.
Saturday night I finished up the 81 blocks for this 9 by 9 block piece and I just thought I’d share with you what my design wall looks like with all the blocks completed:
Now it’s time to figure out the final layout and then get the blocks sewn together.
But first I seriously need to clean my sewing machine it was a LOT of lint from piecing denim and home decorating fabric scraps (many of which are synthetic type of fabrics).
In this post Black Pioneers Exhibit Celebration, California Museum, Sacramento, CA in July 2023, I shared that I discovered that my quilt Langston Hughes: Pioneer Poet was featured on the poster for California Museum‘s leg of the nationally touring show Black Pioneers: Legacy in the American West, curated by Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi.
What a huge surprise when I arrived at the show!
Well the show ended October 1, 2023 and last week I got to wondering “what became of that poster now that the show is over?”
On a whim I reached out to the exhibit team at the California Museum and one of the Exhibit Technicians kindly mailed it to me!!!
It arrived on Friday and we went and out and got a frame for it that afternoon.
I was going to hang it in my studio or somewhere upstairs in the house but John insisted we hang it in the living room (I used the term “we” loosely as I only advised if it was centered while John got up on the ladder and hung it):
We had a giggle that the poster coordinates with our decor (how thoughtful of the museum when they designed the poster, ha!); and coordinated very nicely with the quilt hanging over the banister:
I’ve been taking a break from blogging after my push to do a daily blog post for the 31 days of October, my 10th anniversary month of blogging. Additionally recently I had a wonderful visit with out of town family that of course kept me from sitting down and blogging.
Here are some updates on my current adventures in creativity.
I now have 66 blocks completed and 15 more to go to make 81 blocks for a 9 by 9 layout:
This is not even close to the final layout, just blocks put up on the design wall to track my progress. I have a lot of cleaning to do on my sewing machine after all that lint from sewing denim and home decor fabrics!
I’ve completed the 80 crocheted granny square blocks for the next granny square blanket I am making. I am doing a 8 by 10 layout of the blocks and will set them in dark gray yarn as the lattice.
Mike the Miniature Schnauzer couldn’t wait to lay on the laid out blocks as soon as I moved away from them!
This also is not the final layout, just a general layout to show all the blocks (and a Miniature Schnauzer, ha!).
I used the pages she sent me to make a display in my studio of the article I am in using these cool 11 inch by 17 inch frames I found. John did a great job helping me hang them.
I’ll close this post with a cute meme my sister sent me the other day as we all struggle with Daylight Savings Time (setting the clocks back 1 hour in the Fall and 1 hour forward in the Spring); that is US states that agree to play along with it (Hawaii and Arizona do not participate).
John’s long time friend E was our tour guide during our trip and one day he took us to an absolutely magical place – the Southern Highland Craft Guild’s The Folk Art Center.
Downstairs was an amazing craft shop with everything from handmade baskets to spectacular quilts; and upstairs was a craft museum with exhibits of new work and historical works.
I took like a thousand pictures (okay perhaps only 70 or so) but here are a couple of my favorite images of what was on display or for sale.
If you are a crafter visiting Asheville I highly recommend this place. John and E were very patient as I wandered around this magical place wanting to see everything. I think they had a good time also (E and his wife S have purchased some amazing crafts from this place for their home); or they were patient because they knew afterwards we’d be visiting another amazing Asheville, NC brewery (Asheville is known for its craft breweries!)
I have some news: I am done with Etsy for now and have removed listings that I recently posted to my Etsy shop Textiles & Smiles.
Some of you warned me a while back when I mentioned returning to Etsy, you mentioned that sellers had had issues.
Recently I listed a couple of my drawstring/project bags on Etsy (I was getting ready to make a big announcement on my blog and on Instagram that my shop was restocked).
I followed Etsy’s STRONG recommendations (they want to compete with Amazon I think) and provided free shipping on the items, by including the cost of shipping (which unfortunately I had underestimated a little) in price of the item. I also included a coordinated little wallet to sort of offset the slightly higher listing price to include the cost of shipping (it felt sort of like playing a game with your customers that I do not like). Etsy rewards you for offering free shipping by giving your listings are higher visibility.
This weekend wonderful woman, who had reached out with the specific bag she was interested in based on an image she saw on my blog, purchased one of my newly listed bags.
I was preparing her order for shipping today and discovered this in my Etsy Shop Manager platform:
I listed the bag for $35.00 for a large drawstring/project bag to include shipping (but you use the bogus term “free shipping” as it isn’t really free, especially if you are a small small business, you have to include the postage cost).
Etsy took fees for shipping ($4.31, okay I expected that and allotted for that), fees for their commission and credit card fees ($4.85, expected, I am still okay with this), AND then they took a fee called “Offsite Ads” for $5.25 which is 15% of the listing price (which included the cost for me to ship the item).
So this left me $20.59 profit, which if I were to meet a certain sales threshold (which I think is $600) in a year, I would also have to pay taxes on. So if just for very rough example sake, let’s say I was in a 22% tax bracket would be $4.53; so that would bring me to $16.06 in net profit.
So I looked at the cost of materials to make the bag (and the little wallet), my time for making, administrative (photos, creating listing, etc), and travel to the post office etc., I am at sweat shop wages of like $3 an hour or less.
I just started crying as I really wanted to sell my handmade items on Etsy and reach a large audience but I just don’t have the heart to work for nearly free. And I can’t do the volume as a sole proprietor of a business to make the fees okay. I am feeling a bit heartbroken.
And theOffsite Ads? Wow I looked into how to turn those off and could not find a way even following their instructions. Plus they said only some shops will be opted out. Plus I do not think the sale came from Offsite Ads (like Google Ads) as the lovely person who bought the bag first contacted me with an image from my blog.
I looked at the Etsy forums for challenges other shops had with these Offsite Ads and found many forum postings like this:
I also found this about Etsy fees. As you will see below this seller is losing 30% each sale to Etsy fees:
I think the only way to be successful on Etsy is to sell digital products (for example pattern downloads) where you have passive income (you create it once, occasionally update it, but don’t have to do anything major on the product again after you upload it), resell items you’ve purchased at a low price (like the whole vintage item resale market); or if you sell products that you can charge a fairly high fee for or produce very inexpensively compared to what you are selling them for.
As fas a digital products, perhaps I will look into that in the future if I start writing patterns, etc. I don’t like listing my drawstring/project bags for $100 a pop will fly – ha!
So I am looking into other ways to sell my bags including revisiting working with brick & mortar stores again (see my post The Tangled Ball and Project Bags) that want to sell my bags, craft shows, and direct sales (I am working on ideas for that and might post them on a page on my blog, more to come), etc.
For now, I’ve updated my Textiles & SmilesEtsy shop with this message that my shop is on hold.
Thanks for reading my rant 🙂
Maybe I’m just not built for this kind of retail…
(I feel ultimately the Universe is telling me to just focus on my art quilting journey…like slapping me in the face about it right now, lol…)
Tierney needed a break from her daily postings for October 2023 challenge to celebrate her 10th anniversary of blogging, so I am stepping in and doing a guest blog post for her.
This is Mike, the Miniature Schnauzer that lives with Tierney and John. If you are new to this blog I guest blog post time to time.
Here I am doing some late night blogging.
Well the other day the humans pulled a fast one on me. They loaded me into the back seat of their car and said we were going to “Home _______”. I thought they said home improvement store that I go to all the time with John when he works on his projects – THEHOME DEPOT. This is my favorite store and I am regular there, with many of the humans that work at The Home Depot greeting me and occasionally slipping me a dog biscuit (because my cuteness overwhelms them!).
Nope, we did not go to The Home Depot. Instead we went to some place called HOMEGOODS. Home Good is VERY DIFFERENT than The Home Depot!
Here I am in shock as they push me around in my box in the cart:
No one stopped and petted me or gave me a biscuit. This store sucks!
As we approached the check out line I gave my humans quite the look for disappointing me!
I was fooled my the word “Home” in the shops title!
There are so many awful and sad things going on in the world right now it’s difficult some days to write a cheerful post. I think for today’s post I will just share a post from October 2020 when I was struggling with craziness in the world.
Currently I am just trying to focus on appreciating the good things in my life and sending love to those struggling in the world.
Why Worry Now (re-post from October 6, 2020)
I was thinking about a different post to write this post on my morning walk with Mike the Miniature Schnauzer.
The trees have turned and the weather has cooled down and there was a delicious Autumn cool quiet to my walk this morning.
I enjoy listening to either podcasts, audiobooks or music while I walk Mike. This morning I was listening to music and one of my all time favorite songs queued up on my playlist – Why Worry by Dire Straits from of one of my favorite albums of all time – Brothers in Arms.
In the back of mind lately, always swirling around, are thoughts of the craziness going on in the world. Listening to this song gave me pause.
So I decided to save the post I was going to write today for tomorrow and instead share this song with you and maybe it can give you a little pause too if you have a lot of “thought swirling” going on in your head…
Courtesy of YouTube
Baby, I see this world has made you sad Some people can be bad The things they do, the things they say
But baby, I’ll wipe away those bitter tears I’ll chase away those restless fears And turn your blue skies into gray
Why worry
There should be laughter after pain There should be sunshine after rain These things have always been the same So why worry now Why worry now
And if you’d like to see a lovely live version of the song in a Mark Knopfler duet with the exquisite Emmylou Harris, here you go…
Courtesy of YouTube
I thought my soul would float away from peacefulness listening to this…
I am really pleased with the interior/lining fabric I put in this bag – representing the “fields of grain”/grain fields you might pass during a journey on Route 66!
The previous time I sold my bags on my Etsy shop I include a little wallet as a thank you gift. This time I decided to include the little wallet in the Etsy listing. I plan to try and select a little wallet that coordinates with the bag.
Well at least I got one listing done, ha, and tomorrow is another day to get more done.
I am continuing on my challenge to post to my blog every day in celebration of October 2023 being my 10th anniversary of blogging month. And if you all can’t keep up no worries, this is WAY too much posting – ha! I think once October is over I will go to a once a week posting schedule (or perhaps a little more frequent than that…we’ll see…).
I continue to crochet granny squares for a distraction while traveling as a passenger in a car or while traveling in general. I am currently working on an 80 square blanket (8 by 10) and I’ve progressed from thisin July 2023:
To this (only 7 more granny squares to complete to make 80):
I don’t have them in their final order before they are joined together, I just semi randomly put them together for this update photo.
I store them in this bucket bag I made a couple years ago, as I complete them:
I have mixed feelings of getting near the end as it will be 1) time to work on joining them (a sort of pain in the booty) and 2) I’ll have to start work on a new one (and I am sort of attached to this one, ha) when I am a passenger in a car/traveling.
Luckily I have a couple blocks of this one already started (see post Plastic Yarn?) so this will be my next “road trip blanket” to work on!
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 know it is late in the season to be reporting on my garden but better late than never. My part of Colorado seems to have a short growing season and we’ve already had a freeze at night so my garden is done for the season but here is the story of what happened during the 2023 growing season.
THE PATIO GARDEN
In August I shared some photos from my patio garden where I was growing tomatoes, peppers, and herbs (I use Marigolds as natural pest control):
Well I ended up having a sort of decent harvest of tomatoes and for the first time I was able to grow FULL SIZE tomatoes instead of just cherry tomatoes. I also grew a couple Anaheim peppers. John even roasted one. I also grew a lot of basil and made pesto.
I felt like a FARMER (ha!) with my imaginarily large harvest (yes it was a little bit more than in the photo above, but not that much more). And as I mentioned John actually roasted the first large pepper I grew and added it to a salsa.
GIANT SUNFLOWER (YUP ONLY ONE)
In 2022 I grew bunch of sunflowers including a GIANT SUNFLOWER. I harvested the seeds from the giant sunflower with plans to plant as many as I could to have a mini field of giant sunflowers in 2023 (see post The Sunflowers!)
I felt so “rich” in giant sunflower seeds from this harvest I even shared some with friends.
So I planted a lot of these seeds (probably 1/2 the jar that was left from sharing with friends) and guess what:
I GOT ONE GIANT SUNFLOWER from all the seeds I planted:
And then when I went to harvest the seeds, I pull the head off the sunflower too soon and the seeds did not appear to be mature. I ended up putting the sunflower head in a paper bag upside after googling what to do when you screw up like I did, to let them mature more and dry out.
I don’t think it helped but I did go ahead and harvest what I had a couple weeks later:
So next year I’ll try and plant them and see what happens. I suspect nothing as the seeds are pretty thin and I do not think they will germinate. But I will try.
I might have to just start over again with some store bought giant sunflower seeds…
Now that I am going on walks regularly, I am regularly listening to audiobooks. Here are some of my recent enjoyable listens. I consider a book an “enjoyable listen” if the writing is good and the narrator is awesome! I’ve provided a star rating with 5 stars being the highest rating. (All book images are from amazon.com)
City of Endless Night by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child (fiction)
I’ve been reading/listening to the Agent Pendergast series of murder mystery thrillers by Preston and Child for many years. This is book #17 in the series (there are now 21 or 22 books in the series) and I’ve fallen behind in the series so it was time to start catching up. I enjoyed this book and as usual there was quite the twist at the end! I give the book 4.0 stars for the story and narration.
The Steal Like An Artist Trilogy by Austin Kleon (non fiction)
The author was the audiobook narrator, which I love, and this audiobook was three books in one. It was very inspirational and I really appreciated a three books within the book. I rate this book 4.5 stars.
Creative Calling: Establish a Daily Practice, Infuse Your World with Meaning, and Succeed in Work + Life by Chase Jarvis (non-fiction)
Quite the inspirational book and one of the tips from this book that has stuck with me is dea of having a “session plan” which I write on my whiteboard in my studio what I am going to accomplish that day. Since I’ve implemented that tip I’ve not left my studio for the day until I accomplish what I wrote down! I rate this book 4.5 stars.
It’s Never Too Late to Begin Again: Discovering Creativity and Meaning at Midlife and Beyond by Julia Cameron, Emma Lively, et al. (non-fiction)
This book was inspirational and had some great ideas but I never got inspired to do one of the main activities the author recommends: write daily morning pages and work on your autobiography. It was a good listen while walking and I enjoyed the narration. Overall I rate it 4.0 stars.
The Empath’s Survival Guide: Life Strategies for Sensitive People by Judith Orloff (non-fiction)
What a book! I read it at the right time when I needed it. The author states: “Though there is a spectrum of sensitivity that exists in human beings, empaths are emotional sponges who absorb both the stress and joy of the world. We feel everything, often to an extreme, and have little guard up between others and ourselves. As a result, we are often overwhelmed by excessive stimulation and are prone to exhaustion and sensory overload.” I learned a lot of tips to protect myself when I get overwhelmed by others energies; and it reinforced I need to stay far away from “energy vampires” and people with “narcissistic personality disorder”. Narcissists feed on Empaths. I give the book 5.0 stars.
This afternoon I attended a reception at Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum hosted by eQuilter and Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum for those featured in the Colorado issue of Quiltfolk Magazine.
It was wonderful to meet the other quilters and groups (such a local guild) that are features in Issue 28 of Quiltfolk Magazine; as well as wander around the museum and look at the latest exhibits.
Here is a selfie I took at the reception:
Greetings!
Here is the beginning of the photographer trying to “herd cats” for the group photo of quilters featured in the magazine:
I had John take photos with my camera as the photographer attempted to get us into place…
Here is one of the attendees who had a beautiful quilted jacket she made:
We did some “yearbook signing” (remember that from high school if you went to high school in the US?) and some of us signed each other’s magazine copies.
I’ll share in another post some of the awesome quilts currently on display at the museum, include an all scrap quilt exhibit.
When I returned from our trip to Asheville, NC I had a package from my sister.
She surprised me with an early Christmas gift – a box full of kimono fabrics from Japan!
My sister has a friend who imports kimonos from Japan and she had had a collection of kimono obi sashes that were no longer needed. She thought I would be able to recycle the fabric into something else.
I recently got permission from the Editor in Chief of Quiitfolk Magazine to share the image of a page from Issue 28: Colorado that really surprised me (see blog category Quiltfolk Issue 28 for the whole story/all the related posts,if you are just joining us) when I opened the issue for the first time.
I had no clue they had selected my quilt for the Table of Contents/Index page. I gasped when I saw it!
In the second image you can see the credits on the Title of Contents page for myself and the longarm quilter Cara of Sew Colorado Quilting! She was so awesome to do quick turnaround when I finished this quilt in early June to turn it around like a week later so I could put on the binding and have it ready for the Quiltfolk Magazine photoshoot!
Yesterday Quiltfolk Issue 28: Colorado arrived to my home and I got to open it up and read the profile on me and see the photo spread. It was quite eerie to see myself in a magazine, especially one I’ve read/collected since the first issue in October 2016: Oregon. (The irony is that I was living in Oregon at the time the first issue came out!)
This is the magazine on my lap as I prepare to open it for the first time!
I wish I could share photos of what I saw but I don’t want to violate any copyright laws.
I can tell you that I was blown away that my quilt, Scrappy Autumnal Splendor was used as the background of the Table of Contents! I can also tell you the article about me is on page 56 and it is called “Tierney Davis Hogan: Pieced with Purpose”.
I get a couple copies for participating in the issue and I ordered additional copies on line at 20% using the code they gave me to share:
Quiltfolk did provided me with most of the photos from the photoshoot by the photographer Melanie Zacek (Instagram: @melanie.zacek) and stylist Kimberlee Zacek (Instagram: @kimberleezacek) created; but did not make it into the magazine.
Here is a sampling of some of the photos that are not in the magazine article: