Sunday, October 6, 2019

Fall Has Fallen
   Here in the Pacific Northwest, the change of seasons is in full swing.  The furnace is coming on early every morning, and darkness arrives earlier and earlier each week.  Leaves began turning color not long ago, and now are drifting off the trees as they dry out.
                                                 
   This photograph was taken on a Vancouver, BC street in 2012, not far from the waterfront.  Amid the glass-fronted buildings, this maple tree in full fall hue was a great example of what inspires the main design feature on Canada's national flag. 
   I'd like to head back north of the border again, but that will be another year.  I've got dozens of fleece blankets to sew for the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, and a baby grandson [born this past June] to watch over for several months when his mom returns to her teaching post at the end of October. 
   South Dakota has transitioned from screaming heat and flooding to nearly-freezing temperatures at night.  Folks without adequate sources of heat are in need of blankets and other warm clothing.  I am warm and clothed and in a position to help.  Time to create more blankets!

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Back In The Stitching Saddle

   After a hiatus of some months, I have "fired up" my APQS longarm quilting machine [Lenni] and am quilting again.  I cut out and began piecing this 'log cabin' pattern over twenty years ago, and decided last month that I needed to complete the top and make a backing for it. 
 
This particular pattern requires piecing the blocks [made of strips cut into appropriate sizes] with some accuracy, so the pattern lies straight and even from one block to the next.  In other words, it takes some concentration - and I have to really focus on keeping pieces even and equal.  I can assure you that even with this "easy" pattern, I spent a fair amount of time 'unsewing' here and there, to ensure an accurate design structure.

    The 'log cabin' design pictured above was first discovered centuries ago on mummy wrappings in ancient Egyptian tombs.  After making its way through European countries and then onto the New World, it's safe to say that this has been a design originating in the mists of time!
   
My Lenni has performed like a champ - after a bit of cleaning and oiling, and a few minutes adjusting the thread tension, my quilting machine was off to the races with nary a hiccup!  I can highly recommend the APQS company in Carroll, IA.  Their products are amazing and their customer service all around seems above reproach.  My sales representative, Barbara Mayfield, of APQS Northwest in Issaquah, WA is absolutely wonderful.  Hopefully someone reading this blog feels welcomed to contact her with any questions and maybe even stop into her store to try her longarm quilting machines on for size.
 
Time for another ride. 
   

Monday, March 4, 2019

                                                             
As The World Spins 

Last week I woke up with vertigo.  What a bad morning.

 
  Not recommended.  But survivable.  I've slowly come out of my spinning world, resuming what I can only hope will be a 'normal' life once more.  I learned again [I've experienced vertigo once before, about 14 years ago] that I would fail at being an astronaut without gravity, and my childhood dreams of space flights to distant planets belonged to a different someone who does well with being totally unbalanced.

  Now that my world is 'righting' itself, I've been able to return to my current retirement vocation:  creating fleece blankets and quilts for folks who live on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.  While we've experienced more snow and cold during February than we normally do in the Pacific Northwest, in no way has it been the bone-chilling, non-stop biting blasting cold of the prairies of Pine Ridge in South Dakota.  January, February, March, even April - it's just plain freezing cold there. Below zero cold, and some of those incredible people aren't prepared for it.  The fleece blankets will hopefully continue to travel from my apartment home eastward across half of our country, thanks to the US Postal Service, now that I've resumed sewing and can safely drive to the post office to send them away.

 Once again, my mornings are good, and I'm grateful to be grounded again - and balanced [at least for the time being].
                                                                                       

Monday, February 18, 2019

The Gift Is In The Giving

Giving It Away!    
   There are so many 'sayings' that describe the act of making something to be donated.  One of my favorites is "To Give Is Better Than To Receive."  The king-size quilt top in the photo above was completed in August of 2018 after piecing on my Bernina sewing machine and then quilting on my new APQS Lenni longarm machine.  It was donated to Vision House, headquartered in Renton, WA - and became the raffle item for their annual fall fund-raising luncheon in order to raise funds to help homeless families in dire situations.  The woman who 'won' my quilt in a drawing was thrilled to receive it, which makes me even happier than the fact it raised over $850 for Vision House!
   Since my previous blog post, I have made literally dozens of quilts as well as knitted blankets.  The quilts have been donated to Vision House and Quilts Beyond Borders, to be sent wherever needed around the world [including refugee camps in Jordan, the new "home" for many Syrian refugees].  The knitted blankets have been given to Eastside Baby Corner in Issaquah, WA - supporting families in need.
   My most recent sewing-for-donation focus is fleece double blankets [lap size], which are being sent to an emergency shelter in Martin, SD, on behalf of the Sioux Native Americans in that area.  The winters are ferociously cold in SD, and the need for warm shelter, warm clothing, and caring hearts outside of the Pine Ridge Reservation is huge.  Not many weeks ago, I somehow came upon an internet blog written by Sewing For Kids Volunteers, under the parent group of Lakota Friends Circle.  I was immediately drawn in by the challenges facing the residents of the Reservation, and the hearts of many members of the Sioux tribes living there - hearts who are devoting their lives to helping their people.
   Facebook has provided one way for groups to form, in order to send assistance from outside the reservation to these helping hearts and people in need.  Doll clothes and children's clothing are made and/or purchased and sent; layette items for new mothers; blankets and quilts and boots and shoes and school supplies and toiletries and diapers and personal supplies and lap and nap blankets and toys - these are just a small part of the total needs of those living on the Rez.  Money donations help with purchasing propane gas and food and meds and many other survival needs for individuals, schools, and emergency shelters.
   The need is immense.  The opportunities abound for willing hearts and hands outside of the Reservation to help.  Making toys, clothing, blankets, quilts, donating items, giving money - please join in on this journey to make the future better than any challenges of the present facing the amazing Sioux peoples in South Dakota!
   LakotaFriendsCircle.org/donate
   Sewforkids.wordpress.com
   www.facebook.com/groups/SewForKidsVolunteers