Turkey Tracks: Coastal Quilters’ First Retreat

Turkey Tracks:  May 15, 2016

Coastal Quilters’ First Retreat

It finally happened!

Coastal Quilters made their first retreat last weekend:  Mother’s Day weekend.

Our new board, headed by Lynn Vermeulen, got this event off the ground.  Basically, Lynn and board just “built it” and “they came.”

We needed 15 quilters to be able to have the guest house cook food for us, so some members got friends (wonderful quilting friends as it turned out–we adopted them all) to join us–and off we went to the Franciscan Guest House in Kennebunkport, Maine–the location of one of Maine’s sweet little coastal towns which are crammed with good restaurants, gorgeous vistas, and friendly people.   (http://www.franciscanguesthouse.com)

A group of Franciscans from Lithuania bought this 40-acre property in 1947 and built a monastery, a school, a Tudor-style “cottage,” and several outdoor chapels/grottos.  The link to Lithuania is still quite strong. The guest house is in the renovated school.  There is nothing fancy here, but rooms are comfortable, everything is spotlessly clean, the food was delicious and very fresh, and the big quilting room had lots of lights, great set-ups (lots of plugs, lights, design boards, ironing boards and irons, and a table that held coffee/tea fixings all day and all night.  We were walking distance to the town (a great pastry and coffee shop right on the corner with the best lattes I’ve ever had) and the beach, where I am told surfers were enjoying the waves.

We can hardly wait to go back and are reserving time for next May, AND some of us are looking to go back in the fall for a few days mid-week.  Can we get 15 to go so we have food?  I sure hope so!

We could start moving into the sewing room at 1 p.m. on Friday, so those of us who got there before (it was a short trip–a little over 2 hours) had a delicious lunch at Allison’s.  Megan is wearing the shirt she just made (dinosaurs), and on the left are Gail, me, and Mary.  The pics of the other table are terrible–I should be fired as a camera person.

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Here’s our fabulous new president, who has agreed to another term–even though she has TWO weddings this fall and Christmas season.  (You can see the monastery in the distance.)

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Lynn worked on this daunting, fun foundation piecing pattern that she designed:

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Margaret-Elaine worked on various projects–among them one of our Farmer’s Wife blocks:

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Becca also worked on various projects.  Here is one:

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And here she is machine quilting another and making it all look easy:

Megan, as I said in other block posts, is working on an English Paper Pieced millifiore quilt–a complicated and daunting project.  She’s making real progress on it.

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All the little “tails” you see disappear when the rosettes are joined.  She is using Anna Marie Horner fabrics from last year’s Alewives fat-quarter club.

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Vickie also worked on several projects–among which was a colorful batik quilt:

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Jan Corson worked on a table runner made from sewn/padded strips.

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Jan’s friend Laurie worked on several quilts, but some of us fell in love with the “quilter’s friend/necessary” she made for herself and Jan.  Some of us (me included) asked her to make one for us.   (See Jan’s table runner strips in the background?)

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Vicki’s friend Sherrie had a quilt that entranced us all, and she has very kindly sent us the pattern:

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Moving to the other side of the room:

I worked on this Jacob’s ladder block–using 4-patches from my “parts department” and pre-cut 3 1/2-inch strips.  I came with all the units done, but the piecing was intensive, so I didn’t really get to other projects.  I did go home with this one “webbed,” but had to make 8 more blocks to finish off the pattern on either side.  They are all done now.

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Gail was working on the most beautiful plaids–making a quilt of her own design:

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Mary spent the two days hand-quilting this quilt and trying out different names for it.

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Sharon worked on a back for a bright, modern, graphic quilt with lots of shades of green.  I missed getting a picture of it.  But here’s Sharon with a gorgeous pillowcase she was making.

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And here’s a strip for another quilt like the completed one.

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Linda worked on making selvage blocks–lots of them.  (You can see how much space we had in this photo.  That’s my machine back of Linda.)

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The pile is growing, growing…

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Jan Kelsey worked on several projects.  This one involves postcards her grandparents collected on a trip to Europe in the 1920s.  Jan scanned them and printed them onto fabric.  (Don’t miss her gorgeous vest.)

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(This picture is a bit dark.)

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Jan’s friend “Mac” worked on several quilts for grandchildren–each gorgeous.

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Such pretty fabrics!

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And I have by no means captured all the fun, work, laughter, and fun hours that we spent together.

Turkey Tracks: Dorman’s Ice Cream

Turkey Tracks:  May 3, 2016

Dornan’s Ice Cream

Dorman’s is open.  It probably opened May 1st.

I’ve never been by there that there wasn’t a line, and Monday in the POURING SHEETS OF RAIN was no exception.

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That’s Megan Bruns (quilter, mathematician, emerging teacher, great friend) standing nearest to the car under the overhang.  God love her; she got us both an ice cream.  And, napkins.

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Vanilla custard soft serve fragrant tasty deliciousness for me!  Megan got chocolate.

Turkey Tracks: Hexie Quilt Center DONE

Turkey Tracks:  May 3, 2016

Hexie Quilt Center DONE

I started this project in mid-November 2015 and finished it yesterday, May 2, 2016.

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The pattern is from Edyta Sitar’s HANDFULS OF SCRAPS book.  I used only fabric from my 2 1/2-inch strips and from the 2 1/2-inch square bin.

So, it is totally scrappy.

I went yesterday with Megan Bruns to get help from Rhea Butler at Alewives Quilting with picking out the borders, backing, and binding–all of which were due to a generous certificate from Bryan and Corinne Enright for my birthday this year.  Corinne likes this quilt, so her name will be put on it.  I may have to love on it a bit first…

 

Turkey Tracks: Early Spring 2016

Turkey Tracks:  May 3, 2016

Early Spring 2016

The trees are fringed with pale green leaves or with red maple buds:

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The daffodils are glorious, despite their daunting weather ups and downs:

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The little Siberian squill bulbs are so pretty this year:

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Flowering shrubs have big fat bulbs and the Forsythia is in full bloom:

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Perennials, like this peony, are emerging:

 

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The grass needs mowing:

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But it’s never really spring for me until the windchimes get brought out of the garage and hung:

Books, Documentaries, Reviews: DESTINY OF THE REPUBLIC

Books, Documentaries, Reviews:  April 27, 2016

DESTINY OF THE REPUBLIC

Candice Millard

I found this book really interesting.

It’s about the assassination of James Garfield in 1881.  But it is also about this era in our history.

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I did not know much about this era.  I did work on Washington and Jackson, and being from Georgia more than anywhere else, I grew up with discussions of Civil War history.  I have studied around and about the 1920s and forward, especially the economic issues and theories.  But I knew little or nothing about James Garfield.  Or Chester Arthur, the VP who succeeded him.  Or this formative period in American history when government jobs were given out by the president in a “spoils” system and presidents walked around unprotected, and anyone could come inside the White House and ask to see the president.  Garfield’s death sparks Arthur to create a civil service where jobs are awarded on merit as a sub-text to the assassination is that an insane man wanted one of these jobs, though he was totally unqualified for any one of them.

Apparently Garfield was brilliant.  Beyond brilliant.  He embodied the “American Dream” in that his father died very early and his mother and brother really struggled not only to survive, but to give Garfield the education his mind so richly deserved.  That mind and the respect he earned (as he was not only good-natured, but ethical and moral), took him all the way to the presidency.  This was an era when education was highly prized in and of itself and highly respected by those who did not have it.

He did not want to be president.  This era was marked by conventions where ballots could go on and on until someone emerged that everyone felt they could support.  Garfield was elected in the Republican Convention on the 36th ballot!!  He went on to win the general election.

Alexander Graham Bell is featured in this story as his metal detector was used to try to locate the bullet lodged in Garfield’s back.  Bell did not find the bullet as the arrogant doctor in charge would only let him search on the side where he had determined the bullet to be.  The bullet’s path had taken it to the other side, of course.

Joseph Lister’s work on germ theory and antiseptics is discussed as Garfield’s doctors did not believe in keeping wounds sterile.  They repeatedly probed Garfield’s wound, introducing germs that created an infection that went all over his internal body, forming huge pus cavities.  The main doctor’s last name was Bliss, so the aphorism “ignorance is Bliss” has newfound meaning for me.

And the great irony is that if Garfield had not been immediately surrounded by well-meaning but ignorant doctors, if he had been on a battlefield or in one of the hospitals, as dirty as they were, he would have survived his wound.  The bullet was not in a place to threaten his life.  His body would not have been continually probed with fingers and unsterile instruments.  Literally hundreds of men of that time were walking around with bullets in their bodies from the Civil War.

The story of the “longest GOP convention in history” resonates today if today’s GOP goes to a contested convention this summer.

Turkey Tracks: April 26th Snow!

Turkey Tracks:  April 27, 2016

April 26th Snow!

I need to mow.

Only the cobalt blue squill I have planted in the yard for years now are glorious this year.  So many have spread that now, in early spring in Maine, they are making a real showing.  I just hate to mow them over…

They got a reprieve yesterday as IT SNOWED.  Hard.   All afternoon.  And it stuck to trees and grass, turning everything quite white for a time.

The daffodils and early bulbs, like the squill, have taken quite a beating this year with our up and down weather.

Poor little things yesterday:

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They’ve all popped back today, though the wind is cold even as the day has been bright and beautiful.  I love the bracing air of Maine though.

The grass still needs mowing!!

 

Turkey Tracks: “Tell Me A Story”

April 24, 2016

“Tell Me A Story”

WARNING:

Amy Friend’s blocks in her quilt “Tell Me A Story” are addictive!

(Her book, just out, is INTENTIONAL PIECING and her blog is http://www.duringquiettime.com)

She can’t resist them either–and the new ones she is making are on Instagram and the blog.

Here are my first ones–made yesterday afternoon, where I spent some sewing time just playing.

The idea is to make some connection between the fussy cut center of the block and the borders:

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I chose a soft salmon/peach color for my background…

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I don’t know how this block center got “turned.”  I make take it apart and recenter it.  Not sure if that is possible though…

I like the Indonesian fabric with the tiger…

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I’m not sure I can resist making a few more of these blocks this afternoon…

Interesting Information: The Scandal of Infant Formula – Weston A Price

Interesting Information:  April 21, 2016

The Scandal of Infant Formula

If you know anyone feeding a baby infant formula, please try to get this information into their hands.

What industry has put into infant formula is one of the huge scandals of our time.

Here’s the opening bit:

Infant formula lacks many key substances for development and growth. If a key nutrient is missing or not available, the body cannot adequately accomplish the task. • Infant formula is primarily composed of sugar or lactose, dried skim milk and refined vegetable […]

Source: The Scandal of Infant Formula – Weston A Price

PS:  BE SURE TO SCROLL WAY WAY DOWN TO SEE WHAT THE DANGERS OF SOY INFANT FORMULA ARE.

 

The Weston A. Price Foundation is an invaluable source of information on the nutrients in food, disease, etc.  They have “no dog in the hunt” in the sense that their sole purpose for “being” is to try to get really good, science-based information into YOUR hands/mind/body.  The scientists in their group have great credentials for what they study–among them are many biochemists who specialize in the relationship between food, medicines, and the chemistry of the human body.

Also, The WAPF has solid guidance on what is good to feed your children, like alternatives to industrial dried infant fourmulas.

 

 

Books, Documentaries, Reviews: Bill Roorbach’s THE REMEDY FOR LOVE

Books, Documentaries, Reviews:  April

Bill Roorbach’s THE REMEDY FOR LOVE

I LOVED THIS BOOK!

I ripped through it–getting back to it whenever I could until I read the last sentence.

 

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I liked Roorbach’s last book as well:  LIVING AMONG GIANTS.

But this one…

…has a lot of themes, among which is the question of what love looks like and feels like.  And especially so when the other person is so…different.

Turkey Tracks: THE FARMER’S WIFE 1930s Sampler Quilt: April’s Blocks

Turkey Tracks:  April

The Farmer’s Wife 1930s Sampler Quilt:  April’s Blocks

I’m still on track with this project.

Here are April’s completed blocks:

 

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This one is a very, very dark navy blue.

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