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Showing posts from June, 2025

Where Did the Week Go?

I can't believe it has been a week since I've been in the sewing room or on my blog. I can report, however, that I've been catching up on some of the books I've got stacked up to read. "Stacked'" metaphorically, since most of them are on Kindle. Also daughter Andy and I have had a few good lunches and watched a couple of good movies. Be sure to catch "Straw" on Netflix if you haven't already. It will break your heart, but everyone should see it.

Blocksdone - 1
When I did finally get in the sewing room this morning, I whipped out 12 of these little quarter blocks for my Windows quilt (Star Silhouettes pattern, I'm calling it "Windows" for now). When I laid them out to photograph them, I found that one was missing, so you see only 11 in the photo. I guess I dropped the other one somewhere in the sewing room. But I promised, I made 12.

When I signed online to write this post, I opened my email for a quick check and got some very sad news. A dear friend and quilt bee member, Martha, has passed away. That's three of our members who have passed since we've been meeting regularly: Martha, Barbara, and Gerri. Below is a photo of Martha eyeing my Halloween tumblers quilt at bee show-and-tell some years ago. And after that I'm posting some photos of us all together. Cyndi sent these out with the announcement of Martha's passing.

Martha - 1Martha and my Halloween Tumbler quilt (I'm behind the quilt.)

Bee1 - 1I'm not sure what year this is. I think it must have been in the early part of the 2000s. Pictured are, first row seated, left to right: I don't know the First Lady is, maybe a visitor, Martha, Donna (no longer a member), Me, Mary (moved to Atlanta a couple of years ago): Back row, left to right, Barbara (seated) (passed away earlier this year), Mary (no longer a member), Sally, Doris, Rita, Mary Grace, Gerri (passed away earlier this year), Cyndi


Bee2 - 1I don't know what year this is either, but I think it's later than the photo above. Pictured are: Front row: Martha, Cindy, Cyndi, Gerri, Mary (no longer a member): Back row: Rita, Barbara, Mary Grace, Me, Doris, Mary U., Sally.

Now, back to the reading stack.


This post was migrated from the old blog. To see the comments on the original post, CLICK HERE. To add a new comment, click "Post a Comment", below.

On 06/28/2025, Barbara Anne said ...

LOVE your scrappy stars!!! Aren't HSTs just the very most versatile blocks in the quilting universe?
My sympathy on the loss of fellow quilters from your bee. I remember when an elderly quilter from our guild passed away I was saddened afresh when I realized what amazing quilting skills and knowledge was gone with her.
I've started a scrappy baby 9 Patch quilt so wish me luck!
New author to me: Iona Grey and I loved, loved her novel: "Letters to the Lost".

Hugs!


On 07/11/2025, Barbara Anne said ...

Psst! Jesse and I are waiting for a new post from you!

Hugs!
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Doing a Lot of Something

Kris

Quarter block

At least it feels like a lot. I finished Kris's cat quilt top. I'll take it to Angela to quilt for me, and maybe it'll be ready to bind, label, and give to Kris by Autumn, maybe before.

I puzzled over whether or not to put a border on it, but it seems plenty big enough. And I think it looks fine without a border.

When I had the cat quilt finished, I made about 25 more of the little 4" quarter blocks for the "Star Silhouettes" quilt. (I'll be naming mine something else. Don't know what yet.) It takes over 200, so I'm not nearly finished with yet.

It feels so good to have a bit accomplished this week. And even two blog posts. Yehaw! 

Today, daughter Andy came over. We had a pasta dish that I was trying out, a version of which called Pasta Limon, which I saw online. My version was angel hair past with a sauce of butter (lots of butter), parmesan cheese, garlic powder, a splash of lemon juice, salt, and pepper with chopped and sautéed asparagus, carrots, and onion mixed in. Simple, easy, and very tasty. Then we watched a really good movie titled "The Brave One" starring Terrence Howard and Jodie Foster.

And that's all for today. 


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On 06/21/2025, Barbara Anne said ...

Applause, applause at finishing Kris's charming Starry Cats quilt top!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I'd probably add a border just because I like borders.
Love those little scrappy stars, too, and their fabrics are a delight.
Yeah for you and all you've accomplished this week!!!
I hope to be inspired by you. The first of the week we're expected to be at 100*F and 101*F and I don't wanna go anywhere on those days.

Hugs!


On 06/26/2025, Bonnie in Minneapolis said ...

Those kitty cats sure look happy. Thanks for sharing!
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Doing a Little of Nothing

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I don't know why I just can't get my blog back on track--or actually, why I can't seem to get my life back on track. I want to do a lot, but I can't find the energy and strength to do hardly anything. I cook a little, do a little laundry, clean something when it absolutely has to be cleaned. And to me that seems like a lot, but I know it isn't. My house isn't nasty or anything. Jesse and Andy help with that. But it certainly isn't at a point where I would want to welcome company. 

I make resolutions. I determine to do better. But before I know it, it's weeks later and I haven't done a bit better.

I have a bunch of quilts started, ones I want to enter in Birmingham Quilters Guild's Quiltfest a year from now. But I haven't even finished Kris's cat quilt yet. I have managed to get the top about 90% finished, so maybe at least that will happen.

I had my annual physical exam last week. Nothing serious found except my blood pressure was sky high. Doctor put me on a new prescription, and it has come down a bit. But not enough. I guess he'll have to try something else. Will call him and see.

I'm going now, determined to make it up the stairs to the sewing room today. And I'm not coming down until the cat quilt is done and at least a few stitches are taken on one of the quilt show quilts.


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On 06/19/2025, Barbara Anne said ...

Amen, sister!! I hear you and am in the same boat you are. Lupus fatigue is at an all time high and I do far too little beyond keeping us in clean clothes and clean dishes. That God for washers, dryers, and dishwashers!
My TX rheumatologist told me the first 10 years with lupus are the easiest and I'm at 28 years post diagnosis now and it's the pits.
I'm also much more sensitive to heat now. Are you?
Have fun in the sewing room today and have someone pat you on the back for your determination. I'm too far away to do it myself.
I look forward to seeing Kris's quilt in due time.

Hugs!


On 06/22/2025, Sandra Hutchins said ...

You are so very lucky to be in your home, able to quilt and climb stairs. I haven't commented in many months or maybe years. I used to be Sandy Gail on Facebook but my husband had developed dementia from a bad parathyroid. He got on my Facebook page and got scammed out of $8,000. The scammers took over that Facebook page. I did not get a new one until recently. As Sandra Gail this time. We sold our beautiful two story home and have moved into a retirement village. I can no longer even sit at a table and can't use my sewing machine. I am wheelchair bound except I can use a walker to move around in the house. Our lives have totally changed in a flash. I have both Lupus, MS, and two kinds of arthritis now. I am selling my quilts in an online auction minus the dozen or so that I gave to family members. So, enjoy being able to still do the things that you do, it may be in pain but at least you are in your own home and can sew, cook, drive a car, go out to eat. I can no longer do any of those things, I am 76 years old. Sandra Hutchins
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Springtime Reading

Bitter Blood by Jerry Bledsoe
This non-fiction book recreates a complex case that claimed nine lives, one of the more shocking crimes of recent years. The links in all the deaths were Susan Lynch and her cousin Fritz Klenner, each from a prominent, upper-middle-class Southern family. The murders began with the shootings of Lynch's ex-mother-in-law and ex-sister-in-law in Kentucky, and continued with the slayings of her parents and grandmother in North Carolina. What connected the killings was the bitter divorce between Susie and her husband Tom, and the impending custody battle for their children, particularly since it became increasingly clear that Susie regarded the boys as pawns in a power struggle. Although this book spent many weeks as a New York Time best seller, I can't say I was particularly enthralled. I had to squeeze out the three happy faces I'm giving it in deference to the best seller list. KKK 

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And Then She Was Gone by Lisa Jewell
Laurel Mack is trying to put her life back together> It has been ten years since her youngest child, Ellie, disappeared, seven years since her marriage ended, and only months since the last clue in Ellie’s case was unearthed. When she meets an unexpectedly charming man in a cafĂ©, no one is more surprised than Laurel at how quickly their flirtation develops into something deeper. Before she knows it, she’s meeting Floyd’s daughters—and his youngest, Poppy, takes Laurel’s breath away. Because looking at Poppy is like looking at Ellie. KKK
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Watching You by Lisa Jewell
She's back home after four years working abroad, new husband in tow. She's keen to find a place of your own. But for now, she's crashing in her big brother’s spare room. That’s when she meets the man next door. He’s the head teacher at the local school. Twice her age. Extraordinarily attractive. heS finds herself watching him. All the time. But she never dreamed that her innocent crush might become a deadly obsession. Or that someone is watching her. KKK
Watching

Before I Go to Sleep by S.J. Watson
What if you lost your memory every time you went to sleep? Your name, your identity, your past, even the people you love–-all forgotten overnight. And the one person you trust to give you your memories back every day when you wake up may be telling you only half the story. Welcome to Christine's life. Every morning, she awakens beside a stranger in an unfamiliar bed. She sees a middle-aged face in the bathroom mirror that she does not recognize. And every morning, the man patiently explains that he is Ben, her husband, that she is 47 years old, and that an accident long ago damaged her ability to remember. This is a really well-written and intriguing mystery. I liked it a lot.KKKK
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Pew by Catherine Lacey
This is a very good, and short, book. It's the best book I've read this year, I think. The story and plotting are very "Shirley Jackson," But the writing is much less "straight to the point" than Jackson's. You might have a bit of trouble with her prose, and the ending might leave your wondering. I was able to figure it all out though, at least to my own satisfaction (and maybe because of my familiarity with Shirley Jackson's novels). 
Here's a brief synopsis mostly from Amazon: In a small town in the American South, a church congregation arrives for a service and finds a figure asleep on a pew. The person is genderless and racially ambiguous and refuses to speak. One family takes in the strange visitor, who remains mostly silent, and nicknames it Pew. As the town spends the week preparing for its annual Forgiveness Festival, Pew is shuttled from one family and another.  As days pass, the mystery of who and what Pew is begins to unnerve the community, whose generosity erodes into menace and suspicion until Pew’s story reaches a shattering and unsettling climax at the Forgiveness Festival. KKKKK
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*****
BOOKS I DIDN'T FINISH AND WHY

The Peaceable Kingdom by Jan de Hartog
This was the April and May selection for my book club. It's a very long book, near 800 pages divided into two parts--a novel based on the history, both in Europe and America of the formation of the Quaker faith. I made it through the first, the part that takes place in Europe, and then I was just burnt out. I couldn't make myself open the book again. In my defense, however, I think I was not the only person who couldn't make it through. I believe nobody finished it except Ramey, who selected the book and often attends Quaker meetings. But I'll give it two happy faces since Ramey really liked it, and she's smart. KK
Peace

Homecoming by Kate Morton
This one is pretty long too, almost 600 pages, but I don't think that was my problem. It is a story about a family's murder that takes place in Australia in 1959. Many years later, Jess, a journalist who lives in London now, is called home to Sydney when her grandmother who raised her is ill. In her grandmother's house, Jess finds a true-crime book that chronicles the murder. And she learns of her family's connection to the crime.
This story is compelling, and I hope to get back to it sometime soon. The problem for me is the writing style. Too much description, and every character has a back story. I'm bad about losing interest if the main story doesn't move along as my brain feels it should. Still I'm giving this one three smiley faces, and renewing my resolve to finish it. KKK
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On 06/07/2025, Barbara Anne said ...

Love your book reviews and just yesterday requested "Homecoming" from the library. Hope I can manage a story with that many pages and it's going to be even thicker as it's large print!
You know I don't read creepy scary thrillers so hope this isn't one. In that genre, the last one of those books I read was "The Shining" (long ago) and finished it in one sitting at 3am, with all the house lights on and Rob keeping me company because I wouldn't let him go to bed! Never again. No way, Jose!

Wishing you well!

Hugs!
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Bad Blogger Report


My nephew Jed drove over from the Atlanta suburbs on Sunday to have lunch with me, my sister Ramey, Daughter Andy, and niece India at the Irondale Cafe (inspiration for Fanny Flagg's Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistlestop Cafe). We had not seen him in more than a year, so we had a good lunch and a good visit. While visiting, Jed reminded me that I had been lax in updating my blog, which he follows. I also got a note from friend and long-time blog reader,  Barbara this week checking on me. I won't make excuses; crap happens.

After lunch, Jed, Ramey, and India drove over to Ruffner Mountain and had a good time on the trails. Daughter Andy and I didn't go. I'm afraid my mountain-hiking days are over. And Andy never was much of a hiker.

I'm determined to get a photo today of Kris's cat quilt progress, and maybe work on the quilt a little. It has been more than a week since I've visited the sewing room.

I also need to update my reading list. I've read some books since last I posted, one really good one I'd like to tell you about. 

So stay tuned, everyone. I promise I'll be back shortly.

Jed took some fun photos of our visit, at the cafe, Ruffner Mountain, and at Ramey's' house. I copped a couple more from the internet. Photos by Jed Cage except as indicated.

Jed1The Irondale Cafe is a popular eatery. We stood in line for 15 or 20 minutes. That's Ramey in the front.

I-1Fried green tomatoes at the Irondale Cafe. YUM! YUM! (not Jed's photo)

Jed2Ramey and India at Ruffner Mountain mural

Jed3Trail at Ruffner Mountain

Ruffner-Mtn-trails-1024x577More Tail at Ruffner Mountain (not Jed's photo)

Jed and Ramey - 1Jed and Ramey (I guess India took this one.)

Jed4Ramey at her house looking up at something. (I guess Jed had a drone. I wasn't there at this point.)


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On 06/05/2025, Barbara Anne said ...

Good to have a new blog post and how delightful your family to get together at the restaurant that inspired the Whistle Stop cafe! AMIL and DH share(d) a love for fried green tomatoes but me, not so much.
I'm looking forward to seeing your Starring Cats quilt progress and the book reviews. You're ahead of me in sewing when I was on a roll til I sprained my left wrist in a fall about 6 weeks ago. Haven't gotten going again yet.

Hugs!


On 06/06/2025, Barbara Groeschell said ...

I check your blog daily and was delighted to see activity. Looks like a fun day in beautiful and delicious Alabama.
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