I wiped away the weeds & foam. / I fetched my sea-born treasures home... Ralph Waldo Emerson







Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Out and About ~ Part One: Emerging



As April draws to an end I am thinking back on how excited I was, looking at my calendar notes in late March and planning ahead to April. The weather is pretty awful but the world is stirring, fun things to do and see after winter's hibernation. The big flea opened! Sadly it poured rain, but I am still hopeful for a visit or two this spring.  Instead I have been back to the church flea which has proved interesting.
I've gone on Friday and also on Monday:  is it worth getting there early on Friday?;  do they restock on Mondays?, and so on. (No they don't restock or mark down on Mondays, too bad; it's okay to be early on Friday but not necessary, the ladies unpack all afternoon.)
I am limiting myself to $10.oo budget. Prices are high and they do not allow haggling. Looking for materials for etsy  items mostly. I got the green glass candlestick, for a velvet tomato pin keep.


Very pretty delicate etched glass, 1910-1930s?


And this damaged doily with perfect pansies, for a set of white linen, lavender-filled hearts.


This past week there were no inspiration bitsies. I did get treasures, though. Beautiful blue rustic jug or pitcher, probably Uhl.





The embossed motif is a little obscure or blurry. I think it is an open rose, with buds and leaves?



I have wanted a pitcher like this for many years. Usually they run about $ 75.oo, [though this is unmarked]; this was only 5.oo! I just knew it had to be filled with red tulips!






Off I went hunting for red tulips, found these amazing red parrot tulips, wow!












How fun.



Another find, an overpriced but lovely collectible seashell. A spiny whelk. For me or for the shop, not sure.










And a wonderful papier mache German Easter egg.





Too bad thechurch ladies taped it shut and the tape has damaged the surface, so stupid.


It is a classic style, unusual for its deep shiny chocolate brown color. Darling bunny and classic German storybook red toadstool.





The inside, once pried open, shows that this is a modern, new egg.


Not exactly a repro as it is made in/ by the German holiday resource of Erzgeburge that has made these eggs for over a hundred years.


I have a big collection but have not displayed them in recent years. I still buy though, I love these---full of dear childhood memories.

German Easter eggs

*****
Another much awaited event was the Quilters Guild biannual show. They discouraged photos so I only got a couple of shots of the display room, not any quilt photos.





The venue was very cool for me, at a rec center in my village! There is no parking there though. I had a friend drop me off. When we got there we found out that the marina had lent its big parking lot and opened a fence to allow access to the rec center. It was expensive to see the show, $10.oo each day, so I only went once. The quilts were very lovely, but very slick and professional looking. Such perfection, oh my! The guild seems small and the ladies older. There were only about 5 small scale vendors and not a single one with Civil War/ 1800s repro fabrics or even much to offer in fun fat quarters. Disappointing because I love to actually get to shop in person, in search of fabric and also small sewing gifts for stocking stuffers for friends. But no. Lots of big buck sewing machines though.


The only display quilt I liked [though not to make!] was this dainty  30s inspired embroidered doll quilt.


The embroidered designs were very cute and much smaller than  original embroideries of that era. The vendor gave me permission to take to photos, she was quite pleasant.


As mentioned it was a small show. I imagine the guild will fade away, and especially this show will; it is not a thing young people do here, make or buy quilts. Both my kids know how to sew,
but they have no interest in my hobby or collections.
******
Off topic: here are some close ups of the purple toile I'm using for Hideous. The toile is by Laura Ashley. I have two remnants, purchased at different times; both could be as much as 20 years old?


The boys look Up to No Good, in my opinion. Look at that slacker on the right. So funny. I guess hthey will be the fussy cut on next month's SG block. It will be published on Wednesday, tomorrow. Yay.





"Thief, thief!"
 purse snatcher on the far right.

Part two of Out and About on Friday, be sure to stop back.

love

lizzy 

gone to the beach...

[other springs, later, with roses, below...]







PS
At the quilt show, there was a set of challenge quilts called By the Sea, which oddly---and to me, offensively, seemed to be promoting the idea of wind farms off our beaches, in our ocean. Shocking to think the natural beauty here may  SOON be ruined by the need for electric power. There is a lot of empty interior space that could be used instead, though the windmills are a huge hazard to migrating birds, killing thousands [millions?]* of birds each year and we are a coastal flight path.
Imagine this view filled with hundreds of enormous wind towers. Disgusting. Makes me cry.







baby piping plovers




*Edit: Lori is correct: many more birds are killed by cell towers than by windmills. Approx 30,000 migratory birds are killed annually by wind turbines; the figure in total for cell and antennas is about 6 million. One of the main recommendations though is not to place the turbines in major flight paths.

Someone else mentioned that we would not even see the turbines. However they would be placed 5 miles from the coast. The ships you so often see in my photos are more than ten miles away, so the towers would be relatively close and very visible.

9 comments:

  1. It is too bad the quilt show venue isn't more accessible and affordable! Sounds like it will eventually fade away, which is too bad.
    It is fun you get a new place to thrift!!
    We have lots and lots of windmills on land in Oregon. As far as birds, cell towers kill more than the turbines. (cats too!)

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    1. I don't object to the wind farms if thoughtfully placed on land, but the ocean is a huge interconnected organism that is not entirely understood or controlled; and a valuable earth resource that should not be tampered with. Yes cell towers do kill more birds, but as wind turbines increase so will the damage be increased, esp if the towers are built in major migratory pathways [these are known]. Right here where I live we do not have cell towers, the cell panels are attached to our large staionary water tower and are not abundant. Cell service on the beach is a relatively new thing here. Putting wind towers in the ocean would be a tragedy.

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  2. The Easter egg you found is DIVINE! Your collection is amazing (naturally)!

    Kids do change in their interests (hobbies and collections) - they might come around. There are groups here where there is some quilting, probably not the caliber you have back east.

    Glad your flea market is back - our flea markets are going to close (or go indoors) very soon - it just gets too darned hot!

    Smooches to both you and Mo!

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  3. Cool finds! I especially like the green candlestick and the pansy doily. And the blue pitcher looks great with the red flowers. I don't think parrot tulips really look like TULIPS, do you? They're pretty though.

    Fun to get to see all the quilts! I'm a little bummed you couldn't take more pictures but I also understand why not. Hopefully the guild will be around a few more years yet, and maybe attract some new younger members.

    I've read that wind turbines are dangerous to birds, too, but the ones near me don't turn very fast at all so I don't see how they'd kill birds. Maybe if they were close together? We do have some migratory birds but I think maybe the turbines are far enough away from the 'stopover' sites - the lakes and the river - that they're not really a hazard here. I like watching them turn from a distance BUT they are LOUD up close so I wouldn't want one next door. All things considered I'd rather have solar power!

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  4. Love following along on your flea market adventures. I do some second handing but we don't have very good venues here in our area. Mostly my husband and I hit up the antique/collectible stores on our vacations and mostly dream--prices usually too high for us! Hope you don't get the wind turbines anywhere near you. They are terribly noisy and a blight on natures gorgeous views.

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  5. Very fun thrifting! Look forward to seeing the finished velvet tomato/candlelit project. So cool to find the blue pitcher for yourself too.

    Hoping the wind thingies don't end up in your ocean. Get involved, speak out, it makes a difference.

    Always like seeing the beach walkway out and ready for summer!

    Kel

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  6. The Easter egg you found is DIVINE! Your collection is amazing (naturally)!
    Genting Crown

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  7. The blue VAZZZZZZZZZZ is so pretty. Great find. That quilt is precious.

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