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







Saturday, January 28, 2023

January is Flying By!


Hello hello, how fast the winter days go by. It's almost February. Last year at this time a huge blizzard was arriving and my eye surgery was January 31, as I recall. In many ways things have not changed much---like the movie Groundhog Day, events keep repeating, repeating. We are again, still? in a cycle of cancellations and fears of Covid and other illnesses. Three--3!-- special celebrations were canceled this week, due to non-Covid/ non-flu related respiratory illnesses; one of my dogwalkers has Covid, blah blah blah. We have to wear masks in public. Again. And I still have severe double vision! 2022, below


The good news, in addition to the warmish temps, is that there has been a sudden shift in the sun's setting time. Mo and I can go out at 5 PM and not be in pitch darkness.


January has not been a productive month, time just slips away. Too much time spent reading trashy free offerings on Kindle Free Books! 

This week was mending, not quilting. Do any of you mend undergarments? Since Covid lockdowns made it so hard to shop in stores--and buying bras and panties online is a real crapshoot, loser's game!--I find myself ''making do'' and mending underwear. Nuff said. And my beloved Eileen West nightgowns cost a fortune, are never on sale, so, yes, I patch and repair. Eileen West

I also patch the elbows of my work sweaters. I have a thing for cashmere turtlenecks, my winter uniform. Lest you think this is hugely extravagant: 1-I am always very cold and they're warm but not bulky; 2-I look for sales and specials; 3-some I have since before my mom died that were gifts from her---and she passed away in 2009. Value per wear? Pretty good, pennies per wear I am estimating. Then I have a method: every few years I buy a new sweater for going out and I retire a sweater to a home wear sweater. These are the ones that get elbow patches. 

When these finally have shrunk to baby size from machine washing, I recycle the arms as leg warmers and the bodies as cuddle blankies for Mo.

This year's new sweater, very much on special when I bought it.    Lands End Sweater Today LE asked for a review. I love the sweater, was willing to say that. But then the questionnaire asked for age, gender, height, weight, size. These are not bits of info I wish published for millions of shoppers to see and also spyware to have. Deleted that page real quick.

More mending of household stuff. Some shells do better with a coat of white paint!

Scribble journal and try-out perpetual journal. The PJ will ostensibly have better more perfect illustrations, not cartoons like the SJ. Hmmmm...












I mulled over a few possible ''this looks fun'' sewing projects:

This is adorable, but all so tiny. 1" squares in the center, tiny applique motifs, most 2" or less. Needle-turn app gets harder the tinier the bits and pieces are, as does piecing actually. And really, how many tiny placemat sized quilts can a person make? I made way too many last year, I notice. Useless after the fun of making is done.






Or this one? Just that I can't seem to break it into approachable blocks of now-and-then segments. Must think more, so I set aside this one too.

Mo as always cozily supervises.

Undecided and unfocused, I just went back to making Flying Geese for Winter Marsh. I need about a hundred more. And the Sun, a snow day project, if indeed it ever snows? Fine with me if not.

Here are the huge skeins of geese that inspire my Flying Geese quilts. 


Seen in giant flocks yesterday, not just on the marshes but overhead driving home from Target. We also saw flocks of brants [smaller geese] and cormorants, and rafts of pretty winter ducks in the water.



I did cook this week, Mongolian Beef, seen on Instgram.


Mine, below, looked so pretty, just like the vid, tasted gloppy and bland. Gave me a stomachache too, so I tossed the rest. Had planned it to be meals for three days.


The premise of the IG story was that the recipe is cheap and fast. Okay it didn't take long, but the steak for a double recipe cost * $23.99! Horrifying. And so wasteful. Pretty sure the local Chinese carryout could deliver for a LOT less. [*I had asked for one small ribeye steak, grocery sent pre-packed two rather large steaks! Wish I had only used one. Steak is a big treat for me, hard to throw this dish out.]

.......................

All my spring forcing bulbs have arrived so I am collecting flower pots. Hopefully that's our next post here. Lots of prechilled bulbs, very on sale, look on line if you want to grow spring flowers with me. Even an on sale, leftover from Christmas amaryllis bulb is fun in deepest winter. 



Have a good week, welcome February! Dry hands and feet suggestion, smells so good:


love

lizzy 

gone to the beach.....

longer days means longer Mo walks despite the gale winds.





And the beach ball--so sad, so evocative of summer gone by and not returning for 6 months still....


PS back from walk, we played out on the deck and noticed many people [20? 25?] on the shoreline of the beach. Long zoom, lenses. Probably not a wedding, in January.....Something in the surf? A body, a buoy, a seal, a whale? I hope not the Snowy Owl, as they are looking in the shorebreak. 
Too far and too dark to walk out though.




7 comments:

  1. I'm not much of a mender. My intentions are good and I usually have quite a stack of things waiting to be fixed. The pandemic really made it hard to buy clothes. I hate to return things so I seldom order clothing online. I finally went out last fall to buy jeans. I just bought the ones I usually buy without trying them on. When I got home and put them on they kept slipping down with the weight of my phone in the pocket. Good Grief! I knew I had lost a few pounds but I went down two pants sizes.
    I love that little quilt with the appliqued figures around the center pieced blocks. That would be fun to make. I'm such a cheapskate, I would have cleaned the steak and used it in something else. Maybe you already tried that and it was unsalvageable That beach ball all alone is kind of sad. Enjoy the flyiing geese, both pieced and in flight.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's crazy how fast times flies by! And without my getting much done, besides.
    Yes, I mend underwear. I hate doing it but needs must. I also patch elbows, but by hand. Your patches look machine-sewn. I don't think I could manage it on my sleeves.
    Cashmere sweaters sound wonderful! I once had a cashmere coat and it was the warmest ever. Have you tried silk? I found several silk turtlenecks at the thrift store. They are so warm that I sometimes have to change to something not quite so warm.
    I enjoy the drawings/paintings/illustrations in both of your journals.
    The quilt with the 1" squares is delightful--but too tiny for me! Could you enlarge the appliques (if you really love it)? Is it a Cheri pattern?
    What a disaster with your steak. Like Robin, I think I would have washed it off and used it a different way, maybe with a stronger seasoning. We make bulgogi, which seems similar to your recipe. I love it! (But then I don't like spicy food.)
    I hope whatever was on the beach was a buoy and not a living creature in trouble.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I forgot to say, that last anonymous comment was from me, Nancy, at ndmessier @ gmail, joyforgrace.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  4. No I don't mend underwear or socks! But we wear them long beyond any hope of mending anyway, I mean if God forbid we're in an accident the hospital is just going to cut off our clothes anyway, and if we're dead, we have no more need of them. I'd rather be quilting!

    ReplyDelete
  5. posting for Mel:
    Our weather keeps bouncing from warm to freezing - I wish it would just pick one! I tend to think the constant change makes people cranky and MAYBE contributes to them getting sick. I just know the 'change days' make all my joints ache!

    I've been buying kindle books (the free titles don't usually appeal to me for some reason). But then, I NEVER get much done!

    Yes, some of us do mend undergarments and other favorite things. I don't mind buying online *IF* the label hasn't changed everything about the styles I bought. Sometimes its hard to find anything even remotely similar, even if it's been a year or less. The nightgowns you like are so pretty - but I'd never be able to sleep in them. I move around too much, even now, so I'd end up knotted in the cotton! Stretchy stuff works better for me.

    Love the color of the sweater with the new elbow patches!

    The tiny quilt is cute but looks like LOTS of work. And I know it's probably just me, but the X-shapes make me think of crossed band-aids. I've seen entirely too many bandages lately!

    Have you thought any more about a 'bookshelf' quilt? I was thinking about it a while back, looking at my sewing machine, but my machine does only one font and one size... Maybe a set of permanent fabric pens would work better - make more interesting titles on the "book bindings". I still think the idea is cool - could do some sitting up right, and some stacked on the 'shelf' - all your favorite titles. Maybe childhood favorites on the bottom shelf and working you way to current faves on the top? Little pug curled up on the bottom shelf? LOL.

    Sorry your recipe didn't turn out! I think I'd have tried rinsing the beef off and making a stew or something.

    Did I tell you my daughter and I finally made that internet-famous 7-can chicken taco soup? It came out really good. If we make it again I plan to get low-salt versions of the ingredients as much as possible, but I don't think I could beat the flavor or how EASY it was!

    I will look forward to seeing your forced blooms!

    Take care and thanks for sharing!
    M.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love your philosophy with your cashmere sweaters. The rotation, the mending. It is "slow fashion" when we are drowning in "fast fashion." You have auditioned several interesting projects. I think a part of our creative process is this kind of wondering, planning, deciding. Too bad about that recipe. It's neat that when you piece flying geese, you have the real thing to reference in your life!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Oh my gosh! That owl is so beautiful!
    Love your sweater patching. I hear clothing is a big trash item- it is good not to be wasteful.

    ReplyDelete

Hi! I'm allowing comments from everyone, even anonymous for awhile, to see what happens. With comments moderation. Hopefully the awful porn spammer has gone elsewhere. Or you can always email me! I love to hear from everyone.