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







Friday, November 19, 2010

November Glories

The calendar says November....



...but my morning glories think it's July!






















These are the little "volunteer" morning glories by my back door! They arrived from somewhere and have happily bloomed for months.

Aren't they brave?


They have survived the first fall Nor'easter storms---


and high winds!


And they make me smile while I sew on my deck and pretend it is still summer at the beach.

Have a great weekend! Polish that silverware and open grandma's cookbook!

enjoy!

love
                  
      lizzy

              gone to the beach.....

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Turquoise Star Quilt - Polka Dots Included


Sunday's flea market was big, busy, and exciting---but a little junky. Late in my fruitless searching I spied this folded blob of polka dots on top of a grubby old oak armoire.
It looked like a mess of old pj's or boxers, lol!


I reached up, shook it out a little...saw those big almost-turquoise dots! And made an offer. We haggled a bit but for a tiny price I brought home what I thought was a crappy cutter quilt, maybe a cheap import even. (I never really opened it up even!).


When I got home I was thrilled to see that it was a charming vintage (or antique?) full-sized handmade Blazing Star or Star of Bethlehem in really very good condition.


And of course I LOVE the color, soft white with shades of off-blue verging on my fav turquoise. The photo below has more acurate color....


Very interesting! The stars are all different sizes of polka dots from tiniest pin dots to big fussy-cut coin dots! Aren't they adorable!


The ground print is a cheery blue and white aspirin dot. Some of the midsized "dots" are squiggles but definitely dots.


The smaller stars, to my surprise, are pieced then appliqued...see the background dots showing through?


Even the traditional "ribbon" border commonly seen on Blazing Star quilts (like twisted garland or bunting?) is one of the dots plus a blue check, then the binding is a blue stripe.


The very faded backing is (was ) palest aqua blue with pale tan figurals that remind me of spinning tops (or Christmas ornaments!) and refers to the theme of polka dots too.


Was this a kit? If not, how did this 1940s-1950s-ish* quilter accumulate all these dots? And why?
Was her name Dot?
She loved to polka?
Loved dots?
Wish I knew...the anonymity of quilts always intrigues me, though makes me wistful too. Don't you just wonder?


The hand quilting isn't excellent but it's nice and far superior to what I originally thought. "Dot" did a very nice job...



Yes it's a little soiled...actually at this very moment it's being cleaned...fingers crossed!
Oh, here it is all washed and pristine! The white is much brighter than my photos...



And it needs a little mending and TLC---but I think it's a treasure! Lucky me, I was so happy.

And this is my latest little turquoise heart, with close-ups of the quilt fabrics in the background.



I've had fun researching this bracelet, so more about that treasure soon. It will also will be on etsy, since sometimes I must share and sell to support my turquoise treasure hunting!


*I am just estimating the age of this quilt: surely pre-1960/ post 1900? Any thoughts? I'd love some input!

PS A fun recent post about polka dots by quilt expert Barbara Brackman.

love


            lizzy



gone to the beach...........

Monday, November 15, 2010

November Beach

Hi all! Just dashing in to say Hi and hope you all had a lovely weekend.

Mine had its ups and downs but the beach was beautiful!



And so warm, 70* plus. (Rain coming tho?)



 Hope I can get better pix of my flea market quilt for tomorrow. One guess what color it is! [hint: not peach!]



love

              lizzy



gone to the beach...