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







Friday, February 9, 2018

Winter Bird Nests ~ and Some Shopping



When I was a little girl I collected birds' nests. I was a shy, solitary, book-nerd child and presumably to  get me out for some exercise and fresh air, my mother invented nature walks. Looking back it seems odd of her---my mom was not yet thirty, an urban young woman who had met and married her husband in NYC, a former stewardess, a woman who cared about clothes and hairdos and who ''did her nails". But walk we did, after school on the long afternoons when my dad was away travelling for work.


We lived in a suburb that was urban encroachment on what was once farmland, so behind our house was a tiny old apple orchard, cornfields, a new peach orchard, then a wide creek with tadpoles and leopard frogs and box turtles---and acres of woodland. If you walked far enough, the woods met a highway with a roadside bar that my parents went to on Saturday nights. My memory is they left us home alone but perhaps a babysitter was there, I don't recall.


My mother taught me how to find birds' nests by watching in the spring to see where the birds would go into the leafy trees, bugs and worms in their beaks. We only collected nests that had fallen, of course, but I amassed a small gathering, displayed in the basement on the old pine topped farm table where my mom folded laundry. (Oh I wish I had that table now! The chunky turned green chippy legs, the lovely oiled pine top. Sigh.) I had a few treasures, a mud cup of a robin's nest, a lichen encrusted hummingbird nest.
Here at the beach, songbirds are few, but my eye is still trained to see the evidence of summer bird activity. When Mo and I walk in the winter, I am thrilled to finally find Mr Mockingbird's nest in a now-bare shrub, like this one, near where the mockingbird chatters frantically on the grey fence in the early summer.




We also look for signs of spring. Most of the Big Snow has melted and underneath a few green tips of daffodils are peeking out.


Sharp eyes and patience required.


....
In the stores Valentines Day has passed ages ago, the theme is spring!




                                     


And again birds' nests.






Now that we know birds return and reuse their nests each year it's especially important not to ever touch a still-viable structure. Faux is clean and pretty and ecologically better.


Cute bunnies too! Though my kids are too old for Easter decor or baskets/ treats, too bad.



And I really want this pitcher, 25% off.  Isn't it wonderful. Calls out for pink hyacinths or white tulips on my table.







Pier One also had wonderful furniture. How I wish my budget [still saving for a new dishwasher and dryer vent cleaning], could run to new sofas like this one.



So white, so soft! Zippered slipcovers!



Quite modern [or Chippendale field desk?] but such a good idea for a sofa table. It even has a drawer for sewing things, or TV remote? Nice design, not yucky plastic and tin.


This would be a great coffee table with a  Nantucket basket or driftwood-ish tray on top.


Neat cabinet too, with good storage.


Lovely chair, same one I've been wanting in the blue floral or ecru stripe. (Kel, I was chicken to sit in it! All set up for display. LOL. I'll go back with a friend to investigate further.]


..........................
In other news, how would you like to wake up to this on your phone!? Eeeeek!



And--last night I couldn't find Mo. Where's Mo? Where's Mo!? Not underfoot, not in his bed where he watches me during the day, not outside or downstairs...where is Mo.








(His new food regimen leaves him very hungry, poor little man. But unfortunately is adding weight. Must reassess!)



Any signs of spring at your house?
Have a great weekend! I'm off to buy a Lotto ticket, because ''ya never know''.

love

lizzy

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
















Just for Fun, a Nature Walk with Doug the Pug!

Monday, February 5, 2018

"Antebellum Album Quilt ~Schoolgirl Diaries, Letters and Album Quilts



Hello, everyone, another cold Monday here. Tonight the wind is a bit less and the air is so invigorating, the sky is [trite but true] like black velvet scattered with a million brilliant diamonds.
In Friday's post I showed you my finished top for the historic quilt-along on Barbara Brackman's blog. Her new sewalong has begun, much anticipated by me since I skipped 2017. This year's history/ story is about the lives, letters and album quilts made by young girls before the Civil War, in both the North and the South, though presumably there was no such rigid division as early as 1840, unless we face reality and call the states Slave and Free?

It was a fad back in the 1840s and 1850s to make signature or friendship quilts. Each of one's girlfriends would make a block and sign it, as a remembrance of school days and classmates.


Sort of like we used to sign yearbooks, I guess. Or remember those funny autograph hounds, cotton dachshunds. I was pretty surprised when one of my kids got one for a party gift, who knew they still exist?
But now I have the quandary of What my Album quilt should look like. Not a scrap quilt; these were spoiled, pampered, very well to do young ladies who could easily afford to buy a certain color that the honoree might demand.
A designated palette is in order. I have three ideas:

1-Taupe/mud/neutral, with light ground text fabric for the light.

















The selvedge here shows the colors I would be using.


I got this group of prints specifically for this project last fall. And I added a few greyer prints, and a fun bird print for fussy cutting.


But, though I love dry-mud color or taupe, I fear this might appear very dull and sad in a quilt. And I def do not want the accent color to be mustard, I don't think a grey and yellow modern palette works at all. [And I hate it.] The accent will need to be black.




But still. Yawn?



then 2- These authentic brilliant prints are from a group called Jamestown, which is confusing as Jamestown reeks of 1600 taupe and starving colonists. The allusion of the name escapes me. The colors are so ''me'', so fun and lively. But perhaps anachronistic? Seems to me they date from about 1875-90 or so.


And picturing them made up I am seeing a truly hideous quilt, even if again lightened with the white ground writing print.


3- Blue. Indigo blue. Oh okay,let's make this a beautiful and usable, if crushingly boring blue and white quilt. My [imaginary]schoolgirl loves blue and simply asked her girls to make blue blocks. She's a bit less of a lahdidah princess of the old south, maybe she is from  Ohio or Illinois. New York? I don't have a photo of blues, but here is Bitty, similarly blue and ''white', and blue hearts:





My quilt will have alternating spacer blocks for a total of  25? blocks. The spacers will be Double Nine Patch or Four Patch Nine Patch. In the sewalong Pinterest board Brackman shows a  spacer, but it isn't yet mentioned. Too fussy for me; the nine patch variations will make a strong diagonal secondary pattern too. Like this:

Pinterest
And last to consider. Each month we will be given an antique signature block photo, to copy and use if we wish.


I'm pretty sure I will use these, though that leaves a big light hole in the center of each block. I don't have a light box for tracing so I printed the writing on my computer, on muslin. Supposedly printer ink is water soluble but I've had good luck with ironing well then spraying it with matte acrylic sealant. I also will enhance the writing between ironing and spraying, using Pigma pens.


I wasted a sheet of the printer fabric making and experimental square for the washing machine test.


So what do you all think!?


Mo chimes in, "Moooom, does this t shirt make my butt look fat?" He doesn't like quilts until they're at the lying on stage.


Opinions, please. While we decide, I will be sewing the 40-odd Flying Geese for my Fall Festival quilt. It has waited patiently for many months to be finished.


love 

lizzy 

gone to the beach...

thinking of summer days...