Sunday, September 30, 2012

Sunday night is here again

What happened to this past week? I feel like I just came home from Chincoteague and just started the QU class. And now I have to get ready for a new week.

Actually it's been a busy week but not quite as busy as I wanted. A lot of family things needed my time. Today is the birthday of my daughter and my son - they're not twins, just share a birthday. Friday was the birthday for my daughter-in-law and my youngest grandson. We all gathered Friday night to celebrate and eat a mixed dinner of beef brisket, veggies, mac and cheese (for the kiddos), salad -- and then steamed crabs for my daughter, son and I. All topped off with four flavors of ice cream.

I've spent some time working on Bella's birthday gift (in two weeks). She wants a mermaid outfit with a tail. I found a pattern and bought all the slippery fabric to create it and then got frustrated. This pattern is not very well written. I guess the pattern industry is taking shortcuts to save money. I have figured out how to do this, but I feel sorry for anyone who buys the pattern who has minimum sewing experience. I finished the top (it's in two pieces) and will start the bottom (skirt/tail) tonight. I know she will be thrilled to have a tail like all the mermaids in the movies.

Got to get working now. Thanks for stopping by.

Karen

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Nasturtiums

I stopped back at the arts center today and took some photos of the piece, Nasturtiums, that was purchased and will be going to a new home. The piece began with some prints using a gel plate and some actual nasturtium leaves. After a while of looking at the new leaves on the wall, I began a convergence piece that became the background. Then I added the flower petals.

Here are some detail shots that show how I cut out the leaf shapes and added the flowers.


I think it is a good piece. Thanks for visiting.

Karen

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

A lovely surprise

I walked down to the local Arts Council to view the annual members exhibit. I was pleased to see that my small quilt was hanging in a great location. Then I noticed the dot on the label. It SOLD! Woo hoo! How nice to have a piece in an exhibit that has found a new home. And, of course, some positive cash flow. This is Nasturtiums - not the best photo (which I cannot find).

Back to work now.


Karen



Back home

I got home Sunday night, did my Monday job and had dinner with a dear, dear friend. And now it's reality time. I want to make time for the on-line class and my mind mapping project, but first some important things need attention.

Friday night my family celebrates four birthdays, my daughter and her youngest son, my son and his wife. I am doing most of the dinner at my son's house (my apartment is not big enough for all of us). But first, I must finish a gift for Josh who will be 11 and get the rest of the presents and food stuff for everyone.  So, a busy week and a joyful week.

Right now, I should sign off and get moving on my class exercises. Elizabeth Barton is teaching. So far, the exercises are generating lots of good discussion and many references to exciting web sites. Good stuff.

And I must take a walk - it's another beautiful September day. This time, however, I have to wear shoes.

What are you feeling passionate about this week?

Karen

Saturday, September 22, 2012

An amazing day

at Chincoteague. I went to the beach early today because I got sunburned yesterday and it was going to be pretty hot. After I walked, I decided to get my chair and sit for a while. Yes, I was going to work on my master plan and the on-line class this morning, but the day was too beautiful to go back inside. I told  myself that I can always work on projects, but I can't always be here on such a great day.

As I sat, the dolphins swam by, going south this time. That is really awesome. Once the air got hotter, I did go back to the condo and did some work with plans to return later. I saw another bonus as I drove around the wildlife loop -- two bald eagles perched in the marsh. One flew around a bit, showing off.

It would be so wonderful to live next to the ocean. The sound of the surf is so soothing and energizing at the same time, it drowns out other sounds and is mesmerizing. Later today, I went back to the beach to walk and work in my sketchbook, but the wind had picked up and the sand was stinging. So, I sat in the car with the window open on the downwind side and had a great time just working and hearing the ocean. On the way out of the refuge, I stopped to visit with this heron and chatted with a couple visiting from Colorado - their first trip to the east coast.


Tomorrow I must go home, but first will visit my friend Peg. I have lots of pictures to use for a series around the marsh. The colors here are beginning to turn for autumn to complement my spring photos. Life is good.



Thanks for visiting. I hope your autumn is off to a good start.

Karen

Friday, September 21, 2012

Blessings, blessings, blessings

I'm taking a bit of a holiday at a favorite place, Chincoteague Island. I come here to be filled, to be amazed and to get some nature time. I took a long walk on the beach last night and spent time being grateful for all my blessings. Hugs and laughter on Wednesday with Bella. A visit with Mimi as she heals from knee surgery. A beautiful day for traveling. The beach. The ocean. Good health that lets me walk for a long time. So very much. And the sky, oh my ...

then a marvelous sunset ...


 
Just amazing gifts from God.

Aside from a delicious holiday, these days away give me time to work on some "big" stuff. Last week at our regional SAQA meeting, Leslie Riley was giving a talk on making time to make our art and answered a member's question by asking if
it fit her masterplan. Talk about a wake-up call! I woke up right away and realized how much I have been drifting in several areas of my life. I haven't had much focus for a while. This time last year, I began my get-ready-for-the-ACC-show project. After the show and my disappointment, I forgot to refocus, I forgot to get moving in any real way. My time at QSDS helped as I started several new pieces. But still, I wasn't with it. The funny thing is, I used to teach this stuff and encourage people to focus and to do what feeds their hearts and souls.

Sooooooooo, I am spending this time on two 'foci'. First, to do some mind mapping and brainstorming about a master plan. I just turned 67 (still young) and know that most of my years are done. So, what's next? Another funny thing, I read Mary Oliver's line "How do you plan to live your one wild and precious life?" every day and still have been drifting. So, time for some dreaming.

The second thing for this trip is to start Elizabeth Barton's class on Quilt University on Working in a Series. I have ideas for at least three series and hope to decide which to pursue.

And, of course, these days here offer beach time and marsh watching time - look for those herons and egrets.

Sometimes I seem to talk and write a lot. Thanks for reading and visiting again.

Do you have a master plan?

Karen


blue jello


Friday, September 14, 2012

Progress on a UFO

And it's almost finished. I started Roots back in May at QSDS and then it hung on the wall til I was packing for last week's retreat. I wasn't sure how I wanted to quilt it and decided to just do something. I quilted the river, then did the rocks and leaves, and finished it at home. Hooray! It just needs binding and a sleeve.

Maybe I can enter it in my local quilt show next month.

The weather has been wonderful lately - cool nights, open windows and a brilliant blue sky. Enjoy.

Karen

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Another week has passed

and now I am home for a bit, time to sew and dye and stamp some new fabrics.

Last week I celebrated my birthday several times - with my family, with some dear friends over pizza, was serenaded by the Sisters when I went to work, and co-celebrated with another friend. I am blessed to have so many people who share my life.

The low point of the week was having to drop out of the local artists studio tour scheduled later this year. It's a long story that I cannot write about. I am saddened to leave this group of talented and good artists and sorry to lose the opportunity to share my work with others, but I had to do it.

So I got busy sewing and then went on a quilt retreat and lost myself in two projects. It is wonderful to be reminded that getting busy always helps me switch gears when I am down. I came home after making progress on those two pieces and almost finished one yesterday.

Enough of that stuff, here are a couple more photos from my Oregon trip.
Cinderella's coach along the road

Two of the Sisters mountains

Miles and miles of volcano remains from 5,000 years ago
More amazing volcano remains
 
I was enthralled with all the different landscapes and geological stuff that I saw in Oregon - so different from my Maryland home. More later.
 
Karen
 




Bella's new dress

 
and she picked it out all by herself.

Monday, September 3, 2012

A bit of Oregon

from my trip. I'm still in running around mode (visited my friend Lynn in WV the past two days, have a quilt retreat coming up this weekend) so I will share some photos from my time in Oregon.

After a couple days settling in with my friends, Lin and Mike, I took off for the coast. I am an ocean person, a coast person, and I appreciate all the differences between the Oregon coast and the Maryland/Delaware coast. Both are wonderful. The Oregon coast has mountains and forests right up to the edge of the ocean, lots of rocky coastline areas, many amazing surprises.
High overlooks:
Fog that rolls in and out daily:
Horizontal trees from the strong winds:
Nooks and crannies:

More tomorrow.

What amazed you on your vacation this summer?

Karen

Friday, August 31, 2012

Being Elmo

is an uplifting, cheerful and inspiring movie, now on DVD. It's the story of how Kevin Clash (a Baltimore native) became a puppeteer, then a muppet maker, then the voice and personality of Elmo, and now a major force at Sesame Street.

Elmo has been a lovey for two of my grandchildren and has a special place in my heart as well. And I've created various voices for other toys starting with my son's monkey up through my puppy and now to Bella's bear. I remember watching the very first Sesame Street show with my babies.

On another level, this story is about imagination, about following your dream, about creativity and about having fun with what you do in life.

If you want an inspiration boost and a bit of a fairy tale, check out this great movie.

I wonder if I can get to be a muppet for a day. This might be a new addition to my bucket list.
Karen

Thursday, August 30, 2012

The power of one

can make or break your day and possibly your spirit also.

I've had a few 'one' encounters this week that have had me up, down and all around emotionally.

Tuesday was my day with Bella after three weeks away. She was so happy to see me, kept kissing and hugging me, and was in such a wonderful mood that we had a great day. We played, we shopped a bit, we sang and read and laughed. A very nice 'homecoming' for me.

Then I came home to find more than 30 emails concerning a future event in which I was going to participate. All these emails and many more to follow this week were the result of 'one' person and 'one' email to all of us. The issue is a valid consideration but the method was more of an attack and threat than sharing of information. Needless to say, this deflated my happy 'Bella' mood. I then spent too much time and emotion researching the issue and how I am impacted by it and trying to make a decision on my participation. I am very aware of how I let this affect me, but still struggled with how much chaos 'one' can create for many.

Wednesday's mail brought another 'one' that helped me switch gears emotionally and get back to the sewing machine. I received a lovely thank you note from a hospital that had received some of my Linus blankets. I quickly found another top to put together for quilting today. That 'one' note lifted my spirits. I guess I was a 'one' for a positive cause.

So, before I get stitching, I have to remind myself to be aware of what I do and say as a 'one'. Choose affirming and helpful.

What 'power of one' has touched you lately? What can you do as a 'one'?

Karen

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Back home

I just got back last night from a really good vacation in Oregon. I stayed with my life-long friend Linda and her family in Eugene for nine days, taking trips to the coast, the lava fields and Crater Lake. Lots of adventure along the way -- and visits to three quilt shops. I'm still jet lagged, so this is a short blog. More to come.

Below is the sketch I did on the plane last night, trying to capture all I saw in Oregon. Lots of amazing things and places. It is a huge state, full of diversity and very different from my home state of Maryland.

Sorry to go so long between posts. Home now and maybe getting back to some kind of routine.

Enjoy these last days of summer.

Karen

Saturday, August 4, 2012

A bit of catch-up

Summer has a way of getting away from me. Here it is August 4 already! I am excited that I will be leaving on vacation in ten days - I am going to visit my lifelong friend Linda and her family in Oregon. And I am taking ten days for this vacation, the first real vacation in a few years. I plan to spend a couple days at the ocean. Linda and I plan to take their camper and visit Crater Lake, the Lava Fields National Site and a few other volcanoe sites, and visit Sisters to check out quilt shops.

In the meantime, summer is in full bloom here. Temps near 100, humidity high and ants are visiting my kitchen. But I am ready for them. Those blocks of paper are filled with Terro ant stuff - it works - they come and eat and take the bait back to their nest. The rest is their history.

Yesterday I started some postcards using selvages. I will use lots of machine stitches to 'decorate' them today.

Here's a piece that is now on the design wall waiting for the next step. I started this at QSDS, using a photo as inspiration, and came home unsure of what was next. Here's its evolution:

Tried layers for the 'earth'.

Then went horizontal for a couple views.


Finally. Now I need to decide how to quilt it.

Well, that's a bit of catch-up. I need to get over to the sewing machine and play on those postcards. Hope you are staying out of the severe weather and enjoying summer.

Thanks for visiting and reading.

Karen

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Thought I did this already

Camp Mimi was successful once again. Abigail made the napkins and apron that were requested. We ate out twice, tried a new ice cream place in town, watched several movies and enjoyed our time together. And we got Sam the Singer repaired by the end of the week so it can soon go home with her.

She got to sew on all three machines this week. I rather think she enjoys my Janome Horizon the most, of course, and finished up the apron on that machine.



As with all sewists (I'm still not sold on that word), she learned to unstitch as well. I let her be the judge of how the apron was coming together. Several times, she was not pleased and got out the seam ripper.

She was pleased and proud of the finished project. I had won some of these fabrics at a recent guild meeting and was pleased to see them in use (I don't use a lot of flowers).

We ended our time together by enjoying the DVD of The Secret Life of Bees with my book group along with more ice cream! Quite nice.

Karen

Monday, July 23, 2012

Trees and roots

Here's a bit of catch-up from the past few weeks.

While at QSDS, I sketched a few tree designs. I'm wanting to express some thoughts about rootedness by creating trees. The best sketch of those became the start for this new piece. It's larger than recent things and, of course, has a life of its own.

Living with the sketch, I began to put together layers of ground fabrics. It just kept getting bigger.

The original piece of hand dyed that I had for the sky was not large enough. So, I pieced two similar pieces to a strip down the center to get more height and width.

Here's the full size sketch against the fabric.

On a trip to Patches, a Mt. Airy quilt shop, right before the guild meeting across the street, I found several fabrics for the center tree - a gorgeous Stonehenge. Got that center tree raw edged sewn down, stood back and deflated a bit. The roots sorta blend in with the ground - not what I want. So, right now I keep looking at it for answers about how to emphasize the roots. Any ideas are welcomed.

I do like the depth created by the other trees.

Back  at Camp Mimi with Abigail,  today was a slow day. We slept late, lazed around, went to lunch with a friend and took Sam the Singer into the shop. We did get the apron pattern cut out so it's ready to go on Wednesday using the small Janome. I withheld dinner until she practiced some on that machine, just to stay in the mood. What a meanie I am!

This afternoon ended with a phone call from a guy I went to high school with - he is one of the committee that is organizing the 50th reunion of our high school graduation. Egads! And they all want a decision and money now for the event next June. It's too hot to make such a decision now.

Karen

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Camp Mimi

has officially begun. This is Abigail's time with me, an annual tradition since she was small. We play and get creative with whatever we want and just have fun. The tradition includes fudgesicles on the porch at night and usually a trip to a museum. This year includes some serious sewing instruction that will fulfill her home ec requirement as a home schooler.

So, we started with napkins using my 1963 Singer TouchNSew machine. This is the machine I had given her, but it seems that two years in an unheated garage took its toll. We fussed and fumed with it and then switched to my little Janome - I want her to use a machine that she can have at her house. Sam the Singer needs to visit the machine hospital and hopefully can be resusitated.

I must give Abigail lots of praise for sticking with it today. She was determined to finish six napkins and she did. Unlike some others, she did not give up or abandon the project - she decided she would win and be victorious.

The next project is an apron, easier fabric to sew with, but first we need a field trip for some fun.

Last week, I worked on a new tree piece and did some ice dyeing. The tree piece has some issues. I'll try to get some photos up tomorrow. Right now I need to finish dinner and feed us. The blue sky has returned and we need a walk.

There's always tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow.

Karen

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Life happens

I finally got back to my studio today after three days of full-time Mimi duty. Matthew, my oldest grandchild, was hospitalized for a serious case of pneumonia, so I was with his siblings during that time. He is now home and fever-free and continues to recuperate. Thank God.

I was able to get back to the rice cereal resists I started last week. I had put another layer of resist in a design on each and started a third piece with a more definite design. Today I painted all three and took advantage of the outside heat to help dry them. Then I soaked each separately in warm water and used a spatula to help scrape the resist off. Then, outside again to dry (I have these large thick bushes right outside my door - good drying spots). Here they are. I am pleased with the second and third. Good learning experience.



Friday, I hope to try out two new screens I have designed.

How wonderful it is to have a holiday to bring our attention to celebrating our freedom and heritage and counting our blessings. Happy Fourth of July to you.


Karen

Wordless Wednesday

Thursday, June 28, 2012

It's a good time

to try something new. It's hot outside and the AC is working just fine. so I am content to stay inside and play. I pulled out an old issue of Quilting Arts and found Lisa Kerpoe's article on using rice cereal as a resist. I mixed the cereal with water and filled a squeeze bottle and played on two pieces of fabric.

Sometime on Saturday I will paint them and put more resist on in another design when they dry. I want to layer and see how this all works.

I've started sketching some new stamp designs. Hopefully next week I will have time to stamp and stencil on more fabric. I just need to make some things.

Thanks for stopping by.

Karen 

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Surprises are great

I made it to Friday, the day of the ice melt - finally. The fabrics were lovely. I am often more pleased with the results of ice dyeing than regular batch dyeing in containers. And this time I got a very pleasant surprise, sorta an added benefit.

As an attempt to keep ice from falling through the grid where I arrange the fabric for ice dyeing, I covered the grid

with a piece of muslin (the kind I use for backing fabric). It worked well. The ice stayed on top of the fabric. When I picked the fabric up, I was surprised to find a nice grid design on the two pieces of muslin.

Hmm, I'm using them again today with two more ice dyes. I'm curious to see how they look after more dye in different colors. I might have to consider using them for something.

What has surprised you lately?

Karen

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Waiting is so hard sometimes

particularly when dyed fabric is involved. This morning, I got a very early start, knowing I would be out most of the day and evening. I really, really wanted to dye some more fabric. So I was in Walmart at 8 am buying ice so I could get some ice dyes started. By ten am, I had two containers set up with three pieces of fabric under the ice and one yard batching in a bucket. I went out and about, had a yoga lesson and then dinner with a friend who is recuperating from knee surgery. I got home at 10 pm hoping to see some 'new' fabric but there's still ice piled on the fabric. Arrggghhhhhhhhhhhhh!

Tomorrow, always tomorrow.

Karen

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Another week going by already

After QSDS I put four projects to finish on the design wall and sat and looked at them, not quite knowing where to begin. I worked on building layers of earth for a tree-with-roots-showing piece. Time to build a sky - put up this hand dyed piece - not quite sure. Have to live with it a bit.

So, I tidied up a bit and came across a UFO that I quickly knew how to finish and did it! As I worked on it (those hoochy stars and geese from months ago), ideas began to sprout for the next steps on some of my QSDS beginnings. Lesson learned: never underestimate the power of a UFO. Here it is completed. It will  be a charity quilt.

As I flipped through a sketch book, a photo popped out that told me what to do with one of the QSDS pieces. The piece will be a tall piece with vertical 'stripes'. As I started fiddling with fabrics to try, it hit me that this is another piece about roots. I guess there's a theme or series happening here.

Fun to be working playing again and to have ideas flowing. I want to focus on playing and avoiding the w word - it grabs me in the wrong way lately.

Thanks for visiting. Karen