Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Featured Customer: Quiltville

I'm home from our anniversary trip to Miami and Key West and I have a post with pictures almost ready but in the mean time I thought I'd tell you about one of my regular etsy customers.

From her etsy profile in her own words: Quiltville


My name is Carly, I do business as Quiltville. I live in the Beautiful state of Wisconsin.

MY MISSION STATEMENT:
I will not sell anything I would not be proud to own myself.

I have been sewing since I was a young girl and have always enjoyed Quilting. I designed my first drawstring bag when I was in high School, back in the day of Bell Bottoms and Rock n Roll. With 5 grown children I now work full time from my home sewing, quilting, designing and selling my creations. My creative side never rests; as I am working on one project I am designing the next two.

Most of my Quilts are original designs; however, I also use traditional Quilt patterns. I only use Quilt Shop quality fabrics to ensure a superb product.
I offer a variety of Quilts; Baby quilts in everything from Colorful Brights to Soft Pastels; Lap size, Throws and Wall Quilts from Scrappy patchwork, Modern Retro to Traditional Log Cabins. I also have recently added Twin and Full size Quilts, thanks to my new Pfaff Grand Quilter. I do not have a Quilt Frame yet, so I do not offer Queen and King Quilts.

After numerous requests I have started offering my patterns for sale. I am starting with Quilt patterns and possibly my bag patterns will be available in the future.

Please take a moment to look thru my shop, perhaps you will find a Quiltville Treasure just for you!

Thanks for your Interest.

I still like Bell Bottoms and Rock n Roll!
Carly


She really does some beautiful work! If you are looking for that perfect heirloom baby or wedding gift she is the person to see.
Now go, buy lots of stuff from her so she needs to buy more fabric from me to make more!

Thursday, September 17, 2009

New Fabric!

Some new goodies were delivered this week. (See the link in the right-hand column for my etsy shop)

First off I picked out a few of my favorites from Lila Tueller's newest line, Santorini.
ambosialeafambrosiaeartholivegroveearth
olivegrovemarigololivescreamyolivesearth
(Note that the olive print with the creamy yellow background is backordered)
I lovelovelove these prints! The colors match my kitchen and living room and I'm dying to get my sewing machines out finally to make some pillows out of these.

Next up is the newest from Tula Pink, Hushabye.
owlstripsageowlstripepinkowlstripebrownowlstripeaquaduckydotsageduckydotpinkduckydotaquaduckydotbrowncircusdotpinkcircusdotivorypinkcircusdotivoryaquabutterflylacesagebutterflylacepinkbutterflylacebrownbutterflylaceaquabunnydamasksagepinkbunnydamasksageaquabunnydamaskpinkbunnydamaskbrownbunnydamaskaqua
(Note there are two other small scale prints available in all the colors, they are listed in my etsy shop.)

This is such a fresh line for babies. My niece is expecting her second baby next spring and I'm excited to make something special for him or her out of fabrics from this line. I just love all the little hidden animals and surprises to be found in the details.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Tressie's Quilt - wedding gift

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This is probably my favorite of all quilts in my collection. It was a wedding gift to Steve and I 20 years ago from his childhood baby sitter, Tressie Garner. Tressie was a widow with no children of her own when she started watching Steve and his brother Paul back in the late 60s when they moved from Saginaw to the farm in Mayville. By the time we were married in 1989 she was in her 90s but still mentally quick and as spirited as ever. We aren't sure about the real story behind this quilt. I don't know if it is something she made or something she bought along the way. We are pretty sure it wasn't purchased specifically for us and is definitely an antique made with real vintage fabrics. It was most assuredly hand pieced and hand quilted. The details and precision are amazing. I believe the pattern is called Around the World and each piece is only 2 inches square.
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The sawtooth binding edge is meticulous.

I used to use this as a quilt on our bed and also on the guest room bed. I also used it as a wall quilt above our bed briefly at our vacation house. Now I try to keep it in storage so the delicate fabrics and colors don't fade and wear and more. But it is too pretty to keep hidden away so I pull it out every winter to bring some much needed color and freshness to our long bleak winters here in the midwest. It is the one thing in my house that none of the animals are EVER allowed on! (But I do have a picture in my wedding album of our old cat Penelope resting on it and my wedding dress at my Mom's while we were on our honeymoon.)

Monday, September 14, 2009

Sarah's Quilt - 1995

Sarah's Quilt

Since I haven't been doing much sewing or other fresh crafting lately I decided to take this opportunity to share some of my oldies but goodies. I was going to call it, "Flashback Friday" or "Time Warp Tuesday" or "Way Back Wednesday." But it is Monday and I couldn't come up with any clever alliteration for today so I'm just calling it what it is.

When Sarah was ready to move out of the fantasy that she actually ever slept in her crib and give a big girl bed a try I made her this quilt. I guess I thought if I made her something really special and made a big deal out of it she'd actually SLEEP IN HER OWN BED! (ha!) I just loved all of these vintage 30's style fabrics and had collected a few of them. When it was time to make the quilt I added more in the purples and teals to go with the color scheme I was working with at the time.

I pieced the squares in a fairly random pattern trying to avoid any weird color blocks or repeated patterns. The batting is an organic cotton (hard to find way back then but well worth it). I then spent months hand-quilting the thing. The first and last time I hand quilted anything. Not my thing. At the time I was still sewing everything on my old Singer and it just didn't have the cajones to handle a large quilt.

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I don't specifically recall if the quilt worked magic and kept Sarah in bed all night. (It must have worked a little because Emma came along about a year later.) When we moved to this house I used it as a color palette for their shared room with a Noah's Ark theme. Now it just lives in a big wicker chest in the guest room with other quilts (that I will share soon) and gets pulled out for sleep overs.
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It has a few marker stains from the nights when Sarah would stay up to all hours drawing and doodling. When it first happened I was upset that she had "ruined" it. But as time has gone on I now cherish those stains as much as the quilt itself. They bring back a memory of a special time and activity she really loved.

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So readers, do you have a special handmade item from your childhood? Did you make your child (or grandchild, niece, nephew, godchild, etc.) something special that brings back memories of their childhood?

Thursday, September 10, 2009

9-11

9/11. A date that has so much significance for so many of us. Mine goes back 3 years before the day our lives as Americans changed forever. 9/11/98 - the day I miscarried my third and last child. I haven’t kept this date in my head for the last 11 years. It was just coincidence that I remembered its significance this week. I have this old Daytimer/Planner/Address book that I used to use religiously to keep my family’s life organized. I was going to toss it out a while back but decided to just throw it in a drawer instead. I came across it the other day and flipped through it. I used to write little notes and things on the calendar pages to help me remember things. It was interesting to read notes on Emma’s tear duct surgeries she had as an infant and Sarah’s children’s choir practices and play dates and duties I had at our former church. When I flipped to September I noticed that the days and dates coincided with this year.

The note on 9/11 took me back. On Friday thru Sunday it read, “cabin”. Steve had reserved a cabin at White Pines State Park for the weekend. He was out of town (Texas I think) until Friday morning and then we were leaving for the cabin. I was supposed to have everything ready and packed so we could leave and get there by late afternoon/dinner time. Thursday’s square reminded me that I had to drop off baked goods at the church rummage/bake sale. I was planning to make a peach pie from scratch.

This pregnancy had been a complete surprise. Not an unwelcome one, just a shock. Emma had just turned one in July and I was still nursing her. Infertility had become such a part of our life that we never even considered using birth control after either of the girls were born because we knew that if we didn’t just take what we were given whenever it happened we may never have any kids. Sarah and Emma were 3 ½ years apart and it had taken us almost 3 years to get pregnant for Sarah in the first place.

I was just coming to grips with the idea of being pregnant again when I woke up that Tuesday morning with cramps and an uneasy feeling. Looking back I realize that this pregnancy never really felt right or real. Later that morning I noticed light bleeding and called my doctor. He told me to take it easy and see what happened. Steve was packing to leave for another business trip and asked if he should cancel it. I told him to go ahead, I’d be fine. By bedtime it was obvious it was not going to be fine. I was alone with a one year old and a five year old and I never felt so alone in my life. When he called that night he again asked if I wanted him to cancel his meetings and come home. I said I didn’t care and I’d manage. In truth I was in denial that what was inevitably happening was really happening. Also I didn’t want to have to say “yes I need you” I just wanted him to want to be here and make that decision without me having to say it.

So what did I do? In the morning I called my doctor again and they told me there was nothing to be done but wait it out, if I hadn’t stopped bleeding within 24 hours or it got “too heavy” I could call again to schedule a d&c. So I laid on the couch, nursed Emma when I could, bribed Sarah with PBS shows and cried when she wasn’t looking. I didn’t really have anyone close that I felt comfortable calling to help me out so I toughed it out.

By Thursday morning I convinced myself that things were getting better. I made the pie for the church bake sale and made arrangements to drop the dog off at the sitters that evening. I was determined that this was not going to interfere with my commitments and the weekend Steve had planned for us. I baked, cleaned and packed and only stopped long enough to take care of the girls and occasionally rest and cry some more. My neighbor called to see if Sarah could play and I finally broke down and told her what was going on. She came over and took Sarah for a few hours and prayed over me. That evening I loaded the girls, the dog and the pie in the car and delivered the pie to the church and the dog to the sitters. Halfway through these errands I realized things were getting worse instead of better. I sat in a bathroom stall at the church and delivered what would have been my baby.

The next morning I realized things weren’t resolving themselves on their own and I would need a D&C. I called my neighbor take care of the girls for me and then called another friend, the same friend who watched Sarah for me when Emma was born, to drive me to the hospital. The procedure was routine and proceeded without incident. By that time I was exhausted and resigned to the situation. My friend got me home and settled on the couch and Steve pulled in the driveway, home from his business trip.

The girls came home from the neighbors and Sarah sat on the floor of the living room with her paper and crayons and drew me a picture to make me feel better. It was of a sweet little angel. She handed it to me and said, “Here Mommy, this angel is happy because she is in heaven now where everything is beautiful.” She had never been told there was going to be another baby and at that age would not have understood the concept of a miscarriage but somehow in that magic that is childhood she made that spiritual connection. If this baby had been a girl, her name was going to be Grace. Seems fitting doesn’t it?

We did go to the cabin that weekend and I continued to try to act like nothing had happened. I spent one afternoon in bed while Steve took Sarah hiking and fishing. I still got up in the night to change, nurse and soothe Emma back to sleep. I cried the entire time.

Time passed. I “got over it”. We never did use any form of birth control again. I never got pregnant again. Eventually I gave up the idea of anymore children. Eventually my endometriosis took its ultimate toll and I had a total hysterectomy. My doctor said that I was the most severe case he’s ever seen. I’m glad that part of my life is over, I don’t miss it. But I will never forget that weekend. And I will probably never be totally “over it.”


Post Script: I was also alone with the girls three years later when the terrorists attacked. Steve was stuck in Reno and ended up driving home in the last rental car available in Nevada. When people wonder at how I manage things around here when he is gone I just think about these two times and figure if I could survive them, I can handle just about anything.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Ahhhhh.

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I have been working myself very hard this week. The weather has been more than perfect for working outdoors. Moderate temperatures and cool nights keep the sweat and the mosquitoes at bay. Last week I started working on this huge garden project. It started out that I was just going to get the weeds cleared out and maybe move a few things around. It evolved into a major overhaul of the entire front yard.

Today I got it almost completed.
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From this.
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To this.

This unimaginable mess.
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Became this!
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I also added some new plants.
Sum & Substance HostaDriveway grass046AnemoneTurtlehead064Endless Summer hydrangea045

I also unburied this bench from under a mountain of weeds and coneflowers and moved it to a better place. Planted at its base are Lady's Mantle.
Rusty bench

One of the biggest parts of the job was dividing about eleventy-billion green and white hostas and moving them to the edges of the driveway. I still have a load and a half of the two-toned green (Frances Williams I believe) ones to divide and use to edge the front (street facing) side of the big bed. You can see them as the big clump in front of the red shrub in the after pictures.
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There are some areas that still need work. (mainly weeding)
Still needs work

Big grass
This gigantic clump of ornamental grass was just three tiny little bits that I transplanted from elsewhere in the yard about five years ago. It is hiding the well.

This has been a LOT of work but it has really been enjoyable. The first weekend I started weeding it out I thought I was going to die! Every muscle and tendon in my body hurt. My toenails hurt. I had rug burns on my forearms and thighs from where I pushed myself up after bending over. By Monday afternoon I was in the groove. I still hurt but not nearly as much. I even got up this morning and took Maizey to the dog park with my friends for a long hike before starting in on today's work. I'm re-energized. I feel strong again. This is the best I've felt physically and mentally since I closed the store. A month ago I was plagued with continuous back spasms. Sometimes just yawning would set one off. I was worried that this would trigger them again but instead it seemed to have healed me. I'm on a roll and I just want to keep going and going as long as the weather cooperates. I'm sure I'll burn out eventually, I always do. But in the mean time, watch out, I have a weed whacker and I know how to use it.

(I should also take photos of the GIGANTIC weed piles we now have back in our woods and on the compost pile. I think the final count was 5-6 full loads in the John Deere wagon which I think is 3.3 cubic feet. All pulled by hand. Mine.)

Last but not least I have one other garden feature to share. Emma and a friend were playing "CSI" or "Criminal Minds/Profiler" or something one day over the summer. This little guy was their "victim". He is still chained to the address post out at the end of the driveway next to the telephone switch box and yes, he's wearing little red plastic handcuffs. I think I now know why our neighbors all think we are a little bit off. (Note to self: maybe it is time to increase the funds in the children's future therapy account.)
Just weird