Patterns by Elizabeth of OPQuilt · Quilts · Sawtooth Stars · This-and-That

This and That • January 2026

I used a new-to-me number generator, rolling electronic dice and it came up with number 10. So Karen, you are the lucky winner of the pattern. I’ve already emailed you and we’ll get the pattern sent off. And just like a roll of the dice, we are off and running into this New Year, and I’ll start with a This and That post, as I’ve been saving them up for a while.

There always seems to be a pile of tips for the New Year, whether or not you are one to do resolutions. I prefer to think of these as tips for getting started on a road trip. How about these:

I thought some Route 66 stamps — which will be issued this year in honor of The Mother Road’s 100th birthday — need to join my stamp stash.

Head to the Route 66 Centennial website to see calendars, and to get your merch.

And these! Confession: I like small square things, like quilt blocks, stationary items or stamps. Always in our house we have stamps for about 300 letters because I love stamps. I saw some of Harriet Powers’ quilts when I traveled back to Boston, and met Carol there at the Museum of Fine Arts-Boston. Good memories.

Speaking of roads, did I mention I had two quilts accepted to next week’s 2026 Road to California quilt show? The quilts’ split portrait is above, in front of a local modern building I love.

I’ve had some great correspondence with Beth R., and she sent me a couple of her quilt photos, which I really enjoyed. I’d asked about them because she’d done some squircle blocks, and I was interested in her process for her quilt. She wrote:

“One of my favorite new things to do is when I make a more “regular” quilt, like all Log Cabins or all Courthouse steps (albeit wonky improv versions, with lots of scraps) is to make improv blocks at the same time as I am making the “regular” quilt, with the offcut smaller pieces that don’t fit into that regular design, and I just set them aside at the time, each day while I am making that “regular” quilt, to “clean up” the scraps of the day. Then as soon as I get the current “regular” quilt bound, I begin the very next quilt starting from those improv blocks, and add as many more blocks as I need, of the same/similar colors.”

I thought this was a really great idea, and also thought of my stuffed-to-the-max orphan block box, and how much easier it would have been to follow Beth’s ideas. I’m putting this out there for everyone else; thank you, Beth!

In browsing the news, I came across an article about Sue Bender, announcing her death. I still have both of Sue Bender’s books on my bookshelf. As a quilter who has done her fair share of Amish-type quilts (and recognizes that they were the genesis of today modern quilt movement), we quilters owe Sue Bender a thank you for bringing an understanding of those communities we might not ever visit. I have since ordered the third book in the Trilogy, Stretching Lessons, and was happy to see it was a signed, first edition. I hadn’t looked at Everyday Sacred in a long while, and I had forgotten that it was given to me by my parents, my Mother’s inscription on the fly leaf reminding me.

From the New York Times article (gift link, above):
“She wrestled with the tension between being a woman who hated housework and defined herself by her artwork and professional achievements, and her desire to internalize the Amish sense of identity that came from community, godliness and manual labor.”

One of my Amish-style quilts, from 1986

from Plain and Simple:
In writing about her To-Do lists: “I never thought to stop and ask myself, “What really matters?” Instead, I gave everything equal weight. I had no way to select what was important and what was not. Things that were important didn’t get done, and others, quite unimportant, were completed and crossed off the list” (p. 7, Bender).
“All work is important. All work is of value” (p. 138, Bender).
“What really matters?” (p. 148, Bender)

from Everyday Sacred:
” ‘Art is order, made out of the chaos of life.’ Saul Bellow” (p. 2, Bender)

Maybe a little bit too far back into the past for some, but it is lovely to read IN a time where the author wasn’t living with the instantaneousness of social media and the internet, but took the time to think about what she felt, and how she wanted to work. I find so much of the time I’m reacting to what is going on around me; certainly we live in an era of in-your-face politics and news. But the last few nights I’ve immersed myself in her writing and in her thinking, and it’s helped me cope with the terrible news we’ve been having this week (I’m not linking to it; either you know about it or you don’t).

I was struck by what many of you mentioned when you left comments last week. It was your relationships with your people, for one. Others had ways to keep their proverbial chin up and I especially liked Mary’s: “Look for things to be happy or hopeful about instead of focusing on the parts of our world that are going to hell.” Yvonne mentioned “dark chocolate” (a woman after my own heart). Kit reminded me to “Don’t rush. Enjoy. Life is not a fire drill.” These were just some of the tidbits of wisdom and slivers of your thoughts. Thank you all. (And I just appreciate Sharon’s illustration, even if it is from a couple of years back.)

I found the downloadable chart to be informative. Here’s the link. Thanks, Bob!

Zeitgeist is one of my favorite words. It’s that description when something is just all around you, and you see it different places, but they are not the same thing. Technically, it refers to history, but I use it more colloquially. Like the following two things. First, mine, from our Covid Year, 2020:

and then what I did with the rest of my ideas:

Twenty-three different types of Sawtooth Stars.

Now one from 2025:

Same idea, different execution. It’s in the zeitgeist.

I called mine Sawtoothmania, because it was kind of a like a celebration of Sawtooth Stars. (And weren’t we all a little manic in 2020?) I just put my pattern on sale and you can get it from now until the end of January for 25% off. I had a very nice birthday last week, so consider this my gift to you if you want to make some fun stars. And if you want Leila’s pad of stars, well, you have her name and will be able to find it. (She’s very nice.)

In other construction news, I finally made good on my threat to dump the 50-year-old “workbench” table (left) and replace it with something more modern. Of course, my timing was great as we don’t use much more than a screwdriver and a hammer these days, but hey: we’re equipped. The bulky item trash people have already been called, and will be here shortly to haul a lot of that junk away.

Found this message from the Workbench Gods while cleaning out.

New Year’s service at the local car place. Still working on my squircles. It’s fun to see these on Gladi’s blog, too.

I’m getting together some lists of blogs I like to read–starting to write a post about that. If you have a blog you enjoy, drop me a comment with the name of the blog, and maybe a link to one of your favorite posts. Thanks.

Truly, it was only a matter of time until AI found me; I love how the system just makes stuff up. Hope they enjoy hoovering up all of my blog and creativity! (I am working on my Aerial Beacon pattern.)

For my birthday, I asked for three things: a trip to IKEA to buy bins, a stop at Tokyo Central to have lunch, and a final check in at Whole Foods. All of these are about an hour away from our house. Do I like Hokka biscuits? (shown above) Can’t say they are my favorite, but since I am a box sort-of gal, I loved their tins.

Happy Birthday! Happy New Year!
Happy Great Food at the Tokyo Central Food Court!

(still quilting this)


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15 thoughts on “This and That • January 2026

  1. Thank you x 100 for your Utopia quilt pattern !!!! Can’t wait to see it. And thank you for your generosity, not only in the gifted pattern, but in your blog: Sharing beautiful quilts and loving ideas.

  2. I started reading Everyday Sacred this week – so good. And I have put a reminder on my calendar for those Harriet Powers stamps. I also have enough stamps to mail a card every day for a year 😉


  3. Happy birthday, Elizabeth! I’m wishing you a year of happy activities, enjoyable quiltmaking, and ribbons/awards at quilt shows, including Road to California. Your quilts look good in that split photo (love it!) and I’m sure you’ll have a fun time at the show. Perhaps congratulations are in order that AI found you? It seems most of us are more obscure than that, though perhaps you’re higher on the search/knowledge list because you sell your patterns? I really have no idea. The tips you presented at the top of your post are the best! I like them because each one is true. I already apply all three of them to my life, no doubt possible due to living in a retirement community. An active, involved lifestyle is the best way to live – purposefully.

  4. How fun to be featured in your This and That! Hope someone finds the idea helpful and gets a good quilt out of it.

    Looks like you had the perfect birthday with all of your favorite things (well some of them anyway). I hope your husband’s shoulder/arm/body is doing better.

    This is the year I think I want to try to make some more traditional blocks – not a whole quilt of them, I can’t give up my precious improv I don’t think? but to do a few and see where it takes me. I plan to start with your star pack because goodness that’s a lot of stars all in one place and I really love stars. Really you have so many good designs – I am still going back and perusing old quilts (and blog posts) using your 300s list to jump to them. Oh that reminds me and goodness this is no big deal but just in case it is helpful to you, some of the links on that list are broken. Whenever you want to do some mindless fixing of things….ugh, don’t you hate how technology creates work for us? Not the promise it turned out to be….but I digress.

    Thanks again for the bit of loveliness in my in-box that a new post from you always is – I appreciate it so much Beth

  5. Happy birthday! I hope it was a good day and your year ahead is full of things that bring you awe and joy. Congratulations on getting 2 quilts accepted to Road to California, that’s fantastic! I don’t think there is ever a bad day to piece a sawtooth star, they are so delightful and I really like how you play with the centers in your patterns. I know it might not seem like it with a quilt finished in a week, but I moved a little slower this week in response to the heaviness of our barrage of news. Just when I think, “I’ll not check the news today,” it is big enough to find me in social media stories or conversation with a friend. All I know is that it’s important that we strengthen our community bonds and sit in the discomfort that being in community requires of us. I believe these are important muscles to strengthen right now.

  6. Hmm…squares and rectangles, stamps and quilts, even a rectangular workbench as opposed to a sagging one. And I love the half-and-half quilt picture. Not even going to ask how you managed that! Beautiful quilts, as always.

  7. the sawtooth stars were definitely a favorite among Gridster quilts!
    Wishing I was Roading with you this year, but maybe next!


  8. Happy birthday Elizabeth. I know I’m late but that lunch at Tokyo Central looks delicious! I now make Okonomiyaki (Japanese pancakes) regularly. I hope you are going to visit your two lovely quilts at Road to California! I always enjoying your posts about that show.

  9. I hope that you had a lovely birthday and will have a fantastic year in 2026! I enjoyed your photos and quotes. I especially thought Beth R’s suggestion of making an improv quilt from the scraps of a regular one was interesting, although I’m not sure that ever end up with that many scraps…

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