Temperature Quilt · This-and-That

Even Gritty People Get Discouraged

The title of this post comes from Angela Duckworth, the researcher famous for talking and writing about those who have what she calls “grit” — that innate quality that helps you to keep going. I used to show it to my freshmen English classes, in a teacher’s quest to motivate her students. But in a recent article on IdeasTed.com, she wrote about discouragement and surprisingly, even she gets discouraged. She tells the story of crossing the Rubicon, and how that metaphor came to mean a decision point. Duckworth has a list of “grit” items, available in her Ted Talk (video is at the bottom of that post), but now she adds one to it: “Setbacks don’t discourage me for long.”

I’ve saved the Advice for Discouraged Sailors in one of my computer files, and just like cleaning out a drawer, this scrap of an idea keeps popping up. And like Duckworth, there is this moment of decision, of stopping and steadying your boat and figuring out where to go. I’ve never been a sailor, but I can only imagine how critical the advice is to “seek the wind,” if you are surrounded by a water everywhere, with no land in sight.

So, incorporating both of those ideas — setbacks don’t discourage me for long, and seek the wind — I started (again) on my 2023 Temperature Quilt. I tried listening to a book when I worked and that was a disaster. I needed to study my compass, not be distracted, even if it is a good book. And I had this in mind:

Yeah, that’s a Temperature Quilt, all right.

I made progress, by cutting triangles, cataloguing them in my box and making a fabric key on the lid. To the lower right is the calendar for January, and that’s when I discovered that the color for 60-64 degrees F was missing. I had to order some, and it will be here hopefully Monday. But I pressed on, keeping notes where the gaps were:

I figured out that I wanted a stripe for precipitation, and figured out how I wanted to make it:

Clunky, but it works. These are my samples, not my quilt blocks. I have a PatternLite I’m working up so that people can download my bits and pieces, but I need to do more trials and add more info before it’s ready. Patience. But here’s my graphic so you’ll know I’m serious.

Sketches of the layout. If you want your strong bands of color vertical, that’s the middle image. If you want them horizontal, that’s the last image. I went with vertical, just like my last quilt. I’m still puzzling over what to do for the month block. I didn’t need a month block in my 2019 Temp Quilt, but I want one here because unlike 2019, I’m wrapping the days from one column into the next. I need something that will blend, but be distinctive.

Anniversary treats: two Totoro buns from our local bakery, and pink carnations. The Totoro buns have blueberry jam in them, with chocolate-dipped bases. It was a quiet, but lovely day, and I finished it with the Creatives:

A group of women from my town, and we are quilting, stitching, crocheting. Glad they all could come.

This popped up the next day, and it’s a reminder to myself to take social media posts with some caution. While I’m completely envious — and enjoy the scenery of all your trips and excursions — I’m well aware that there are bee stings, mosquito bites, schlepping the luggage, losing the luggage, fatigue, upset GI systems, missed connections and sore feet as well a glorious flower-filled grand square in Europe. Likewise, for this blog. I have my highs, my lows, my moments of satisfaction and other days when a good piece of chocolate is the only answer. Okay, maybe two.

So cross that Rubicon, seek the wind, and carry on with the journey–

Totoro and bee friend

300 Quilts · Quilt Finish

Amarysso • Quilt Finish

I never hold my own quilts, preferring to be the one behind the camera, taking the shots. But we had a photo shoot for Amarysso, my latest finish, and we traded places. Here’s some more photos, next to two wonderful murals in our mid-town area. Okay, now Dave will hold it:

The back is a random print from the stash, with a rod pocket of Tula.

What does amarysso mean? It means “to sparkle.” It’s one of the root words for Amaryllis, the name of the fabric used for our quilt guild challenge, designed by Philip Jacobs.

Now me:

And we’ll give Dave the last shot:

My husband is a mural-and-art spotter for our town. He has a blog with lots of posts of murals and sculptures and interesting art, and was written up in our city’s newspaper. He started this project after he retired, and it just sort of morphed into his site Murals and Art. The thing that is keen about this is that whenever I need a backdrop for a quilt photo, I just go to his blog, point, and say, “Take me There.”

Thirty-four years ago, I pointed to the future and said “Take me There.” And he did, me and my four children, now *our* four children. This past weekend, we went to the wedding of our granddaughter, child of the little girl you see in the photo. In June, we went to the marriage of our grandson, child of the boy with the black tie on the left. We have a granddaughter on a mission for our church in Argentina, and yesterday, she just turned 20. And I wish I knew where that pink ribbon sash was that’s hooked around my waist (when I had one). I sewed it out of imported French ribbons, to accent my dress, also handmade. And where did the time go?

I’ll celebrate that evening by meeting with the Creatives, my name for our little group that gets together monthly for crafting, sewing, talking, sharing, whatever. It had gone defunct right before covid of its own volition, but we think we want to get together again. It will probably be a different, smaller bunch than who was here last go-round, but under the alchemy of Time, things do change.

We live in the now, framed by the past, and guided by the future.
Just like my Dave and I.

The most recent newlyweds at their bridal photo shoot

Other Posts about this Quilt, made from my Crossroads Pattern:

Crossroads
Crossroads and Simply Moderne Magazine
Uppercase Fabrics, Kevin Umaña, and Creativity Breakout

Temperature Quilt

Temperatures are in the News!

Since it is not nice to be selfish, the West Coast and SouthWest are graciously sharing their high temperatures with the MidWest and East Coast. We are sorry. Climate Change is upon us all.

But the above image (which reminds me of my time when I lived in Texas) also reminds me of another subject.

Yes, it’s time for another Temperature Quilt. I have decided this for four reasons:
1) With the chilly temps this winter/spring and the highs this summer, the quilt will have a lot of good colors;
2) I like the new line-up (top row) of Painter’s Palette colors — they are softer, yet still strong;
3) I’m approaching a milestone birthday and feel it would help me appreciate this Milestone-Birthday-minus-1 year;
4) my sister wants my 2019 quilt.

My 2019 version of a temperature quilt. However, I’m moving on from Flying Geese, although I still love love the border.

I liked this one by Stephanie Hedstrom of Crafty Ninja Quilting. I like how she incorporated bands on the HSTs for the preciptation that day.

I had several other candidates (houses, birds, leaves, circles) but so much of it felt too fussy for this harder year, although I love all the ideas. Am I crazy for doing another one? It’s kind of like childbirth: you swear once you have that baby you’ll never have another, and then surprise! Another shows up a few years later. Yes, I’m crazy, but Temperature Quilts do get under your skin.

I get my weather info from Weather Underground, in their history section. LINK IS HERE for July and for a weather station in my locale, both changeable. I just take a screenshot of the finished month, and use that to work from.

I learned long ago that using 2 1/2″ squares of a color is better than the itsy-bitsy little swatches on the cards. I numbered the rows, then labeled the small squares with the row and the color number. They used to sell charm packs, but lately I’ve been cutting them from the fabric when I get a new color. And yes, I’m in the Painter’s Palette Camp for solids. 1000%.

This week my husband and I were treated like royalty. He’s been helping a refugee family (I have only done a little bit), and they invited us for lunch. It was amazing. And the mother had been in the hospital for two days, a day prior to that (she’s very shy) and they still hosted us. If we had known, we would have tried to reschedule, but the father kept that info to himself, as he wanted to thank us. Tahira, the young woman in the copper-colored scarf, speaks the most English, and told me that the bread I really liked was Bolani, and was filled with pumpkin and spices. The rice was amazing, and Tahira wrote to tell me it is called Qabole Paluo. Although this family doesn’t have much, they teach me about graciousness and hospitality every time I interact with them.

Right after my mother died, I had a chance to serve them by taking the four younger children (one is missing from the photo) to get language-tested for our school district. They were a light to my day that day, and for one whole day I wasn’t weeping. It was a gift, being with them, and all that I thought was complex and hard and difficult in my life paled by comparison to what they were facing: a new land, a new language, new home, and basically no earthly possessions. This time we saw them, they had new glasses (filled with Pepsi), a new-to-them kitchen table, rug and sofa. My niece, Emma, has taught me a lot about working with refugees. They don’t want handouts, but they will accept a hand in getting established. Anyway, it was a beautiful table and I thought you’d like to see it.

We took them a bag of tomatoes from our garden, but left this one home for us. We are in a race to the finish, the tomatoes and us. We put up the sunshade, but now they have been infected with wilt. Sigh. They are so delicious.

Finished my Summer Camp Quilt-A-Long blocks, but after working with some layouts, I think need 24 more the finish I have chosen.

I threw this up on the design wall (at night: hence, soft-focus) thinking of Jen Kingwell’s Boho Quilt. Yep. Not going to work, and I think it’s largely because of the soft contrast between the colors. We were steered toward a not-too-dark, not-too-bright palette on purpose, as the reason why would come at the end. So obviously, this isn’t the end, although I do know where it’s going.

While I stitched down the binding on the Raincross Challenge Quilt (due in September), I watched Fat Quarter Shop’s Kimberly Jolly do a presentation of the new Moda lines, and a couple of other fabric designers they’d chosen to carry. There’s a couple I’m interested in, of course!

Good luck with what you are toting–

This-and-That

Messing Around *July 2023*

Literally.

And that’s not an ironic use of that word.

To see if I’ve made any progress, here’s an earlier shot from January 2020:

I know it’s a little fuzzy, but the glump of fabrics in the lower right, for Bee Happy Sew-A-Long? It’s finished and renamed Picties and Verities. So is My Small World, now called Golden California. And North Country EPP, called almost the same thing: North Country Patchwork.

I’m here to say that messes can be creative, and allow us to focus on the big picture, and not sweat the small stuff, like seeing the floor once in a while. Projects can get done, even if it is a mess. And doesn’t it feel nice to clean up the messes once in a while — I feel so virtuous when that happens…before I mess it up again.

The other night at Guild, I offered to do an EPP demo for them, and they accepted. So I packed up all my little EPP kits I used to teach with and then made 30 more, a few examples of EPP quilts, tons of needles and tins of thread and participated in the round-robin. The grandmother’s flower garden quilt, above, is designed by Sherri McConnell of A Colorful Life, and is titled Flowers for Emma.

I said I would bring back the RWB version of Shine, and there it is, in all its glory. I have now returned it to its place of honor, hanging in our upstairs hallway. The title, I Hear America Singing, is from the Walt Whitman poem.

(from here)

Maybe all this was triggered by seeing the movie, Barbie, where mess and chaos and order and structure are part of its themes. A friend bought me this little souvenir treat; it’s the first movie I’d been to since covid, and boy, has movie-going changed! You buy your seats ahead of time, they are the size of my car and they have foot-rests and tilt backwards and arm rests with trays the size of what I used to take notes on at school. When the previews would pause before the next one played, the entire theater sounded like munching mice. And the line for the concessions was longer than the line for getting in. Who knew?

What else have I been working on?

Well…living.
Laundry
Meals.
Dishes.
Making messes in my sewing room.
Quilting on the Guild’s Challenge Quilt. I don’t think it’s a problem to show it publicly, but just in case, I’m not. Yet.
This block, from Raincross Guild’s BOM, called Sedona:

If you want to play, the lightweight pattern has two sizes, and two versions of putting it together. Have fun.

I use the no-waste version of Flying Geese. You can find directions for it on the Flying Geese Tips and Tricks handout that I made — click the black download button to get a copy (again, it’s free). Or click on the title to see it online.

I think the AMH fabrics in the second version look like the Very Large Array in New Mexico. With all the press about the Oppenheimer movie, I think I should also see Trinity (the testing site), the VLA, and certainly Roswell. I’m adding it to my travel list. I’ve already checked out hotel rooms, as we plan to head to Texas for the Solar Eclipse. Rooms that are normally $134/night are now $500. I saw some in Fredericksburg for a thousand bucks. Wow. Celestial events of one kind or another are big business.

from here

I once made an eclipse quilt, but I think I’d rather see the real thing in person, thank you very much. And yes, I just noticed the monster in the upper right corner. Maybe you have to take your celestial events with a creature from Outer Space?

Happy Messy Room and Sky-watching!