It all started with this.....

It all started with an antique quilt given to me by my Uncle Cliff in 1985. It was made by my Great Grandmother using original fabrics spanning from the 1860's to the 1930's, in a string quilt pattern. All strings were hand pieced. All fabrics were loved. I can imagine Grandpa's shirts, or Grandma's housedress or apron. And now I'm the fortunate steward of this wonderful bit of family history........all made by hand.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Annual Quilty Friends Retreat

Recently I spent four luxurious days relaxing with ten quilty friends at the Inn at the Rustic Gate in Big Rapids.  This annual respite is perfectly timed with the change of the season Michigan style.  Almost without fail, the color teases us with its upcoming change as we head north.  Four days later the colors seem to explode as we leave the Manistee Forest.  We anxiously count down the days leading up to retreat, and then wham, its over until next year.  This first post is a sample of the inspirational beauty that surrounds us……no other words needed.  Peace........

















Saturday, October 3, 2015

Sunset and Soup.........................

A few of you have asked why I’ve not blogged lately.  To be honest, I’ve just not been moved to share.  Losing my mom this summer hit me much harder than I expected.  Even though we expected it, and were at peace with her passing, watching her decline significantly over the past ten years, the reality is she’s gone.  It’s final.  No more trips to see her.  So many times I’d have a difficult visit (normal ups and down of dementia/Alzheimer’s) and leave on a sad note.  I’d cry the hour and a half drive home, telling myself it’s okay, because one day you will no longer need to make this trip and you’ll wish you could. Lately is that time…..I wish I could.  But there is no one on the other end anymore.  Even though I lost my mom repeatedly over the many declining years, this one is the last, its real, and it hurts.

I think summers end has helped for some strange reason. The sunlight is changing, the air is crisp, and the leaves are beginning to turn colors.  I’m not necessarily done grieving, but the sting isn’t as hard. Change is part of the process, and heralds a new season.  Life does go on. 

So as the weather changes, it reminds of the season I love best…..fall.  I pulled all my boxes of fall decorations, garlands, pumpkins, Halloween quilts and got busy. I love the colors in my house in the fall…..all warm and cozy.

If you’re like us, fall also says soups.  There’s nothing better than hot soup and fresh bread on a cold day.  I couldn’t wait to make a new recipe; courtesy of my BFF Trisha G... …a group of friends enjoyed her Tortellini Soup, with a salad, a fresh baguette, and wine on her beautiful patio on Lake Michigan complete with a beautiful sunset.  If the truth be told, I believe it was her hubs Dave that made the yummy soup. Here’s the delights of both……………complete with recipe, and my tweaks:

TORTELLINI SOUP

1 lb. spicy Italian sausage (Bob Evans)
2 zucchini, sliced and chopped into quarters (I used 1 zucchini and 1 summer squash)
2 medium onions, chopped
1 8oz package mushrooms, sliced
1 green or red pepper, chopped
4 garlic cloves, minced
1 tsp. oregano leaves, crushed
1 – 28oz can diced/chopped tomatoes
4 T minced parsley
2 boxes chicken broth (or homemade stock)
1 lb. package of cheese tortellini

Cook sausage, drain, set aside. Cook tortellini according to package, drain and set aside. In a large stock pot or Dutch oven cook the zucchini, onions, mushrooms, pepper, garlic and oregano until tender.  Stir in the sausage.  Add the tomatoes, parsley and chicken broth. Bring to a boil and simmer for 5 minutes.  Place a serving of tortellini in the bottom of the bowl and top with soup.  Serve topped with fresh ground pepper and grated Parmesan cheese.  Makes 8-10 servings.  Refrigerate leftovers, even better the next day.





Saturday, July 4, 2015

HAPPY BIRTHDAY AMERICA!

July 4, 2015

I love this time of the year.  I break out all my colonial era artifacts, all the red white and blue, historical memorabilia that reminds me it’s time to celebrate our country, its freedoms, rights and liberties, and the hardships that come along with it.  I hang my George Washington portrait, drape the bunting along the staircase, and place a dozen tea stained small flags in a pewter chalice.  I watch HBO’s JOHN ADAMS from beginning to end.  I love Paul Giamatti’s portrayal of John Adams, and his years spent shaping our country alongside wife Abigail, and statesmen Thomas Jefferson (my life long crush) and Ben Franklin.  I reflect on the intentions of our original framers.

I often see quotes or billboards that say something to the affect…..FREEDOM ISN’T FREE.  People, many thousands of them gave and continue to give their lives so that we many uphold these original confirmations of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness some 239 years after the original signing of the Declaration of Independence July 4, 1776.  Happy Birthday America!

Each day I listen to news that focuses on all things negative and unpleasant in our country.  I hear about infighting and disagreements and lack of cooperation between political parties over a number of different polarizing topics.  Like you I tire of it.  It makes me crazy.  I turn down the volume.

Yes, we are a flawed and often impossible system.  But for all its flaws, and all its difficulties, and all the areas we could easily see improvements in, if only the efforts were made. Over the past decade or so I’ve come to know many recent immigrants to this country (yes, all here legally) that tell stories of countries they left for ours.  Hearing their journeys I still believe in my gut and heart that this little republic of ours is still the best gig around.  With all its struggles and challenges, the foundation remains strong.  Are things changing?  Of course they are.  But that doesn’t mean it’s horrible or can’t be saved, or the ship is sinking.  As the face of our demographics change our democracy shall change too.  The constitution can remain firm and strong while changing with the face of our people.  But then I’m a ‘continuous improvement’ kind of gal.  There’s always a solution, so there is always hope.

So whether you are having a quiet celebration at home, or having a big backyard BBQ, or going full out for a community picnic and fireworks, just remember the many that worked to create this wonderful place we call our country, the United States of America.  Be grateful.  And have a wonderful and safe celebration.


Happy Birthday America!!




Thursday, June 25, 2015

Did someone say "Quilt Road Trip"?

Your car is gassed up and ready for a road trip.  Your GPS is ready to go.  Do you know where you’re headed? Do you have planned stops along the way? If the heat radiating off the pavement into the horizon is calling to you and you have no planned stops along the way, you may want to consider visiting a quilt museum. 

Many states have quilt museums.  A Moda Fabrics recent blog post lists many of the familiar ones.  I’ve had the fortune to visit Paducah, Lowell, Golden and Shelburne, but I sure hope to visit others in my future trips.  I’d love to organize a bus trip across country with my quilty BFF’s visiting many of the others, and perhaps a quilt shop or two along the way.  Naturally!

For those that still prefer a paper road atlas, grab the yellow highlighter and get busy planning your stops.  The rest of you log on, map your route on google earth.  If your traveling with ‘hubs’, be sure to find a ‘guy stop’ to keep him busy, maybe a Cabela’s or a golf course, or some other stop that can fill his afternoon so you can enjoy the rich history these museums have to offer.

University of Nebraska
Lincoln, Nebraska 

Textile Quilt Museum
La Grange, Texas

The Dairy Barn Arts Center
Athens, Ohio

National Quilt Museum
Paducah, Kentucky

San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles
San Jose, California

La Conner Quilt and Textile Museum
La Conner, Washington

New England Quilt Museum
Lowell, Massachusetts 

Great Lakes Quilt Center/MSU
East Lansing, Michigan

Wisconsin Museum of Quilts and Fiber Arts
Cedarburg, Wisconsin 

Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum
Golden, CO

Quilters Hall of Fame
Marion, Indiana

There are many museums that feature exquisite quilts in their collections, but may not be exclusively quilt focused.  However, they are still very quilt worthy in terms of our time, and important to the history and promotion of quilt making.  There are many more across our great land so check the states you plan to visit to see what may be showing.  Check these websites to learn more about their exhibits, dates and times:

The Henry Ford Museum
Quilts of Henry Ford
Detroit, Michigan

The Quilts of Gees Bend
Auburn University
Auburn, Alabama

Shelburne Museum
Shelburne, Vermont

DAR-Constitution Hall
Washington, DC

American Folk Art Museum
New York, New York

Here’s an additional site that lists exhibitions by state, so give this a look too:

And if all that doesn’t yield enough, simply google/bing/yahoo search “quilt exhibits or museums” and the area you are visiting.


Happy Quilty Summer!

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Honoring Craft.....the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Award

First, I apologize for my absence, while my mother passed away at 95.

But today I honor her history in my love of the art of quilting.   Recently three quilters from Gee’s Bend Alabama were awarded the National Heritage Fellowship Award, our nation’s highest honor for folk and traditional arts.…….Mary Lee Bendolph, Loretta Pettway, and Lucy Mingo.

The Quilts of Gee’s Bends are a collection of quilts created by a group of African American women and their ancestors who lived in the rural isolated area of Gee’s Bend, southeast of Selma along the Alabama River.  These works of arts are considered to be one of the most unique and important African American contribution to the history of art within the United States.


Gee’s Bend, officially called Boykin, is named after Joseph Gee, a landowner that moved from North Carolina in 1816 to establish a cotton plantation with his seventeen slaves.  Mark H. Pettway bought the plantation from Gee in 1845, and Pettway remains a prominent name throughout the community today.  After emancipation many of the freed slaves stayed as sharecroppers.  Their quilts were made out of necessity, using scrap fabrics to make bed-coverings to keep their families warm in unheated shacks, without running water, electricity or phones.

Most quilters came to know of Gee’s Bend after well-known African American textile collector-historian-curator William Arnett introduced their bold, abstract and improvisational style in museums throughout the US, including The Whitney, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Art Houston to name a few.  After stumbling across these amazingly simple quilts in the late 1960’s, Arnett introduced them to the NYC art community and as they say, the rest is history.  Their simple, intuitive style laid the foundation inspiring art quilters today to create many wonderful abstract quilts, all rooted in the wonderful traditions of Gee’s Bend Quilts. To learn more about Arnett’s foundation, or the NEA and its award, or see many of the wonderful Gee's Bend quilts visit:

Monday, May 18, 2015

Light on a subject......

I’ve been starring at this lamp for several years, wishing I could re-purpose it into something a bit more ‘prim’, as in primitive.  It’s a nice lamp as is, but I just wanted to change it up, without any expense of course.



Then it hit me……remove the white milk glass shade and clear hurricane, remove the cute antique brass bulb hardware, paint and distress it, then rob a dark mustard tin punch shade from another lamp, and maybe just maybe it would work.  Our house is an eclectic and warm blend of Colonial Antique meets Americana meets Folk meets Art with a slight tinge of Prim……with modern creature comforts, all depending on my mood. Basically I'd like Thomas Jefferson and Andy Warhol to both feel comfortable in my home, just in case they both stopped in sometime.

Next I had to pitch the concept to hubs.  You might say he’s not big on change.  “What’s wrong with it as it is? It’s just as nice as the day we bought it back in 1977.”   Keep in mind he wears the same jeans, same shoe, and same plaid design flannel that he did back in 1977, so that’s his reference.  Nothing against LLBean, they are great, but seriously.  If they announced they were closing, he’d buy 20 years-worth just to be safe. It’s not that I couldn’t have removed it myself, but I know it gives him great satisfaction to ‘come to my renovation rescue’ now and then.

So, once I convinced him of the values of the change, the hardware and wiring was removed.  Next I lightly sanded the wood and metal base so the paint would stick.

Next I added several coats of Lamp Black acrylic paint, being sure to leave rough edges so it looked ‘old and distressed’, like me!  Be sure it’s nice and dry and proceed.


Then I added a glaze of red acrylic in the creases, whipping the excess.  I allowed the red to dry thoroughly. 




Next I added a glaze of mustard over some of the creases, again whipping the excess and allowing them to dry.



Happy with the glazing, finally I sprayed two coats clear matte protective finish on the entire base, letting it dry in between coats.  Hardware and wiring was added, a bulb was added and I popped on the shade.  Voila!  A soft slightly prim light to enjoy! 



Gotta run, I hear a knock at the door.  I think it may be Mr. Jefferson and Mr. Warhol!

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Where am I?

I’m not sure where the last month went, but I can tell you it wasn’t spent blogging.  I think it was partly spent spring cleaning.  Yes, I love opening the windows, cleaning the stuffy winter smell from everything.  There was a very busy week involving a bus trip away in there. But then I made the mistake of saying “gee, I got thru the entire winter without being sick”. I know better.  Two days later the sore throat started but I pressed on.  Two more days and I was down for the count.  6 boxes of Puffs later and I’m back among the living.  But oh wait, meanwhile in the middle of this my eye problems worsened so I made an appointment to see my ophthalmologist about two issues, as soon as I was well.  Well, turns out it was fortuitous that I made the appointment, because the issue that caused me to make it wasn’t the critical issue, but rather what I thought was a minor issue turned out to be a retinal tear which required immediate laser surgery. Whew! I was very lucky.  

So I’m hoping I’m done for a bit.  I did get a few tangles done in between, and am still busy working on my new red and white quilt which I’m not showing until it’s done.  We are experimenting with homemade ice cream because we want to have control of what’s in it.  It’s not cheaper, just better for you. So I may pass along some things I’ve gleaned from others, specifically my pal ice cream Queen Denice. 


Until then, here’s a few mandala Zentangles® to share: