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Wednesday, November 06, 2013

On Wings of Prayers---

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We did it!

I just finished the binding on the  Scrappy Mountain Majesties Quilt, boxed it up and dropped it off at the Post Office with 10 minutes to spare before closing.  Whew!

The timeline quilt –what a whirlwind.

I found out about Mark’s surgery last Thursday –Friday was such a numb day, but it was also a busy day with my own physical and mammogram, knowing that Mark’s surgery was also Friday afternoon.

After all of my appointments we packed for a weekend at the cabin with plans to rent the Rug Doctor and spend the weekend cleaning carpets in getting things ready for Thanksgiving.  As a side thought I threw a bin of shirt parts into the back of the trunk “Just in case”.

I really have to give The Hubster the credit –he said the “Rug Shampooer is a one person job, so go sew.”  And I did.

I pieced Saturday afternoon.  I pieced Sunday --- by Monday I was sewing the blocks, all 100 of them into rows, and joining the rows together for the quilt center.

And then the borders.

By 3pm on Monday I had the top done.  The carpets were clean, we packed up, returned the Rug Doctor on our way through town and came home.

Tuesday I quilted.  And I started binding.

Wednesday (today) I finished the binding and mailed it off.

You can tell from this first photo that I even use my Best Seam Guide Ever with my walking foot.

It has to go a bit out in front of the foot, but gives me a very nice straight seam with my binding.  This is just a low-shank generic walking foot and works great on my low-shank vintage machines.  With all of these layers and bulk, I really like a walking foot for putting on binding.

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Basting on the label.

Before the binding went on, I took a square of fabric for the label, folded it in half corner to corner, pressed it, and basted it in place in one corner.  Plenty of room to write a personal message.

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Binding underway!

I chose a chocolate brown/black check for binding –directly from the stash.  I’ve had this hunk of fabric for a long time and I think I’ve used it for a couple of bindings….

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Bound and ready to send off!

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Close up of bottom left corner.

It should arrive Saturday or Monday, and yes I have the tracking numbers.  I get as nervous sending off quilts as the next person.

Since I have neglected everything else in my life in the past 5 days up to this point – it’s time to pull everything back together and get the trunk show repacked and class samples readied and my suitcase filled for my trip to Weslaco, TX in the morning! 

Leaving for the airport at 4am means I’ll be in bed by 9 – at least that is the goal!


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A Pieced Together Opportunity!

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Yesterday I received an email from Julie Donofrio, the director/producer of a documentary film currently in production called "Pieced Together."

It's the the first documentary film about the American quilt square trail movement and Donna Sue Groves.

I’ve posted several Quilt Barn Blocks over the past couple of years, North Carolina has some Great Quilt Trails, so I was excited to get to know the story behind Donna Sue a bit better.

Donna Sue never planned on creating a cross-country community - but that is exactly what she did with some plywood, paint and a spark of genius!

And she is humbled and grateful, for it is this very community of friends and strangers that has helped her put the pieces of her life back together as she fought through job loss, breast cancer and numerous health concerns.

It's amazing what quilters can do together - whether it's fabric or wood!

I watched the trailer below.  I contacted Julie back and offered my assistance with this blog blast to see if we can get that funding where it needs to be so this film can be shown where we can see it.




PIECED TOGETHER: DOCUMENTARY ON LIFE, LOVE & QUILT SQUARES

"Pieced Together" is the first documentary film about the American quilt square trail movement. Directed by Julianne Donofrio, a Peabody award-winning producer and veteran of ABC News, “Pieced Together” tells the story of how one woman's love for her mother changed the American landscape - and saved her life after job loss and cancer. 
 
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Donna Sue Groves had an idea: pretty up an old barn for her mother Nina Maxine, a celebrated quilter, by hanging a wooden square painted to look like a traditional quilt block. But why stop with just one square?

So Donna Sue got together with her neighbors in Adams County, OH and created a driving trail of squares hung on barns thinking it would attract tourists looking for a day trip who might then stop and spend money on gas, food, or crafts made by local artists. The first quilt square was hung in 2001; the idea sparked a grassroots phenomenon and a new form of American folk art. 

Filmmaker Julianne Donofrio stumbled upon a quilt square in Tennessee in 2009 and learned of Donna Sue Groves through a “pink” web page created by the quilt trail organizers in Garrett County, MD. They were raising funds for Donna Sue who had lost her job and was battling breast cancer.

“I guarantee you, that had it not been for the quilt trail community, that I would not be here today,” says Donna Sue Groves.
 
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Now, more than 40 US states have organized quilt square trails - all done by community organizers, volunteers, men and women, young and old - and there are countless squares found on barns, garages, and fences from California to Tennessee to Prince Edward Island. 

Donna Sue never planned on creating a cross-country community. But it is this very community of friends and strangers that is helping her put the pieces of her life back together after job loss, breast cancer and numerous health concerns. 

She is forever comforted by their love, as if wrapped in a quilt made of fabric and thread; only this quilt is special, it is made of plywood and paint. 
 
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“It’s amazing to see how people have embraced Donna Sue Groves and welcomed her and the quilt square project into their lives and hearts. I feel honored to witness and document what will one day be a chapter in our American history,” says Director/Producer Julianne Donofrio.

Over the last four years, Julianne has followed Donna Sue's journey, interviewed organizers and volunteers, and documented quilt trails and events in California, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland and Ohio. “Pieced Together” is slated for release in 2014. 
  
Visit the Kickstarter page HERE.  You can help make a difference and make this important film a reality! 

Visit the Pieced Together Documentary page HERE.
  
Quilters and friends have raised $18,000 of the hoped for $24,000 that they need.  There are 16 days to go in the campaign.  We can DO THIS!! 
  
Please share this post with your email lists, your message boards, on facebook, twitter and with your flickr groups and anywhere that quilters gather.  If we all plege a simple $10.00 or $20.00 or whatever you can spare –we can make this happen! 
 
What a great thing to do on a Wednesday! 


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Tuesday, November 05, 2013

Quilting, Quilting All Day Long!

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 This was my view for most of the day today.

Can you see the autumn colors outside my window?

I’m still driven to get this done ASAP for Mark ---and I chose a simple quilting pattern, a panto called Check and Chase by Hermione Agee of Lorien Quilting, Australia.

I wanted something kind of curvy and free flowing to go with such straight, jagged piecing.  Something still spiky and pokey, but with some swirl to it. 

This fit the bill just fine!

I used the thinnest cotton batting I have on hand, being as the quilt is being shipped to Arizona.  I ended up using Hobbs heirloom without scrim.

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Quilting in progress!

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Quilting done and trimmed! Ready for binding!

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Close up of quilting detail.  Is this perfect, or what?

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My trees still have some leaves, but they are falling quickly!

Next up is  adding a label into the corner, and getting the binding sewn on.

I do plan to hand stitch this binding.  I know several said to just sew it down by machine, but every hand stitch is a thought, a wish, and a prayer – I can’t skimp on those.  Besides, it will be nice to sit tonight and work on a binding with my feet up.  That’s about as relaxed as I get around here.

If you are new here – welcome!  The free pattern for this quilt is found under the free patterns tab at the top of the blog….scroll down to S for Scrappy Mountain Majesties.  If you find yourself a need to sew fast and furious – this is the quilt for you!


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Whoopie Pies, Ice Cream Sandwiches, Oreos–Or Cacti!?

MarksQuilt 001We arrived home last night just about dark.

It felt later than it was ---it was only 6pm but look at the beautiful sunset as we arrived closer to home.

Yes, through the windshield, so excuse the bug splats please!

I’m happy it is lighter in the morning. I’m not happy that it is getting dark so early.

If I stay in the basement with my daylight fluorescent bulbs brightly shining, and don’t look out the window, maybe I won’t feel like it’s time to go to bed 2 hours past dark.

I remember just a few months ago, how it was light in Soldotna, Alaska past 11pm ---and light again by 4am.  What a contrast it must be there now…getting close to being dark 24/7.

No wonder quilting thrives there ----it keeps quilters warm, and quilter’s hands busy when it is too dark to want to be out in it.

After unloading the pickup, and moving all the perishable food from the cooler to the fridge, I brought Mark’s quilt top down stairs to see about putting a backing together for it.

Where is that cactus fabric?!

Here it is!

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Rats!  Not quite enough for two full lengths!

I figure I could get one full width length, and if I took the remainders, and cut them in half length-wise, and sewed those two narrower pieces end to end it would make a narrower width that was long enough.  I could insert something between the two pieces in a wide stripe that would go top to bottom of the quilt.

But as I’m digging –I took another look at this cactus fabric and saw….Oreo cookies with cream filling?  Or are they Ice Cream Sandwiches?  Or perhaps Whoopie pies?  Is there a hidden message in this fabric? LOL

Quilters can not live by Fabric alone..they must have CHOCOLATE!

A plaid that matches what is going on in the front of the quilt was found…remains of a previous backing.  Perfect.

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Treadling the pieces together on the 227M!

This machine just runs SO smooth ---and she can sew in reverse so I can back tack the ends of seams.

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It’s an odd match, maybe ---but definitely masculine and will use up both of these pieces of yardage.

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Yep.  I still see Oreos.  LOL!

The quilt will be loaded today and I will get the quilting started.  My only hiatus today is a planned lunch date with my friend Mary!  Then I’ll be back at it.

Several have asked when the next Quilt-Cam will be.  I’m taking a break this week.  Emotions are too close to the surface and I have other things to take care of, but I promise we will get back to it as soon as I am able.  I’m off to Texas on Thursday!

Quilt On ---


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Monday, November 04, 2013

One Top Done, One Tired Girl.

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I just finished the top for my brother’s quilt.

I sewed like a fiend over the past 3 days.  Driven.  Determined. And yes,  a force to be reckoned with!

And I’m happy with the results.

I wound up doing most of the piecing on my 301A that is in her original folding card table from the 1950s. 

Mostly for speed.

But also for work surface space.  It's nice to sew with the machine flush into the table…I have another table off to my left so it makes a large L shaped area –good for supporting quilt rows while joining them.  In this picture I’m  “webbing” the top together so that the quilt is pieced in rows across, and there are chaining threads holding the rows together.

This is one of those interesting quilts that does NOT get pressed until joining rows.  I do not press the blocks other than the center seam of the large half square triangle before joining them into rows of blocks.  The reason?  I want to be able to push all the seams in row 1 in one direction, and then all the seams in row 2 go the oppsite direction so all seams nest easily all the way down the quilt.

There is no way to tell where a block will end up, if it is turned this way, or that way --- and therefore impossible to know which way seams are to go before assembling into rows….

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I decided on a simple 5”  scrappy border pieced from left over shirt parts.  While cutting squares for the blocks, I trimmed extra lengths of fabric into 5” widths and set them aside.

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Usually I find myself sticking in an inner border as well, but I didn’t have any big yardage up here with me – just a bin of shirt parts.  And enough is enough.  The quilt is big enough, an inner border would have added that much more width, and that much more length.

It will shrink up a bit in quilting. 

I tried it on DH on the couch ---and it is the perfect size for a 6’2” brother to nap under…plenty of room for wrapping up in, and plenty of length for tucking around and under feet.


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And I have just the “perfect” backing fabric at home – if there is enough.  Mark lives in Arizona – and this fabric has cactus all over it!  It was a gift from Sandi D – and I’ve been waiting for the right quilt for it.  This could be it. 

May have time to piece a backing tonight and get the quilting under way tomorrow.  I’m still on a mission ---the race to get this done is not over yet.

Time to clean up the sewing mess and head down home.

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Just Six Blocks Short!

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I worked until about midnight.

I just can’t stop.

This quilt needs to be a top by the time I leave here today, and I think it will be.

These Scrappy Mountain Majesties blocks are so fast they take no time at all, and I can’t believe the amount of fabric I have been able to fly through ---and yet the bucket still looks just as full?

Quilter's miracles I guess!

I’m not sure when Mark’s chemo will start, but I leave for Texas on Thursday and I’d love to see this quilted tomorrow and bound on Wednesday.  Is it possible? I don’t know, but that’s what I’m shooting for.

Last night I thought I counted right, but this morning when I laid out the blocks I found I had far to many that leaned THIS direction and not enough that leaned THAT direction.  It left me three blocks short on the bottom row.

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Not to be one to waste blocks, I can just make the quilt one row wider with the ones that leaned the other direction….and make six more blocks  and call it good.

I’m loving how this looks and I think Mark will too.  It’s definitely a GUY quilt.

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My view off the deck this morning ---

Last night it got very windy and most of the leaves are gone from the tree in the left of the photo ---the hills are tinted copper in the autumn morning sunlight.

The next time I come up here will probably be for Thanksgiving and all the leaves will be gone.  It will be great having my dad and both of my sons here to fill this space with family warmth and laughter and togetherness.


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Sunday, November 03, 2013

Elm Creek Quilts Companion Give Away Winner!

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This sleeping in an extra hour this morning I could get used to.

This getting dark an hour early I already dislike!

I know I can’t have it both ways, but I took a late afternoon nap this afternoon and woke up to pitch black and thought it was 6am the next morning.

The quilt blocks are coming along as they should, though I would have more to show for my efforts if I didn’t stop and take a nap.  But when tears have dried up and realization creeps in yet again, sometimes the mind just needs to “check out” for a while.  Emotional upheaval is also body-tiring.

I’ll do some more sewing this evening.

So on to our winner of the Elm Creek Quilts Companion book by Jennifer Chiaverini!

And our winner is:  RHONDA RUNGE!

She writes:

Hi Bonnie
I was recently introduced to the Elm Creek series. I have read the first three and am definitely hooked and eager to continue reading these heartfelt stories. Jennifer has a way of making these characters and quilts become a part of our lives. I want to read but I want to sew...which do I choose?!  Thanks Bonnie for the opportunity to win this awesome book.
Rhonda, this book will be winging its way to you as soon as you get back to me with your snail mail address. I hope you enjoy it and use it as you read the rest of the series.

Thanks for participating everyone!

We took a bit of a break yesterday to go check out some pellet stoves.  It’s still an option, although it may not happen here for a year or so.

On our way back, we made a pilgrimage to the waterfall that is about 3.5 miles from the cabin.  The seasons sure have changed its appearance since I last visited it:

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Hard to believe it is the same water fall that caused so much damage during our torrential rain this past July!

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It’s still running –but not nearly as heavily.  You can see by the color of the rock on the left that this is where they slightly diverted the pathway to be a bit safer for travel under the road where they have added additional culverts to carry the excessive water flow should it happen again with the next heavy rains.

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The trees across the creek are almost bare now, just a bit of gold left!

I know the next time I make it up here the trees will be nothing but bare sticks in the ground – I’ll wait for spring and the budding of new leaves to bring the magic back to this place.

Dinner will be simple tonight –I’ve got the left overs of a teriyaki marinated pork roast to slice and reheat, some left over baked potatoes to sauté for cottage fries, some steamed snow peas and a salad to use up the rest of the fresh veggies in the fridge.

We are staying one more day and will head home tomorrow afternoon.  Until then—you’ll find me sewing away on more Scrappy Mountain Majesties blocks.  At break neck speed!  I’ve never felt more urgent about a comfort quilt in my life.


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Sewing Mends the Soul…

Sewing Mends the Soul.

It’s true.  It really does.

At least for those of us whose hearts beat to the rhythm of the needle.  Or the treadle.  Or the hum of the electric foot pedal.  Or all of the above.

It’s hard to explain to a non-sewist how concentrating on a simple task such as feeding matched pairs of pieces through a machine can give your brain a place to focus so that it doesn’t keep running in circles, ending up focusing and dwelling on hard, painful things – like a broken record stuck endlessly in the same spot.

Wow. I just realized that today’s generation will never know the sound of a broken record that plays the same partial phrase over and over and over again….or the hiss and scratch of the phonograph needle hitting the run out groove – swinging the arm of the player back over to home position.  Geeze, I’m old!

But it has been very cathartic.  Ironing shirt parts, cutting 8.5” squares…matching those squares with each other, slicing them on the diagonal into two matched pairs of large triangles, and feeding those pairs one by one by one into the machine.

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Triangles sewn, squared and re-sliced.

If you cut the two blocks together with dark on light, light on dark, the center seams nest and you get one up-hill block and one down-hill.

You can find the full directions for Scrappy Mountain Majesties under the free patterns tab at the top of the blog.  This is just a quick re-cap of what I’ve been working on since yesterday.

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Rearrange the pieces and sew them back together.

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7 blocks on the table.

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There are now 22 sewn, and a whole bunch more to trim.

I’ll be back at it today. I need about 72 blocks total – these finish about 6” X 7.5”.  I'm thinking I'll set them 8 X 9 and add borders.  That should be big enough for a 6' 2" fella to snuggle with on the couch and to take to chemo.

As I cut out my 8.65” squares, I’ve been getting what I can out of each shirt part. What is left after cutting the large squares is being cut into 1.5”, 2” and 2.5” strips ---I don’t want any small untamed pieces coming home with me.  Cut out as many 8.5” squares as I can get from each shirt piece, and tackle the leftovers into usable sizes right from there while the ruler and rotary cutter are still in my hands.  I've got some nice little piles building.

I’ll see how far I can get today.  The Hubster has even said that we can stay an extra day and go home Monday night if I want to.  I just might.  I’m on a roll.  I need to get this done.  This is a quilt in a hurry for my brother who needs it badly. Or is it that I just want him to have it badly?  I can’t be there to hug him in person just yet, so this is the next best thing.

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Morning Walk ---

I just got back from taking Sadie on her morning walk –this is the view as the sun touches the tops of our golden trees.

Yes, I think I could easy stay just one more day ---at least!


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Saturday, November 02, 2013

Heavens to Betsy!!

When we arrived last night at the cabin my big plan was to  get Betsy up and running.

I’ve found that I really like the tubing belts better than the leather ones.  They are much more forgiving and provide better traction –remember I wrote about them HERE. ((Info on ordering is there too))

The tubing comes in clear and in yellow – my first order I didn’t realize I was supposed to CHOOSE the color, so I have yellow belting with black writing on it.  It doesn’t matter.  It still works, and that is what I’ve hooked Betsy up with here.

All was going well…she just needed a bobbin wound ---which was easy enough!  But when it came to threading her…OH. BETSY!

This is what her threading diagram looks like:

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Just READ that description and see if you don’t wind up shaking your head and going “WHAAAHH!?”

Last night I was so frustrated I gave up.  Even though according to the diagram I had her threaded right..my stitching was looking like this:

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Ewww.  Just eww.

I gave up in frustration and went to bed.

But before retiring I used some tri flow lubricant on anywhere I felt was still sticky – including inside of where her stitch length guage is…that bar didn’t feel like it was moving very freely, and even where it would move, the stitch length itself never really changed when I tried to sew….sometimes, things can loosen up if you let them soak a while.

I also dripped some tri flow on anything connected to the feed dogs thinking maybe they weren’t moving very freely to feed the fabric either.

And while I was at it, I used some on the presser foot pressure screw at the top of the machine…it was pretty sticky as well and maybe the pressure on the fabric wasn't quite right from the presser foot side.

This morning…still yuck.  things were moving more freely ---but there were stitch issues ---I adjusted the tension on the shuttle.  It was too loose.  I monkeyed with the tension on that weird tensioner thing ((C  in the diagram above)).  I kept going back and forth, a little here and a little there.

These machines take an odd size needle, but I was told that I could use a standard 15 X 1 and just “scootch” it down a bit so it doesn't go quite to the top of the needle bar.  Okay.  How much is a “scootch?”  Monkey with that also.  About that much.  Okay.  try again…

Guess what?

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Betsy’s got her Stitch On!!

There is a life lesson in this, isn't there?  No matter how impossible it seems, go take a nap and come back to it.  Time-outs are necessary.  When emotions are frazzled and hearts are hurting and you don’t know which way to turn, time out.  Rest.  Come back to it.

Thank you, Max Ehrmann!  Who is Max Ehrmann?

Do you know the Desiderata poem?  I have lived by it and loved it from as far back as I can remember:

desiderata - by max ehrmann

Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible, without surrender, be on good terms with all persons. Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and listen to others, even to the dull and the ignorant, they too have their story. Avoid loud and aggressive persons, they are vexations to the spirit.
If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and bitter; for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself. Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans. Keep interested in your own career, however humble; it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.
Exercise caution in your business affairs, for the world is full of trickery. But let this not blind you to what virtue there is; many persons strive for high ideals, and everywhere life is full of heroism. Be yourself. Especially, do not feign affection. Neither be cynical about love, for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment it is perennial as the grass.
Take kindly to the counsel of the years, gracefully surrendering the things of youth. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune. But do not distress yourself with imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself. You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.
Therefore be at peace with God, whatever you conceive Him to be, and whatever your labors and aspirations, in the noisy confusion of life, keep peace in your soul.
With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world.
Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.
Max Ehrmann c.1920
The line I reflect on the most is this one:
Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself. You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.
And that goes for all of us.  And for what my brother and his family are going through.  Things are unfolding as they should.  And we will love him through it.

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My view through the windows at the autumn colored trees and the flag flying off the front porch.

I've decided to make Scrappy Mountain Majesties in plaids for my brother.  It seems fitting.  Definitely masculine, and stitched up in these mountains that I love so dearly.

Have a great afternoon everyone --- Betsy and I will be mighty busy!


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