It’s a new year! Stuff got done.

I purposely didn’t plan very many projects to work on over the break.  In fact, the only plan was fix cat tree, so Antares would stop scratching the furniture. Julie came over and we used sisal rope to replace the fraying sisal.  Good job us!

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As a reward, we prepped for my t-quilt, yet another massive undertaking.  My last quilt was made out of 3″x3″ squares of denim and other old pants.  It took more than five years and when it was done, I found it to be ugly.  But it’s super warm and keeps me warm every winter.  I just put a comforter on top so I can’t see my design.  So I have low expectations for this project.  But at this point I need to get started as I have been saving t-shirts from high school. (Borah High Class of 1993.)

I bought sheets at Fred Meyer (one black, one white) and we created a 15″x15″ template and cut out squares of backing for the t-shirts.  Then, we created  a frame (seen behind the square template made out of brown paper bags) so I could center my t-shirts before I cut them to size.  And then we cut two t-shirts so I could get started.

IMG_4847My plan is to affix the t-shirts to the sheet/backing using Sashiko embroidery.  I’ll let you know how it goes.

In the meantime, it was nice to have Julie’s big self-healing mat and rotary cutter, as well as her company.  Thanks Julie!

My sashiko journey begins here.

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It all started with Collette Patterns selling sashiko embroidery kits for Christmas one year.  What was this sashiko stuff that looked so pretty?  It turns out it is a Japanese quilting method, where layers of cloth would be held in place by really amazing geometric and beautiful embroidery.   Some examples here and here.  When I heard “layers of cloth” I thought of the t-shirts I’ve been saving since high school to make into a quilt.  I bought a t-quilt pattern years ago, but never started it because the first step was fusing interfacing to all the t-shirts to keep them from stretching.  I hate fusing interfacing, even to a collar, and there was no way I was going to do that to 40+ t-shirts.  Plus, it would make them all stiff.  But what if I could use sashiko embroidery to affix the stretchy shirts to a woven backing fabric?

This idea turned around in my head for a few years.  The tidying this spring was what finally got this project in motion. I’ve got an entire drawer full of t-shirt fronts ready to turn into a quilt.  I’d better start making a move toward turning them into a quilt sooner rather than later.  So I finished all my other at-home-movie-watching projects which meant it was time to buy supplies.

However, I decided to learn sashiko techniques by making two pillows first.  Julie and I traveled to Fabric Depot and I came back with this orange fabric, a blue fabric, needles, two kinds of thimbles, sashiko thread and a new color of Clover chaco marking pen.

If the pillows go well, I can begin sashiko on the t-shirts.  If it doesn’t, I can use the technique I just discovered, which involves rotating a backing t-shirt to cross grain to provide more structure.  This would would be much easier, but I’m hoping the Sashiko thing works out.

Good bag. Indygo Junction #IJ805 Grids and Grommets Bag.

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It has a great look while hanging.

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I’m not a fan of the lion print inside, but there are inner pockets and it opens up very wide.

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The straps are good sized and the pattern directions point out that you can double them up and put them over your shoulder make it a single strap to go across your chest.

Should I feel the urge to make a bag, this might be the one.

Completed receiving blanket

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And we are done!  I really like the size of this and the colors turned out to be fun.

Having one side be flannel gives the blanket a nice weight to it.

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Binding troubles (I brought on myself) aside, this is a quick and easy project that looks great.  It may become my go-to baby gift.

Media consumed while making this:
Mikey & Nicky
A New Leaf
Sherlock Season 2
The Sessions
This American Life episode 443
Dear Hank & John 008
Filmspotting SVU #87
Please Give
Endless Love
This is Where I Leave You

 

Let’s making a receiving blanket.

Friend Heidi mentioned she had a pattern for a baby blanket and since I needed to make something for a soon-to-appear baby, she gave me a copy.  Here are the instructions.  Fabric in the City is no longer in existence, but it’s nice that their pattern lives on.

If you are going to use this pattern, I will add my notes right here:
1/3 yard was not enough for 2.5 inch binding.  1/2 yard would have been better.
My four strips did not reach all the way around my material, as you will see.  I had to join pieces together.
For an excellent binding tutorial, including joining pieces, I used this link:  https://youtu.be/2egganTi2us
After you sew you binding to the blanket, go around an make sure that you have actually attached the three layers together.  I didn’t do that and discovered two places where the binding wasn’t attached.

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Here I have placed my two fabrics together so I can cut them to be the same size.
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Before I got to this point, I added a satin stitch monogram to the green material.  I learned that satin stitch takes a very long time when you are doing it by hand.
At this point, I was disappointed to note that the ladybugs show right through the green material.  Harrumph.

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Using my awesome quilters ruler to mark out 2.5 inch binding strips.

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I used my Clover Chaco Liner Pen–another excellent product–to mark my binding strips.  At this point I thought, “It doesn’t look like this binding will be long enough to go all the way around.  What would have been smart would have been to measure to find out the answer.

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But what I did instead was cut out the binding to prove that it didn’t stretch all the way around.  Feels so good to be right, doesn’t it?  Then, unfortunately, that feeling dissipated because I was only left with the option to cut the binding strips in half.  So I went from 2.5 inches to 1.25 inches.  Trust me when I say that this makes a very narrow binding.

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Other late-breaking conundrums.  I realized that with my smaller binding, I would now have to cut off the selvages.  I did this, and then had to re-trim the green material.

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Here, I have pressed the binding in half and sewn it to the fabric layers.  I followed the directions on the link above, though I used a 1/8 inch seam, rather than 1/4 because I didn’t have 1/4 inch to spare.

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Then, because I didn’t have 1/8 inch to spare on the other side of the seam line, I did a lot of tiny, careful trimming.  Trust me when I say I brought all this on myself by having to prove that the binding didn’t go all the way around.  It would have been so much easier if I had just knocked my binding back to 2 inches.

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Then it was time to hand-sew the other side of the binding to the blanket.  We will pause and read a few more movie reviews while I do this.

Hunger Games Sweater completed. Again.

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When I finished my Hunger Games Sweater, (Properly known as the District 12 Cowl)I took it to school to show my colleague, who had been receiving updates throughout the knitting process.  She loved it and expressed sentiments that she wished her mother would knit her one instead of something for the baby. (She’s due very soon.)  Being the kind of girl who completely understands those sentiments, I opted to make her something, instead of something for the baby.  Another colleauge funded the yarn purchase and I provided the knitting.  And I hope she enjoys her new sweater.  (I also hope it fits.)

Media consumed during the creation of this project:
Sherlock Season 2
A Place in the Sun
Now You See Me
Elysium
Ain’t Them Bodies Saints
The Sessions
Edward Scissorhands
PAE’s Macbeth
Martha Marcy May Marlene
Beverly Hills Cop
Walking and Talking
Tonight You’re Mine
Magic Mike
Celeste & Jessie Forever
Greenberg
Only Lovers Left Alive.

Friday Project and how to stay cool in the heat.

The Friday Project this week was hemming two pair of new pants I bought. I found great tutorials here and here.  I also took up the shoulders in a shirt I purchased.   IMG_3656

It’s hot, especially for Portland. If I can keep the heat out, our house is pretty okay.  Here’s how I attempted  to keep it at bay.

This is the only south-facing window in our house.  If I close the curtains, it helps a lot. Antares doesn’t mind the heat, though.  He will happily sleep on the sunny side of the curtain. IMG_3658

Why heat up the big oven to cook your pie crust, when you can instead use your toaster oven?   IMG_3660

Laundry!  Dried outside.  In about 10 minutes.  I washed ALL of my bedding.  IMG_3657

Tidying: some results

Here are all the sorted letters and photos back on their shelves.  And Tim Riggins lookin’ good.IMG_3300

Marie Kondo thinks that everything should have a resting place, which I’ve been pretty good at.

IMG_3301 IMG_3302And she also thinks that you should surround yourself with pretty things.  This grotty-looking empty Greek Seasoning container has been the holder of the rings for the Magic Bullet (there are a lot of smoothies consumed in this house) for some time now.  But now I have replaced it with a clean glass jar filled with sushi rice and oat groats I was never going to eat.  It’s prettier, and has more weight to it too.

Here are two shelves looking tidy. The cookbook shelf has long held cookbooks.  Now it holds fewer cookbooks. In addition, the journals that were stashed behind the cookbooks have been moved to the bookshelves.  Or where the bookshelves will be.  Also, the second shelf, which held cassette tapes and LPs, now holds the mid-brew kombucha jars, which previously stayed on the ground in shopping bags.  This is much better. And there is a hook for my work bag. It doesn’t have to sit on the floor anymore either.
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Tidying Photos and Letters

Today was a big day of tidying.  7:00am to 7:30pm.  I was exhausted by the end.  But I got a lot done.  Here are some results.

Not shown:  the gardening/building things tidying.  Gardening went okay on the day before, but all the building things overwhelmed me and I stopped when I was four items in.  Two hours this morning left me with a clean and organized shed full of only items I actually use to build things.

Photos! They used to be stacked all higgilty-piggilty in a drawer, but now they have been culled (goodbye 4000 landscape pictures that don’t cause awe) placed in envelopes by subject and all fit in one magazine file box.  ONE.  They were taking up the better part of a drawer in my dresser. A drawer that would never open very easily because it was too full.  While I was sorting, I reflected that I actually see the photos I take more now then when I had film photos.  My home computer’s screen saver cycles through my photo folder, so I’m always treated to a random slide show of photos taken since 2007.  Sometimes it’s fun to watch and try to identify the pictures.  I’m pretty good at remembering.  My film photos?  Fun to look at, but not looked at too often.  So I kept only the important ones. I sent a few off in the mail to friends, too.  They can feel free to discard them if they feel so moved.

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Marie Kondo is shaking her head at this next picture.  Here I am sorting all my letters carefully.  Kondo believes that the main joy is in receiving and reading the letters and they should be discarded after that.  The historian in my heartily disagrees.  And the non-historian in my disagrees.  So I’m keeping them. ALL of them.

Well, I did throw out the SPUH (Special Person You Have) letters from Cottey.  It was a secret pen pal thing, and I found it weird, both when I was the first year student being written to and when I was the second year student writing to “my” freshman.  I cannot recall either SPUH, so I let those letters go. Also all the obligatory PEO letters which mostly referenced how much they enjoyed the letters I wrote them, but said little else. To bad they didn’t send me back the letters I wrote that they so enjoyed. I’d be interested to know what I said.

I started this project last year (?) when I found a stash of letters and journals from my first years at college.  I would do a little sorting every morning.  That fell by the wayside and so I knew I needed to sort everything at once.  It took hours.  What is on the table was what was sorted before I started.  That Rubbermaid container was what I had to get to the bottom of.  The hardest?  Several piles of 100+ printed out emails.  I’m happy I printed those emails–including all of the early courtship emails between Matt and myself–because they often have both my emails to the sender as well as their reply.  And it was from the early email years, so they were very letter-like. Now my emails would be really boring one sentence back-and-forths.  But then?  Letters.  They were nicely labeled with the senders name, but they took FOREVER to sort.

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Here are some other things I found in the box:

As I child I discovered the front section of the Idaho Statesman that covered the bombing of Pearl Harbor.  It was in the box of my Grandmother Collins’s jewelery, and I thought that it was a great idea to keep historic front pages.  Here’s one.  This was when the Multnomah County Commissioners voted to approve gay marriage.  It was a very happy time.  Also short-lived.  The statute was overturned and the marriages were later found to be invalid.

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My sealing wax.  I love the idea of sealing wax, but the modern mail sorting machines don’t love the actuality of sealing wax.  You can see my orignal sealing wax, bought for me as a gift in elementary school from Hallmark.  (Thanks mom!) And you can see a newer incarnation bought from a catalog during college.  IMG_3286

Before I realized I could just take pictures of the funny comics, I thought it was fun to clip them and keep them in random places.  I thought this one was rather appropriate for the day’s work. IMG_3287

I once was born. And look at the cute 70’s-era card that identified me to the gazing masses who used to just wander though to look at the babies.   This is a handy card to have a picture of, because it’s one of the few things that identifies the time of my birth.  It’s not on my birth certificate, because I recently checked. I like that only the mother’s name is listed on here. She’s the one who did all the work. The phrase “We’re having a baby” as said by modern-day men, really bugs me.  It’s not you, buddy, who is having the baby.  You are both becoming parents, and that’s great and I’m quite certain you will be very supportive, but only one person in the room is actually having the baby.IMG_3291

My acceptance letter from Cottey!  And, just for fun, the tuition and fees schedule. You can’t get even a public university education in Oregon for that rate right now. IMG_3292

I love this clipboard, which I broke by bungee-ing it too tightly to my bike.  But then I cleverly fixed it.  I’m pretty sure no one would have quite the same level of affection for this clipboard, and we already have two working clipboards in the house, so this fella went into the trash. IMG_3293

What to do with my Grandfather Collins’s American Legion hat?  I wore it while sorting, deciding if I should keep it or not.  It was quite warm (who knew?) but I kept having visions of wearing it in pubic and being attacked by irate American Legion people.  So I reluctantly put it in the Goodwill pile.  Notice all the magazine files behind me?  That’s me being done sorting all the letters! IMG_3295 IMG_3296 IMG_3297

My Grandfather Collins was born in 1897 and this hat is OLD!  They moved from Mackay to Boise before my dad was born in 1941.

Okay, I’m feeling a little guilty about giving up the hat.  I think this one might get pulled back from the brink.  That load of Goodwill hasn’t gone yet.IMG_3298

I love this photo so much, I’ve contemplated ordering a copy from the Oregonian.  It encompasses both youth and art with perfect composition. IMG_3289

Not kept? The many pages of dot matrix paper printed from the Tandy Computer.  It’s early writing and stories, but they are not interesting enough to read though to find if there are any gems.  I had some fun unspooling the pile and then into the recycle it went.IMG_3290

Here are all the boxes and containers I have emptied.  They are hanging about for a bit to see if they present a need, but if not, I’ll set them out for people to claim this weekend. IMG_3299So ended today’s tidying.

Tidying Books, Papers and Kitchen Items.

Per the KonMari Method, I have  found all my books and put them in one spot on the floor.  I have sorted them into three basic categories and now will pick each one up to see if it sparks joy.  You might notice the yellow recycle bin in the foreground, as well as the paper shopping bag.  Shopping bag is for things going to Goodwill, recycle bin is for paper and I have a trash bag somewhere in the vicinity. IMG_3261

Here are some greatly loved books from my past that no longer need to stay with me.

I can no longer remember where I bought this book, perhaps at a thrift store, or used bookstore? But it was a seminal book in my young feminist life.  One story that sticks out is a girl talking about wearing pants to school to protest the rule that all girls must wear skirts.  My 1980s pants-every-day self was surprised to realize that fewer than 20 years prior, girls had to wear skirts or dresses to school every day.IMG_3262

Oh, how I adored this book, which told the story of a family that adopted many children from different countries in the 1940s and 1950s. I loved this book so much I stole it from my Reading teacher.  At least that is my memory, but I can’t quite make the memory of stealing it from my junior high school teacher jibe with the fact that it is stamped with my elementary school’s name.  Interestingly, I never felt guilty about stealing this book.  I think I knew that absolutely no one loved this book like I did.  And it looks like there is a new edition with an epilogue written by Helen Doss.  I could buy it for $26.00.    And here are some pictures of the family.

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This was another favorite, because it had tragedy built right in. I was a fan of tragedy in my youth.  Also, when assigned to interview someone who lived through the Great Depression in eleventh grade History class, I blatantly disregarded the instructions and presented a book report instead.  It felt too weird to interview my very kind neighbor, so I chose a different path.  Amazingly, I got full credit, probably because the teacher liked me.  Best story from that assignment?  One of the boys–a football player, I can’t remember exactly who–said he tried to do the assignment and failed.  He was at the grocery store and asked a fellow customer if he could interview her.  She told him to leave him alone.  After we finished cracking up, the class argued he should get some points for the attempt.  I really loved that class.  Both the subject matter and the mix of kids combined with the teacher into a fabulous way to spend a class period. IMG_3264

Childhood of Famous Americans!  I read a ton of these books growing up. IMG_3265

Though I didn’t own any of them, I got them at the library. I bought this book to represent my childhood affection. IMG_3266 They were fun to read and illustrated.  Plus, I got to learn a lot about history.  I remember reading the book about Jane Addams (founder of Hull House) and being confused because I thought she was related to either of the President Adams.  I didn’t notice the difference in their names. Interestingly, the series hasn’t wandered off to the story graveyard, you can still buy the books.  They have new covers and have added subjects, but Barnes & Noble has 120 of them for sale.  Huzzah! IMG_3267

The books that remain, sorted into category. I’m finally going to pull the trigger on the shelves I’ve wanted for the front room, so they will soon have a happy new home. IMG_3268

Onto papers.  This is papers of the filing cabinet nature.  Marie Kondo and I are in sync here.  She gets rid of nearly everything.  Even bills.  I happily followed her lead. Because do you know the number of times I’ve looked back at all my carefully filed bills?  Zero!  I have looked zero times!  I now only have seven years worth of tax statements, information about my cats, and a few other things and THAT is it!  I’m hoping to downsize that file cabinet to a two-drawer soon.  But someone will also have to go through his files. Here are some fun things I discarded:

How fun it was for me to carefully fill out the order form and send away the film in the postage-paid envelope, only to have my photos appear in the mail (the mail!) with pre-printed stickers and address labels for next time.  And look how cheap it was!  Only $1.95 per 24-count roll!

Last time I used these photo mailers?  Probably in 2007, which was when I bought a digital camera.  So they’ve been hanging out in my file cabinet for eight years.  No longer!  Interestingly, York Photo still exists.  I can’t tell if they process film anymore, but I might look into them for my limited digital photo printing needs in the future.

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Here is the carefully plotted and printed schematic for the quilt I made out of old pairs of jeans, favorite army pants and material from a favorite dress that I “grew” out of.  I definitely had more fun planning this quilt than making it. Along the way I learned that cutting and sewing together over 400 3″x3″ squares was all kinds of no fun.  I learned that making a quilt out of heavy material is a lot harder than making it out of cotton.

I had two parties to assist me in the finishing. One was a picnic in the park to baste the layers together. We had to do it in the park because my studio apartment wasn’t big enough to lay the whole thing out. One was a dinner for the MAunts to help along the tying off process, which also took forever.  After I was done, I was disappointed in how the colors came together.  The whole thing looked darker and the design didn’t pop like I thought it would.  However, said quilt is still in use today.  It comes out of storage every winter to add a warm layer to my bed.  I always cover it with a better looking comforter, but it’s the warm and heavy powerhouse in my bedding wardrobe.IMG_3272

Miss Kondo did not say that we had to go through all our food, but I was motivated to do so.  You know that food you really thought you were going to eat, but you just haven’t?  I wanted to do some culling.  This was a point where I felt overwhelmed, but the only way out was through (something I had to tell myself several times in this process) so I kept going and found my shelves neater than they were when I moved in. IMG_3275

I also took this opportunity to do something about my spice drawer which had grown out of control.  When we first moved in, I bought (too many) empty storage containers and carefully labeled them and kept them in a kitchen drawer.  But the drawer had grown messy and the some of the labels had fallen off and was I really going to eat those two huge containers of Sweet Paprika and Hot Paprika I was given in Hungary in 2008?  No.  So I dumped everything that I couldn’t remember using and put the ones I think I do still use in a container. Over the next couple of months I will move them back to the drawer as I use them.  Then, I can arrange the drawer more neatly and find a better labeling system.IMG_3276IMG_3277 After I did the food, I went though all the cooking devices.  That was overwhelming also, but ultimately worth it.