Friday, November 21, 2008

Swamp



On my way back to the expressway for my trip home I stopped by the swamp where we have a couple of acres... it is truly a swamp, now the folks down here call it a lake, being from up north I call it a swamp. I mean look at those trees growing in the water.... that is a swamp. At some future time we might put a more liveable structure on this property so that we have a "snowbird" retreat.. there are allagators in that there water :)

Busy at Mom's House



While down in South GA at my mother-in-laws house for a visit I was very busy during our evenings of watching TV. Even though I drove all over lower Georgia we still managed to be back at the house before too late each evening... the photo shows my productivity...

Thursday, November 13, 2008

First Bobbin fabric blocks arrive




The first blocks for the very exclusive TreadleOn Bobbin Fabric Block Exchange arrived at my house where the sorting and resending will occur next month. The guidelines for the exchange are posted on the right of this blog, so take a look. Tina's blocks are great. She sent in a set and a half, 9 blocks total-3 of each design.

My desire is to make a "pillowcover" for my lace pillow from the blocks.

Think Pink Mailings



During the month of October I was busy knitting pink facecloths for the ladies in my life... each pink facecloth came with a bar of soap (some homemade from a local source and some got Peach Georgia soaps) The idea was that each time my friend used her pink cloth she would remember that her health was in her hands, that friends loved and needed her and that most of all God had a plan for her....the bottom line, TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF. I derived a great deal of pleasure making all these facecloths. Now I did send my brother and Uncle Bob one as well but theirs were red-white-and blue, both are veterans, but the message was the same, Take Care. A little note card was sent in each mailer just to stay in touch... I've not been a very good correspondent lately....

The photo of the pink facecloths is the second batch. The first ones got hand delivered around the area on Nov 1 with out a thought of taking a picture...

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Robert C. Williams Paper Museum-GA Tech



On Monday November 10th Sonja and I took an adventure down to the paper museum on the GA Tech Campus. Our visit was informative for us and amusing to the building's receptionist. She couldn't believe that we were that enthused to be there and that we spent more than an hour (the parking spaces reserved for the visitors had 1 hr time limitations). The museum housed not only artifacts from the history of paper making but a traveling display of "paper cutting art" WOW is all we could say... how do they do that???? There should have been video showing someone actually cutting one of these masterpieces... it was a great visit. With this fun under our belts we've considered going to another obscure Atlanta area museum in the near future, Atlanta has the National Patriotism Museum and a long list of others that few have heard of... so much to see.


Two signs from the Paper Museum


Two of the signs from the museum caught our eye...

The first one states that
Hunter (the collector of the artifacts and hand made paper researcher) "believed that a hand-crafted object was inherently more desirable, beautiful, serviceable and worthy of human endeavor than anything made by machine." Amen!!!

The second sign was in the room that housed the equipment from Dard Hunter's actual paper mill here in the USA (early 1900's)...

Rags make paper
Paper makes money
Money makes banks
Banks make loans
Loans make beggars
Beggars make rags

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Quilts and "Costume Sewing-in"




The evening of Election Day (Nov 4th) saw much activity in the usually creative but calm quilting room of First Baptist Church.... the big turn out and commotion was due to the quilters and stitchers of the church coming together to work on the costumes for the up coming Christmas program. Puffy pantaloons and vests were the order of the night rather than quilt blocks, borders and bindings. Food was provided and we even had a willing model for the vests ...we didn't tell him about the pantaloons and tights :)