Archive for the ‘Other Stuff’ Category

Welcome, Quiltmaker Readers!

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

If you’re coming here because the blog was mentioned in the January/February 2008 issue of Quiltmaker magazine, welcome! We’re delighted that Quiltmaker mentioned us in their “Blogs to Watch” column, though frankly we’re mystified as to how the editors found us!

As you can see, we talk about lots more than quilting – one of us is more of a knitter than a quilter currently, and we also post about other sewing and crafty projects. And Cathy, the founder of the blog, just had a baby and so isn’t doing much in the way of quilting at all these days. 🙂 We’re also participating in National Blog Posting Month (NaBloPoMo), where bloggers everywhere pledge to post daily during the month of November. So far we haven’t missed a day yet.

The series of posts about the QM Mystery Quilt, mentioned in the Quiltmaker column, can be found here, if you’re interested.

So welcome, and have a look around – we hope you like what you see! We never anticipated that anyone but us would look at the blog, so we haven’t opened it up to comments from the general public (this also keeps spam comments at bay). If you’d like to drop us a line, you can send email to Cathy at spamloaf2001 [at] yahoo [dot] com. Thanks for visiting!

Last post about diaper wipes, I promise

Saturday, November 17th, 2007

Okay, so I think I figured out what was causing ink to run on the diaper wipes when I used them on young Master James. It wasn’t the thread at all, it was the marker I used to mark the sewing/cutting lines on the fabric!

Instead of a fancy-schmancy fabric market, I used a regular magic marker (actually, a Crayola kids’ marker) in black. I figured that since these were diaper wipes, for goodness’ sake, there was no need to be all fussy with the kind of marker I was using on them.

Clearly I was mistaken!

Oops…

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

I’m not absolutely sure yet, but early indications suggest that the thread I used on the cloth diaper wipes may not be colorfast. At least, that’s the only explanation I have for why I wound up with blue dye on my hands after changing Young Master James’s diaper this morning.

This would be, shall we say, a design flaw.

It’s Sulky variegated thread, designed for quilting and machine embroidery. I find it hard to believe that it wouldn’t be colorfast, but the evidence is pretty clear. We’ll see what happens when I wash the wipes, but for now I’ve gone back to using the old frayed ones.

Crackpot Quilters’ Blog makes the big time!

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

Guess what I found when I was playing with Google the other day?

Someone has put a link to our blog on their blog! We’re part of the blogosphere, everyone! There’s a blog called Feeling Simply Quilty (watch out for the animated photos on that page, they’re kind of woozy-inducing) that has put us in her list of links under “Need more inspiration….” I think this is really cool!

I have no idea who the blogger is, but she’s got photos from the Bloomington Quilt Show, so maybe our southern Indiana quilter knows her?

A Post About Comments

Friday, February 9th, 2007

Hi everyone! I’ve been woefully behind on commenting on other people’s posts, so I’ve just blown through and posted a bunch of comments. If the blog is set up correctly, you should get an email message for each one, so I’m sorry for spamming your inboxes.

Unfortunately, I have very little to post about – I’ve been stuck on a project for quite some time now, and it’s sitting on my sewing table silently mocking me: “You forgot the Golden Rule: Measure twice, cut once, and now you’re paying the price, mwah ha ha ha…”

I think I may stuff it back into the closet for a few more months and move on to something else.

Gee’s Bend quilt stamps

Monday, August 28th, 2006

thumbnail of Gee\'s Bend quilt stamps

Yes, yes, I know – I should be blogging about the wonderful full-size bed quilt that Ann and Nancy finished this summer, and which now resides (in resplendant glory) on our bed. And I will, I promise.

But first, all of you should run, not walk, to your nearest post office and buy some Gee’s Bend quilt stamps. They are stunning. I just got some this afternoon and I nearly walked into a wall leaving the post office because I was ogling them so much. (Okay, it was a glass wall, but still.)

I saw an article in the newspaper insert section called “Life” (I think based on the magazine? I’m not sure) about the quilts and the stamps a couple weeks ago, and wasn’t terribly impressed. I mean yes, it’s cool that these women make quilts out of cast-off fabric, and it’s terrific that they’ve parlayed their work into economic development for their community, but I didn’t really “get” the appeal of the quilts. But that’s because the photos in the article don’t do them justice – the stamps show the whole quilts, so you see the full effect of the colors and patterns and not-quite-perfect design.

Go. Buy.

Can quilting be “hip”?

Saturday, June 3rd, 2006

I saw an ad for this website: www.makeitu.com in the latest issue of Quiltmaker. Curious, I checked it out, and “Make It You” appears to be a joint effort by a number of fabric/quilting companies (Pfaff, RJR Fabrics, Viking, etc.) to jump on the “knitting is hip” bandwagon by introducing sewing and quilting to a younger audience.

As far as the web site goes, I’m not terribly impressed – it’s well done, but there isn’t much material there, though the quilt pattern they show (see below) is quite attractive. The line of fabrics that they’ve created is cool, but nothing to write home about, and I think certain aspects of the quilt suffer for having to be limited to just the fabrics in that line. (I think the Log Cabin blocks could have better gradations of color and shading if they used different fabrics.)

But anyway, this got me to thinking: Can quilting achieve the kind of broad appeal that knitting has recently? My hypothesis is “no,” and for one simple reason: it’s not terribly portable. Yes, yes, I know about applique and yo-yo quilts and piecing over papers, but the vast majority of quilting really can’t be taken with you in any practical sense. The idea of people piecing and/or quilting on the bus, at the coffee shop, etc. really doesn’t work.

Of course, I hope I’m wrong – I hope it does take off, because I think it would be a good thing if more people (oh, let’s be honest here – more women) quilted. And there’s also the counter-example of scrapbooking, which is, if anything, even less portable than quilting, and we all know how that has taken off.

What do other Crackpots think? Will quilting be the new knitting?

New (to us) House!

Thursday, April 13th, 2006

Hello, Crackpots!

Well, by popular demand (see Ann’s comment to my “Worst Decorated Bedroom Ever” post below), here are the juicy details and some photos of the house that Chris and I will almost certainly be buying this summer (we’re under contract to purchase it, so unless something goes colossally wrong, we’re buying it).

215 Pokagon St.

First, some basics: it’s a 1922 Dutch colonial, at 215 East Pokagon Street (you can Google map it yourself; I’m not going to post the city and state here ’cause you all know it). It’s about 1800 square feet, with a full basement and partial attic. Yes, that’s a screened porch you see on the front of the house (we’re hoping Molly will like it!)

The floor plan goes like this: the first floor is very similar to my parents’ house, with a long living room to the left as you come in the front door, dining room to the right, and kitchen behind the dining room. Stairs to the second floor immediately ahead of you. There’s no passageway between the living room and the kitchen, though the stairs split and go back down to the kitchen as well (hard to describe, but easy to understand when you see it). There’s also a half-bath sort of off the kitchen.

On the second floor there are four smallish bedrooms, and a full bath. I can’t remember whether access to the attic is walk-up or via pull-down stairs, but I doubt we’ll be using it much since there’s a ginormous storage-enabled basement. The basement does get water in it when it rains a lot (apparently it’s a problem throughout the neighborhood – something about hydrostatic pressure and/or a high water table) but not consistently, and according to the current owners it’s very manageable. They certainly use the basement for storing tons of stuff, and they’ve poured a 5″ concrete slab for the washer and dryer to keep them out of the water. There are several rooms, some of which even have drywall, so there’s a lot that can be done with the space for storage, and possibly other uses. (litterbox, perhaps?)

The Kitchen

This is the kitchen, which has lots of lovely drawers and cabinets. There’s an island, which you can almost see in this picture, which is set up for barstools on one side and storage on the other. The whole space is a lovely sunny yellow color.

Dining Room

This is the dining room, which they have set up as an office. (The owner explained to me, “we knew that if we put a big dining table in here, it’d last a week, and then we’d never find it again because it was covered in papers and stuff, so we just bowed to the inevitable and made it an office. Hmmm…I wonder if she’s married to my husband? 🙂 ) It’s open to the kitchen and painted partly white, and partly in the same yellow. I’m not sure if we’ll keep the yellow or paint it a similar blue to our current living room/dining room. They also took off a chair rail when they repainted, and I love chair rails, so we may re-install it.

The living room stretches the full depth of the house, with a fireplace in the middle. (which isn’t particularly attractive; it’s brick, but painted, and the paint is sort of dirty. I think we might repaint it.) The fireplace is currently set up for gas logs, but it can be retrofitted for wood-burning, yay! Also, the whole room is painted white (or nearly-white, or off-white, or “speckled cloud,” or what have you) which is kind of boring, so I think we might do some painting here as well, especially if we do the dining room. Here’s the front half of the living room:

front of the living room

And here’s the back half (you can just see the quilt draped over the back of the sofa). You can also see Boris, who served as the ambassador for the house when we visited. Boris is somewhat ovoid in shape and approximately equivalent to two Mollys:

back of the living room

It’s hard to get pictures of the bedrooms because they’re so small; this is the best I could do. (Note the lovely Round the World quilt on the bed, and the glimpse of another quilt on the quilt rack. Many of her quilts are in shades of blue with yellow accents, and the kitchen, dining room, and at least one bedroom have color schemes of yellow with blue accents.) Each bedroom has a small, deep closet with clothes rails hung two deep.

one of the bedrooms

This is the back of the house, with my brother-in-law. Somehow it looks enormous and looming in this photo, I’m not sure why. The window on the 3rd floor is really in the attic.

back of the house

And finally, the back yard!

the back yard

The house has a very straightforward (and flat!) front and back yard, with border plantings all around. There is a pink dogwood, a redbud, and a lilac on the property, so all of my flowering-tree needs have been met. There’s a two-car detached garage in the back off the alley, and a small “parking lot” area outside the garage so that you can park the car without actually opening or going into the garage. Since it’s a two-car garage, we’ll have plenty of space for the car and the bikes and the lawnmower and… a canoe. Yes, I’ve given Chris permission to get a canoe, now that we have a place to put it. Pictures of the canoe, on my comically small Saturn sedan, will be forthcoming, I promise.

Worst-Decorated Bedroom Ever

Sunday, March 26th, 2006

Okay, so this isn’t even remotely related to anything on the blog, but I just had to share it. See, Chris and I are doing some intensive pre-house-hunting work, which involves going to realtor’s websites and looking at all manner of houses online. One thing that you learn from looking at other people’s houses is that there is no accounting for taste.

In the course of browsing online real estate listings, we have seen:

  • the kitchen with the bright-yellow painted cabinets
  • the dining room with the mural wallpaper
  • the 100% Marie Antoinette House, with frills and frippery and intricately carved wood furniture and a tiara-mosquito-net thing hanging above the bed in the master bedroom and ivy plants draped over everything (sadly, the listing did not specify a guillotine in the back yard)
  • the “retro kitchen” with all aqua-blue cabinetry
  • the kitchen with the breakfast nook done to resemble a vinyl diner booth
  • quite a number of basement “rec rooms” with – I’m not making this up – what could only be green-blue shag carpeting
  • quite a number of houses with TVs in every room, including the dining room

(Keep in mind, these are all from photos of rooms that the sellers want you to see. We haven’t seen any of these houses in person, so we have no idea what horrors are lurking that they didn’t photograph and put up on the web.)

…and then there was this bedroom:

The World

I don’t even know where to start with this: no single element in this room coordinates in even the remotest way with any other element. It’s astounding. I’m not sure I could have managed it if I tried; and I’m quite sure that there’s no way I could sleep in this room. Chris and I mused briefly about how it could be rescued, and the only thing we could come up with was “strip it and start over.” I present it here mostly for your amusement, but also as a bit of a Crackpot Challenge: What would you do with this room? What (if anything) would you keep? Can you find a way to coordinate any two elements?

New subtitle in header

Saturday, March 25th, 2006

Hey, everyone, if you haven’t noticed already, there’s a new subtitle in the header. Many thanks to Marty for the quote – she was summarizing our upcoming move, and I think she captured it perfectly!