Oct 31, 2009

Happy Halloween, All Saints, All Souls, and Día de los Muertos




The origins of Halloween, may have begun with Roman festivals of harvest, but is typically linked to the Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced sow-an or sow-in)",which is derived from the Old Irish and means roughly "summer's end."

The festival of Samhain celebrates the end of the "lighter half" of the year, and beginning of the "darker half", and is sometimes regarded as the "Celtic New Year." It is believed that the border between this world and the otherworld became thin on Samhain, allowing spirits (both harmless and harmful) to pass through. The family's ancestors were honored and invited home whilst harmful spirits were warded off. It is believed that the need to ward off harmful spirits led to the wearing of costumes and masks. Their purpose was to disguise oneself as a harmful spirit and thus avoid harm.

All Saints Day, or All Hallows or Hallowmas, is a Christian feast day celebrated on November 1, or the first Sunday after Pentecost. It a day meant to honor all of the saints, both known and unknown. Because Halloween preceded this feast day, that day actually took it's name from this feast day and thus became "The Eve of All Hallows', and eventually 'Hallowe'en'.

In the Christian West, All Saints Day honors those who have attained beatific vision in heaven, while November 2, All Soul's Day, commemorates the departed faithful who have not been so purified and entered heaven. In the tradition of using holy names taken from the Greek, early names such as All Hallowmas referred to hallowed or saintly, and mas, to the early Christian mass.

The Day of the Dead (Día de los Difuntos or Día de los Muertos) is a holiday celebrated mainly in Mexico and the Mexican immigrant community living in the United States. The holiday is based on the complicated blended cultures of their ancestors, the Aztec and Maya, and the Spanish invaders, layered with Catholicism.

For more than 500 years, the goddess Mictecacihuatl (Lady of the Dead) presided over Aztec harvest rituals using fires and incense, costumes of animal skins, images of their dead and offerings of ceramics, personal goods, flowers and foods, drink and flowers.

The Aztec, Mayan and other indigenous traditions have enriched the Mexican's attitude about death. From these ancestors has come the knowledge that souls continue to exist after death, resting placidly in Mictlan, the land of the dead, not for judgment or resurrection; but for the day each year when they could return home to visit their loved ones.

Los Dias de Los Muertos is a time for remembering friends, family and ancestors. In the Mexican tradition, people die three deaths. The first death is when our bodies cease to function; when our hearts no longer beat of their own accord, when our gaze no longer has depth or weight, when the space we occupy slowly loses its meaning. The second death comes when the body is lowered into the ground, returned to mother earth, out of sight. The third death, the most definitive death, is "when there is no one left alive to remember us."

The act of preparing an altar by placing photographs, flowers, candles, favorite foods and drink of the loved one provides a special time to remember, and to transform grief into acceptance. The living invite the spirits of the family to return home for a few hours of laughter, tears and memories.

Once the night has passed, and the spirits have returned to their world, the ones remaining know that for another year they have triumphed in the struggle of life and that the only way to celebrate death is to live with courage.

shown:
Traditional crepe paper roses, art cards and figurines as symbolic representations of both life and death, candles to light the way for the dead, goblets of water, candy, and packets of the salt. By using these symbols to represent the spirit of the dead, we honor them and their courage and ability to survive the physical world and live a life everlasting. We honor these days to symbolically keep the thin wall between us separated during the rest of the year. We remain safe in the present while we remember and honor the past.

Oct 26, 2009

Everything But the Kitchen Sink


'Everything But the Kitchen Sink' is finally finished! And true to its heritage of 50's, 60's and '70's' scraps, it was lovely tied on my dining room table, and not quilted. I'd almost forgotten just how much I love tied quilts!

There's something so intrinsically organic and natural about the tying of a quilt with needle and thread...a hearkening back to foremothers who would no doubt be aghast at our designer fabrics and meticulously machine quilted award winners of today;)

I just know it felt 'right' hand-tying this one and I looked forward to a few hours of 'tying one on' each day. I kept having to 'shoo' the cats out of the kitchen and off of the quilt and that also seemed just right. They made me laugh and kept me entertained ;)

"Everything but the kitchen sink" is a wonderful idiomatic expression originating during World War II ....when everything possible was used to contribute to the war effort. Women gave up silk stockings and lipstick. Metal of any and all kinds was re-used or saved for the US arsenal. It was collected, melted down, re-used and re-purposed.The only objects left out were porcelain kitchen sinks.

Suddenly, a simple concept became a cultural phenomena befitting the frugal, scrap saving economy.If you grew up in the forties and fifties, as I did, it was a common expression.

In quilting, it became most popular when quilters began using the term for scrap quilts that included almost every fabric they had leftover in their scrap basket.

Highly popularized by RJR Fabrics who introduced their "EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK "SERIES of reproduction fabrics to hark back to an even scrappier time in quilting.
(Thimbleberries did the same with their own Kitchen Sink Fabric Line as I believe, did Moda.

Many others followed suit and suddenly that kind of 'kitchen sink' quilts began to be a popular art form amongst many quilters. You can see this style in everything from the quilts of Gee's Bend (who use everything they can find including clothing in their quilts), to the art quilt, to the down home and cozy comfort quilt. Not everyone might have known or used that term, but we were certainly all frugal enough to be doing it!

Once quilters began using the actual term 'Kitchen Sink Quilts' in books and TV shows (Eleanor Burns etc.) it became a more common and generalized term for scrappy quilts of all kinds..specifically those with unusual or odd combinations thrown in for good measure!

I totally loved making this one and am delighted to have it finished and ready to send off with love. Finished at 68" x86", it's big enough to be throw over a couch back, ready on the arm of a chair for a winter's nap, or a covering for a lovely winter's bed!

Everything but the kitchen sink went into it, and everything plus love finished it off with a smile :)

Hey Finn!
I finished another one!
Finn's New Years Eve Challenge 2009

Oct 19, 2009

Howdy, Pardner!



Now, that I'm raising chickens, baling fabric, and walking around clucking, I'm definitely feeling a little bit country and not so much (oldies but goodies) rock 'n roll! And true to that spirit, I'm using up every single bit of scraps that come out of one already scrappy project and adding them to another.

Howdy, Pardner!" with a 'd' and not a 't' and said with a twang, combines three of my loves...scrappy quilts, cloth bags to give away, and little newborn babies. This set, ready to go to a new little preemie, with the hope that someday he'll be camping, fishing, and sitting by campfires roasting marshmallows :)

I not only took scraps from a previous quilt, but used many scrap pieces tossed aside by two other group quilters, pieced them together to make my own larger piece of fabric and made a little quilt bag.

Tuck the little quilt inside, add a little note, and lots and lots of positive thoughts...and off it goes to a brand new home and a precious new life.

And Finn that's one more comfort quilt done and ready to check off of my donation list!
Finn's New Years Eve Challenge 2009

Oct 13, 2009

Chickens A La Carte




Little did I realize that helping out my BIL after his open heart surgery, would involve more than Making a (Cardiac) Heart Pillow , a quilt to keep him warm, visiting him in the hospital, and lots and lots of good thoughts and well wishes.

We somehow ended up taking over 3 of his chickens! With little time to build a coop or make other preparations, we had just enough time to make do with what we had, and make what we could in a hurry...simply, because we had to.

And of course, we never realized just how much of a commitment chicken ownership ends up being. It's not just letting them in and out of a coop each morning and evening, feeding them, cleaning up after them, or fetching eggs. Oh no, chickens are also trouble! Where do you think the word 'penitentiary' comes from? From chickens and chicken pens! And penitent? From being sorry, we ever agreed to adopt them ;)

Getting their coop ( which I jokingly called the 'Chicken Shack' in direct contrast to Judy L's purple 'Chicken Castle') loaded onto a garden wagon (now known as 'chicken a la carte') and into our back yard went quite well, until one of the cats came up to the fence and the zoom on my camera...well zoomed...both at the same time. You would have sworn a coyote jumped into the pen with them! I don't even know which one of us screeched first!

All three chickens 'flew the coop' and out of their temporarily fenced pen...all three at once!!! What an uproar!!!! It was something out of Keystone Cops! We didn't know which way to chase down which chicken first! Within seconds, Matilda had flown into the air, headed North to freedom, through the wire fence onto the neighboring acreage, and then continued on her way... for two more properties over. Sophie headed West.... and Penelope ran East.... and hubby and I ran every which way but the right one! Oh, the squawking that went on... and on...and on.....and that was just hubby and me!

We managed to run down Sophie, now a great deal closer to being known as 'Original Recipe', and managed to herd her into corner and capture her, but Penelope ('Extra Crispy') took...true to her nickname.... quite a while longer to herd and to capture. I felt like a tightrope walker as I wielded a big stick on either side of me to close off her path and it was definitely balancing act, catching her without further frightening her, or me!

But Matilda, dear Matilda our little three-tone 'Crispy' one, went on a waltz that lasted all afternoon, all through that night and into most of the following day. I searched for that darn chicken for a full hour and a half...just the first day.... trespassing on neighbor's property and calling 'chick, chick, chick' til the cows (but no chicken) ever came home. Then, I worried when she didn't come home at night, and all the next morning into the late afternoon.

Oh, I was so sad! I thought we'd lost her forever! And we'd only had her in our yard for less than 15 minutes. No chicken in sight and the wealth of blackberry brambles made it impossible to search as well as I needed to! DH basically said, "if she doesn't come home (and remember, she didn't know this was home or anything about it) tonight, we've probably lost her forever."

However, all good dances come to an end....even the slowest and best of all waltzes. And even by someone named Matilda! And by mid-afternoon of the following day, I caught sight of her white tailfeathers across the fence. With great care, stealth, and fine deliberation...I managed to corner her into a dead-end and grab her. She flapped and screeched so loudly I didn't grasp tightly enough and she escaped again. Oh the wailing and breast beating that went on then...and again it was me and not poor Matilda.....who only wanted to be free of this crazy, demented, chicken chasing, wailing woman who went 'chick, chick, chick' and 'cluck, cluck, cluck' for hours on end!

Off I went, this time determined that it was" now or never!" I had to catch her before she was lost for good! Aha...I cornered and caught that little she-devil and clasping her so tightly to me, I was determined that no matter what happened to me, she was NOT getting away again!

I held onto her for dear life, was just gingerly crossing over the break in the barbed wire fence and clamoring over a dirt and bramble pile, when DH came home and into the yard looking for me ...and he actually managed to catch my epic and triumphant return!

Some feats feel almost as good a finishing a quilt...in this case six little chicken feets back on safe ground, penned up all around, and with a newly created wire top to keep them all in!

And in spite of everything, they'd been through, each little lady left us a gift...three lovely little eggs! And of course the end of that story...three eggs cooked to perfection...original recipe, crispy, and extra crispy..... served with some freshly fried red potatoes !

Ah, it's good to be a chicken farmer after all ;)

Shown here: Sophie (white), Matilda (white with black and brown), and Penelope (black) or as my husband jokingly calls them: "Original Recipe, Crispy, and Extra Crispy" See below:

It's a hard, hard fact of life. But if you raise chickens, even if you will never, ever, eat them (as I refuse to!) they are still a form of our lives that serve as meals for many of us. And as my children remind me, you can't do conscious raising of any life form, without conscious awareness of gratitude for all that is given to us that comes in the form of food.

Oct 9, 2009

2009 Blogger's Quilt Festival


In a time of uncertainty, in a place filled with so much unhappiness, dissidence and despair, there are still things that I know to be true and to be real. I believe in goodness, in unity, and in the power of love and healing for all.

Patriotic quilts have always been near and dear to my heart...and I can't really even explain why. I don't have a family member in the military, but I support, wholeheartedly, our young men and women in the military. It may have been their choices to join,with full knowledge of potential outcomes, but nevertheless, many of them are suffering terrible consequences as a result of that choice.

We must still support their courage, their sense of honor and their loyalty to their country and to their fellow soldiers.Because of that, I honor those who serve our country, no matter what my own political beliefs might be.

Shown above is my quilt entered in Park City Girl's 2009 Blogger's Quilt Festival of favorite quilts.

My favorite quilt is, and may always be, my simple patriotic "Lest We Forget: Liberated Heartstrings". A quilt that honors, supports, salutes, and prays for freedom and peace for all.

President Barack Obama Wins 2009 Nobel Peace Prize


President Barack Obama won the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize today for "his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples,". The Norwegian Nobel Committee cited President Obama's outreach to the Muslim world and attempts to curb nuclear proliferation as a primary consideration for their selection .

Presiedent Obama is now the third sitting U.S. president to win the Nobel Peace Prize. President Theodore Roosevelt won the award in 1906 and President Woodrow Wilson won in 1919. After leaving his own presidency, former Democratic President Jimmy Carter, also won the Peace Prize in 2002 and of course, in 2007, the award went to Al Gore, for his extraordinary efforts to raise awareness about global warming.

The Nobel committee praised Obama's creation of a new climate in international politics and said he had returned multilateral diplomacy and institutions like the U.N. to the center of the world stage.

Rather than simply recognizing concrete achievement, the 2009 prize intended to support initiative: reducing the world stock of nuclear arms, easing American conflicts with Muslim nations, and strengthening the U.S. role in combating climate change.

"Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world's attention and given its people hope for a better future," Thorbjoern Jagland, chairman of the Nobel Committee said. "In the past year Obama has been a key person for important initiatives in the U.N. for nuclear disarmament and to set a completely new agenda for the Muslim world and East-West relations."

He added that the committee endorsed President Obama's call to the world: 'Now is the time for all of us to take our share of responsibility for a global response to global challenges."

Shown above:

Work by Susan Shie, titled "Treasure Map":President Obama: A Celebration in Art Quilts

Oct 7, 2009

Morsbags and Pillowcases

Posted by Picasa
In honor of my October charitable commitments, I have been delightfully busy creating all kinds of small sewing projects! First off, 6 re-usable 'green' bags for the U.S. Morsbags donation to the Nolcha Independent Retailer's Fashion Week in Chicago.

Incorporating the industry's ideas of introducing products and educational tools for independently minded business owners, the fashion industry, and retail fashion buyers, Nolcha sponsors London, New York, and Chicago fashion weeks. U.K. based eco-friendly " Morsbags", challenged its U.S. 'pods' to make and send re-usable cloth shopping bags to Chicago.

Our pods are small, unlike in the UK where fervent and passionate sewers work diligently, and endlessly, to create one bag after another. Often sewing in public places and then handing out the completed bags for free, they often surprise prominent public figures by giving them bags and even getting them to help sew some of their own! Check out their photo albums here and truly be inspired!

We couldn't come up with 1,000 much less 2,000 completed bags in time, so the UK pods had to chip in and help us out! With only a few days remaining before the Chicago Fashion Week opened, I did manage to get these six made and labeled and sent off to my contact. The idea is to get retailers to think 'outside of the box' and consider the environment with our own classy re-useable bags instead of ' name brand' paper ones.

My floral bags used to be curtains, and have been re-purposed into 'green' shopping bags. So, with a 'morsbags.com' label that advertises environmental awareness as a premium label of its own...2,000 morsbags will be released onto the fashion conscious sidewalks of Chicago this month and hopefully onto the arms of savvy shoppers and a new kind of label awareness.

Then the great Pillowcase Sew-off! After hearing about Pillowcases Needed for American Samoa I managed 7 pillowcases for donations disaster relief. These were all made from remants from my 'green' bag making, or leftover pieces from costume and garment making days.

Not as many as I might have liked, but still 13 projects in a short time frame is enough to make me happy, and certainly put a smile on my face :)

See, Finn...I can sew quickly when I need to and I'm even Crossing the T's and Dotting the I's... ;)

Links:
Bags:
morsbag website: http://www.morsbags.com/
Morsbag Guide (PDF)
Morsbag Guide (MS Word)
How-To Animation
Labels (PDF)
Labels (MS Word)
Make your own labels with fabric and freezerpaper

Pillowcases:
Make a Magic 'Burrito' Pillowcase

Oct 3, 2009

Pillowcases Needed for American Samoa


I have joined Debi of Quilting With Debi in making pillowcases for American Samoa after discovering that her dear friend, Barb who lives there, has sent the word out that pillowcases, sheets, pillows and children's clothing are immediately needed for disaster relief from the tsunami.

If yo go to Barb's blog, her words will just break your heart. She writes....

"Today bodies started floating up in the harbour. Momma's have found their babies. My husband said it just broke his heart to hear this family going up and down the harbour yelling for their little girl yesterday and today they found her in the ditch.....soooo very sad. People walk around in shock, not knowing what to do. Then there are those that have gleaned their closets like myself. One gal said, what do I need with three black dresses, one will do. Clothes she was saving for her grandchildren, she no longer felt a need to hang on to them. The youth going from family to family collecting items for the homeless. No one complaining just helping. There are alot of wonderful people out here in this world....yes there is the sadness and heartbreak but there is also hope...."

Barb goes on to say ....

"I was called by one friend to help this one village, I asked her if our little donations would be enough and she said, not to worry that what we will bring them they all will share....if one starves, they all starve but if one eats, they all eat. That is the true test of mankind."

I have emailed Debi, and have Barb's address. I am hoping to get a flat rate parcel out soon, as the mail takes a while to get there. The pillowcases, sheets, and clothing can be anything you already have, but if you are trying to clean out your stash, why not make a few home made pillowcases!

While there is no speedier 'Priority Mail' in American Samoa, a 'priority mail box or mailer' will allow you more weight for your money...whatever you can cram in to fit, goes for one price..... depending on the size you select. According to the postage calculator, prices are the same as in the U.S. since they are an American territory. ($4.99 for a small Priority Mail Cardboard Mailer)** Bring pillowcases etc. and a marker and the address (you can email me to get it) with you to the P.O.... fill it up there, write in the address, get the postage stamped on from the desk, and mail it out in one quick visit!

Once you get in the flow of Making a Magic 'Burrito' Pillowcase you can quickly create one after another. I've made these three so far, and am hoping to make more tomorrow. Debi was able to make 12 pillowcases one after the other, bless her heart! See Debi's post here:Pillowcases for American Samoa

Please do help if you can, and leave me a note or a link so I can come and visit and see your donations!

Oct 1, 2009

Sharing Loss in Our Quilting Community


I have just learned of the deep challenges now facing three more of my quilting friends. Two dear ladies just lost a husband to long term illnesses. One is a 'real' life friend, the other a 'blogging' friend. While both men passed away from long term illnesses, another quilt blogger's husband was just seriously injured in a workplace accident. All of these ladies are wonderful and caring women, as well as talented, and giving quilters.

Loss in any way, is heart felt and deep, but the loss of a loved one is truly one of the greatest challenges of our lifetimes. So today, I honor the challenges that each woman and their families now face in working through this enormous heart pain and ask for you to hold both women in your own prayers, thoughts, and energies of love and compassion.

For those of you who know, Donna, of 'Fabric Fun...Everything Quilts' Donna lost her beloved husband, Cliff, to long term kidney disease. Please bless her and if can, send a comment via email or her blog, to show your love and support.

And for those of you who are familiar with Terry of Terry's Treasures , her dear husband just lost his leg in a terrible workplace accident. Laurie of Yankee Quilter is coordinating a quilt block donation for a comfort quilt for the family. If you wish to contribute a block for a family comfort quilt, please go to Laurie's blog for all the details.

And it would be so very lovely if someone could start a quilt block chain for Donna. Pass the word, please so we can all keep them in our thoughts and prayers. Donna, is one of those special women, who makes a point of visiting many, many blogs and is always sending and lending support to all of us. So, we are indeed, all being offered Pay It Forward moments.

shown above:
My Prayer Pocket Pillow filled with virtual blessings and good wishes for these three lovely ladies. May they feel the power of our heart song as it stretches along the strings of love and compassion across time and space.