Fabric 401K…

(Totally stole the title from my best quilting buddy, E.T.)

I was at my quilting group today. Surprisingly, after an hour or so of chatter, out of all the bizarre subjects we could have touched upon with a dozen women sitting in front of sewing machines…the conversation actually turned to FABRIC!

The color, feel, texture, ownership, collection, lusting, cutting and quilting of fabric. Believe it.

This is my theory on collecting fabric.

Fabric has to ‘age’ like a fine wine…

There are so many kinds of fabrics for quilting. Solids are like vegetables; good for you and all that, but hardly sexy or desirable when you start trolling around the quilt store.

What catches your eye are the sparkly things; the bright colors, the fascinating patterns, shapes, the hand-dyes, the novelties. All the candy shop portion of your diet. You know, the tasty bits. Those are the pieces that you can’t forget if you walk out of the store with your hands full of sensible solids.

The adorable snowmen, the Bali batiks, the swirly kaleidoscopes, those are the fabrics that you’ll dream about.

I can’t claim to remember all of what I own, (and I choose to put the blame squarely on a faulty memory rather than a surplus of fabric, thank you very much!) but if I find myself on multiple trips at multiple places buying (or lusting after :P) the same fabrics, chances are it will age well.

If it has been in the stash for a few years, pulled out and packed away repeatedly because it hasn’t found a quilt to call home, it doesn’t necessarily make it a bad piece of fabric. After countless auditions with so many other pieces of fabric, I will eventually bring home the right mate for it, I will find the pattern that will make it sing.

I have this secret aversion to using fabrics designed to go together together. I may like and even purchase multiple fabrics from the same line, but if they accidentally all end up in the same quilt it makes me crazy!

(If there is an easy and a hard way to do something, well, yeah…with me, the hard way wins out every time! I guess I figure ANYONE could come up with a nice quilt if the fabrics all matched!!! LOL)

I did ONE quilt, a Trip Around the World, for Arlie’s 16th birthday, and unwittingly collected a series of matching fabrics over a period of time…I did use them and it did look nice; but I had to purposefully go and find a few pieces that didn’t ‘belong’ and include them, for my own piece of mind.

tripWorld

So, the 401k. It’s like this. Our economy is uncertain. Times are tough, what will retirement be like in 20 years?  But, a yard is a yard is 36 inches, and THAT will never change.

I rarely buy fabric because I need it for a specific purpose, I tend to buy on ‘spec’, I buy what speaks to me loudest!

…. In twenty years, those vintage pieces of fabric will be full of unique, no-longer-trendy shades of brown and aqua. Their designs, by blending them with bits and pieces from here and there, will result in quilts which  will have a flavor all their own.

Oh….and having NOTHING to do with anything else except shameless self-promotion, don’t forget to go to my photo site, (to the right) and look, and BUY something pretty! 🙂

Drawer liner and the fall of civilization…

This is a bizarre topic to be sure; its randomness-meter is way off the charts. But, here goes.

The other day at work, a customer was looking for contact paper (to use as a transfer medium in her art).

As she is inquiring about it, she says, “You know, the kind to line drawers?” Then she looks at me and belatedly decides she is speaking to someone so much younger than she that I would have no idea what she means!

(I love when that happens, by the way. I LOVE that people seem to brush away the exceedingly prolific grays in my hair as a genetic fluke and assume I am but a child. Probably what is really occurring is simply they are neglectful of cleaning their eyeglasses or their prescription needs strengthening; but still, it feels good.)

Anyway, as she realizes that in my extremely youthful state, I would have no idea that people once took the time to line their drawers and shelves, she laughs and says, “Do people even line their drawers anymore?”

I simply smiled, told her to look in Aisle 28, and then commented that I personally hadn’t lined a drawer since 1989, when someone had gifted me a lovely lavender-scented lining paper.

“However,” I continued, “my grandmother never met a drawer that didn’t need lining.”

drawer

Belatedly noting that I am indeed an adult, she laughs and we begin a little back and forth about back in the day, when people DID such civilized things as lining drawers, and we extrapolated to the final idea that the end of civilization surely was brought about by us giving up such genteel activities as lining drawers.

Happy that we had identified the source of all the world’s problems, we pondered briefly about who it was we were to alert with this momentous discovery!

I went back to the shop and I continued to let my mind wander around this subject. I recalled Sister Jane, showing up for the first eight months of school, her bonnet, dress and shoes a deep, maudlin black. Yet, the Tuesday we returned from our long Memorial Day weekend, there she would be standing, resplendent from head to toe in white. For it was AFTER Memorial Day, after all.

I recalled the little ‘rules’ of my youth in the hedonistic ‘70’s and ‘80’s; and truly have to say that over all, I think that maybe it really is the little things that changed the big things.

A New Yorker through and through, it would never occur to me to NOT hold the door for someone; it never crossed my mind that I was more deserving of a seat on the bus than an older person.

“Please,”  “thank you” and acknowledging the person on the other side of the counter during a transaction with a shop-keeper didn’t remove from me the veneer of superiority that seems so paramount in people’s attitudes today.

This thinking occurs because last month we had an elderly woman crash her car into the plate glass windows of our store during the ‘gotta just grab a thing or two after work’ rush. (LUCKILY, the glass was blacked out and walled up, and the space had been turned into an office, and no one was sitting there at the time, because that would have hurt!)

The next morning a customer called, positively haranguing my cashier because of the “inconvenience” she encountered the night before, during the ensuing chaos of broken glass, police tape, fire trucks, ambulances and the building inspector; (who insisted we cut power for a short time while assessing the structural damage.)

Dumbfounded by the lack of concern and basic human decency, what more could we keep repeating other than “We’re sorry to hear that ma’am; we are just so happy no one was hurt??” HOW do you hold a dialogue with someone who believes their unimpeded purchase of rubber cement is more important than the health and welfare of their neighbor?

Or the man who interrupted the customer I was in the middle of a long-ish, involved transaction with to demand my attention. He didn’t want to ask one simply answered question, but to be taken out of turn; to brush off the woman, who with her children was deciding between this and that $500 product, so that he could then get up-in-arms that I wanted to charge him $14 for a custom product that he may need to wait as long at 5 hours for, when our turn-around is two weeks.

It is not my fault that you can’t buy something off the rack; it isn’t my fault that you were not thinking of doing this in a timely fashion and now the clock is ticking away. I’m not making up the prices and I’m not up-selling you for a commission; I’m not even charging you a rush fee. And the woman ahead of you GOT HERE FIRST. And you didn’t even say “Excuse me.” Believe me, she noticed.

In that serendipitous way that causes things to link in my mind, around the same time I was reading a book by Lisa Kleypas, “It Happened one Autumn” and in it the heroine carried on about the silly civilities practiced in England in the mid-1700’s; about how unseemly it would be, and positively horrifying, to possibly speak to a man that she had not received the proper degree of introduction to; of how a young woman would never allow her spine to rest on a seat back; and how unmarriageable one may become if caught eating a course at dinner with the wrong fork.

Last night, the door was not held open for us by a young-ish couple as we were directly behind them with my mother-in-law gimping along slowly; going into a sit-down deli for sandwiches for dinner.

The place wasn’t crazy packed, the help appeared occupied (with work). We sat for no more than two or three minutes, when one of the young-ish couple got up, marched to the cash register and asked for service. The cashier apologized for the delay, grabbed menus, and followed her to the table, again apologized and asked how long had they been waiting. She said, “AT LEAST TEN MINUTES, and no one has come to our table!!”

This morning, as I was going through old quilt posts from one of my on line groups, drawer liner was mentioned….. (this time as a quilting help!)

Do you see the circular workings of my brain?

It all comes down to drawer liner.

 

Emails from China…

This quilt is entitled Emails From China. It was designed for the 2009 Hoffman Challenge. (While it didn’t win anything, it DID get made!!!!)

emailchina-1

The story (there is ALWAYS a story, isn’t there??) goes like this.


My daughter Arlie was off on the other side of the world in China. As I would get up each morning, she was settling in for the night over there.  Part of her nightly routine was to email everyone about her adventure du jour. Often, we would be passing emails back and forth at that time, checking in.

I went to the Mid-Atlantic Quilt Festival down in Hampton, VA on Saturday morning, as I do each year right around my birthday. I had been reading Arlie’s messages, and generally thinking about her and her trip, while wandering around alone being awed by the fabulous art!

I saw the challenge fabric being sold in a booth. I decided to buy a piece and see if I couldn’t finish the challenge in time this year. (The last time I
attempted the Hoffman Challenge, I finished the quilt about 3 YEARS
after the deadline!)

357238453_GJZ2q-L-1

(The Cherry Fabric was the challenge that year in this quilt, SUMMERTIME)

As I fondled my new fabric, walking around the show enjoying myself, I
glanced at it every once in a while. Suddenly, this brown and green and grey paisley started to take on the shape of fish. My mind started thinking about what I could do with fish. Then, Arlie came to mind.

And China. And Oriental fabric. Yes, the paisley were no longer inanimate, they became KOI fish. I started searching the booths for oriental fabrics that complemented this fabric, that reinforced the koi idea.

And so, I came home with a handful of complimentary fabrics, got it all washed and then. Nothing. Else. Happened. (Well, nothing with that fabric. I actually came home from the show with a pattern and had the resulting pocketbook finished before I went to bed that night!)

I put it to the side, in the dreary February light, and promptly forgot about it. In June, I finally decided to look at it again. Still had no idea about patterns, or what other fabrics would work.

While digging through my prodigious stash, I discovered this incredibly perfect fabric with handwriting, in the EXACT odd shade of taupe I needed. The fish…they moved. The koi pond, it radiated.
Having NEVER attempted the curved piecing of a Drunkards Path, the
ever-growing collection of fabrics quickly gelled into a Drunkards Path Variation, no matter how I tried to talk myself out it.

And the writing on the fabric, suddenly represented the communicating that Arlie and I did ‘virtually’ each day while she was away. The idea of the writing substituting for the typing, the circuitry of computers echoed the ripples in a fish pond, moving information and communication.

The quilt, EMAILS FROM CHINA  was born!  Arlie brought me a Chop back
from China. It says, LOVE. I used that on the label. 
email from china, label-1
The quilt is 40×40, and quilted with outlines of koi over the surface extending beyond the shapes on the fabric. It is quilted with ENTHUSIASM but not necessarily skill, lol. But overall, I am very happy with it, am no longer afraid of curved piecing, and actually plan on making another in this same pattern, which is a first!

When it arrives home, I believe it will be hung in the bedroom….

((Please,  leave a comment!! I love to know what people think!))