Project
Quilting 11.6 - Vibrant and Vivacious
I'm really not sure how to write
a blog post today. I’ve been mulling it over all ever since the topic was
announced. It has just been such an unsettling couple of weeks. Should I
just ignore the whole pandemic thing and talk about my project? Or focus
on the pandemic and just glancingly touch on quilting? Ignoring either doesn’t
feel right, so I think that I need to try to strike a balance between the
two.
A pandemic? Wow, just wow.
I know there was the H1N1 'swine' flu going around about 10 years ago, and the
SARS epidemic a few years before that. But neither of those had the
impact that this new COVID-19 is having. This one has everyone panicking. I’m
truly not sure how much of the hype is real and how much is just that –
hype. I was an EMT for a while, so I
certainly understand the necessity of preventing the spread of disease. There are just so many unknowns for this virus. Some of the official advice is normal for any
flu season - wash your hands, don't touch your face, disinfect commonly touched
surfaces. But this one adds the unprecedented advice to stay inside, and,
if you have to go out, maintain the recommended ‘social distance’. It is
causing a real disruption in our society, justifiably or not. They have closed all non-essential stores in
our area, and cancelled any meetings of groups of more than about 10 people.
The Concert Chorale that I sing with can’t practice, I can’t go to the
boathouse to work out, my quilt guild can’t meet and they cancelled the quilt
retreat for this week. And I think worst of all, they have cancelled all church
services so we can’t get to Mass.
I’m sure everyone else has a
similar story to tell. I could very
easily get panicked or depressed, but I am choosing to count my blessings
instead. For every negative, I am going
to look for a positive. We have heat, water and electricity. There is food in the fridge and in the pantry.
I have been able to buy what I need at the local grocery store. The lines are a
little longer and I may have to buy a brand that I am not used to using, but it
is perfectly fine. I can’t practice with the chorale, but I have my sheet music
and there are lots of You Tube videos of the music being performed and I can
sing along. I can’t work out with my
rowing team, but I can get a workout by taking a long walk or jog outside in
the fresh air. I can’t physically go to Sunday
Mass, but our church is live-streaming the Mass every day at 9 a.m. I can’t meet with my quilt guild or go to the
retreat, but there are lots of online quilt alongs and challenges that I can
participate in.
For instance, tomorrow, I plan to
participate in Gudrun Erla’s Quarantine Quilt Along.
I wasn’t sure that I was going to do it until
I listened to one of Pat Sloan’s You Tube videos today. In it, she mentioned that she didn’t make a
‘Millennial” quilt when a lot of people were making them to commemorate the
year 2000, and she regretted it. She
pointed out that this is an historic occasion, and quilters are famous for
commemorating historic occasions with quilts.
I realized that this is not only an historic occasion, but it will be a
way for quilters to connect with each other during this time of social
distancing. So I will be digging into
the retirement stash and finding some fat quarters that are begging to be used!
I also used some of that
retirement stash to make this week’s Project Quilting challenge - Vibrant and
Vivacious. I’m not sure that I would
call my project ‘vivacious’, but I think that it is vibrant! I have always liked the fabrics by Me and My
Sisters Designs because they are bright and cheerful, and that certainly fits the bill for this challenge. I knew that I had a Layer Cake from one of their lines stashed away, so
I dug it out and started planning. I had
recently seen a tutorial by Amy Smart on her ‘Diary of a Quilter’ blog for a
baby quilt made by using one large Lemoyne Star block.
I used straight line stitching, 1
½ inches apart to quilt it. Please don’t look at the
‘whiskers’ in my quilting! I used a
walking foot, and a thin batting, but I still got them. I am hoping that when it is washed, they
disappear or become less obvious.
Speaking of things that disappear – I used a purple air and water
erasable marking pen to mark the quilting lines. The lines disappeared, all right, but when I
tried steaming the quilt to get rid of the whiskers, the lines came back! That gave me quite a scare because I thought at
first that I had made them permanent.
Fortunately, they disappeared again.
But that is another good reason to wash the quilt before I give it away.
Now I know that whatever is used to make the lines is still there, just
invisible. And we all know that
invisible doesn’t mean harmless, especially after this corona virus scare! Viruses are invisible (at least to the naked eye), but look what
damage they can cause!
I saw that pattern on Amy's blog. LOVE your version of the quilt!! Nicely done.
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