Thursday, June 11, 2020

Two "Learning Quilts". 6.11.2020

Last winter I decided I wanted to learn to make quilts.  I'm not as able as I used to be for major outdoor projects and remodeling.  Also, I can't do so much heavy digging.  Something is needed for creative urges and to keep me out of trouble, so I got out the sewing machine.

Never having made a quilt, I did some reading.  I wanted to start small, not spend too much money, and learn by doing.  All of my sewing is self-taught and I make a lot of mistakes.

First Quilt.
I bought a roll of fall themed fabric at the fabric store (Jelly Roll).  After playing around a little and looking at quilts on line, I decided on this pattern.  This is about 3 feet by 3 feet.  It's a little bit of a joke, because one off the fabrics has deer peeking over the fence, and deer are my nemesis (when in the garden or eating the fruit trees) and friends (w hen not doing those things), and they are everywhere.


I just finished the quilting and binding, after having the top assembled for a few months.   I feel intimidated at each step, since each is my first time, but once I get into it and make a few mistakes, I start to learn.   This quilt is too small to be useful, so I hung it on the wall.  After taking this photo and looking at it, I think the darker stripes look too much like the letter "I", so I took it down, took off the loops,  turned it and resewed the loops so the blocs look more like sections of fence.

Second quilt.  Same method, also started the patchwork during the late winter.  I started by basing it on a Pride flag I saw at Cascade AIDS Project, where I was volunteering until the COVID epidemic.  However, I thought the plain colors were not lively enough but seem kind of harsh at the same time.  I used patterns taken from natural ideas instead.  Even then I thought the long stripes were kind of too much, and seemed to have a dominant theme, so I cut into the same type of squares a the other quilt, and scrambled a little while still having a pattern.  Looking now, it's kind of a Bargello-inspired idea, where each stripe can be moved either one down or one across, and they match.   This pattern required multiples of three, which meant adding one color.  I added silver (grey) to represent seniors.

Still a lot of mistakes, but I like the colorful result and it has a kind of meaning.



Now I have some Indonesian Batik fabric to play with.  I'm not sure what I will do.  I thought about a Bargello pattern, but that kind of subsumes the fabric pattern into just shades, without much of the pattern standing out.  I could do one of these again, as another learning exercise before branching out.  Not sure.  I think it might be a mistake to buy Jelly Rolls, which tend to lock a person into a certain type of pattern, whereas larger shapes, like by the yard or fat quarters, seem to give more freedom. 

A Raincoat for Rufus

Sometimes I make things, sew or refinish furniture.  Rufus is so dark and wooly, I worry about walking him especially in evening and during rain.  Plus he doesn't like getting his fur wet.  Dog raincoats at Petco were very expensive.  Plus, none of their doggie raincoats seemed to fit his body.  A human raincoat at Bimart only cost about 1/10 as much last fall, so I bought one to use the fabric.  Never got around to it, but during quarantine, there is more spare time.  Here is the result.  He doesn't mind it.


Tuesday, June 02, 2020

More Vegetable Seeds. 6.2.2020

I planted some more vegetable seeds.  Something seems to be eating a lot of my planted bean seeds.  Several rows vanished completely.  Something also eats some of the plants after they germinate.  I'll try again, Landreth and Roma varieties.  I also planted some more dill and cilantro, which seem to be slow germinating, and the third batch of sweetcorn, this time Ambrosia hybrid.

The garden is very lush.  As usual, I was over-enthusiastic and planted too much.  Photos may follow in a day or two.


Irises. 6.2.2020

With a week of rain, the irises are looking a little sad.  However, there are some bright spots.   I think I'll get rid of most of the rebloomers (four of them) from the main iris bed.  They seem to be much more disease susceptible in the rainy season when they should be at their best.  I'll also move the short ones, Bumblebee delight and Honorable vs Sans Souci, to the border by the vegetable garden.   That will make room for six or seven  rescue irises, so I can close down those beds.   I think the super modern, lavish frilly most colorful irises are the most disease prone and disappointing.   The older ones seem tougher and perform better for me.

Gay Parasol.  6.2.2020

Edith Wolford.  6.2.2020

Red Knight.  6.2.2020

Absolute Treasure.  6.2.2020

Not an iris!  A peony.  6.2.2020

Bumblebee Delight.  6.2.2020

Honorabile or Sans Souci.  6.2.2020

Unidentified rescue iris.   A keeper!  6.2.2020

A group of rescue irises.  I think I'll keep all of them, but move to the main iris bed.  6.2.2020

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Some Ugly Irises. 5.23.2020

I need to do some thinning out of the bearded iris plants.  That's hard to do, they are my favorite flower.  However, some are ugly, and some do poorly.  This season will be when I make some decisions.

The iris garden is getting weedy and the rains and chills have not been kind.

The cultivar "Cheetah Cheese was more oranges and yellows in the photos from the nursery.  This one is mauve-ugly with white.  It's uglier in person than in this photo.  It will go into the trash  The cultivar "Blatant" is sold as a rebloomer.  In the internet photos, the flowers practically glow.  In my garden, they look like the skin of someone with a really bad blood vessel disease.  This one also did not bloom last year, and one of the two plants that I had developed rot.  This one looks like that might happen too.  I think some are over-hybridized and more susceptible to disease compared to some of the oldies.  Blatant will also go.  They probably shouldn't go into compost if they are possibly infected with something.

Bearded Iris "Cheetah Cheese".  5.23.2020

Bearded Iris "Blatant"  5.23.2020