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Showing posts from June, 2011

Grandma's Flower Garden

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Being knit on size 6 needles, Grandma's Flower Garden is a preemie blanket. The stitch pattern I used was from an old book, so I don't know if it even has a name. Update : September 15, 2011

Cinco de Mayo

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Cinco de Mayo was one of three blankets that arrived while I was gone. These blankets circulate in spurts: I hadn't knit on one for months, and then suddenly I am inundated with them. Blanket is being knit on size 8 needles. I used the Checks and Ridges stitch for my section. Update: September 11, 2011 Cinco de Mayo is on the left; Mardi Gras, on the right.  Cinco de Mayo border

Mardi Gras

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Mardi Gras is a West Coast Oddball Baby Blanket knit on size 7 needles. I used Garter Stitch Steps for my section. The first section of the blanket is a gorgeous, deep purple, but it didn't photograph well. Update : September 11, 2011

Hometown Stars

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I am using some of fat quarters I purchased last month to make  Ohio Stars for a Quilt of Valor that I am naming, Hometown Stars in honor of those hometown stars who serve and protect this country.  The stars, 12 inches when finished, will be very scrappy. When I saw the July/August issue of Love of Quilting   and the quilt named, Stars of the Past, I knew it would be the perfect setting for these stars blocks. The top should be finished by the end of the week.

Foreign Friday

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Waiting for Mom and Dad to finish touring can be tiring  except when someone comes along and makes the wait more fun. Church steps and brick column  withstood the 1945 atomic bomb blast Nagasaki, Japan April 1980

Favorite Capitol Quilts 2011

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 Remember the Just One Star program? A finished quilt was prominently displayed in the Capitol Quilt show. It was stunning. As of last week, quilters have sent in over 12,000 stars for this program. Read about it here .  I fell in love with this simple, scrappy quilt. A close-up to show how it was constructed. I especially liked the enlarged blocks on the back. Another quilt with an enlarged block on the back. If you want to try making a large block like the one above, Mary's Carpenter Star pattern may be helpful since she has already done the math and gives the cutting directions.

Capitol Quilts 2011

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Capitol Quilt Show Denver, CO June 6 - August 19, 2011 7:30 AM - 5 PM (Monday - Friday) Before leaving for Denver, I discovered the Capitol Quilt Show was scheduled this year (it's held every two years) in the Colorado Capitol building. Marilyn and I also attended in 2009 . It was exciting to see what is around the next corner.

It's Grand

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On June 10, 2011, John and Annie Stearns' grandchildren, great grandchildren and great-great grandchildren gathered on the farm near Provo, SD. The farm/ranch has been owned and operated by family members for 100 years. The land has passed through four generations: John and Annie; their son, Ed; his son, Dewane; his son, Jerry.

Century Farm

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My paternal grandfather filed this application in 1910, and one hundred years later, the land is still being farmed by his great grandson. Subsequent deeds confirm it is a Century Farm. John Franklin and Annie Stearns date unknown - possibly taken on their wedding John Franklin Stearns, the patriarch of the South Dakota Stearns legacy, arrived in Provo from Brewster, Minn., in May 1910 with one goal in mind: to stake his claim on federal land and start a homestead. Known by his middle name, Frank was 40 years old. Frank Stearns' wife, Annie, arrived by train seven months later (December 1910) with their five young children: Theodore, 7; Sadie, 6; Edward, 5; Arthur, 3; and Charles, 1. The seven of them squeezed into a 16-by-24-foot, two-room tar-paper shack with no insulation, plumbing or electricity. While the children were still young, Frank contracted typhoid fever, causing him to run deliriously through fields full of cactus in the middle of the night. After finding Fran

Foreign Friday

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Roof-tile caps Nagasaki, Japan April 1980

Peaceful Prairie

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East of Provo, South Dakota June 10, 2011

Code of the West

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Wyoming's Official State Code adopted by Wyoming Legislature March 2010 from the book: Cowboy Ethics: What Wall Street can learn from The Code of the West   by Jim Owen 

Country Road

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Near Provo, SD looking north June 10, 2011 The farm my grandfather homesteaded in 1911 has been in the family for 100 years, so family members from multiple states gathered to celebrate and to reconnect. More photos soon.

In the Public Eye

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Grab your project bag, find a seat in a public place (park, office building, hotel lobby, bus stop, airport, train station) and put those needles (crocheters, too) in motion at least one day this week. A partial list of planned events can be found on Knitty .

Foreign Friday

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Twenty-six Martyrs Shrine Nagasaki, Japan April 1980 Note :  Just to clarify, Christianity is practiced today in Japan.

Playing

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“We don’t stop playing because we grow old;  we grow old because we stop playing.”  George Bernard Shaw Posts may be irregular for a bit: I am going out to play.

Trying a New Pattern

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I purchased this yarn in three different colors because I liked how it is dyed from dark to light shades. Even though it is sock yarn, the color placement seemed ideal for a scarf, and I am pleased with the effect so far. The pattern is Versatile Scarves (AC32) by Evelyn Clark. The yellow scarf, shown at left, is the one I am making on size 6 needles and sock yarn. The pattern includes directions for two scarves which can be knit in four different weights of yarn.

Foreign Friday

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Broken Pottery Mural Nagasaki, Japan April 1980 This mural was made entirely from broken pottery. It was colorful and very beautiful in person. However, when I read the story behind the mural its significance became more poignant than its beauty. History behind the construction of the mural: The Shogun in this area of Japan took power around 1600 and decided he did not want anyone to have allegiance to anyone but himself, so he ordered the death of all Christians. To set an example, his troops captured 26 Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries, three of them Japanese. He forced them to march over 400 miles from Kyoto to Nagasaki in the Winter. Once there, they were crucified on a hill overlooking the harbor. Kenji Imae , an architect from Waseda University retraced the route of the martyrs and collected pottery from every town where they stopped. He used the broken pieces to construct the mural on the wall of the museum in Nagasaki.