



Check out this post on the Dear Baby Jane blog. All I can say is "wow"! I love to see other quilters' versions of the Dear Jane blocks.
My block for the day is "H-4 Abbey's Eyes", an intermediate-level block in which I combined paper piecing and applique.



I spent the time sewing the temporary sleeve onto the back of one of my exhibit quilts. The exhibit opens in just over a week!
There was no time for any sewing or quilting on Tuesday night because I had "homework". It was my son's first day of his junior year in high school, and of course I had lots of papers to fill out once he got home. The same forms year after year...sometimes I just want to write "ditto" on them all because nothing has changed in the 11 years I've had to do this! ...I guess there was one addition a couple of years ago...I added our cell phone number.
I'm not sure if it's visible in the following photo, but here is what was on one of the forms...


This year, instead of planting mostly vegetables, we decided to try some flowers. I'm quite pleased -- they're doing better than many of the veggies we've tried in the past, although we have had good luck with green and wax beans, potatoes and squash, and...
...blueberries.
The blueberries started to ripen in early July and we have a late-season bush or two still going strong...now if only we could keep the birds out of them....

This is "C-9 Jane's Tears", a beginner-level block. I used the fusible interfacing technique, but am seriously considering trying to use freezer paper on the next one...or maybe I'll be brave enough for needle-turn...
No, I don't live near a nuclear power plant, but I've never seen sunflowers grow as big as they're growing in my garden right now!
The tree at the end of my driveway started to turn color about a week ago...a couple of days ago I saw the first red leaf on the ground...
My family is off on a college tour again...last week, Cornell in Ithaca, NY...this week, Bucknell in Lewisburg, PA...

Like my maternal grandmother whom I talked about in my Aug 4th post, this grandmother also had to flee the Soviet Union with her husband and 3 young adult children after World War II. I don't have a picture of her with me handy, so here's a photo of her and my grandfather with their 3 children who survived to grow up into adults (my father is the young boy). It was probably taken around 1930.
I am fascinated by the stories that my parents and aunts tell about their childhood years growing up under Stalin's regime in the 1930s and 1940s. I cannot imagine living through what my grandmothers must have lived through -- husbands and other family members being arrested and sent to prison camps (no reason ever given, of course), property taken away, children needing to be fed on one potato a day, bombs raining down from the sky, traveling through Eastern and Central Europe by horse and wagon during the war years and not knowing where their next meal would come from or where they would sleep, starting life all over at age 50 in a foreign land not knowing the language...
Not a day goes by that I don't realize how extremely fortunate I am...Happy birthday Grandma!
I've finally finished my quilt for the guild's exhibit (well, almost finished...I still need to hand sew one side of the sleeve and the label). Get ready for a whole bunch of photos...if I did things correctly, you should be able to click on a photo to see a larger version.

I call this quilt "Window To My Garden II" because the first one I made from this pattern hung in the Sisters, Oregon Outdoor Quilt Show in 2007 and was sold to someone from California. I loved the fabric so much (and of course I still had some left over) that I decided to make another one for myself and then be more adventurous with the quilting. The first quilt just had an allover meandering loop design.






This quilt will make its debut at tonight's guild meeting...
This is number 40 and counting...
I'm in the middle of a couple of weeks that are packed with meetings, many having to do with quilting or the MLQG's exhibit; if I really must go to meetings, I'd much rather they be about quilting than anything else, so I'm not complaining.