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  • Noreen 5:37 am on August 20, 2013 Permalink  

    How Much is Too Much of an Increase? 

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    Labels Tell the Whole Story

    Today the humidity rose as much as the outside temps and I did not hesitate to find my way into the basement sewing area. Doing some multi-colored patch work quilting is a good way to use up spools of thread that were purchased for specific color-matched items.  It may have been a ripped seam or hemming up a pair of pants or skirt and the amount of thread taken off the spool didn’t make a dent in the 250 yards that a spool contains.

    The spools that reflect their cost each held the same amount of thread: 250 yards.  Each spool was also polyester thread.  I know I am getting up there in age, but to be honest, I doubt that the older spool that were listed for “5 for $1.00” that sold in Woolworths could be too old as the core is compressed foam and no longer the wooden type.  I was taken aback when I reached for an unopened spool from my stash and took the time to see the price.  From $.20 per spool to $2.65 per spool tells me why it is no longer cost effective to sew clothing for the family as all other sewing aids and materials have also soared in price.  This is indeed inflation to the max.

     
  • Noreen 1:44 am on July 29, 2013 Permalink  

    It’s in the Air 

    Can’t you almost smell it? The combination of kettle corn being hawked next to the vendor selling cotton candy means only one thing and that it is county fair time. I will admit that I knew that the fair was going on no more than one mile from my home and I did not attend and I have not attended for the last fifteen years. I have vivid fair memories that I can play back at any given time with just the closing of my eyes as I am sitting on the patio with a cup of coffee.mb900155555

    My Mom and Dad allowed me to be in 4-H during our my pre-teen years. It was not an easy sell as there really was no time for foolishness on the farm. After all, we had work to do. One night as we were eating supper Corrine Ewert called and ask if they could pick me up and take me along to the District 34 schoolhouse as that is where the Boon Lake 4-H club was holding their monthly meetings. I begged and begged and Dad agreed after I had finished with the milking chores. I was done and cleaned up, sitting on the house steps when Corrine and her folks came for me.

    Of course I got to join and in time my Mom became an adult leader for sewing and baking. We enrolled in projects and that enrollment was complete with record keeping as we worked towards the end goal: taking entries to the McLeod County Fair in Hutchinson in the fall of the year. You cannot believe how kids with no other social outlet other than attending rural School District 34 could get so excited about sewing an apron or baking a loaf of bread. Saturdays were high drama in the kitchen as I went about soaking my cake of yeast in just the right temperature for a batch of bread. The goal was perfect domed loafs with no crack on the sides that would indicate it had not risen equally and I had not shaped it correctly.

    In time to come the challenge was to enter “Silent Bread Baking” and ‘Silent Pie Baking” mb900239579competitions at the fair that would be preformed in front of an audience. The preparation included having all the ingredients measured out beforehand. From the words “Time begins now,” all the steps needed to be done in sequence. I had practiced over and over at home to make sure I kept the mixing area tidy and didn’t forget any of the ingredients and executed the steps with ease and grace. The judges sat right in the front row and had their check lists and the outcome was not known until the bread or pie were out of the oven and had been tasted. It was a great challenge for self confidence. Who knew that in time to come as a county assessor I would draw from that ability time after time to be in front of a group to state clearly the information I would present.

    About the same time I was a card carrying 4-Her, my sister Elvera gave me a photo album for Christmas. At the time I thought it was just the most fantastic thing that came out of Minneapolis’ shops as it had my name on the front cover. Within it the ribbons that I won at the fair over the years found a home. At the bottom of the cedar chest in our walk-up attic the ribbons are still safe.

    I learned at an early age how smart my Mom was. She taught other girls in our 4-H club her wonderful baking and sewing secrets so they, too, would be proud ribbon winners. In the end, how could my family go wrong? Every Saturday and even days in between I was trying new recipes or working my whiles at the sewing machine, mending clothes for my brothers and my Dad. Sometimes the boys even got new pajamas from some feed sacks with funky looking prints.

    My 4-H years never went to waste as I began a family of my own. I believe even if 4-H had never come into play I would have been expanding what I learned at the elbow of my Mom. She always inspired me to try something new. At a time when we had moved to Watonwan County and I missed seeing Mom as often as when I live just several township sections away from her I began working on sewing quilt tops. One of the patterns that Mom shared with me spurred me on to make a quilt for Kevin. Orlin helped me to put up a quilt frame in the dining room of the house we were in at the time and I slowly buy surely began sewing my first hand-sewn quilt. The pattern name was Jacob’s ladder. In 1979 I again found myself entering an exhibit into the local county fair, not in Hutchinson for the McLeod County Fair but in St. James for the Watonwan County fair. We were new to the area and this was a step out of my comfort zone. Once I stepped into the registration office with my quilt it brought back some of the same butterflies of the silent bread baking days.

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    The 1979 Quilt with the Jacob’s Ladder Pattern

    I am here to tell you all that there may be times when we feel we could have, should have, and might have done differently with our time on God’s earth, but we do what we can when we can with all the abilities that God has allowed. When Orlin and I went back to visit the fair and all it had to offer a feather could have knocked me over when I saw what was attached to my quilt. Agnes Randby had been the championship winner of hand sewn quilts for many consecutive years at the Watonwan County Fair. In the calendar year of 1979 my quilt had won the highest ribbon of the fair in the “Pieced and Hand Sewn” category. I found out later that Agnes spent a lot of time at the fair trying to catch a glimpse of the person that had won the honors that year as my name was virtually unknown to the quilters of the area.

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    The Sweepsteak Ribbon for the 1979 Jacob’s Ladder Quilt

    Since 1979 I have continued making quilted items of all sizes for many family members. As I enjoy each and every one that I make, my heart goes right back to my Mom and what she taught me in my life. My Mom is my hero. Fairs are in the air and I can sit back and so appreciate the butterflies that continue as many bring their wares in for their product to be looked at. My absence at fairs only drives home the fact that I am just so darn content here in my home on Stauffer Avenue. It’s a good thing.

     
  • Noreen 12:47 am on July 23, 2013 Permalink  

    Empathy Gives Moral Support 

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    My Space – My Time – My Day

    I keep hearing that the temps are going to begin dropping and the mid 70 degree type of weather would be here for us to enjoy. I am waiting patiently.  When the calendar shows me it is May followed by June and now it is July – I want to be outside.  I have been forced in and down, right into my sewing room.  It just isn’t fair.  I listen to forecasters when they say no one should be outside if they can prevent it.  I can prevent it and my heart goes out to those that had to work in the beast of the heat last week.  It was with relief when news would come at the end of those hot days, the work had been successful in the heat and now it was time to rejuvenate for the next day.  I know in my younger days I was perhaps stacking hay bales behind a New Holland baler in that very same type of heat.  I can so empathize with those that are now in that place where no matter what the heat the work needs to get done.  Mentally I send lots of moral support and that is all I can do.  Who would have thought that one day I would be at an age where that is all I can offer.  In my mind I still think I could be out there with the best of them with the attitude of “bring it on.” It’s a good thing the body sometimes speaks louder than my mind.

    In the shelter of my sewing room I am keeping busy waiting out the weather.  By being busy I feel that I am contributing and have something to show for the day the good Lord has given me.   I did learn that life’s lesson from my Grandmother Laura.  For me, at the end of each day I need to mentally lay down my physical work of the day for the Lord to see I really appreciate and like my life and my day was not wasted.  My old Sears sewing machine is in good working order and it will be my saving grace until the heat and bugs break and I can be outside getting my finger nails dirty.  It’s important to give myself a batch of moral support to stay strong and vital.  Catch ya later.

     
  • Noreen 2:55 am on June 26, 2013 Permalink  

    Thanks Goodness for Click and Ship 

    Time does get away from even those of us that are retired.  A trip to Fairfax is not that far away, but here I found myself looking into the last week of June’s schedule and the July wall hanging was still in my attic for the Fairfax Printing wall.  The next week’s schedule was filled with “must do” items and I felt the crunch.  In fact, the day that I lost my telephone and found it in the attic was the day I decided to get my act together.

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    Pattern Pieces for Flying Eagle

    I do have several wall hangings to represent the 4th of July, but this year I chose the Flying Eagle I had done in the winter of 2010 when I had first retired.  I had had the pattern for some time but knew I would need some uninterrupted sewing room time. The pattern was done in the “paper pieced” technique.  It allows for the smallest of pattern pieces to be added onto to give great detail.

    I was very thankful to have several Click and Ship boxes on hand.  The Flying Eagle was put in the mail on the 21st of June (Friday) and Kevin emailed me on the evening of the 22nd (Saturday) that he had delivery of the wall hanging.  Talk about snail mail having been improved over the years.  Not that the price of gas is important when it comes to family, but for $5.15 I would not have gotten very far on my trip to Fairfax.

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    Flying Eagle Flying Proud

    I do plan on doing more of the paper-pieced patterns – and why not?  Uninterrupted sewing room time is no longer at a premium.  No mater how many years or how many patterns are tried, it still takes a fair amount of concentration to get into the mood to see a project through.

    It surely does help that Dennis is on hand for consult whether it’s the color of the fabric I am trying to decide on or if it is time to have that blessed cup of coffee delivered when he thinks I have been at it long enough and I may need a break.  I do try and sneak in a suggestion that maybe he may want to try his hand at the fabric fun, but to no avail.

     
  • Noreen 3:32 am on June 20, 2013 Permalink  

    A Fun Recovery Project Finished 

    In May I had posted a photo of what would be a portion of this project I was working on.  Today I can tell you it is finished.  Oh yes, it took me eight weeks of starting and stopping as the energy would allow.  I just wouldn’t have felt like there would be a successful recovery on the shoulder replacement if I could not have a bit of threads, batting and thimbles lying about.  I had the basic prep work of the front of the wall hanging layered onto the batting and the backing.  When I thought I could swing manhandling a quilting hoop propped on the dining room table the progress was slow but steady.   The hand quilting was very satisfying.  What I had not counted on was all of the additional binding that would be required with the four smaller banners hanging on the larger one that has the winter scene.  As I was putting the button holes onto the straps that would bring the four small banners in their rightful place it was with relief.  I knew that oh yes, I had bitten off more than was chewed comfortably.  There was no turning back and the thought of leaving a project unfinished is against all that my Mom had ever taught me.  In visiting with a few of the other gals that love to putz in crafty manners it always surprises me just how much time and the amount of resources that are tied up to be finished at a later time.  Not this cat.

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    Too Many Men aka: Snowmen

    Now that I have the go ahead to be out in the yard and doing some hands on gardening, I needed to get the hanging sleeve sewn onto the back of the wall hanging.  Of course my garage wall off of the patio is the perfect spot for me check out the end result.  When Christmas is over and we still may have waist deep snow, the wall hanging entitled “Too Many Men” – referring to snowmen – can be put up and enjoyed.  My sewing area is tidy and neat until such time when the sun is too hot and the bugs are too many and I am driven back to it to start something else.  Actually, though nothing is physically laid out as I was mowing the yard this morning, I did have a few thoughts flit through the white hair of what may be the next latest and greatest project.  Thoughts such as those make me wonder how anyone can be bored.  My belief is that only boring people get bored.

     
  • Noreen 1:27 am on June 11, 2013 Permalink  

    A Time Study 

    As I was a W-2 Form worker for 45 plus years the need for time studies was always a necessary evil.  In a perfect world we were to work smarter, not harder.  Time was of the essence.

    I feel pretty cockie as this is the second full week of no longer needing to wear a sling on my recovery left arm.  There has been a project in my sewing room that has been itching me for weeks.  I waited until I knew where Dennis was and how long it would take him to stay out of the house and then I made my move.  I headed down into my sewing and craft basement.  A certain project was beyond the hand sewing and needed my trusty 1968 Sears sewing machine.  I was at a point in recovery that it mattered how long something took to get it done with the hand stitching.  I was ready for some mechanical speed.  It had been seven weeks that I been down among the thread and fuzz and I just sat for a moment and took it all in.  The project of the day was that I needed sixteen button holes to be made to kick this project toward the finish line.

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    My Grandmother – Laura Wendlandt

    I have never made a button hole using the attachment on my sewing machine without thinking of my paternal grandmother Laura Wendlandt.

    During my senior high school year grandma came and stayed with with us for a few days and helped out after my Mom was recovering from surgery.  Prior to that surgery Mom had made me a new pair of slacks and a blouse that I was going to wear going to the state basketball tournaments in the metro.  This was huge as I had never been and the day long bus trip was a new adventure for this Boon Lake Township gal.  The missing element for me to wear the new outfit were the buttonholes.  I can still see as clear as yesterday Grandma Laura sitting next to the north kitchen windows making all the buttonholes by hand.   She kept an eye on the oven where she had baked goods going, as well as the top of the stove that had the beginnings of supper for six of us that would be putting our feet under the round oak pedestal table.  Grandma was short in stature but a little dynamo when it came to organizing a household.  She had had a lot of practice with their eight kids plus her mother-in-law, Christine, who lived with them and in years to come when the eight were away from home the youngest son Jerald and his wife lived at the homestead.

    My sixteen buttonholes today were completed in less than a half hour and Grandma Laura would have worked on the seven of them on my new blouse for the better part of an afternoon.  Time studies will be going forever as we think we need to get everything done in record time but memories of the labors of love of yester-years are priceless.

     
  • Noreen 12:36 am on May 23, 2013 Permalink  

    Old Time Crafts 

    Yo-Yo Doll

    A replica Yo-Yo Doll from times past

    The fabric yo-yo craft can be traced back to civil war time. I have seen some items featured on the Antique Roadshow. It was the use of the smallest scrap of fabric for re-purposing. My Dad’s sister, Coreenia, introduced them to me when I was a small child, spending time at my grandparents’ farm. I put the craft aside until my children’s father and I lived in Riesel, Texas and I had time on my hands.

    Pundt’s store in Riesel handled dry goods. When they got lengths of fabric mill ends in, they always trimmed them before putting them out for sale. I only needed enough fabric that was equal to the size of  a cereal bowl when tipped upside down. It didn’t take long and I was tracing out circles of that size in various fabric prints. I did make a circular lap robe out of them and it was tucked away.

    Years later when we lived at South Branch in Watonwan County I got it out and put the yo-yos on a quilted backing. In the recent past I couldn’t resist doing a few more yo-yos and reproducing a doll that was often a part of  children’s toys in times past.

    Ah, yes, this is what Me, Myself and Memories is all about.

     
  • Noreen 10:54 pm on May 16, 2013 Permalink  

    Keeping Busy With Needlework 

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    Keeping busy with needlework

    I am amazed how long it is taking me these days to do what I so took for granted a month ago. I was so concerned on getting winter grime off of windows and airing out quilts and blankets – I forgot the really nitty-gritty items. If there is a next time, you can rest assured I will have various needles threaded, each with a different-color thread. At this stage of the game, I am sticking with white thread and every other item white.

    I was given an assortment of buttons a time back and I decided to use them in a current wall hanging I am working on. Little buttons make great snow flakes. Yes, it may take me longer but it does burn energy and time. When the energy is gone it’s off to the patio for a cup of coffee and a break from this strenuous task.

     
  • Noreen 2:30 pm on March 27, 2013 Permalink
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    My Grandmother Laura’s Butterflies 

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    My Grandmother Laura’s sewn Butterflies

    Here I am working with my Grandmother Laura Wendlandt’s (my father’s mother) handiwork from the late 1960s. This work of butterflies was done on grandma’s treadle sewing machine. The stitches are so small and tight. In today’s world and with today’s sewing machines when we are finished with a seam we do a back stitch to secure the tread from unraveling. In the 82 blocks of pink butterflies the black thread is hand knotted on the back side to prevent them from becoming undone. All of the pink fabrics have been turned under so no raw material can show. I cannot imagine the hours her arthritic fingers spent securing the fabric and then sewing around each pattern. I have not quite decided how to work with it, but I do know that all of her handiwork will not be in vain. Sometime in the future there will be an update of a portion of these blocks. Just don’t hold your breath.

     
  • Noreen 6:25 pm on March 18, 2013 Permalink
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    Dang that Michael’s store in Mankato. Just for this week there is 75% off for framing. I visited with Dennis about it as we just picked up two items on the 16th with a 75% coupon. After we brought those two home and I hung them up Dennis encouraged me to pick out two more to have framed with UV glass protection. Who knew the the ole cowboy would show a bit of a flair for what looked good in regard to interior decorating. Bless his heart. Dennis got to pick out the two to take in and he suggested that they have the same color frames and matting as they looked as if they were sewn as a pair though they were done four years apart. Taking the projects out of the old frames gets to be quite a project so as to not damage the edges of the fabric. Talk about staples, two way tape and glue . . . They have been carefully laundered and have been stretched and are now drying. When the wind decides to simmer down we will be making a trip to Michael’s. Lets hear it for good sale prices.

     
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