Hello Gentle Readers and Hello August. The month is new and has been all about the weather. Lincoln and Omaha are recovering from last Wednesday's storm. Wind up to 90 mph in Omaha and 80 mph in Lincoln damaged and destroyed many large trees and wreaked havoc with electricity. Fortunately we did not lose power or have any outdoor damage. Still, as of Monday about 20,000 customers were still without power in Omaha. Some volunteer cosmos in my garden were snapped off, the zinnias were blown around, pots of herbs blew over so the basil was jostled, and a few tomato vines needed more stakes. They were heavy with fruit so it's surprising they didn't break. The high heat of Friday through Monday broke sometime in the early morning of Tuesday. A drop from 100 degrees Monday afternoon to 66 on Tuesday morning was enough to make my head spin.
As I link with Kat and the Unravelers to post our making and reading, I'm including my garden harvest. The photo above was taken Monday evening so excuse the poor lighting and the basement floor with gardening paraphernalia. Abundant sunshine, hot days, warm nights, drip hoses, have created a good tomato crop. Fresh tomatoes with basil, garlic, and olive oil (garlic removed for eating) served over warm pasta and sprinkled with grated parmesan is my favorite summer dish. I also freeze an easy tomato sauce and blanched, peeled, chopped tomatoes in 2 c. amounts. There are more tomatoes on the kitchen counter and in the garden. If you need me this afternoon, I'll be in the kitchen.
I'm enjoying knitting on my summer top and hitchhiker a little at a time. Photos and an update next week. This summer I've been working on these quilt blocks. A long time ago, I bought seven Grandmother's Flower Garden blocks in an antique/second hand shop. The fabrics are in surprisingly good condition. The small pieces were sewed with tiny even stitches and a 1/8th seam allowance. From time to time, I looked at them and put them back in the box. I didn't want to recreate the pattern and I knew that seam allowance would be enough to make me pull out my hair. Since I am not making a quilt for a bed or a baby, I decided to appliqué them, raw-edged, to muslin squares. I used a new-to-me invisible basting technique to make sure they stayed flat and then stitched around the edges with the blanket stitch. I throughly enjoyed the process and not fussing about turning under the edges. I need two more blocks for a square top. I'm looking at a few books about feedsack and Depression era quilts for inspiration.
I'm rereading The Narrowboat Summer by Anne Youngson, a charming story many of you have read. I'm enjoying the leisurely ride in the canal boat and the three women characters. I had forgotten one of the minor characters is a knitter, a bonus. I'm listening to The Comfort of Ghosts by Jacqueline Winspear. Again, as most of you know, this is the last in the Maisie Dobbs series. Winspear is wrapping up the story nicely.
What are you making this week?
I'm glad your weather wasn't worse as it was quite bad. We're talking about our weather, too, with inches of rain yesterday and lots more to come from Debby before Saturday. But your tomatoes and stitching both look lovely. I've also made and frozen some tomato sauce for enjoyment when it's much colder. You have me wishing I had a nearby antique shop so I could look for some vintage textiles. Your blocks are delightful!
ReplyDeleteYour hand stitching is beautiful and looks so relaxing. I tend to find hand stitching to be meditative. And yum for your tomatoes! Our plants are a bust this year, but I plan to roast the ones I took from C&M's the other day (along with some peppers) and make a nice red sauce. I did manage to make bread and butter pickles yesterday using 3 of the 4 cucumbers from C&M.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you didn't lose power -- those are some winds! We had a pretty strong storm here yesterday afternoon; it actually got so dark that it was like nighttime in my room/home office. Thankfully we had no power issues, either, and we certainly needed the rain, but it was something to see.
ReplyDeleteI really like what you're doing with the quilt blocks. It's a lovely way to give them new life without making yourself too crazy trying to make them perfect.
I saw that top photo and thought you'd started English Paper Piecing! Glad I read on and my mind blown is now heart warmed ... love the way you're stitching those already-worked pieces into something new. and yes, the knitter in Narrowboat Summer ... was a "young person", right? I love when an author who gets knitting puts a knitter into the story.
ReplyDeleteSorry about the storms and that temperature change - wow! Love the little blocks. I am back to a sweater that was set aside and trying to figure out what fabric project comes next.
ReplyDeleteI love those EPP pieces, Jane! The fabrics are so fun and I love what you are doing with them! I am so glad that your storms were not worse and most especially that you did not lose power! We have the remnants of Debby heading our way... not exactly the rain I was hoping for but I will take it!
ReplyDeleteHi Jane! I love those little quilt blocks! What a beautiful quilt they will make. We have lots of tomatoes on our vines in the garden but they are not ripening as quickly as I wish they wood. In a couple of weeks, they will all turn ripe at once and we will have tomatoes everywhere - like you do now. It is still hot here, but there have been some big rain, hail and wind storms in Southern Utah. In one town, the temperatures fell from the high 90s to the 60s - like what you described where you live in Nebraska. I am wondering if you are familiar with the Nebraska town that Tim Walz is from. I hope you have a pleasant weekend. See you again soon!
ReplyDeleteYou and your neighbourhood were very lucky not to have too much storm damage - such a big job for power companies after events like that. Hopefully it’s up and running for just about everyone now
ReplyDeleteAnd, oh gosh a cool change like that would do anyone’s head in. After realising it wasn’t HOT you’d be digging out your winter woolies because it felt cold…or at least I would.
Floral along with plain always look good with patchwork- it’s years since I did any English style. Very time consuming- fiddly - but very rewarding. Here’s hoping you are able to find some fabric in keeping with the blocks you have - look forward to seeing the end result
your blocks are beautiful!! I like how you stitched them on the square and kept the original stitching. Gorgeous and a perfect project as we head into the fall weather (fingers crossed of course...).
ReplyDeleteJane, I'm so glad you mostly escaped the bad weather last week. We have had tornadoes very close to us this year which is totally unheard of...I am going to make your tomato dinner this week...sounds so delish! And the quilting blocks are the star of the show this week. So delicate and fancy. Can't wait to see continued progress.
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