A Tribute to Janus

I am at an age where looking forward shows little time left – I could be dead in a year for some reason! – and looking back makes me appreciate many of the people I have known and met, things I have done, adventures I have had. Making the best of time left is a major goal, and as Clint Eastwood said, “I wake up every morning and don’t let the old man in.” Let’s change it to “old lady” and take it from there.

I have lived in different parts of the country, mid-west, west coast, east coast, upstate New York. I have taken trips throughout the country, sailed in the British Virgin Islands, been stuck in airports overnight far too many times. Siblings live in Wisconsin and Colorado. Relatives are scattered throughout the country, many I have never met because of my immediate family moving every few months for several years, and we never went back to visit. It makes me sad in some ways, and feel empathy for my mother who was often home alone in a strange community with 4 kids to raise and a husband overseas in some mysterious place for many weeks or months at a time. It wasn’t easy for her, nor us, nor my father – connections that could have been were easily broken.

Sentiment is not something I “do” – broken ties mean just moving on to the next adventure. This is not necessarily a bad thing as being weighed down by the past can be a challenge, but it does bring a sense of disconnect from other people and a lack of willingness to risk a connection that can be severed. Loss is part of it, but there is expectation, too – what lies around the corner? New adventures await!

We are used to long road trips, taking several weeks to travel here and there. They are so fun – sometimes tiring – but there is a certain level of Zen that accompanies them. The time passes differently when confined to a car for hours. What is there to do? I often knit on a mindless project, daydream, chat with Josh, look at the landscape, snap crappy pictures out of the window. Country and towns flash by. Then we stop for 2 or 3 days in a town, explore it, and move on. There are a number of places we would like to visit again, and perhaps we shall.

In a couple of months, we will be taking our first trip overseas. We have been to Canada and Mexico, but in the fall we will be flying to Rekyavik and cruising to Barcelona. Stops on the way include Liverpool, Dublin, A Coruna, Lisbon, Porto, Malaga, Valencia, and then Barcelona. From there we travel to Almunecar to visit friends for a week. Then home.

While I look back on travels, I also look forward. New places to see, different cultures, good friends. This could be our first and last trip to the Old World, but one to certainly treasure and enjoy with memories and pictures and experiences.

Heartfelt

Flowers in the shape of hearts – why not? I thought of this as I was drawing some cards for my SIL as a Christmas present – something she always likes. It’s a chance to play with ink and colors, too. Some are more successful than others. Strathmore makes boxes of blank cards which are perfect for this – and it includes envelopes, too. For some reason I always have more envelopes than cards . . .

Dr. Ph. Martin’s Black Star ink and watercolors.

Christmas Sewing – A Bag for Marguerita

This year I made a lot of Christmas presents – hats, bags, and a robe.  Here is the bag I made for my sister-in-law, Marguerita, who kindly sent me some photos of her bag as I forgot to take some.

After the complexity of the other bags I made, as well as the hand sewing they required, this was a pleasure as it was super easy to make!  I was really burnt out by Christmas Eve, but also felt really good to have accomplished making so many presents for those I love!  This season I knitted 3 beanies and made 4 bags, and one robe.  You won’t get to see the beanies and all the bags (bean bags?), but you will get to see the robe soon enough.

The materials were, for the most part, 100% cotton. The green is duck, rather coarsely woven as is the nature of duck. It’s stiffness was both a blessing and a curse. I also ran out of thread and had to go out to buy more – the result was nothing matched what I had used originally, so I had to remake the straps. No biggy.

The bag lining was pure serendipity for the matching of the pink to the printed fabric. I felt really lucky to find it – so many shades of pink!

The Parisian scenes are some upholstery fabric, and it was the focal point of the bag. The pink and green matched perfectly!

I had enough material left over to make a sewing machine cover for the Baby Lock Presto II – it came with a lightweight vinyl cover, and I thought something more classy would be fun to design and sew.

I used my Janome 6500P to make M’s bag. I have not used this machine in a while, and since I plan to use it when I go to the class to finish up my quilt top, I thought it would be a good thing to dig it out, reread the manual, and relearn all its parts. As an aside, it is a more sophisticated machine than the Presto, but less portable simply because it is a lot heavier. The Tutto makes it easy to tote, so I am looking forward to testing it out in a classroom situation.

So ends 2018!  I plan to continue sewing and learning to be a better sewist in 2019 by exploring new and different ways to sew, or things, such as using knits.  Photography, painting, drawing, knitting, and designing are all in the plans.  It is so nice to have time to do things – to not feel a horrific pressure to get things done!  Savoring time to think, to design, to plan, to learn – those have been so absent for the last 5 years.  Those 10-12 hour work days suck!  And now I get to enjoy the leisurely activities of a housewife – some of which I like (cooking) and some I just tolerate (cleaning) . . .

Happy New Year to everyone!  May 2019 bring you joy, health, and happiness!

Another Bag – The Rockport Tote

Between Inktober 2018, watercolors, tasks and errands, I have been working on another bag.  This one is in need of massive trimming of threads – so is the Boxy Tote – before it is done.  Then, it will be shipped off to a friend of 45 years “just because”!  It’s not perfect, but then nothing I ever do is, so that’s life, eh?

This bag is done with one piece of material and quilted every half inch on the body.  It’s called the “Rockport Tote” from Aunties Two.  The pattern is clearly written, and even better, there are videos to accompany it.  If you are interested, follow the preceding links and you will find them.  This project took me awhile to do – it spanned about 3 weeks, and in between a lot of stuff, I was champing at the bit to finish it.  I’m going to start another one next week – bags are in the works for Christmas presents.

The bag comes in three sizes – small, medium, large.  The small is tiny, perfect for little gifts and using up scraps of fabric.  I made the medium size.  The large is a bit bigger, but this one is a nice size to carry around.  Also, I was really happy to find this ceramic Celtic knot work button in my button box – it seems perfect for the bag.

 

One thing I am enjoying with my time off is the actual ability to have time.  If I was still working, I would be rushing and feeling pressed to finish this bag, and I think the whole project would have become a point of aggravation.  Slowing down requires having time, and in the time I have, I am finding I am enjoying working on things that would otherwise become frustrations.  My sewing skill is far from good, and my own rather casual approach to things doesn’t help.  Still, I do have time to do handwork (hand sewing) and picking apart seams or other bits that might not please me.  I have time to think about what I want to do, and time to set aside a project with the time to return to it.  All of a sudden the rush-rush-rush of my former daily life is gone.

And thus, another project completed.  I start a 5-week introduction to quilting class at Quilty Pleasures and another 2-day class to make another Rockport Tote.  Yes, you read that last right – I figure I would make one Rockport, and then make another, learning from my own experience, as well as that from Betsy, who taught the Boxy Tote class I took last month.  And, though I profess to dislike quilting, my thought is that learning how to cut and sew precisely, as needed for a good quilt, won’t hurt me or my sewing skills.  I can only improve.  And I know I will have a lot of fun in the process (and probably some frustrations, too.)