Fashionista

Almost all my family qualifies to be called “Clothes Horses.” Most of them also qualify to be called “Fashionistas,” too. My youngest niece, who will be 17 in just two months, may now be the leader of the pack!
This weekend the ladies of the family decided that they would do a little shopping. We all got ready and headed for the car, and I was amazed at what she chose to wear. I SO wish I had a picture, because she was beautiful, and trendy, while still having a very personal look.
Her astonishingly curly long hair was piled up on top of her head. She had boutique sun glasses that made quite a statement. She was wearing a plum ribbed knit skinny top, and stovepipe jeans that looked like they were painted on her size 2, five-foot nine or ten-inched frame. I think there was a fashion belt and a jacket, too, but I’ve forgotten what they looked like. She wore a long strand of turquoise beads with two tight wraps around her neck and one long drop of beads.
But what blew me away were the shoes. These shoes had high heels, perhaps three inches, spike heels, not the platform kind. The toes were pointed, and there was a little decorative strap-like piece across the opening over the top of her foot. And the shoes were turquoise to match the beads!
I have given up heels. Since Dear Husband is shorter than I am, it was a kindness at first to him that I gave them up. But, as time passed, it became a kindness to me that I no longer had to squeeze my feet into fashionable shoes and hobble around painfully. Yes, there are times when my outfit cries out for heels, but I no longer care. The ability to walk is more important than the need to be fashionable. So, when I looked at her feet, the first thing that came to mind was, “You’re going SHOPPING in those shoes???”
She smiled at me, and acknowledged that it might hurt, but she really needed to have that pulled together look. Heck….she’s not even 17 yet. She’ll learn in time, and she’ll enjoy herself along the way.
I can’t wait to see what she’s wearing the next time I see her! *G*

Simple Pleasures

Too often, we get wrapped up in our lives, trying to deal with all the appointments, and chores and surprises that come our way, and I think we forget about the simple things in life.
Here are some of the simple things that have brightened my day, today.
There is a German-style bakery/restaurant in a small town in Indiana that is on the way to my sister’s house. We feel compelled to stop there whether going to visit, or returning home. They have the most amazing loaf of cinnamon bread! The night shift baker must roll the bread out to paper thickness, about five feet long. Then he spreads it with this wonderful cinnamon-sugar mixture, and rolls it up to make a loaf that will eventually be six or seven inches high. Each bite of the bread is filled with that lovely cinnamon taste. Nan and her family brought us a loaf of that bread, and we finished it off this morning. What a lovely way to start the day!
Speaking of sisters, I suspect that she, or one of her family members, picked up the weeds for me. I was weeding the front beds last week, and got to the point of gathering them up when I ran out of steam, and time. So there they sat as my guests arrived. I tried to ignore them, hoping that Dear Husband would save me and take the weeds to the back. Uh-uh. As I left for exercise yesterday, I noticed the weeds and the wheelbarrow had disappeared! Someone……was VERY good to me. Thank you, Secret Santa!
It’s been a pleasure to wake up to an overcast day, with the promise of more RAIN!! YEA!!! WE GOT RAIN!!! We seem to have broken the pattern of only one rainy day a month, at the very end of the month, and the plants are thrilled! I’m not good about hooking up the hoses and letting them run. We are only allowed to use sprinklers on even days, and I can never keep in mind when it’s my turn. I can, and do, water with a hand-held hose and watering wand, to keep the gardens going until Mother Nature comes through. We really needed the kind of soaking rain that goes into the soil, rather than running off, and I think we’ve had at least two sessions like that in the past four days. We’re hoping for more, today, so that the trees get the drink they need.
What simple things please you, today? A baby’s kiss, a child’s hug, help around the house, patient drivers? We just need to think about the simple things to brighten our days.

Share a Square

This is just to remind you that Shelly at “This Eclectic Life” is looking for people to crochet 6″ granny squares for afghans for kids going to cancer camp next summer. If you know how to crochet, or know someone who crochets, won’t you please stitch a square and send it on?
There’s a button somewhere on this page that says “Share a Square.” Click on it, and it will take you to Shelly’s blog for all the information you need.
Shelly, I have perhaps fifty more squares from my exercise group to send. I have to count them all. I’ll try to get them into the mail on Monday morning.
And, I bought more yarn, so I’ll be sending a few more of my own. Good luck with your project!

Quick Notes

I’m pressed for time today. My sister, Nancy, and her family are coming to visit for the weekend. YEA!!! The house is clean, most of my weeding is done. I have some office work to finish and shopping to do before they arrive. Would it be too, too mean to have the scent of chocolate cupcakes wafting through the house as they walk in the door?? *G*
We have two silo type feeders hanging from a flower “crook” at the back door of the garage. I can see the feeders if I am at the kitchen sink, or if I’m working on laundry. These feeders carry the medium chipped sunflower hearts that just about all our visitors (feathered or furred!) like. This morning I saw two house finches at those feeders, and realized that the house finches have been missing for the better part of two months. Usually we are inundated with them, but they have been conspicuously absent. I wonder if they went further north to try to find a cooler, wetter habitat?
I have been piecing blocks for two Birds in the Air Quilts. There are pictures of the blocks in the late July archives. I started out making 70 blocks with red, green and a range of neutrals for what I hope will be a quilt I can use to decorate the couch this Christmas. True to form, I cut enough patches for probably three quilts, so I cut MORE patches, this time in a range of mid to dark blue, to make a lap quilt for the church bazaar. All the blocks (110 in all) are finished and ironed open. Now, I need to lay them out on the floor so that I can decide how to assemble the quilts. I may put my visitors to work on this. As soon as the larger top is done, I can send it off to be quilted. AND, I have the outer border and backing for the Halloween quilt, and I could finish the border and send that, too! I LOVE it when a plan comes together!
I’ve been reading about how to keep day lilies blooming. It seems that there are varieties, like “Stella d’Oro” that will bloom all season. The trick to keeping them blooming is to dead head every other day, and to clip off the spent stalks. This may work for some of my other day lilies, so I need to get out into the gardens again to do some pruning. I think the perennial salvia would re-bloom, too, so it’s going to be snip, snip, snip!
I get to go out to lunch on Saturday with the ladies of my family, and again with my favorite CPA on Tuesday. When it rains, it pours (so you know how often I get to go out to lunch)!
Speaking of rain…..we SO need the rain! I know there are lots of places where you’re praying for dry. Please send that rain our way. August is going to be hell if the drought keeps up like this. (You can check, but I think I’ve had the same complaint for the past three Augusts.)
Did I mention that we saw one of my nephews perform in “The Fantastiks?” I am SO impressed at what high school kids are doing these days. This was an amazingly polished performance. All nine actors (incoming Freshman thru incoming Senior) did a fine job, well above what I might have expected. This particular school is only four years old, and it has an exceptional theater department. We’re lucky that my nephew lives in that school district. He has been in every single performance that has been staged since the school opened.
Sooooooooo….I need to do some accounting, clear off my desk, shop, and get those cupcakes in the oven. I hope all of you have a great weekend, doing whatever makes your heart happy!

Face Lift

(checking the chin…..tsking at the eyelids…) Yeah, I could use one, but that’s not what I wanted to talk about.
I’ve asked my host at RedEagleSpirit about making some changes. I know that the photos I want to post don’t come through well over my beloved Lone Star Quilt background, so I’ve been thinking about making some changes. Actually, there are a couple of options. We could do a photo blog, or we can change the background of the blog, or we can do both.
Since I put my blogging life in ~T~’s hands, I can’t tell you exactly what we will be doing, but you want to be ready for some changes. Variety is the spice of life. I’m glad that ~T~ is open to the work needed to make changes now and then. I need all the help I can get to keep from becoming a stick in the mud.
So…..don’t be surprised, it will still be me “talkin” to ya!

Birds in the Air

No, this isn’t a bird-watching entry. One of my quilting magazines came last month, and one of the patterns called out to me. It’s basically a “Birds in the Air” block, with a variety of red fabrics used in the unpieced half of the square. I already had the fabric in my stash to make it, so I started cutting right away. This quilt will be roughly 60″ x 60.” It takes 64 blocks. Since I’ve chosen to make it with a scrappy look, I have more than enough pieces already cut out to make more blocks. It would be easy to expand the quilt and make it full size.
This is what the basic block looks like:
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I have about half the blocks pieced. This is what the quilt will look like as I assemble it:
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I don’t too often jump into a quilt like this when I have others ready to go. Actually, I have TWO others ready to piece. I wanted to combine a group of Christmas themed fabrics with some of the “woodsy” fabrics I brought home from Alaska. I thought this might make the kind of quilt I’d like to have on the back of the couch at Christmas. Can’t you see drawing a cover up over you while you read on a snowy day?
I love using my digital camera to take pictures of blocks. As I looked over some of the pictures I took today, I realized that two of the darker “neutral” fabrics were just a bit too dark for this quilt. It’s a wonderful tool to determine value in quilts.
I don’t have a name for this quilt yet. The designer called hers “Red Sky At Night,” but I don’t want Dear Husband to get any ideas about appropriating it for the boat!

Share a Square

Do you see the button to the right, at the top of the sidebar? It has the power to take you to a blog where wonderful things are happening.
Sherry at This Eclectic Life has a goal she is trying to reach, and she needs our help. She would like to make an afghan made of crocheted Granny Squares for every child who will be attending Cancer Camp in Ft. Worth, Texas next summer. To accomplish this, she needs thousands of granny squares, and that’s where you come in.
Would you click on the button, and go read what she hopes to accomplish and then send her at least one granny square? The squares should be five rounds, six inches, and made of whatever washable yarn you have to donate. Patterns for the squares and instructions for the simple stitches can be found on-line.
I’ve asked the members of my exercise class to help, and Elegante Mother’s Empty Nester sewing group. I’ve asked family members to contribute. If you can’t crochet, Sherry will accept a six inch knitted square. If you share the word, then many hands will make the work light.
Mailing information is given on Sherry’s blog. Perhaps you can spread the word for your contacts and be the collector and mailer of the squares. Our goal is to get them to Sherry in August. She’s received 634 of the 6720 she needs.
I have seven made from two kinds of variegated yarn.
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I hope to make several more in the more traditional pattern with a different color for each round. This type of work is very portable. You can carry it with you and work on it anywhere you have to wait for a bit.
Won’t you please help?

ANTS!

I dream of an old “B” movie, set out in the desert, where a colony of gigantic ants is nesting…..
“Them” is a 1954 movie that warned of the dangers of atomic bomb testing.
Unfortunately, after a hiatus, we are once again inundated by ants. It’s Dear Husband’s job to deal with them. He has his ant-killing dowel rod. He humanely squashes them flat, and then leaves them for the other ants to get the message that this is not a safe place to visit. Frankly, I don’t care to have piles of ant carcases littering my floor. Luckily, other ants will come and collect those bodies. We assume there is a little ant cemetery somewhere in the basement.
Probably the only good aspect of this invasion is that I have help cleaning up after dinner. We don’t leave food out to tempt visitors, and anything found with an ant in it gets pitched. There was one in my iced tea the other day. YUCK!!!!
There’s an ant crawling on my monitor. What could be there to interest it?? I’d hope that it somehow gets fried in the computer, but with my luck that would make the computer crash. Go AWAY, Ant!
NOW HEAR THIS! I want all ants, and all spiders…for that matter, ALL BUGS to be off the premises by 5:00 tonight! Pack yer bags guys and GIT!

Rerun: Farmer’s Tomato Pie

I posted this recipe in May of 2003. Rather than have you search the files, I’ve reposted it for you. The recipe came to me from my sister, Nan, at Just My Opinion, and it’s the perfect summertime recipe for tomato and basil lovers!
Farmer’s Tomato Pie
30 minutes preparation
32 minutes baking
10 minutes stand time
1 piecrust
1 1/3 cups shredded Italian blend cheese (5 ? oz.)
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 Tbsp. Fine dry breadcrumbs
2 lbs. Ripe tomatoes cut into wedges
1 cup Cherry tomatoes, cut in halves
1 tsp salt
1/4-1/2 cup loosely packed small basil leaves
Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.
Pie crust
Roll out a prepared piecrust to a twelve-inch circle. Place in a 9″ quiche pan or a 9″ pie pan, and trim. If using a pie pan, crimp the edges. Line the unpricked pastry with TWO thicknesses of foil. Bake 8 minutes. Remove foil and bake another 4-5 minutes, until set and dry. Remove from the oven.
Reduce the temperature to 375 degrees.
Filling
Sprinkle 1/3 cup cheese evenly over baked shell.
Sprinkle garlic over cheese.
Sprinkle 2 tsp. Breadcrumbs over garlic and cheese
Top with 1/3 of the tomato wedges and 1/3 of the cherry tomatoes
Sprinkle 1/3 cup cheese
Sprinkle 2 tsp of the dry breadcrumbs
Top with 3 of the tomato wedges and 1/3 of the cherry tomatoes
Repeat last set of instructions once more and then sprinkle with salt.
Bake 20-25 minutes or until pastry is golden brown and tomatoes are just beginning to brown.
Remove to wire rack
Sprinkle with basil and let stand for 10 minutes

Personal Attributes

Do you consider yourself to be a “High Maintenance” type of person?
I’ve been pondering this subject the past few days. I’m not sure I understand the complete scope of “high maintenance.”
Of course, there are women who expect lots of BLING, and clothing and cars to maintain that image. I consider that to be HM.
But, there has to be an aspect to high maintenance that doesn’t involve material things. For instance, is the expectation that one’s husband will be nice to his in-laws high maintenance?
Is expecting to be given coffee in bed before you start the day HM?
Is hogging the conversation, or jabbering away HM?
What about assuming that your spouse will share the household duties?
Does a partner pursuing their own interests, taking time away from your relationship and your family constitute HM?
What about the high-powered businessman who comes home to sleep, and turns around and goes back to work…..is HE HM?
I’m not really sure I know the definition, and I’d like a little help. From your perspective, what makes a high maintenance partner?