There hasn't been much sewing going on this week, but that's just become the normal around here lately. With no projects in process and an abundance of unfinished tops, I just can't bring myself to start anything new that doesn't have an end purpose.
That's okay.
I DID make progress on the mystery quilt - the next clue was released Thursday morning about the time I finished doing my morning chores, so it was perfect timing!
It's not much, and making the baby size means not too many units to make no matter the instruction, but this is okay. Keeping the pace slow enough that everyone can stay caught up is important and there are bigger quilt options happening! (Never mind the crazies who are doing TWO quilts!)
This took about an hour, trimming and all.
I SHOULD be working on the stack of unfinished cat toys, but I just haven't had the motivation lately. I'll get there.
Instead I did a little more sock mending...
We'll see how these hold up. I love those stripey socks and the shamrock ones are also fun. It looks like there is another spot in the heel that needs attention, but it is just missing the green color - it's not thin there at all!
And the socks I was wearing at the time also developed a hole. The socks I don't much like will get tossed, but the ones I do like, I'll experiment with fixing them. (Eventually I know I'll need to buy more socks, but this is fun and not hurting anyone. Plus it's using my Christmas present. So no matter how much my hubby rolls his eyes, I'm going to keep doing it until I can't.)
I tried another method on the stripey ones - it's basically a blanket stitch that works its way inward until you hit the center. It fixes true holes, so we'll see how they feel when worn.
I worked, of course, and then on Friday spent most of my day at my hubby's work, as he decided we were making fajitas for his whole maintenance crew. That included the engineers and project planners AND the guys who actually fix stuff. They have a big grill there, so he grilled the meat and veggies once I got there, but all the prep was on me. And then slicing up the cooked meat and veggies once they were cooked.
But the guys (and a few gals) were appreciative and I know how much this kind thing can mean to an employee. Not so much me being there, but the boss taking the time to plan a meal and feed you.
I did get a bunch of reading done this week again.
This one sounded more like a ghost story than it was. Well, a scary ghost story, I guess. Technically it IS a ghost story.
An older man passes away and the task of cleaning out the house falls to his ex-wife, children and one grandchild - a fairly dysfunctional family. But the house is inhabited by two ghosts - former inhabitants tied to it. But they're not like you'd expect. No floating entities that people see. They're part of the house itself - the wood of the floors and metal of the pipes, etc. They talk to one another and see everything, but the living humans cannot see or hear them except in the creak of boards or clank of pipes - noises that you'd attribute to an older house.
The story is told through many eyes - both living and dead - and you get the story of how the ghosts died, though you also see a lot of why the living are struggling as well.
I expected the cleaning of the house to be a sort of cathartic experience for the family (they weren't really in touch with the ex-husband/father/grandfather), but it was not. I think it was more about the ghosts letting go and moving on to whatever is next for them. We just got the treat of the crazy family as a part of that.
It wasn't good and it wasn't bad. It was just kinda different.
And then...
Set in 1942 in Paris, this is the story of a man, an architect, and his growth as a human during the time that the Germans occupied his city.
He is approached by a wealthy older man to create a hiding spot within the walls of his apartment for a Jewish man. It will be temporary, in the event the place is searched, but must be undetectable. He doesn't want to do it - he knows it's dangerous, but also has no real opposition to what Hitler is up to (it doesn't affect him, so he doesn't worry himself about it). An offer of a job designing a German munitions factory as part of the deal convinces him - he wants the fame that can come with creating something like that.
When the hiding place works, he is asked to do it again, in a different place, again with the offer to design a factory as part of it. HIs desire for fame again trumps his worry, but he also finds he enjoys finding ways to outsmart the Germans.
Over the course of the book he designs at least half a dozen hiding spots and in the process his attitude changes to one where he wants to help the Jewish people escape and survive and the design work is just a job. His marriage, his mistress, and his life in general all change in the process as well and in the end he has become a person I liked, where at the start he was kind of a self-centered jerk.
I did enjoy the book (despite all the awfulness of the war), but the cast of characters was limited in a way I thought might be inaccurate, but I suppose it helped me keep people straight more easily?
Time to go get a few more chores done. I work this afternoon, so I'd better make the most of my time before I have to go do what someone else wants me to do!
Happy quilting!
Katie