I dropped off all the carrier covers you saw in the post from last week, including those not quite done yet - I finished them first.
I pushed myself because I was called on to transport pelleted bedding that the rescue uses for litter - a whole pallet of it - so I knew I'd be at the shelter and it would be convenient. And then I started work on the last three fabrics from that HUGE stash.
Remember, these were mostly full bolts when I got them, so something like 8-10 yards per fabric. A LOT to press and fold and cut, but I got this far early in the week.
I debated just trying to get one fabric done for the drop-off, but decided I'd rather just push through these last fabrics. I'm getting tired of this. (Thank goodness this batch is almost done, but I'm not fooling myself that there will probably be more eventually!)
I joke that my kitties are putting in a little extra love for the homeless kitties I sew for, but Freddie doesn't seem to be so enthusiastic about it? I kept moving him and he was none to happy for that. (I tried to explain what surfaces I needed and he was welcome to one of the three cat beds in the room, or the sofa-chair, but NOOOO!)
But, by Saturday evening, I had all of the handle inserts sewn all the way in!
They all still need to be hemmed all the way around, but I've been scheduled every day Sunday through Wednesday, so it will have to wait till later this week.
And THEN...
I can start a baby quilt!
My niece Adrian is expecting in late March!
She has gotten a baby quilt (no photo on this blog - I'll try to find it for later) and a tween quilt and a grown-up quilt. Time to roll the tradition into another generation!
(She and the daddy aren't married - yet - so no wedding quilt right now.)
The hubby has called her a monster from day one. (Her mom gained a fair amount of weight, so my extremely insensitive husband called her Godzilla, which means her offspring is also a monster...he is not always funny outside his head...)
So what else is she going to get but a monster quilt?
The floral will be the monster bodies and the turquoise and pink/purples will be arms, legs, etc. The black with the flecks will be the background. And I'm sure my stash will provide for the white and black features as needed.
The monsters themselves are quite tall, so I'll be making just three and then some sort of border to make the quilt taller than wide (or at least square). Perhaps hearts from the leftover floral?
I have also considered making a second, more traditional, baby quilt for her and giving this one from my husband. I know she'll love it, but I also don't want to piss off the pregnant lady! I'll see how well I procrastinate and if something catches my eye that must be made between now and March.
Oh, and it's a girl. In case the fabrics weren't clear.
And finally, the one book I finished this week...
This author is one that I happened across at a used book sale and knew nothing about him. But after just one book, I was hooked on his writing style and stories. So when I've found others at sales, I've snatched them up quickly. He can be wordy at times, but he does a wonderful job of building the world the story inhabits, so you're sitting right there with the characters and you SEE the trees and water and cars and all of it, just as they do. It's not a book you want to read quickly, but it does go pretty fast.
This story, though it is of a bartender, is told through the eyes of a 12-year-old son of a bartender and does include his story as well. Set in a small town in Montana, there are some ups and downs and major changes in the lives of the two main characters (the bartender and his son), but seen through the eyes of a boy, they take on a whole other dimension. It amazes me how well this author gets kids as narrators. I know I'm an adult, but I can remember being a kid better when I read his books.
The blurb on the back says something about Francine coming to town and turning things upside down, but she doesn't arrive until the book is half done and she didn't turn it as upside down as I expected. She definitely changed things, but other characters that showed up sooner also changed the way these two men lived their lives. Perhaps because the other arrivals were mostly positive changes and hers was a little more chaotic the blurb-writers felt it was more significant? (But we all know by now that I don't trust blurb-writers much.)
It's been a while since I've put a book down and been frustrated that I had to go do something else (make dinner, go to work, sleep) because I wanted to know what happened next. It still took me a week to read it, but I was tied up with other things, too.
I have another ready to start as soon as I'm done typing here, but it's got some big shoes to fill!
Happy quilting and reading and all the stuff!
Katie