It's been A WEEK!
Then again, so have all of them lately, so I guess we'll just move on...
I DID sew!
Yesterday.
First I had to press and neatly fold all the new fabrics so when I cut pieces they weren't all wonky.
Then I went through my self-drafted pattern and made a list of what to cut for each fabric. That made it easier - I could cut strips and then subcut those. And then my fabric wouldn't have all sorts of wonky chunks taken out of it.
And then I had to talk myself into actually sewing. The pressing and folding and organizing took over an hour, but the background is about 5 yards, so that took some doing. Freddie "helped."
But I decided to just get going. The first (half) butterfly took a bit because I was doing it piece-by-piece and I made a few errors that needed correcting. I wanted to get an idea how long it would take to make one.
Turns out not long. Even with sewing a few pieces on the wrong place - I was making two halves, mirror-images of each other - and that made for a few oopsies. Thankfully I caught them before trimming off any corners!
After a little editing of this photo, I got the colors close to right. What is it with this phone that wants everything to be dull? I feel like it wants to put an "I took this in 1982 and it's faded" filter on every photo I take.
Anyways, I think this fits the "bright" request. I wanted that darker blue on the outside, but it was a small piece and wouldn't be enough for two butterflies, so I decided to go inside. And the two bolder prints kinda get lost in each other from a distance, but they're in there.
The original had a lighter body and dark head there for the body, but I've never seen a butterfly with a multi-colored body/head, so I went with black. I think it looks just fine, though maybe I need to embroider some antennae? We'll see how the motivation goes.
Three more of these to complete the arrangement that was most liked, though I'm not sure once I get to that point the verdict will be the same. I have plenty of background to make a 3x3 butterfly-only layout and can always raid the stash to see what other colors I can make. Another one to decide as I get there.
Mostly I'm excited that the first one is done, the pattern is working, and it's not as hard as I anticipated.
On to other things: BOOKS!
The 4th was the annual sale (though they do them quarterly now, this is the biggest one, even if it's not as big as it used to be) and the hubby and I stopped at home to pick up my dad and their wagon before heading in.
It seemed smaller, but it always does. That doesn't mean there aren't treasures to be found.
I should have take more photos, but, well...
I got everything home and hauled into my bedroom for sorting. I always think Gabby (the cat that lives up there) will come and help me (because she's a cat and they are curious), but every year she hides like it's the end of the world.
Lily helped, though. See her in there? She helped a lot.
Anyways, two paper grocery bags of books - this year a local veterinarian donated reusable fabric shopping bags to reinforce the paper while supplies lasted and I got there early enough - and a hat.
(You can kinda see the hat. I should go get a better photo. But I got a hat for free!)
I took everything out, sorted into stacks by size (because that's how I roll and in my mind they fit on the cart better that way), put number labels in each book, wrote the title and number in my notebook, made little papers with their numbers on them to go in the random number jar and then tucked them all onto the cart. And rolled it back out into the hallway just outside my bedroom door where it lives.
Two books didn't fit. Oops! I found the green bucket in my sewing room, nearly empty, and repurposed it for those books, the jar and the book covers. For now.
But this looks so tidy!
(Salem isn't so happy because the bottom shelf was empty of books - just housing some covers and the jar - and she would get on there and "sneak" into my room when I opened the door. Now she walks up to it and can't figure out where her spot went. Not to fear, little one, I read fast!)
Anyways, now I just want to read, read, read and make room for more when the sale at my truly local library happens in October.
How many books did I get?
54
But one I bought twice. One in each bag. Ha! Hopefully it's a good one! (I'll do my best to remember to mention which one when I read it.)
Otherwise, I don't think there was any overlap from what I already own.
I think.
And since my last post I've finished two books! (The last one I finished the night of the 3rd, so I started Saturday with a clean slate! That was finish #42 for 2026.)
Written as letters from the main character to her sister, set during the Civil War, this follows the theme this author seems to use of old-timey women making do without men. Not a bad thing and I haven't read one of hers in a while, so this is not a complaint.
A young woman's new husband volunteers for the army to fight to save the Union. She goes to live with his mother on their farm - she's something of a city girl, though in Iowa at the time I'm not sure how big the city really was - and grows into the farming life. She deals with small-town gossip, vagrants (indirectly) and the town troublemaker, all while making friends and quilts.
It was a good story. One that has a happy ending and loose ends all tied up.
And then this one:
Another written in the form of letters, but this time to and from a variety of characters. Set on a fictional island somewhere off the Atlantic coast of the US, named for the man who invented the phrase "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog," they seem to be more literate, or perhaps just wordy, than others. On their town hall-type building, the sentence above has been glued up, letter by letter, until one day the "Z" falls. The town council, in their "wisdom," decide that this is a sign from Nollop (the inventor) to stop using that letter. Punishable by first offence: a warning, second offence: stocks or whipping, and third offence: death or banishment.
And this is where the book makes you go WHAT???????
Even more so when additional letters begin to fall.
The letters between residents (and one non-resident) do not use these letters either, as using them in speaking or writing is punishable. At first, the residents get creative, using alternate words or phrases to get their message across. The days of the week are renamed early when "Y" falls. But by the end of the book...whew! Phonetic spellings, or near phonetic, are used and it takes a while to figure some of them out. (I found myself saying things out loud a few times even!)
And yet the councilmembers hold fast to their rules.
Many are exiled. Commerce is failing. And there is a group trying, after it is agreed that they will reverse the decision if it can be done, to find another sentence with as few letters yet using the whole alphabet.
And though we don't have letters falling, I feel that some of the nonsense going on in this book with those who make decisions feels all too real in our world right now. I wonder how timely it would have felt reading it two years ago. Or longer.
But.
I enjoyed it. I enjoyed the story (it was sad, but the community sticking together was nice). I enjoyed the wordplay. Definitely one of the best I've read this year.
And with that, the chores must continue. Today has been a doozy and I still have a few to go, plus a doctor appointment before I get to work tonight. Yikes!
Happy quilting and reading
Katie











