Showing posts with label snow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snow. Show all posts

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Snow...

 


We got some snow this weekend, but not all that much. It is wet and heavy, though, and my neighborhood lost power overnight on Friday night. I woke up about 3 AM and it took me a few minutes to figure out the power was out. The little motion sensitive lights lit my way around the house, so that confused my sleep addled brain the power was out. I called the power company to report the outage, and later got a message telling me when they expected to restore it. So I went back to bed. About 7:30 AM I heard the rumble of my heater, so that was good.

We are supposed to get more snow tonight into tomorrow, and it is likely I will work from home on Monday.


Here's the resewn Amish quilt. It's an improvement, although it's hard to tell. I'm not sure the quilt top can take being taken apart again so I am really going to have to think about my next steps. But it has got me back into the studio (even though it's a bit chilly in there!)

Saturday, January 29, 2022

Snow Day!

 

We are expecting LOTS of snow today. I'm in that pink 12-20" area on the right. We shall see.


This is what it looks like out my side door as I write this as 8 AM on Saturday. It's just barely starting.

This is what the radar looks like now. I'm at the blue dot, so you can see it's coming, but isn't here yet.

When storms like this come, the grocery stores are jammed with folks stocking up. I went out last night and laughed when I saw so many empty shelves. I got some ground beef (actually I got a "meatloaf mix of ground pork, beef and veal) to make meatballs. I've got a lot of mushrooms so I'm going to make a meatball mushroom stroganoff to eat over wide noodles. Nice, warm and cozy. But I digress.

What did I do on my way home?

I went to the car wash.

Yeah, I know most people do it the other way around - go to the car wash afterwards when your car is coated with greasy dirt and salt - but you have to wait in a long line on those days. There was no line last night, and besides, if my car is cleaner and slipperier, then the snow and crud should slide right off.

Well, that's my theory and I am sticking with it.

While it snows, I'll be in the studio, and yes, that is the same towel that inspired the painting which inspired the quilt.

Funny that.


This is a scrap slab quilt. You can get my tutorial here, at my Etsy shop.






Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Snow? What?

This is the view outside the window when I got up this morning. I have NEVER seen snow on the ground this late in April.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Forecast Gone Wrong

It was supposed to be 2 to 4 inches.

ROFLMAO.

Until I had to shovel it.

Oh well. It'll melt.


About yesterday's post.

Yes Ruth, I saw those upside down kitties too.  Dammit. But they are staying, because a couch quilt doesn't have an UP or a DOWN. They may get shifted down to the third row, however.

And for those of you who noticed the pale yellow beehive fabric looked like a hole in the middle of the quilt, good for you. I saw it too. That block will be replaced.

Thank you Ann, and others, for your compliments. I don't have any trouble with color, and I choose fabrics without much conscious thought. You may all hate me, but Color Sense cannot be taught. You either have it or you don't. I can show you what I do, and explain why I do it, and knowledge of so-called color theory will help, but it isn't the same.

Now, that doesn't mean you can't make beautiful quilts. Years ago my sister was making a scrap quilt. She showed me, "Is this OK?" she asked. "I don't know what I am doing."

"Maybe not," I told her, "but what you are doing is lovely, keep doing it. If it doesn't feel right to you, don't do it." Now she probably won't admit she still doesn't know, but she trusts her instincts, and so should you. That and being willing to change what isn't working, will help you in the long run.

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

A Snow Story

Snow is a funny thing. Folks who don't live with it regularly will say, "I've seen snow," if they have seen it once, which is pretty hilarious. There are all kinds of snow. There are the big fat wet flakes that make terrific snowmen and snowballs and is heavy to shovel. There is the cold dry snow that blows around like dust and settles everywhere and nowhere. Four inches of snow can be a piece of cake to drive in, unless.
 


So what do you see in the picture above? Or rather what do you NOT see?  It's my driveway, after I shoveled the maybe four to six inches of snow. But you do NOT see my car. I live on a rather steep, short hill. My street is a curve with a long hill on one side, and a shorter, steeper hill on the other. I live on the short side of the street, halfway down the steeper hill. I usually get to my house by driving up the long side. There's a long straight approach that usually gives me enough momentum to make it up to the top if the road covered in snow. There isn't enough of that on the short side, and it T's into somebody's driveway. So when the weather is nasty, I'm never eager to get in my car and risk sliding down the hill into somebody else's driveway.

Tuesday the weather reports said we'd have snow, and that it would start about 6 AM, but be done by 6 PM, and we wouldn't have a lot, maybe 4 - 6 inches. So I went to work. I left earlier than usual, after hearing from the shipping manager that the truckers said the main roads were fine, but a lot of parking lots were terrible. I had no trouble getting out of our parking lot, and on my way to the highway, I almost slid right through a red light. Fortunately there was nobody there, so I didn't hit anything.

I had no trouble on the steep curvy street outside my neighborhood (development), but inside my neighborhood was a different story. I got about 3/4 of the way up the big long hill before my car lost traction. I tried to back down the hill, but mostly I slid. I tried the other, shorter hill. That was even worse. I slid back down sideways. I backed down the street the best I could.

Now I should tell you I live in an over-55 community where the speed limit is 15 MPH and cars are a rarity. I encountered no traffic. Thank goodness nobody has a stone wall and nobody else was on the road. I could no sooner control my car than I can sing an aria. (I cannot sing to save my soul.)

Parking on the streets in winter is forbidden. (thank goodness, because I sure as hell would have hit anything that was parked.)

I got back down and then tried the big hill again.  Same thing. Got stuck 3/4 of the way up, and then slid and skidded back down. Slid backwards at an angle halfway down the street. When the car stopped, I did my best to execute a 3 point turn and drove away, toward the flat area near the "mail house" and the parking area reserved for campers and extra vehicles. That's where my car is parked now, about 1/8 mile away from my house. I left it there and walked home. I made it up the short hill, but I did slip several times on the ice underneath. As I was walking home I was passed by one of the maintenance trucks that was plowing. "I've got to plow first, then I can lay down some salt," he told me. "You can try again after that."

"No thank you! I am going to leave my car right where it is. No point in pushing my luck."

For the record I can tell you that one time on my way home from work my car hit a slippery patch and did a 360 turn in the middle of the road. I've slid and slipped more than once. I live in New England. It snows. We have to learn to deal with it. I did not freak out and I didn't lose my cool when my car slid and slipped down the hill (either time). I wasn't even worried I'd hit anything (mostly I think I was just resigned to whatever happened.)

The saying we have around here is this, and it's very true. "The first mile and the last mile are the worst."

So that's my snow story for the day. And I kinda hope is the last one like that I'll tell for a long while.

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Snow

If you live where it doesn't snow, you think snow is just snow. But it isn't. There are many different kinds of snow.

This is wet snow, that clings. We didn't have much of it, and even though the temperature was just above freezing when I took these pictures, the sun wasn't out, so the snow clinging to the branches on the trees hadn't melted yet.

I always tell you to look around for inspiration, because it is everywhere, and I took these pictures so I could remember the patterns of the snow covered branches, but somehow I knew there was inspiration here too.

I don't know what I will do yet, but an idea is forming...

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Snowy Thursday

We haven't had a particularly snowy winter, so I can't complain about this latest storm. I can't tell how much snow we got, not that it makes any difference.

I'm getting ready to teach my Liberated Birds to the Bedford Friendship Quilt Guild on Saturday, so I am gathering up everything I will need. If you want to make your own birds, you can buy my tutorial here, at my Etsy shop. It's an instant download so you can get started right away.


PS, I've added a page to the blog that shows all the Diamond Quilts in one place. You'll see the link in the header.

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

The View

I like waking up to fresh snow outside. Everything is clean looking and sparkly.  There is the view out my studio.

The other day I showed the fabrics for the new quilt, based on Little Man's Winkel and today I want to show all the fabrics I have chosen: the pinks, oranges, and lime greens.


Before I jump into that quilt though, I've got to finish the Sparkling Winkel top. Half the rows are sewn together.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Picnic Table in the Snow

My rail fence quilt is finished. I've decided to call it "Picnic Table" since it's got ants and bugs on it.  What outside picnic table is free of those? As for the snow...

Yes, that's freshly fallen snow. We got about four inches last night.


That's on top of the forty or fifty inches we've had already this winter. (sigh)

I used those new "wonder clips."  The big advantage is they don't get caught on everything the way regular pins do.  And they don't stab me when I'm moving the quilt around while sewing the binding down.
The disadvantage is that I have to remove them before the quilt goes through the sewing machine, so I have to hold the binding in place by hand. Not only is that a pain, but the result isn't the even perfection that I like. It isn't bad, and since I only machine sew bindings on quilts that are designed to get a lot of hard use, it's not really a big issue, but the perfectionist in me bristles a bit.

However I think these will be a big help when I am hand sewing the binding down by hand.

For those who asked how I apply my binding, here you go: I cut it 3 inches (7.62cm) wide and join the strips at an angle. I fold it lengthwise, wrong sides together. I line up the raw edges of the binding on the WRONG side of the quilt and sew it down 3/8" away from the edge. Then I fold it over to the FRONT of the quilt and sew it down. This way the folded edge covers the seam nicely and it's easy to sew down. Naturally I miter all the corners and join the ends at an angle so the whole thing lies nice and flat.


Sunday, February 8, 2015

Snowy Sunday, Monday, Tuesday

We are at the beginning of what the weatherfolks are calling a "long duration snow event," which means it will snow from today until Tuesday. They are predicting 3 to 6 inches (7.62 to 15.24 cm) inches today, 5 to 10 inches  (12.7 to 25.4 cm) tomorrow, and 1 to 3 inches  (2.54 to 7.62 cm) on Tuesday.
 
 It's a good day to cook a pot of soup,

and bake bread. I've got to work on my talk to the Amoskeag Quilter's Guild on February 19, so I won't be sewing for the next few days.

I might even bake this cake today. Or I might vacuum the house.

Yeah, sure.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Snow, Cold, Busy

This is the view out my front window. This photo was taken about 4 PM on Tuesday. The snow wasn't done falling. We had almost two feet of snow, and it's been blowing and it's cold. It's 52F in my sewing studio, so I've been avoiding it. 

Otherwise I'm busy, but fine.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Curtains! Snow!

I've finally made a curtain for the door in the sewing studio. I've been preparing my class for QT on Saturday, and that's almost ready. Next up I have to work on my talk to the Amoskeag Quilter's Guild in February.

As everybody probably knows, I am in the path of Snowstorm Juno (when did they start giving snowstorms names?) We are expecting between 18 to 25 inches of snow, wind gusts of 35 MPH and a potential loss of electricity (sigh.) The governor has declared a state of emergency, and our company will be closed tomorrow. If I'm lucky, I'll spend the day cozy and warm at home, watching the Australian Open on TV and getting in a little sewing. If not... well, it just doesn't bear thinking about.

Friday, November 28, 2014

The Day After

When I woke up yesterday, Thanksgiving morning, the electricity was out and the temperature inside the house was 57F. The temperature outside was 33F, but it was sunny. As the day wore on, it got cloudy and cold. My sister had power at her house, so the Thanksgiving feast was moved there. A good time was had by all except for one small black and white cat.

When my brother, niece and I drove to my house to get Millie, it was starting to get dark, and the house was 53F. The overnight temperatures were supposed to drop to 22F, and I had no idea how cold the house would get. I was very worried about leaving her alone, so we went to get her.

Millie was not happy to be ambushed and thrown in the crate. I am sure she isn't happy at all to be in my sister's bathroom, even though she has her own litterbox and food. Still, I feel much better knowing she is safe and secure.

I sure do hope I get my electricity back soon. I really want to be in my own home, in my own bed, and sewing in my own studio.