Shopping at the Salt Lake Airport…

I visited the Bitteroot Quilt Guild in Hamilton, MT, last week. It was fun! Nice quilters, beautiful place – there was even some snow! I flew home through Salt Lake City. Oh my – that is an airport with good shopping. A window at Zeta with beaded purses made me stop and look.

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BeadedPurse-03 

The purses were in the $200+ range. I'm not really a 'purse person' so I wasn't tempted to buy one but I was impressed by the artistry.

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I did buy a big scarf/pareo by Desigual. I won't wear it like this lady in the photo – aren't you happy to hear that!

Coqo rugs in many colors…

DarkBlueRug
GreenRug
GoldRug
RedRug
BlackRug 

Don't these look like antique quilts? They are instead Coqo
Rugs
from Anthropoligie.
They are hand hooked wool. Click on each one to see an enlarged view.

Isn't it nice to see the same
design worked up in different colors! When you make a quilt, you don't
usually make the same thing up in multiple colorways. Linda and I
sometimes each make the same quilt in different colors, but we haven't yet
made the same thing FIVE different ways.

Roses in my yard…

Our climate is hot and humid enough that the roses I've planted succumb to black spot pretty quickly. It doesn't help that I expect them to make it without a lot of help from me. The one exception is a miniature rose that I got years ago because it was so cute in it's little pot. It was supposed to be a house plants but it wasn't long before it looked pitiful and I stuck it in the ground out front and told it to sink or swim. It swam.

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The dark bush covered with red flowers is my former 'miniature' rose. I did try to remove it once… which only made it spread more. Every now and then I whack it back, knowing that it will come back with a vengeance. I've decided to love it, which is pretty easy to do this time of year.

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Flower power three…

I grow perennials as much as I can. Replanting flowers every year just takes too much time. I think this red flowering plant is a variety of Lemon Balm. It flowers twice a year. I whack it way back when it gets leggy and it always rebounds. The stems have a distinctive smell when cut.

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That's Oxalis in the background. It, too, flowers twice a year. Each plant looks like a big mound of clover. When it gets shaggy I cut off as much as I can, leaving a mound of short stems. New leaves grow back quickly in warm months.

Oxalis-04_2010-01

Color progressions…

Did you see this cover on the May issue of Martha Stewart Living? Those are paint swatches on the wall! What a good idea. With all the cool things you can do with paint swatches I hope the day doesn't come when we have to pay for them. You can click a link to read the whole story.

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What I like the most about this cover is the smooth progression of color, from green through yellow into orange and finally ending in red, in both the paint chips and in the pillows on the sofa. This sort of color progression is both eye-catching and soothing. And If you pay attention, you'll see lots of color progressions used in magazines and store displays.

I use this sort of color progression often in my quilts. In fact the quilt that I have just finished is based on this very thing…

GreenToBlue

Flower power two…

Columbine grows from seed in my yard as well. The yellow variety tolerates full sun. It pops up all over the place but it isn't as troublesome as some wildflowers that re-seed themselves.

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The red and yellow columbine sticks to the shade. The shape of the columbine flower, from the bud through the full blooms, captivates me. I know that many people see shooting stars when they look at these flowers, but I am more often reminded of the monster from the Alien movies – the one that chased Sigourney Weaver from planet to planet. But I see a prettier, friendlier alien…

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