Centerpieces for the rehearsal dinner…

The rehearsal dinner is one week away! I went to work yesterday on the centerpieces. I saw some centerpieces recently that mixed tall sticks in glass vases with short logs that were drilled to hold votive candles. I liked the little logs a lot  and decided to use that idea. Steve cut several cedar logs…

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He then cut them with the miter saw to make them level and 10"-12" tall. He stripped the bark by hand and cleaned them up with a wire brush.

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I cut the daisies to the correct height and we stapled them to one side of each log. Actually, Steve stapled them.

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I tied a cute yellow tulle bow around each flower-studded log. I've borrowed some mirrored tiles that are nice. I've got some pretty acrylic "diamonds" that would add some wedding-flavored bling at the base of each centerpiece.

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Or I might not use the mirrors. When all of the centerpieces are on all the tables I'll be able to see which what looks best.

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Lemons scattered on the table around the centerpieces could be fun! I didn't think that up all by myself – I saw it at A Cup Of Jo.

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John Flynn on the Alzheimer Quilt Smackdown!

John Flynn tells a good story! Here he is:

"I would like to use this opportunity to announce the very first World Quilt Federation, AKA WQF, “Smackdown”. This will be the quilting equivalent of a no holds barred cage fight refereed and administered by Ami Simms to benefit the Alzheimer’s research project.

SmackdownThe participants will be; Hollis Chatalain, Becky Goldsmith, Sue Nickels, and myself.  We were not chosen by anyone to stage this ultimate contest, it developed at a dinner party that spun out of control. First there was a fairly civil discussion about whose quilt donated to The Alzheimer’s priority project had brought the highest price. We were unable to figure this out among ourselves so we went to the source, Ami Simms. Ami did not answer any of the four of our phone messages about this critical issue. She had the lame excuse of being at the Penguin’s- Red Wing’s Stanley cup playoff game. With no help from Ami we decided that the only fair way to settle the discussion was to have a head-to-head no rules contest the winner to be determined by the highest auction price.

This contest will be unlike any other contest in quilt history in that there will be no rules. We all agreed on a size limitation but I do not exactly trust anyone to adhere strictly to or even remember accurately the guidelines set forth late on the evening of the dinner party that started all of this. What I do expect is that you will see and have the opportunity to vote on with your pocket-book the best work each of us is able to produce in our own style in the allotted time.

The four Smackdown quilts will be revealed for the first time at the Alzheimer’s booth during the Houston Quilt festival.  The auction will take place on the Alzheimer’s website in mid-November and ending when the ultimate Smackdown winner is declared."

John has started his quilt. Y ou can see the beginnings of it on John's blog. It's very good. You can scroll down this blog to see photos of my quilt in progress. I have a great deal of respect for my fellow participants and I know that each quilt will be marvelous – I just want mine to be the most marvelous!

Please do tell your friends about this auction. The more money that is raised for Alzheimer's research, the better.

Check out our interview at SEWN…

Sf2small Sarah Fielke has posted an interview with me @ SEWN.com. It's a good interview and I hope you enjoy it! Sarah lives in Australia and here is what she says about herself:

I'm a quilter,
a teacher, a designer and an author, but most of all I'm mum to my two
boys.
Most recently I was co-owner of Material Obsession in Sydney, Australia
– right now though, I'm doing my own thing as well as being the
creative director of SEWN. Here's where I'm going to tell you all about
it. 

Some of you know Sarah from her wonderful books, Material Obsession and Material Obsession 2. I love these books! Sarah's blog, The Last Piece, is happy and colorful and fun to follow.

 

Instead of tape…

In college, I used sticky blue putty to stick posters to the dorm room walls. It worked great! I got older and forgot all about the blue stuff until my class on Friday when Pam (a very smart student!) showed me how she used the blue stuff to stick upholstery vinyl to her pattern. The small blue dots held the vinyl firmly in place while she traced her overlay.

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It comes off without harming either the paper or the vinyl. You can save it and use it over and over. Thanks for the tip, Pam!

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The best mascara I’ve ever worn…

OK, I know that this may not interest everyone but I have to share. When Steve and I were in NYC we wandered into a Sephora (well, I wandered, Steve followed). A wand-wielding Sephora staffer offered to make my lashes lovely. She then came at me with the most wicked mascara applicator I have ever seen. It's like a mace.

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You sort of poke it at your eye head-on, stroking the mascara up the lash from the base to the tip. It's made by Givenchy and called Phenomen'eyes and I love it! I took this photo of it on me – best looking lashes I've had in a long time! (I hope the photo of my eye isn't too creepy. If it is, let me know and I'll take it down.)

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What do you pay attention to?

I don't know why, but on our recent road trip I started noticing fire hydrants. I realized that I have a mental image of what a fire hydrant looks like – it's red and shaped like a fire hydrant! This one that I saw in St. Louis has the right shape but the color is wrong. 

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In Chicago the color is right (red) but the shape is wrong.

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The more places we visited, the more hydrants I noticed. I must not be alone in this. At least one artist in Burlington, VT, pays attention to hydrants too.

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In NYC this hydrant wore basic black with silver accents.

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This hydrant on the Johns Hopkins campus in Baltimore could use some paint – or ivy.

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Last week in Knoxville I walked past this cheerful one every day. There was another one nearby that had a green top!

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I tell people in my color lecture that it's really important to walk around with your eyes open and to pay attention to what you see. I pay attention to colors and color combinations, shapes, and textures that catch my eye.

What did I learn from these hydrants? Once I realized that all hydrants do not match the image that I have of them in my head, I saw them better. Using an unexpected color for an object in an applique quilt would make it more noticeable.