Saturday, May 28, 2022

Looking back ten years to May 2012 Part Four 05-28-22

This was the last class that Ruth taught, ever!  She had been teaching here for a few weeks every summer for some time and many of the students were repeating - taking one last class.  it was at the Quilt Gallery shop which has since changed locations and owners.  It was a very large shop with a great classroom, but I don't know what the new shop is like. 


  The first day of class everyone gets out the picture(s) they have brought with them and Ruth starts helping each student design their quilt.  I have always been amazed at how easily she seemed to handle twenty different designs and the twenty different backgrounds and experiences of those students.  

Susan Hilsenbeck and her husband drove from Texas and while she was taking the class he went on a fly fishing class.  She worked diligently and almost complete the quilt top of this eggplant design. 

First putting tracing paper over her picture and drawing the seam lines.  She chose to color her drawing to make it easier to chose fabrics. 

Starting with the flower she selected and cut fabric, pinning it on her diagram until she has all the fabric cut for one section.  

Continuing to select fabric and cut the shapes which are pinned in place.  
One joy of having a class in a quilt shop is being able to search the entire shop for just the right color, texture, value, etc.  of fabric needed.  

By the last day of class this is what she had done.  The piece is about 22" wide by 28" tall.  The original photo she worked from is on the left.  

There were four or five dogs, a cat, seven or so flowers, a couple landscapes, some people, a great lizard, just a broad selection made by the students.  

I liked Susan Vacek's blue dog.  The original picture was brown. 






And the lizard was spectacular.  About 36" wide.  

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Friday, May 27, 2022

Looking back ten years to May 2012 Part Three 05-27-22

Still en route to Kalispell.  We didn't want to eat fast food, so we drove on until we found a nice restaurant that I had enjoyed before.  It was completely different, but the food was good.  We were ready to start our Ruth B. McDowell class the next day.  

It was spring in upper Montana so there were lots of wildflowers blooming and later in town beautiful flower gardens in the green, green yards.   I had to photograph many of the flowers.

Prairie Smoke  (Geum triflorum)

Lupine (the blue flower) and I don't know the name of the white.

Bluebells (Hyacinthoides)


Common Flax (Linum)  A garden flower


Horse Chestnut tree in blossom. 

A very blue bearded iris growing beside a garage in Kalispell. 

Catmint (Nepeta)

Columbine (Aquilegia) with Catmint.   Columbine is the state flower of Colorado.

 

We finally made it to Kalispell, a lovely green town, at least it is in the summer.  We stayed in what would now be called an AirB&B.  The door on the bottom floor at the left was our room.  It was clean and comfortable, but we didn't spend much time there since we were in class all day. 


Tomorrow I will show some pictures from Ruth's class.  


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Thursday, May 26, 2022

Computer is soooo sloooow I can't post tonight. 05-26-22

Postponing the continuation of the Kalispell trip of 2012, but will follow up tomorrow.

Don't know why it is taking so long to load each picture, but I have been at it for over an hour and only two pictures would appear.  So, tomorrow maybe I will start in the morning and have something ready by 11pm!  Today was a bit of a hard day because I had to go grocery shopping which seems to be extremely tiring these days.  But no matter what we do our two 1/2 hour walks every day.  KoKo can be very demanding.  

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Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Looking back ten years to May 2012 Part Two 05-24-22

We had allowed enough time to do some sightseeing and not drive too long in one day.  One problem we had though was finding places to eat.  There is a lot of open highway and not many towns or even service islands.  One really needs to plan ahead.

We saw a lot of wildlife and spent a day driving through the National Bison Sanctuary.  I had driven it before, but saw a lot more bison and other animals this time.  

These sheep were not in the sanctuary, but up on a hillside behind a rest stop.  They had two attendant dogs, but didn't see any sheepherders. 

In the Bison Sanctuary there were a lot of bison - bulls, cows, and calves. 



Ruth McDowell taught in Kalisplett for quite a few years and visited the Sanctuary.  She made this very large quilt (over 100" each side) showing the bison in the pond. 


Many pronghorn antelope all along the way.

                            
Their bright white butts make them stand out on the rolling grey/green prairie. 


 Quite a few deer, but they are more difficult to spot without the bright white backside. 

I believe this is the first wild swan I have every spotted. 

To be continued.....

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Monday, May 23, 2022

Looking back ten years to May 2012 05-23-22

Late May 2012 I started a long trip to Kalispell, Montana, to take a workshop with Ruth McDowell.   I had driven up there sever years previously for the same purpose, but this time I picked up a friend from the east at the Las Vegas airport and we stopped many places along the way to the quilt shop in Kalispell.  It was a great trip through wide open country almost the entire way.  

First day on the road - I-15 north of Barstow where the north and south bound lanes are wide apart.  The desert sometimes seems unending. The smogless blue sky stretches from horizon to horizon.


Further north the highway winds through Virgin River Canyon.  Glimpses of the river deep in the shadows of these great grey walls. 



We stopped at Zion Nat'l Park, but it was blazing hot and we stayed in the air conditioned car.

 

Miles and miles of open country - meadows, mountains, piles of clouds. 



We spent some time driving around Butte, Montana, with old mining shafts and many explanatory signs about the gold and silver mining in the past. 

To be continued.............

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Sunday, May 22, 2022

Quilt from TCQC - Karen Rips 05-22-22

 Revisiting a small quilt by Karen Rips originally posted 05-03-12

               

"Asilomar"  Karen Rips - Thousand Oaks, CA   2011 12" square
Hand-dyed and hand-printed cotton fabric, perle cotton thread. Machine quilted. Wool batting.
To create this gorgeous texture Karen used 100% wool felting for the batting. After stitching the front to the batting, she washed it in hot water to shrink it a lot. For a quilt this size, she started with a piece about 18 inches. She drew her inspiration from all the sea grasses growing on the grounds of Asilomar Conference Grounds in Pacific Grove, CA.

This piece is very flexible, which makes me wonder how a lap sized quilt would be to snuggle with on a wintery day.
 
Her hand stitching and French Knots, along with the loose gauzy fabric sewn into the quilted lines, add more depth.  They give the feeling of the layers and layers of grasses.
 
Hand-dyed sateen on the back.

A minimal label, but it does have an e-mail contact.