Patience, Concentration, and Precision

“…But this novel reminds us that narrative refuses to stay put, and that the effort of telling stories only pins things down so far. In the end it is language itself that is the problematic container, it holds too much and too little at the same time.” Translating Myself and Others, Jhumpa Lahiri discussing the novel Ties


A Custom Quilt!

Whew! I would say the studio has been hopping, but honestly it has been steady, methodical progress. Lately I have been reminded of how slow the stitching process can be, never mind the creative process. And I don’t mean to say my creativity is slow, but it does have a rhythm. I like my work best when it is unhurried, consistent, and interesting. I usually have no problem with the interest because my clients bring me the best projects, and I can truly say they are all unique. I may be making a classic t-shirt quilt, but the shirts and fabrics vary. The stories of my customers are unique for certain!

I feel stressed probably twice a year—graduation season and the holidays, but I am working to build calm into those seasons, too. Everything I do requires time, patience, concentration, and precision, and no amount of need or deadlines can rush that process. As a matter of fact, I find that when I am in a hurry or feeling harried that I make mistakes and create longer, more difficult work. Sewing should never be frustrating, tedious, or maddening, and my studio is rarely—and I mean rarely—any of those emotions. I tend to laugh at my mistakes, probably because I have the skills to fix them and because I know some mistakes are leading in to a better solution.

I have talked/written before about how I like to have a variety of orders on the go. In a particular day, I don’t want to spend the whole day on one task. I try to plan different tasks to pay attention to my body and allow time for thinking and digesting a project. For instance, I do thinking tasks, like layouts and planning, when I am fresh in the morning. I try not to sew all day or stand all day, so I plan a prep of shirts (cutting, interfacing, and steam pressing) and the piecing of a quilt top for the day. The prep I know I can finish in a few hours or less, and the piecing can spill into the next day if needed.

I try to pay attention to my creative desires, too. I usually have three or four things on my “to-do” list, and I let my desire for the day dictate the order. I do try to remain cognizant that, like everyone else, I can try to avoid a certain task, and I will usually do that one first! Then I get a reward—doing the thing that is burning in my mind or making my fingers tingle—yes—my work is often a physical desire—and I am happy to be able to sew and create at will. I am also lucky that I really like all of the aspects of my job, from pressing freshly washed fabric to binding finished quilts. I do find a quiet joy in all of those activities.

One more row to go on the pixellation quilt…now I just have to decide how to quilt it while I work on that row!

Lately the studio abounds with colorful squares for a pixellation quilt (I’ll do a blog post for that process!) and a double-sided t-shirt quilt with a certain vision desired by the client. Pillows and custom quilting and sweet custom quilts are in the works, too. Also, I have been meeting with clients with new projects and of course graduation quilt projects! The studio is a lively place, where the process may be slow, but the product is always worth it!

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Time: Pixellation? Memory Quilts? Is there anything you would like me to write about?

I am Reading: I am still enjoying The Old Curiosity Shop by Dickens, and I am reading the second novel in the Chief Inspector Gamache mystery series by Louise Penny. I am also reading several nonfiction books and books of poetry, as usual. Do you have reading recommendations?




Catharsis

In the doorway, the artful Dutchman didn’t move.  Harry knew better than to move. Hannah was wrong, Eddie knew.  There are moments when time does stop.  We must be alert enough to notice such moments. 

A Widow for One Year

      John Irving

A College Graduation quilt!


Graduation season is quickly approaching.  My queue usually fills for graduation by mid-March, and this year I already have four graduation quilts waiting to be made and a few others awaiting meetings with clients.  If you want a graduation quilt this season, then get on my list!

Graduation season is always so exciting and bittersweet, and last season a parent reminded me, as I was working on her daughter’s quilt, that the process is a cathartic one.  She said going through shirts with me, picking fabric, and discussing designs brought back so many memories and punctuated the end that graduations signal.  For her, she had already sent her daughter off to college–we made her quilt during her daughter’s freshman year of college.  My client said working with me to make the quilt really helped smooth and nurture her process of letting go. 

The front of her daughter’s double-sided quilt!

Graduations themselves are bittersweet for graduates and parents.  They mark the end of something, while nodding to the uncertain future.  Old ties are loosened and newness abounds, and graduation quilts reflect that friction.

As a mother I have two high school graduations completed, and I am enjoying my new freedoms and the boys’ bright futures.  My oldest wasn’t interested in  a t-shirt quilt, really–I made him one in middle school, and I just prepped my youngest’s t-shirts for his quilt.  He picked out his shirts, and he helped me pick fabrics.  I think my personal process is less cathartic because he left home for his Senior year of high school to attend UNCSA, but I was reminded, as I worked on his shirts and layout recently, of the dichotomy of emotions inherent in graduation season.

I made her daughter a bear, too, and it is pictured here on top of the quilt.

With both my boys in college, I see and feel the joy and expectations of the future, and I am so pleased to be able to work with parents feeling the pain and anticipation of graduation.  I read often for catharsis that I don’t even know I need until I find it in a text, and I hope my graduation orders help my clients find cleansing catharsis, too.  They will have a quilt that embodies so many memories and emotions, and a quilter cannot ask more from a quilt.

The back of her daughter’s quilt was filled with pictures I printed to fabric and hand appliqued “confetti” strips to add interest.

Memory quilts of any kind are a process, and I probably need another blog post to cover the ways it can be beneficial and possibly painful. If you have memories you want to keep, though, a quilt is a brilliant place to store them!


Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Time:  Patience, Concentration and Precision


I am Reading: I finished Mirror Lake, and now I want to find the other books in the series…I just ordered myself some new mysteries yesterday!  I will look at my local used book shops for the other Mirror Lake books.  I am fifteen chapters into The Old Curiosity Shop, and I love Dickens.  His ability to paint a scene and characters is superb.  The Old Curiosity shop is my daily lunch companion!  I have other books on the go, too…what are you reading?

Earl Grey and Creative Mind Marination

“Rummaging through the cupboard like a wartime surgeon frantically searching for the right bandage, Peter swept aside Yogi tea, and Harmony Blend, though he hesitated for a second over camomile.  But no. Stay Focused, he admonished himself.  He knew it was there, that opiate of the Anglos. And his hand clutched the box just as the kettle whistled.  Violent Death demands Earl Grey.”

Still Life

Louse Penny


Over my lovely winter break, I had the opportunity to read more, as evidenced by the quotation above, and I was enormously pleased to find that gem in a mystery I was reading.  Earl Grey is my nightly respite, and I think it is perfect for all of life’s ills, though we all hope to avoid violent death…one cannot drink Earl Grey if one is dead.

Finished Christmas Quilts ready for delivery!


My Winter break was more than lovely, it was a much needed rest.  I worked every day of the first sixteen days or so of December–I completed at least nine quilts, and I am so pleased with all of the creative sewing.  I’ll be sharing those quilts on Instagram soon, and I will try to update the gallery here on the website, too.

I finished my Christmas Queue on December 16, and I had all of the quilts delivered by December 19, just in time for gift giving.  I always feel like Santa during December deliveries, and this year was no exception.  Special quilts were taken home as special gifts, and I was honored to be a part of so many family celebrations!

After deliveries, I cleaned up the studio, but before I closed the studio for break, I decided not to move new orders into my work baskets.  You see I have pending orders in stacked containers that move into the baskets when I start to work on them physically.  

Baskets ready for orders!

I had at least six orders to start in January, and I moved those into the baskets when I returned to the studio on January 2.  I enjoyed leaving the baskets empty in this way because it felt like a pause for rest.  I was also excited to move the orders upon my return to the studio, so that  I could let those orders start to work in earnest in my brain.  I think not filling the baskets gave my brain a rest, too; it didn’t pick up the orders and try to tease and niggle ideas in the back of my mind.  Of course, those orders were already filed neatly in my brain because my creative process begins with my first contacts with clients.  I make notes, sometimes before I meet the customer in person, or before I receive an order in the mail. Certainly once the materials for an order are in my possession, my creative brain is weighing options and making plans, even when I am not physically working on the order.  I know my mind does this work since ideas for orders will pop into my head at interesting times—in the middle of the night, on my daily walk, when I am stitching something else.  I’ve decided my creative process definitely includes pondering time.  Orders have to marinate in my creative juices.  Those “aha” moments are a lot of fun; they allow me to celebrate my own creative self!  Ha! By the way, everyone should celebrate and congratulate themselves, even for small ideas and victories!

New Year and orders ready for sewing. Under that batting is a quilt already pieced and ready to be quilted!

I’m back in the studio now, and my creative brain is fully cogitating.  I have meetings with eight or nine clients for new orders in addition to the ones in the studio.  I am excited about the possibilities.  My clients bring me the best projects!  Thank you!

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Time:  Hmmm…I have not decided yet, so you will have to come back to see! If you have an idea, then let me know in the comments below!

I am Reading:  I just finished A Widow For One Year by John Irving…so good!  I picked up a mystery Sam gave me for Christmas called Mirror Lake by Juneau Black.  Sidney gave me a new illustrated copy of Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein, so I have been giggling over that.  I am also reading Make, Sew, and Mend by Bernadette Banner…a birthday present from Sidney.  Lee gave me books, too, and I am excited to read those!   My boys know me pretty well, don’t they!  I think I will start The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens, too, while I am reading Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen…oh, I have so many things to read it makes me feel so warm and snuggly!  A cup of Earl Grey and a book…lovely!

Still Speaking the Same Quilty Language!

“She cast around for the right words.  That was the problem with words--they nail the thought down, made it explicit, fixed it, crucified it on the cross of exact meaning.  But life has no exact meanings, only shades of meaning, hints, versions, and contradictions, a confusion of loves and hates, of motives and desires.”

Tightrope

Simon Mawer

Hello!
I hope you have had a brilliant week.  I keep waiting for rain...maybe today!  Last week we explored twelve common words I use when I am talking about making a t-shirt quilt or quilt.   I have twelve more words that I think might be important to the process of making a quilt.

Quilt vs Blanket--Most quilters will get a little irritated at a quilt being called a blanket, but I really see “blanket” as the overall group and a quilt is a special kind of blanket.  Quilts have three layers and blankets usually have one.  I love the word “counterpane” for a quilt, but it is a bit archaic. 

Piecing-the process of cutting and sewing the pieces of a quilt top together.  Piecing is used  most often in reference to the quilt top, but the back of a quilt often needs to be pieced as well.

Block-One unit of a quilt.  For instance a 12T t-shirt quilt has 12 blocks in it.

Quilting-the act of stitching the three layers (front, batting, backing) together, and the actual stitches used to hold the three layers of the quilt together.

Applique-sewing one piece of fabric onto a larger piece of fabric. For instance when I sew a small logo onto another block of a t-shirt quilt.

This sweet little pumpkin block has a skirt appliqued to it!

This sweet little pumpkin block has a skirt appliqued to it!

Heatnbond-an iron on adhesive that helps in the process of some types of applique.

Miters or Mitered Corners-The corners of the quilt are created by sewing the fabric at a 45 degree angle, like a picture frame. (It’s magic!)

A great example of meander quilting and a mitered corner!

A great example of meander quilting and a mitered corner!

Meander or Stipple-the most common type of quilting I use for a t-shirt quilt.  It looks like loose puzzle pieces.

Longarm-the large sewing machine that I use to quilt quilts.  My long arm has a 10” frame.

Me quilting with my APQS Lenni longarm!

Me quilting with my APQS Lenni longarm!

Hand-guided Quilting-the quilter drives the machine as it sews.  All of my quilting is hand-guided.  I do not have a computer attached to my longarm machine.

Free-motion Quilting-A pattern is not being followed and the quilter is in full control of the machine.  

Domestic Machine-a regular sewing machine used at home.

Hopefully last week’s blog and this blog help with the general vocabulary of quilting!  Let me know if you can think of other words I should define!

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Week: How much time does it take to make a quilt?

I am Reading:  I am still reading Wicked by Gregory McGuire and Tightrope by Simon Mawer, and I am working my way through Let Your Creativity Work for You by Heather Allen. I am still reading bits of poetry, and I have stacks of things to read, which always makes me happy!  






Speaking the Same Quilty Language

“I am beginning to learn that it is the sweet, simple things of life which are the real ones after all.”

Laura Ingalls Wilder

Happy October!

I hope you have had a brilliant week in all of your endeavors!  I promised last week that I would define some quilting vocabulary for you.  Many of my customers are not quilters, which is why they hire me to make things for them, so I usually spend a little bit of time explaining quilting vocabulary, especially when we are deciding fabric.  Often I show them a picture of a quilt and point to the relevant parts as I discuss what parts of the quilt they have to decide in terms of fabric. 


I made a list of the terms I most often explain, and I found twenty four terms.  In this blog post I will define twelve I use most often in meetings with clients, and I will define the rest next week. 

You can see most of the terms below in this quilt!

You can see most of the terms below in this quilt!

Sashing-the fabric around the blocks and between the rows. (The teal in the picture above.)

Cornerstones-the small 2” squares between the rows and the blocks. (There are black cornerstones in the picture above.) Custom Quilt do not have cornerstones because the layout is not in rows.

Inner Border-The border closest to the blocks; it usually matches the sashing. (Teal in the picture above.)

Outer Border-The large, usually 6” border on the outside of the quilt. (Black in the picture above.)

Middle Border-A border between the inner and outer border, usually for a pop of color and is 1”-2”.

Binding-The edge that finishes the quilt. (The tiny black edge on the quilt above.)

Backing-The fabric for the back of the quilt. (Teal in the quilt above; you can see it in the corner that is folded over.)

Embroidery-Custom lettering...names, dates, messages to a quilt. (The quilt above has an embroidered label on the back of it; seen in the folded over corner.)

I interfaced the towels in this quilt to make them less likely to stretch and unravel.

I interfaced the towels in this quilt to make them less likely to stretch and unravel.

Interfacing-Pellon 911 Featherweight is the brand I use, and it is a lightweight fabric that gets steam pressed onto the backs of the pieces of the t-shirt/clothing/fabric.  It allows a stretchy fabric to behave more like a cotton fabric. (In the quilt above, interfacing was used to stabilize the Hurricane’s towels.)

Batting-I use 80/20 Cotton/Polyester blend and it is the layer of wadding between the top (t-shirt block layer) and the back of the quilt.

Hanging Sleeve-a flat ~3” sleeve, usually made from the same fabric as the backing fabric. The top edge is sewn into the top binding and the bottom edge is hand sewn down to the back. A rod or pole slides into the sleeve to allow the quilt to be hung. (The sleeve for the Hurricane’s Quilt would be made from Hurricane’s fabric.)

Scraps/Remnants-Any fabric left over from making a sewing project.  For t-shirt quilts that means any part not used in the block---sleeves, bottoms of shirts, etc.

Next week I will cover words like piecing, applique, and longarm.  Please let me know if you have a question...leave me a comment, and I will try to answer it!

Do you have a term or a part of a quilt or the quilting process that you don’t know how to name or define?

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Week: More quilting terms!

I am Reading:  I am still reading Wicked by Gregory McGuire and Tightrope by Simon Mawer, and I am working my way through Let Your Creativity Work for You by Heather Allen. I am still reading bits of poetry, and I have stacks of things to read, which always makes me happy!  I listened to a reading given by poet and essayist Ross Gay this week, and I highly recommend looking into his work.  His talk and reading were so good! 




The Magic I Can Put Into a Quilt!

“She seemed to walk in an atmosphere of things about to happen.”

    Anne of Avonlea

Lucy Maud Montgomery

Hello!

I hope you have had a beautiful week with the advent of autumn and a lovely, round full moon to light our nights!  I promised last week that I would discuss layouts in this blog.  In the quilting world, layouts are limitless...blocks and pieces of fabric can be combined to create endless combinations to lovely effect in innumerable quilts.  

Classic.jpg

For my T-Shirt quilts, layouts can be simpler, especially when we are talking about Classic T-Shirt quilts.  Classic T-Shirt quilts are always in a grid pattern and the blocks finish at 13”.  Who decides the layout for a Classic quilt is completely up to the customer.  Some clients like to create the layout, while others are happy to leave the layout of the pieces to me.  For people who prefer to decide the layout of their shirts, I have provided a grid on the Order page. You can download it and fill it in and give it to me with your shirts, or you can email or text me a picture of the shirts in the layout you like best.

Customers who want me to complete the layout can get a preview of the layout once I get the shirts prepped before I piece the top, or they can be surprised when the quilt is finished.  The way I usually think about a Classic layout is by the color of the shirts (actual color and dark, light, or medium) and the size of the graphics.  I try to mix up the colors and the values to balance the quilt, and the graphics need to be balanced in the same way.  Large graphics that cover a square cannot all be on the same side of the quilt.  I also look at all word graphics and picture graphics as a way to balance the quilt, as well.  I have a giant 6”x6” table in the studio that I usually use to finalize layouts.  I set out all of the pieces and I move them around until I am satisfied!

IMG_20210806_142223_945.jpg

Custom T-Shirt quilt layouts are always done by me.  Clients may let me know they want a particular piece centralized, but I create the layout based on the same factors as Classic quilts, while I also change the size of the pieces.  The size of the pieces are based on the shirts themselves, so if you have pieces or graphics that do not fit into 13”...like hockey jerseys...then you might want to get a Custom quilt.  Custom quilt layouts have a more modern look to them, too.  I love creating a custom layout because it is like a puzzle!  Customers can also get a sneak peak at the layout, if they like, before I piece the top.

Memory quilts and custom quilts can also have endless layout possibilities.  The layout for Memory quilts are really based on what the customer is seeking and what will best highlight the fabrics from the clothing and honor the person who wears/wore them.  Custom quilt layouts are often decided by something a client sees or a fabric they have or even a room or place they are planning to put the quilt.  In both cases, usually customers and I look over the clothing/fabric and discuss everything.  Sometimes I draw a possible layout, too, to help them decide. I am currently researching classic quilt block patterns for a special memory quilt coming up in my line-up. 

Pillows and bears are just smaller versions of Custom layouts, which is so much fun!  For bears, I make the fabric for the bear, so I can place special pieces in special places based on the bear pattern...for instance I can place a heart over the heart of the bear.  Pillows can also be customized...sometimes they are made from one piece or several pieces.  Sometimes pillows have a cotton back and sometimes the back is clothing fabric.

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I suppose my point with this blog is to explain my process and thinking for layouts and to show you that customization is the heart of my business.  If you have an idea and you are unsure, then ask me.  I know what I can do and what I cannot do, and if I cannot do what you want, then it might spark an idea in my head that gets us the same effect.  You might be surprised by the magic I can put into a quilt!  

So what would you like to see in your quilt?

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Week: Interfacing, heatnbond, sashing...what are all those quilting terms I am using?

I am Reading:  I am still reading Wicked by Gregory McGuire and Tightrope by Simon Mawer, and I am working my way through Let Your Creativity Work for You by Heather Allen. I am still reading bits of poetry, and I have stacks of things to read, which always makes me happy!  I am still thinking about the need for more reading everywhere and the need for reading freedom in schools.  I used to teach Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, and I always felt its relevance and the prickles of fear at its uncanny read of the bent of our world some 63 years on. If you have not read it, then you should.  It is beautifully written and it has the integrity Virginia Woolf says great literature has.  Pores...the book has pores.  We cannot allow Beatty-like philosophies to suffocate our society’s creativity and thought. Are you thinking what I am thinking...yes a reread and some quotations are in order.



The "Fire of Genius" and Beautiful Art

“...Nature, in her most irrational mood, has traced in invisible ink on the walls of the mind a premonition which these great artists confirm; a sketch which only needs to be held to the fire of genius to become visible.  When one so exposes it and sees it come to life one exclaims in rapture, But this is what I have always felt and known and desired!  And one boils over with excitement, and, shutting the book even with a kind of reverence as if it were something very precious, a stand-by to return to as long as one lives…”

A Room of One’s Own

      Virginia Woolf

Hello!

I hope you have had a brilliant week, and are staying safe!  I have been asked to add a hanging sleeve to a beautiful quilt, so I researched the fabric because I want the sleeve to match the backing fabric.  I found out the fabric is called Bloomsbury---a fabric line inspired by the Bloomsbury group...Virginia Woolf’s group of lively painters, writers, and artists, hence the Virgina Woolf quotation this week!

I have had a lovely week finishing up two large custom quilts with lots of pieces (over 150 between the two!), and working on a lovely heart quilt.  I have also prepped for a new project, and I have been hand sewing Dresden plates, too.  I’d love to hear what you have been busy with this week...leave me a comment below!

I promised you last time to show you the custom quilt I had just finished, and I am so excited!  I had so much fun designing this quilt.  It is a custom quilt with a regular custom layout, but the owner wanted a more crazy quilt look, and she had so many fun pieces in her clothing that I could use.  So I appliqued pieces to the regular custom layout for the beautiful quilt below!

Crazy Quilt inspired Custom T-Shirt/Clothing quilt!

Crazy Quilt inspired Custom T-Shirt/Clothing quilt!

I love all of the details!

I love all of the details!

I’m so pleased the quilt is loved!

I’m so pleased the quilt is loved!

As you can see, butterflies roam all over the quilt, a bear is tromping across a seam, and in one block a vintage girl is riding her bicycle right off of the quilt.  I love to create custom layouts, and cutting and placing the appliqued pieces on this quilt was pure, creative fun!  The owner contacted me after she had the quilt for a little while, and she said, “Just to let you know, I’m loving my blanket and all the little aspects that I find new everyday. Thank You sooooooooooo much.”  She really made my day by letting me know how much she loves the quilt!  

I love the simple black binding, too!

I love the simple black binding, too!

The reproduction quilt made its way to its owner this week, too, and I asked him to send me pictures of it in action during a reenactment!  I will keep you posted on that!

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Week:  Studio highlights and quilting information

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands, Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte (though I am kind of stalled there...I was led away by the lure of another text!). I am reading Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow; a friend gave it to me...it is the book upon which the musical Hamilton is based.  I am also reading The Yellow House by Martin Gayford. (I’m still contemplating Willa Cather, and I may reread Measure for Measure...Shakespeare in Spring and my oldest is reading it for a class. I love that play!) Let me know what you are reading!




Busy Christmas Order Week!

“On a personal level, too, art is life intensified: it delights more deeply, consumes more rapidly; it engraves the traces of imaginary and intellectual adventure on the countenance of its servant and in the long run, for all the monastic calm of his external existence, leads to self-indulgence, overrefinement, lethargy, and a restless curiosity that a lifetime of wild passions and pleasures could scarcely engender.”

Death in Venice

Thomas Mann

Just off of the frame, some of the echo quilting I did this week.  See that orange fabric…that is the back and it is going to be the binding!  I think it will really pick up the appliqued flowers!

Just off of the frame, some of the echo quilting I did this week. See that orange fabric…that is the back and it is going to be the binding! I think it will really pick up the appliqued flowers!

Happy Friday!

I hope you have had a wonderful week!  I have been busy sewing, prepping, quilting, and enjoying my work.  You can see above the lovely echo quilting I did earlier in the week...I am really starting to like custom quilting!  I do enjoy the simple stipple I use on t-shirt quilts; it is a soothing pattern that allows me to avoid any parts of shirts that need special care like pockets, buttons, placards, or areas with heavy paint.  I do enjoy having the opportunity to do some custom quilting, though, too, and I think in the new year I will endeavor to do more practice with it.

I am deep into getting Christmas projects completed.  I am trying to finish the Christmas orders by mid-December, so that if people need to mail items they can.  I feel good about my progress, too.  

I think the anniversary quilt will have to be put on hold until after I complete that work, though, so you will likely not see more about it until later in December.  I have also hinted at showing you the embroidery work I have been doing in the dark evenings before bed...I may get some pictures taken of it, but lighting is not great when I am working on it.  

Next week is Thanksgiving, and I won’t post another blog until the week after, I think...unless I get it set up and ready by Wednesday evening.  I have promised myself that I will take the entire day of Thanksgiving off, so I cannot set up the blog on Thursday if I do!  Maybe I can get it set up on Friday...which will mean it will be late, but even if I do not get a blog written next week, know that I am thinking of you all!  I hope you all have a safe, socially distant Thanksgiving, so that we can all enjoy a table full of family next year!

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: That depends on you...what would you like to hear about?  Leave a comment by next Monday or Tuesday...maybe a few suggestions will help me get the blog finished early next week!  Really, I would love to hear from you!

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands. I am also reading Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice, and now I am casting about for what my mind needs next.   The Mann novel was acquired at the library along with Blue Rose by Carol Muske-Dukes (poetry).  I am also reading The Yellow House by Martin Gayford.   



Ecstasy in the Art of Making

“For Vincent, smoking was a great solace.  He often recommended it as a source of comfort and a remedy against melancholy.  So, too, was painting directly from life.  As he had written to Theo, when he did that and all went well, he could lose himself in an ecstasy. ‘The emotions are sometimes so strong that one works without knowing one works.’”

The Yellow House

  Martin Gayford

Our sweet kitty, Smokey.  He is sorely missed.

Our sweet kitty, Smokey. He is sorely missed.

Happy Friday the 13th!

Hopefully you have a super day filled with good vibes and sweet feelings!  I have had a great week.  This week has been a week of preparation and finishing orders...I am trying to get everything prepped, so that I can just pick projects up and make them.  As I worked away this week in the studio, I had a Vincent moment, I think. I was working along, and I stopped all of a sudden and thought, “I really like to make things.”  I mean a moment of complete joy, ecstasy if you will, in my work, and I have to say I wasn’t even doing my favorite part of my work.  However, this week’s work has been creative and challenging in the best ways.  

Carrie stopped in this week to bring me a top she finished, and I told her I was working on this really complicated prep for a quilt, and she said, “You mean you’re having fun?”  She knows me so well.

I didn’t get more of the Anniversary quilt made, but I feel good about my work this week.  Sidney and I have been participating in the Preview week for UNCSA (North Carolina School of the Arts), where he hopes to attend his Senior year of high school, and so some of my regular work time has been spent learning and feeling even better about the campus and programs offered there.  

Unfortunately this week has also been about our family adjusting to the loss of our sweet kitty.  He was 19, and so much a part of the fabric of our family.  We will miss him dearly.

I suppose I have you all caught up now...I hope you have a week filled with love and joy in creating or doing what you love.

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: That depends on you...what would you like to hear about?  Leave a comment by next Tuesday or Wednesday!  More about the Anniversary quilt next week, too!  Pictures of my night time embroidery?  Would you like to see that?

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands. I finished both  The Murder at the Vicarage and Sleeping Murder by Agatha Christie.  I started Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice, and now I am casting about for what my mind needs next.   The Mann novel was acquired at the library along with Blue Rose by Carol Muske-Dukes (poetry).  I mentioned Virginia Woolf last week, but I picked up another fiery mind with Vincent Van Gogh.  I started reading The Yellow House by Martin Gayford...I feel sure I mentioned it here before.   



"Amiable Wraiths"

“Just when I was settling down to it, Lettice Protheroe drifted in.

I use the word ‘drifted’ advisedly.  I have read in novels in which young people are described as bursting with energy--joie de vivre, the magnificent vitality of youth.  Personally, all the young people I come across have the air of amiable wraiths.”

The Murder at the Vicarage

Agatha Christie

Happy Friday!

I hope you are having at least a bearable week if not a great week!  I have been busy cutting, quilting, and sewing!  I finally finished The Count of Monte Cristo this week, and I started the first Miss Marple Mystery.  After teaching high school for nigh on15 years, the quotation above made me chuckle.

Row one!

Row one!

Some piecing has been done on the Anniversary quilt, and I am hoping to do more tomorrow.  I am deep into the heat of holiday orders, so my time is very limited…I know I should have endeavored to finish the Anniversary quilt before the holiday rush...but...alas.

This is the last blog before Election day, so please be sure to get out and vote if you have not already done so.  I voted by absentee ballot, and my ballot has been processed and accepted. Vote...it is very important.

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: That depends on you...what would you like to hear about?  Leave a comment by next Tuesday or Wednesday!  More about the Anniversary quilt next week, too!  And maybe a little about what I have been watching while embroidering in the evenings! Maybe some pictures of that, too!

My copy of Agatha Christie.  I picked it up at a used book store a few years ago.  It smells wonderful…you know, that old book smell…it has the first Miss Marple Mystery and the last Miss Marple Mystery.  I don’t know why they put the first last, bu…

My copy of Agatha Christie. I picked it up at a used book store a few years ago. It smells wonderful…you know, that old book smell…it has the first Miss Marple Mystery and the last Miss Marple Mystery. I don’t know why they put the first last, but I started with the first.

 I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Murder at the Vicarage by Agatha Christie. I finished The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged); I was not disappointed!  I also checked out some books from the library, which I have to go pick up safely with my mask in the express checkout.  I am so excited!  More about those next week!  I am also reading various poetry.   




Cutting is Magic!

Measure twice. Cut once.

Very appropriate proverb!

My favorite cutting tools in the studio.

My favorite cutting tools in the studio.

Happy Friday!

I hope you have had a super week!  I have been busy finishing a few projects, delivering quilts, and meeting with new customers, so my week has been less present in the studio than some weeks.  

As you probably know I finalize the blog on Thursday afternoon, and today when I was piecing a quilt I had cut out last week, I started thinking about cutting.  Cutting really is the magic in quilting.  If a quilter cuts the pieces right, then the quilt will go together so easily!  I remember my PawPaw, who was a woodworker, say often to me to “measure twice, and cut once,” and I live by those words all the time in the studio!  Too often, though, I find cutting rather arduous, but I think I will look at it a little differently now...it really is what makes everything better!

Great preparation always helps!

Have a great week. Stay safe. Vote!

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: That depends on you...what would you like to hear about?  Leave a comment by next Tuesday or Wednesday!  More about the Anniversary quilt next week, too!

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged); I am getting so close to finishing! 1112 pages finished...the end is 1243, so only 131 to go...oh my...so good!  Maybe Agatha Christie soon?  I am also reading various poetry.   



Can You Tell I Am Feeling Bookish Today?

“He’s more myself than I am.  Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.”

        Catherine of Heathcliff

Wuthering Heights

Emily Bronte

Happy Friday...the last of September!

I am having trouble believing October starts late next week.  Alas. Well, I promised you one of my favorite quotations from Wuthering Heights, so I began with it this week. I did not, in fact, start rereading it (The Count and his revenge are really keeping me busy!), but I think I will take it up again soon.  I realized yesterday, again, mind you, that I crave books like most people crave food, and I mean that about reading itself, and the composition of books themselves.  I sometimes long for a certain style, era or author...turns of phrase or familiar friends...a difficult wordy maze or soothing pastoral.  The Count of Monte Cristo is interesting because it is a translation from the French, so I find myself going back to the French to see how certain phrases or looks were originally written.  I have thought about buying a French copy, so that I can match and read them.  I want to do the same thing for The Lover...what a beautiful book it must be in French.

Honestly, I don’t spend all of  my time reading, though.  I really only spend about 15-30 minutes on weekdays reading, usually right before bed.  This week, though, I had several appointments, so my book went with me.  And my appointments, both business and personal, have dominated the week.  I almost think they have dominated more of my time than the studio has this week.  Probably not, but it feels that way.  I will try to make next week a much quieter week where I am in the studio all day! 

I did make some progress yesterday between appointments, and I hope to have a final Anniversary quilt layout for you soon!  

I realized yesterday that I forgot I am making two quilts…I have just been making half square triangles…no wonder I have so many!

I realized yesterday that I forgot I am making two quilts…I have just been making half square triangles…no wonder I have so many!

I also prepped orders a lot this week; I have one quilt on the quilting frame and several others waiting for that one to be finished!  I also delivered a beautiful quilt to its owner!  All in all a productive week.  What did you do this week?  Did you make progress on something you have been working on?  I would love for you to share in the comments...and it can be anything, not just quilting or sewing things!  Obviously books are fair game here, too!  You might have other passions, too, so tell me about those! 

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: Anniversary Quilt layout.  

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  

Business News!

“The goal, in being cræfty, is not to use as much as possible of the technology and resources you have at your disposal but to use as little as possible in relation to the job that needs undertaking.  This is the resourcefulness in cræft.  Having physical adeptness, strength, and fitness represent the power in cræft.  And finally, understanding the materials, making critical decisions about how to approach the work, and factoring in wider financial and time constraints represents the knowledge in cræft.”

Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning

                                                                  of Traditional Crafts

                                                                  Alexander Langlands

A little hand work I have been working on in the evenings.

A little hand work I have been working on in the evenings.

Happy Friday and almost Fall!

The equinox is next week, and I can already feel the changes in the weather.  I have been busy on a quilt this week that reminds me that I am often astonished at what I get to make. This particular quilt is made from something other than t-shirts or cotton fabric, and I have marveled at how lovely this very colorful quilt is!  I will share it with you when I have shared it with its owner!  As usual, I have thoroughly enjoyed my work this week! 

I promised you information about my secret plan...so...here goes:  I have hired a contractor to help me piece t-shirt quilt tops!  I know---exciting and nerve wracking all at once---I realized I am a total control freak (I already knew, but sometimes I forget!), so giving over some parts of my work to another person has been a huge step for me.  I feel very grateful that my contractor is an award winning quilter, who I have known for longer than I have been in business, and she is always one of my best supporters.  Carrie Hauser is a wonderful addition to Finished Fibers, and I am so pleased to welcome her!  Carrie has finished her first Finished Fibers quilt top, and she did a beautiful job.  I am excited to have her help on future tops!  Carrie is not just a contractor for Finished Fibers, she is also a business owner herself.  She is a Longarm quilter, and you can see more of her work on Instagram @lovebulongarming and on her website here: https://www.lovebuglongarming.com/.  I meant to get a picture of her when she dropped off her first top, but I was so excited that I forgot!  You should visit her website and Instagram, though, because there are pictures there! (By the way, she is going to laugh when she reads this!)

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes still has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him, still. Don’t worry---the Count is moving every closer to bringing his revenge to fruition!  I have been eyeing The Witcher books, too.  I remembered Wuthering Heights this week...I think I may need an iconic love story.  I love Wuthering Heights...the language, the angst, the love, the torture, the...well everything.  OOh, maybe I will use my favorite quotation from the novel next week.  I actually have it printed on a pillow. :)  

Quick Studio Tour!

“Women have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size.”

“A Room of One’s Own”

Virginia Woolf

Happy Friday!

I often revisit Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own” because it is not only a wonderful essay about women and society, but it is a beautiful essay about literature and its importance.  I also thought “A Room of One’s Own” fitting today because I am sharing a video of my studio space...my own room where my work and creativity shine.

You can find the video here: https://www.instagram.com/finished.fibers/ once you get there, click on the sleeping dog! Enjoy!

Don’t worry I have not forgotten the half square triangles...they will get to shine next week!

I know today is September 11, but the more than 190,000 deaths in the US from Covid-19 seems to overshadow that to make me immensely sad.  Wear a mask and take precautions.

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  I did say I have a secret plan, right?  I need to get a picture for that blog post! :)


I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes still has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him, still. I have been eyeing The Witcher books, too.  I spent most o

Fall Plans and a Busy Studio

“A light wind swept over the corn, and all nature laughed in the sunshine.”

Anne Bronte

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

Some of the quilts that were delivered this week!

Some of the quilts that were delivered this week!

Happy Friday and Happy September!

A lot of people seem to be talking about fall this week...the weather changing, or not changing as the case is here in North Carolina, fall decorations, Halloween...so I thought today’s quotation was lovely.  The summer is waning, and pretty soon the corn will rustle dryly in the fields and pumpkins will be found everywhere.  Hopefully all of nature will continue to laugh in the sunshine.

My week has been very busy.  I delivered eight quilts this week to three customers, and I had a happy reception from them all.  One lovely customer said:

“You made magic!  You were able to bring together a grandmother and granddaughter and create a wonderful memory...through your talent and skill they created a timeless quilt TOGETHER!  The quilt honored both of their styles-I love it.”

I really do love making my clients happy by creating lovely, warm, special quilts for them!  

I have also been working on my secret plan that will be finalized today in an exciting meeting...so you will have to wait until next week to learn more about it!  In addition to that I have been prepping and piecing three more quilts for next week!

The studio reorganization is fantastic...as you can tell the studio is a happening place, and now everything (almost) has a place of its own!  I have really enjoyed working in my space this week.  I am plotting that video tour…I might use IG TV...I’ll let you know!  I will try to link the video here in the blog when I make it, too!

My half square triangles are still coming along, but they are not finished...I know, I know...but really, I am working very hard!  My secret plan will hopefully help me with time...I am so excited! I think you will be, too!

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger


Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  The reveal of the secret plan! :)


I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes still has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him, still. I have been eyeing The Witcher books, too.  Hmmm.

Organization can be key!

“He was a great teacher, Mr. da Silva.  He treated us with complete seriousness, as if we eighth graders, during fifth period, might settle something scholars had been arguing about for centuries.  He listened to our chirping, his hairline pressing down his eyes.  When he spoke himself, it was in complete paragraphs.  If you listened closely it was possible to hear the dashes and commas in his speech, even the colons and semi-colons.  Mr. da Silva had a relevant quotation for everything that happened to him and in this way evaded real life.  Instead of eating his lunch, he told you what Oblonsky and Levin had for lunch in Anna Karenina.  Or, describing a sunset from Daniel Deronda, he failed to notice the one that was presently falling over Michigan.”

Middlesex

      Jeffrey Eugenides

Happy Friday!

I hope you are well and have had a super week.  I chose today’s quotation in homage to the best teachers I know and to all of the teachers who are working to make places of learning wherever they are.  I know this school year is a challenge for everyone.

Last week I told you I was going to work on organizing and cleaning up the studio, and I feel very successful in that endeavor!  I have a few things left to do, but overall everything is neater and better organized, especially my orders.  Prior to the reorganization, orders were in either one of six stackable laundry baskets or they were in giant ziploc bags.  You can see how that would be cluttered after a while.  I now have all of my orders in containers (save one, but it is neatly tucked away), and I am so pleased with the room it created in the studio.  

New bins for orders creates more space in the studio!

New bins for orders creates more space in the studio!

My embroidery machine along side the big stackable laundry baskets.  Do you spy the six quilts all packaged and ready to go?

My embroidery machine along side the big stackable laundry baskets. Do you spy the six quilts all packaged and ready to go?

I also dusted and organized shelves.  My husband had some books on shelves in the studio, and I packed those up and made space for fabric scraps.

My steam press and new fabric scrap shelves!

My steam press and new fabric scrap shelves!

Shelf under my cutting table…everything within reach!

Shelf under my cutting table…everything within reach!

I also reorganized all of my thread and personal projects.  Now everything has a place and I feel like the studio runs more smoothly!  I will try to create a video for my stories or do a live video on Instagram of my studio, so that you can see how it is organized better!  Would you like that?

Thread and personal quilts.  I have a new thread holder for my longarm thread…it is waiting to be hung on the wall.

Thread and personal quilts. I have a new thread holder for my longarm thread…it is waiting to be hung on the wall.

I have also spent time binding, piecing, and quilting this week.  I have six quilts ready to deliver!

I am still chugging along on my half square triangles---I am getting so excited to see them come together!  How about yours?  Can I see some pictures?  Leave me a comment or send me a DM or tag me in your stories on Instagram.  

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  Definitely news on my secret plan I mentioned last week!

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him. (Yes, I have read the book before, but I am the person who always cries at the end of A Tale of Two Cities...even though I know what is going to happen...and the person who hopes 1984 will end differently, even though I have read it a hundred times.)  Please let me know what you are reading...it really doesn’t matter what it is as long as it is giving you pleasure!




Studio Reorganizing!

“But our dreams are the anterooms between quickness and death---where we divest of meaning’s demands.”

“Conversations with Sleep (IV)”

Lines 19-21

Kyle Dargan

Happy Friday!

May I ask:  Where has August gone?  I can hardly believe we are so close to September.  Well, school has resumed for all of my boys (husband included both teaching and learning), and it has been an eventful week.  NCSU began classes a little over a week and a half ago with a hybrid in-person schedule and this afternoon (I am writing this Thursday evening!) undergraduate classes were moved to all online.  ASU looks like its Covid numbers are good so far, so we will hope Sam can safely stay on campus.  High School classes for my youngest have been underwhelming, but I think this week has been, really, just an acclimation week.  I think everyone is trying to settle in before major work starts.  I seriously want to give Sidney some work, though! (Can you feel the eye roll?)  Teachers, professors, administrators…everyone trying to school has my deepest sympathy and respect right now.

My week has been busy and enlightening...I have been wanting to move things around in my studio for a while now, and I have a pretty solid plan.  My business, five years in, is beginning to outgrow my little studio above the garage, so reorganization has become a necessity.  This week I started moving things around, and I think I have decided to dig in and finish the shuffle tomorrow.  Otherwise my head might explode!

Earlier this summer, I moved my desk, where I do paperwork and answer emails, completely out of the studio.  I now have a sweet, very organized desk in our dining room, and I love that set up.  (I am typing this blog there right now!)  In the studio this week, I cleaned off one bookcase, so that I can store fabric in it, and I moved my bolts of fabric to the corner where my table used to be.  The bolts are now more accessible, and they are organized and neat!  

Easily accessible and organized…I am so motivated and excited to finish more reorganizing for you to see!

Easily accessible and organized…I am so motivated and excited to finish more reorganizing for you to see!

I plan to move my embroidery machine to the corner where my bolts used to live, and I have acquired new bins to keep customer orders in.  I plan to get all of that squared away tomorrow, so I should have good pictures for next week.

The cleaning and organizing so far has been at odd times built around the work I am currently trying to complete, but I decided today that I need to just get organized.  My work-flow and my mind flow will appreciate and benefit from the studio being cleaner and more organized.  I hate to halt production of quilts for even one day, but I know that getting the studio finished in a day will be better for me.  And every little bit helps these days!

I am also looking at another big...and excellent...change for the business, but I will have more information about that later.   I have also been spending a lot of extra hours on this plan!

All of that being said, you know my half square triangles have been in tiny bits of production all week!  I will continue to work on those, but the Anniversary quilt is only one facet of this five year celebration!  I will not lose sight of it, though! How are your quilts going?  Can I see some pictures?  Are you struggling to get all of the half square triangles finished?  Let me know how things are going in the comments below.  Are you super peeved that I am taking so long?  Let me know! I would also love to see your work!

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: Okay...definitely studio pictures.  I’m sure an update on the Anniversary quilt, too.  And who knows, my other plan may be ready to be revealed, too! 

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry---Kyle Dargan’s Honest Engine lives on my nightstand--beautiful, timely, and important.  What are you reading? I would love to know!  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still.  

Busy Week and Good Reads!

‘I always thought,’ says LF, ‘that an artist’s was the hardest life of all.’ Its rigour--not always apparent to an outside observer--is that an artist has to navigate forward into the unknown guided only by an internal sense of direction, keep up a set of standards which are imposed entirely from within, meanwhile maintaining faith that the task he or she has set him or herself is worth struggling constantly to achieve.  This is all contrary to the notion of bohemian disorder.

February 24, 2004

Man with a Blue Scarf: On Sitting for a

 Portrait by Lucian Freud

      Martin Gayford

Hello and Happy Friday!

Whew!  I feel like I have had a busy week.  I did a little Research and Development in mask pattern making, since I need to make masks for two of my men returning to their respective Universities. I made masks for the entire family early on in the pandemic, but I want to make more solid masks for the long term.  I think I like the process and pattern I have made; I just need to make sure I get the fit right.  Prototypes abound!  I did make two pretty masks that fit me, so that is progress!

Two pretty masks!  I think the boys will prefer elastic ear pieces instead of the tie.

Two pretty masks! I think the boys will prefer elastic ear pieces instead of the tie.

I also pieced four wall hangings, a Queen sized t-shirt quilt, quilted two King sized quilts, and cut and sewed more squares for the anniversary quilt.  I did not get any pictures taken of the half square triangles, and I know you are probably ready to move to the layout phase of this project. Don’t worry, I will be there soon!  

Four pieced wall hangings ready for quilting!

Four pieced wall hangings ready for quilting!

How has your week been?  What did you sew?  Please share pictures and your progress...also feel free to complain in the comments about how slow I am being! Honestly, I set aside the month of July to work on half square triangles, so I’m not really behind in my plan; we will see if I can stay that way on track!

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week:  Finished Half Square triangles!

I am Reading: I finished Elantris by Brandon Sanderson and Man in the Blue Scarf: On Sitting for a Portrait by Lucien Freud by Martin Gayford.  Both excellent reads!  I am reading Elantris with my oldest son, so I was trying not to get too far ahead.  I got really excited and devoured the rest in one sitting, though, and now he will have to catch up!  I loved the Lucien Freud book so much that I ordered The Yellow House, the book Martin Gayford wrote about Vincent Van Gogh.  I ‘m so excited!  I have already read Vincent Van Gogh: The Life by Naifeh and Smith, which was a lovely read.  I highly recommend it!  I started Alexander Langlands book about Craft: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts, and I am going to really like that book!  If you don’t know, I am a medievalist.  My concentration in college was Anglo Saxon and Medieval literature, and I love to read both in their original English.  Langlands is a Medieval scholar, and as I read the preface and the first few chapters, I realized how much I miss another medieval mind.  Plus...I think the topic of crafts is interesting, too!  I’ll keep you posted about that one---I think I will get good quotations out of it!  ! I am still reading The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged)  I am also reading various poetry---Anne Sexton mostly this week..  What are you reading? I would love to know!  My hand is also hovering over my copy of Mozart’s Starling...I might delve into it soon.  Do you read more than one book at a time?