Thursday, May 28, 2009

Collecting......

In the last post I showed the tin I bought and mentioned "collections". Tins are everywhere in my home and i'll show you some...

Most of them contain what it says on the outside: coffee, tea, chocolate milkpowder, cookies...and lots of different sweet sprinkles we Dutch like to put on our sandwiches..


Sewingroom (small) tins...


.....and the crackers are in a crackertin, soap for the dishwasher in a dishwashertin etc. I just don't like cardboard boxes!
Another (strange to some) collection are my unsharpened pencils. It started with just fun pencils I found here and there. Now I buy a pencil when on holiday. E.g on from the Tower of London when I was there, or one with "carpe diem"from Rome.
I also buy keychains from things/places I visited and use them as such or attach them on one of my (handbags) It's fun to see a red English telephonebox dangling again,when I use a totebag I haven't used for a while. Brings back memories from that fun holiday!

Last but not least my increasing collection of pincushions!


And don't we all collect fabrics????
Speaking of those: I got 6 emails and 2 comments about the Dutch fabrics and all 8 of you would want to swap some. Well, hope you understand that swapping with 8 people is a bit too much. I can't pick 1 or 2 and ignore others, so the best I can do is give a link where those fabrics can be bought (it's in English or English can be chosen). I myself am a member of their Dutch fq fabric club. Check this site http://www.minewood.nl/en-uk/

Monday, May 25, 2009

Ascensionday weekend

After cleaning house, doing some gardening, having Lotte and her BF over for dinner and having dealt with a lot of dirty laundry, DH and I decided it was motorcycle weekend. We drove to the province of Zeeland in the down west of the country.

First stop was at the lock: bridge was up and a lot of boats had to get in. It got rather crowdy inside and the lockmaster kept on shouting that everyone had to move to the front as much as possible. Easier said than done!


Next stretching-the-legs point was at this lake.

No Dutch mountains but this is how our dunes look like!


The effects of global warming compel the Dutch to make the natural sea wall higher to keep our feet dry in the future. Here in Zeeland the know all about that. The province contains of islands (actually peninsulas) and the last big flood was in 1953, known here as The Disaster. There was a lot of work in progress...


Did we drive past a quiltshop?? Ofcourse we did! I wasn't allowed to make pics inside but I did make one from the outside. Look at this lovely kitchenware they sold!

I bought me some Dutch fabrics for the Dutch quilt I'm planning. Those are the red, white and blue ones. The tulips are for fun 'cause they are my favourite flowers and the striped one is apron fabric for the traditional costumes. I'm always on the lookout for those fabrics for that quilt. In Zeeland there are not many who still wear the costumes, but as I walked out of the store this lady sat almost at the doorstep! Note the apron :)


I also have a lot of tins . It's quite a collection and they're all in use to store coffee, tea, candy, things we put on our sandwiches, etc. Ofcourse I have some for needles and pins, buttons and ribbons. The kitchenware was too expensive, a lovely coffee tray to big to take home but this tin could hold the fabrics ánd fitted perfectly in my motorsuitcase!

We drove past these bright red, lifesized cows on the way there. They were fairly close to our home. On the way back I told DH I wanted to stop at the strawberry cows to make a pic. He didn't know what I was talking about: he completely missed them (even though I pointed them out) Ah men! What DO they notice one might ask.....

Monday, May 11, 2009

A new collection?

On Mother's day the weather was absolutely great and DH, DS and DD2 hopped on the bikes for a visit to Lotte. DS wanted to show his new bike and Lotte had to go to her MIL too and I didn't want her to drive through the country all day.

Lotte is the most thoughtfull child. She always brings little gifts for one of the family, sends cards etc. This is what she bought for me

At first i didn't know for sure what it was, but then i pulled his tail
(and grrrr Blogger flips pics again)

It's a tape measure! I have 3 now and find more and more cuties on the internet so I feel the need for a new collection coming up. I already have a big glass vase full of pincushions and I could add a new vase with tape measures.

DD Maren made a great pastasalad after we got home; she's the cooking and baking one. DH cleaned up after her in the kitchen.
I'm not sure what DS did on Mother's day. Perhaps he just loves me and that's it :)

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Mother's day

A link on http://jovaliquilts.blogspot.com/ brought me to this, and at lest I found this very interesting to read!
Wishing everyone a Happy Mother's day


Today is Mother's Day. Mother's Day as we know it — where we celebrate our own mothers, with flowers, gifts, and cards — is relatively new, but annual celebrations to celebrate motherhood are an ancient practice.
The motherhood festivities have historically been in spring, the season of fertility. In ancient Egypt, there were celebrations to honor Isis, the loving mother-goddess, who is often shown in Egyptian art with the baby Horus at her breast, much like Mary and Jesus in later Christian iconography. The cult of the great mother-goddess Cybele began in Turkey and soon moved to Greece and Rome, and she was worshipped in some form for more than a thousand years. Her priestesses led wild celebrations, full of drinking, dancing, music, and all kinds of debauchery.
As the Roman Empire and Europe transitioned to Christianity, the Church set aside the fourth Sunday of Lent as a day to honor motherhood. It was a day to celebrate the Virgin Mary, and for people to honor their "mother church."
In the 1600s, England declared an official Mothering Day for that fourth Sunday of Lent. It was a time when families were encouraged to get together, and servants or workers were allowed one day off work to go see their mothers, since many working-class families in England worked as servants on separate estates and rarely got to see each other. Mothering Day was also declared an exception to the fasting and penance of Lent, so that families could have a feast together.
When the pilgrims came to America, they stopped celebrating Mothering Day, just as they stopped celebrating most holidays that they thought had become too secular.
Mother's Day was reintroduced to America in 1870 by Julia Ward Howe, who wanted to set aside a day of protest after the Civil War, in which mothers could come together and protest their sons killing other mothers' sons.
But the woman who really created Mother's Day as we know it was Anna Jarvis. Her mother had held Mother's Friendship Days to reunite families and neighbors separated during the war, and when she died, her daughter, Anna Jarvis, worked to proclaim an official Mother's Day to honor her mother and celebrate peace. And so on May 10, 1908, the first official Mother's Day celebrations took place in Grafton, West Virginia, and at a church in Philadelphia. In 1914, Woodrow Wilson designated the second Sunday of May as Mother's Day.
But Mother's Day became commercialized very quickly, especially in the floral industry, and Anna Jarvis was furious. She said, "What will you do to route charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers, and other termites that would undermine with their greed one of the finest, noblest, and truest movements and celebrations?" But flower sales and card sales continued to grow, and Anna Jarvis died in poverty and without any children of her own.
In the last U.S. Census, there were an estimated 82.8 million mothers in this country, and about 96 percent of American consumers spend money for Mother's Day.

Friday, May 08, 2009

Liberated!

I finally liberated myself! After reading Gwen Marston, Freddy Moran and Jan Mullen I thought I'd give it a try. I sewed (not by hand this time, another milestone!) liberated roses..

I started with a paperpiecing pattern. After years and years of fretting over every seam, you got to take babysteps. When I got to the 4th rose, I didn't sew the pattern lines anymore and the next flowers I made became more and more "freehand".
The pic is again a bit blurry (perhaps I got to take pictures NOT hastily), but you'll get the idea.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the table, Corrine was playing with her Kaffe Fasset plaids and stripes...

During my time off, I did not only make roses and spinning wheels, I also made good progress on this one:

And last I got to show a pic I took at the quiltshow we visited. Isn't this the best tin ever???Too bad is was waaaay to expensive and it held a pair of scissors that were too big but...it's still a great tin!

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Been busy (part 2)!


This is what came home with me.You can tell Blogger won't work with me any more: 2 pics are flipped. You really should bend your head for the first pic (and enlarge it!!) Please do! It's a kit I bought from "de Haan en Wagemakers" I previous posts I told you that they re-produced old chintzes that originally came from the east Indies in the 17th century. I saw this kit in a magazine and fell in love with it. It is very expensive fabric and I thought about buying it for weeks. I never ever bought a kit before, let alone such an expensive one. But now I did and it'll probably take a while before I'm going to cut the fabrics. For now I look at it, feel the fabrics and dream..
The dots are various sizes, fq and fe's. They are for the mutual dots stash Corrine and I have. Just to keep the creative juices flowing :)
The notions fabric will match great with my red/black zipper and buttons fabric I have and they will find a place in a wallhanging or something like that.
Corrine bought me a great fq with red tulips, but I cannot find the pic anymore.
I got a book from the Guild's library called "Quilts with a spin" from "Piece o'cake designs". Ofcourse I had to try a block. I don't want to do a whole quilt but it was a fun experiment!
Especially for Pam(ela) here's my dotted, spotted, spinning wheel :)

I also made huge progress on my propellor quilt but I'll keep that one for another post.
I also got a rose pattern from my trip to the quiltshow and I plan on experimenting with that one this afternoon. Still got one and a half day off!
When we got home after the show, Lotte raided my stash and (all inspired) planned on sewing some cows from a pattern she got last year. Unfortunately it was a pattern in inches and she didn't take my inches ruler. DH was bored and was as kind to drive all the way to Leiden (2 1/2 hour drive back and forth) to bring it to her to get her out of that quiltingcrisis. So you'll better sew a lot of cows dear!!!
Last but certainly not least: DS got a new-to-him motorbike!!

For those who want to know: it's a Suzuki GS 500 E. He's not allowed by law to have acces to all the 5oocc yet, so DH has to tune it down to contain the horsepowers. He's already at that right now so if the weather's good (today it's raining..) we'll take a trip, probably to Leiden (so now you know that there's company coming later this week Lotte!)
Now that he has a much better bike, we will go to Italy by motorbike this summer. We have plans to get to Rome to see if that missing piece of my heart is still there....
Now I'm going to attack that roses pattern.I'll be back with progress pics later this week so stay tuned!!!!

Been busy (part 1)!

It has been a few days since my last post and I have been very busy! I also got a LOT of pics so I'll make 2 posts today. Grab yourself a cup of coffee or tea as I did!

First there was Koninginnedag or Queensday on the 30th of april. It's a national holiday on which we celebrate the Queen's birthday. In the midst of all festivities, some nutcake drove his car THROUGH fences and crowd in an attempt to hit the bus in which the Royal Family was at that time. I sat in front of the tv and watched in horror how people got hit by the car. 7 people died, lots were injured and the country was devastated. The queen appeared on tv later and she was almost in tears. Needless to say that I spent the rest of the day in front of the tv as more news of the attack came.

Nicer things on the 2nd of May. Corrine, Lotte and I went to the Open European Quilt Championship in a nearby town. I was looking forward to this day: it had been too long since the 3 of us went on a quilting trip!

The exhibition itself was dissapointing. Lots of wallhangings (I prefer quilts you can snuggle under) but worse was the way quilts were displayed: high on walls, poor lightning. It was almost impossible to take good pics and you couldn't see the quilts up close. Nevertheless......here are some of them!



Look what you can do with solids!

The very bad lightning is to be seen in this pic. It was "the best of show" and although the middle part is lighter, it was not THAT light.

Time for a break!!

..and back in we went!


Look at this amazing quiltwork!!!

and when the time comes Lotte, perhaps something like this:)


In the middle of the hall there were lots of shops and yep...we were very bad! Actually I was on top of the list and I'll have to suffer 'till my next paycheck..
I'll show you in the next post what we (I) brought home!
Further more I attended a funeral and a birthday, hit the road on my motorbike, DH rescued Lotte from a deep quiltingcrisis, did some chores, read a lot of blogs, got a book from the Guild's library and still waiting for a book I ordered that i really NEED RIGHT NOW and will probably get here waaaaaay to late for my secret plans....
Let's start post number 2!