Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Things I Never Understood #1: Clothed Lawn Geese

On my walks around the 'hood I think about all kinds of things. Today it was those concrete geese that people dressed up back in the early 1990s.

I never understood why women were making fancy dresses and bonnets for concrete geese. There were all over! Often the geese had an old fashioned dress and a poke bonnet. I haven't seen one in a long time.

I did a quick Internet search and learned that the fad actually began in the 1980s in the area from Pittsburgh south to Kentucky and spread from there.

I found an Atlantic article from 2018 "Nothing Says Midwest Like a Well-Dressed Porch Goose" by Julie Beck that informs the demand for clothes was met by start-ups like Goose Clothes Galore. Then the pattern companies caught on.
Image result for lawn goose clothes patterns
Simplicity pattern for lawn geese clothes
Turns out outfits for lawn geese are still a hot commodity. You can order Christmas and even Halloween outfits on eBay Etsy and at Miles Kimball.

Frankenstein Goose Outfit-352265
Miles Kimbal geese outfit
Apparently, there is a 'hipster' revival as a new generation inherits those concrete geese!

I found a Prairie costume along with all kinds of dresses at The Depot that felt like the classic clothes I recall seeing.
Goose Clothes Complete Holiday Goose Outfit Prairie Floral Dress and Hat Costume
clothes from The Depot
At least one person is making dresses for their real geese, with patterns at House Goose.

If you have a goose and don't want to dress it you can learn how to repaint it at Petticoat JUNKtion.

Our little two-square-mile suburban town is writing ordinances for fowl keeping, so I guess this is the new trend: why have a fake fowl when you can get the real thing? We will have a limit of four hens per household and strict rules for housing and cleanup.

Now I wonder if they have patterns for chicken dresses...

The History of Goose Lawn Ornaments
https://www.ehow.com/info_8059753_history-goose-lawn-ornaments.html

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout

Elizabeth Strout's Olive, Again only confirms her as one of my favorite contemporary writers of literary fiction.

The temperamental Olive in her later decades demonstrates qualities that only come with experience and self-reflection, enabling her to be an instrument of grace to others. She is still a straight-shooter who sees things unvarnished, her truthfulness sometimes abrasive.

The stories in this book revisit characters from Strout's fictional world of Crosby, Maine. 

This was a hard story to read. At age 67, my husband and I have undergone several surgeries this year. I am all too aware of the brevity of life and how we allow ourselves to be propelled through the years impassively until some change in our abilities stops us up short. We reconsider our mistakes; our view of the past and its relationships become torqued with new understanding. We wonder how we could have allowed love to become a battleground, fear to fence us from our dreams. We become invisible, an unwanted portend to others of their own inevitable future. We recognize that we are strangers to each other--and are incomprehensible even to ourselves.

What kind of life can we live in these ever-shortening days? The answer is in the line that had me in tears: "I think our job--maybe even our duty--is to--" Her voice became calm, adultlike. "To bear the burden of the mystery with as much grace as we can."

Life is a mystery. People are a mystery. There are no answers, no easy to follow instructions to guarantee success and happiness. 

Like Ranier Maria Rilke wrote in his Letters to a Young Poet, we must "be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves like locked doors and like books that are written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer."*

I don't know if Olive's story is completed. And I am not sure I want to follow her to her end. It's all too close to home. Strout is a fearless writer who dares to confront us with things that disturb our equilibrium. We recognize ourselves in her characters. 

I read a free ebook from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.



Olive, Again
by Elizabeth Strout
Random House Publishing Group - Random House
Pub Date 15 Oct 2019
ISBN 9780812996548
PRICE $27.00 (USD)

* excerpted from Letters to a Young Poet by Ranier Maria Rilke, translation by M. D. Herter Norton, W. W. Norton & Company

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Mini-Reviews: Things We Save In A Fire and Shadow of the Lions

Non-review books, people! A romance and a mystery--
Human connection had its upsides, but it sure was a lot of work. The risk-reward raion was low, at best.~ from Things We Save In A Fire by Katherine Center
A cute, page-turner romance with darker themes of forgiveness and overcoming challenges, this was an enjoyable distraction, the kind of book I pick up between heavy, demanding books. I read my husband's ARC provided to him by the publisher.

From the publisher:
Cassie Hanwell was born for emergencies. As one of the only female firefighters in her Texas firehouse, she’s seen her fair share of them, and she’s a total pro at other people’s tragedies. But when her estranged and ailing mother asks her to give up her whole life and move to Boston, Cassie suddenly has an emergency of her own.

The tough, old-school Boston firehouse is as different from Cassie’s old job as it could possibly be. Hazing, a lack of funding, and poor facilities mean that the firemen aren’t exactly thrilled to have a “lady” on the crew—even one as competent and smart as Cassie. Except for the infatuation-inspiring rookie, who doesn’t seem to mind having Cassie around. But she can’t think about that. Because love is girly, and it’s not her thing. And don’t forget the advice her old captain gave her: Never date firefighters. Cassie can feel her resolve slipping . . . and it means risking everything—the only job she’s ever loved and the hero she’s worked like hell to become.

Katherine Center’s Things You Save in a Fire is a heartfelt and healing tour-de-force about the strength of vulnerability, the nourishing magic of forgiveness, and the life-changing power of defining courage, at last, for yourself.

Things You Save In A Fire
Katherine Center
St. Martin's Press
ISBN: 9781250047328
Publication Date: August 13, 2019
*****
"We weren't brothers; we were beyond that. He was perhaps the one person whose counsel and opinion I held higher than my own."~Shadow of Lions by Christopher Swann

They were waiting for the future in the form of an acceptance letter from UofV when Matthias' best friend Fritz disappeared from the grounds of the Blackburne School. Their last encounter had been contentious and Matthias never got over the guilt or the loss.

Over the nine years since then, Matthias had reached the pinnacle of success with a published book, a girlfriend, loads of cash, and a movie contract--and lost it all. When Blackburne offered him a teaching job Matthias had to accept it, even if returning meant reopening wounds he had sought to bury.

As Matthias grapples with his new job, surrounded by ghosts of the past, he determines to follow any trail to find Fritz.

"Everybody searches for something," ex-cop Briggs says to Matthias. "You telling me Fritz isn't your white whale?"

Shadow of the Lions is a great read with wonderfully drawn characters, unexpected twists, and terrific writing.

from the publisher:
How long must we pay for the crimes of our youth? That is just one question that Christopher Swann explores in this compulsively readable debut, a literary thriller set in the elite—and sometimes dark—environs of Blackburne, a prep school in Virginia. When Matthias Glass’s best friend Fritz vanishes without a trace in the middle of an argument during their senior year, Matthias tries to move on with his life, only to realize that until he discovers what happened to his missing friend, he will be stuck in the past—guilty, responsible, alone.

Almost ten years after Fritz’s disappearance, Matthias gets his chance. Offered a job teaching English at Blackburne, he gets swiftly drawn into the mystery. In the shadowy woods of his alma mater, he stumbles into a web of surveillance, dangerous lies, and buried secrets—and discovers the troubled underbelly of a school where the future had once always seemed bright.

A sharp and moving tale full of false leads and surprise turns, Shadow of the Lions is also wise and moving. Christopher Swann has given us a gripping debut about friendship, redemption, and what it means to lay the past to rest.

Shadow of Lions
by Christopher Swann
Algonquin Books
ISBN-10: 1616205008

ISBN-13: 978-1616205003

Saturday, October 26, 2019

Helen Korngold Diary: October 20-26, 1919

Helen Korngold, Dec. 1919, New York City
Helen and her family have been distraught over her father's illness.

October
Monday 20
A trifle better

Tuesday 21
Still in bed, but he is very sick yet.

Wednesday 22
Improved.

Thursday 23
Lots of guests – Mr. Sigler, Lipshitz, Russack, Steiner, Thurmond. Grandma – Mrs. Levy

Friday 24
Pops still in bed.

Saturday 25
Guess he can’t get out so soon.

Sunday 26
He is much better. Mrs. Waldman & Aunt Jennie came

Notes:

Oct 26
Aunt Jennie Frey Rosenblum (1873-1953) was Helen's maternal aunt.
Jennie married Jonas Rosenblum. Jonas and Jennie were granted a divorce on November 29, 1898. Jonas remarried in 1904.

Like her sister Beryl, Jennie was a music teacher. The 1910 US Census for St. Louis shows Jennie and her son Irl living with her parents. Irl became an attorney.

Feb. 22, 1911, from St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
 -

July 9, 1953 death notice in St. Louis Globe-Democrat:
 -
*****
The Frey family history:

Benjamin Frey b. 1816 in Rzeszow, Galacia, Austria, immigrated in 1865.

He married Yitel Kressel and they had child David Joshua Frey b. 1840 in Rzeszow.

David married Sophia Hertz (b. 1846 in Germany and d.1929). The 1880 US Census for St. Louis shows he ran a clothing store; in 1900 he was a traveling salesman. David tragically died in December 1901 as this St. Louis Globe-Democrat article reports:

 -

David and Sophia had children Beryl and Jennie, music teachers; Abraham Benjamin, lawyer and judge; Helena; Joseph who was a druggist; and Eva, Helen's mother.

Sophie died in 1929.
Newspaper Death notice

December 19, 1928, St. Louis Globe-Democrat newspaper article of Judge Frey's retirement:

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"Judge A. B. Frey was the guest of honor at a testimonial dinner given last night at the Hotel Coronado, in recognition of his record on the bench from which he will retire the first fo the year. The dinner was attended by 500 of his friends. most of them attorneys, and the members of the St. Louis bench. Former Mayor Henry W. Kiel acted as toastmaster at the dinner. at which addresses bearing on the service of Judge Frey during his tenure of office were given by a number of his associates. Judge Frey himself spoke in appreciation at the conclusion of the program. Walter J. G. Neun, attorney and president of the Board of Aldermen made the first address in which he spoke of the reputation and standing Judge Frey has admired among his fellow members of the bar. When Judge Frey retires, Neun said he will leave a clean record and will retain the regard of his fellow lawyers as a man who has worked hard and who deserves every tribute and praise which can be paid to him. Judge Frey displayed an unusual amount of fairness and consideration in all the cases brought before him, Neun said, and always assisted lawyers In their problems. Judge Henry A. Hamilton did great work for the instruction of his successors in the profession. and that his relations to the other judges were always indicative of a great desire to co-operate. and to carry out the dictates of justice. Judge Hamilton praised his practical knowledge and willingness to give considerable time to research." 

April 21, 1930 article The St. Louis Star and Times on Joseph Frey assuming editorship of The Modern View newspaper:
 -
Dec. 15, 1931 article in St. Louis Star and Times:
 -
****
In the news this week in 1919:

October 20, 1919, article from the St. Louis Star and Times
 -

 -
WIDE HIPS AND HIGH COLLARS PARIS has many ways of obtaining the new silhouette. So clever are the methods of producing It that they sweep away every objection to things that suggest panniers and hoopsklrts. The straight, narrow little frocks that have been so dear to feminine hearts appear uninteresting' beside the new arrivals. In a most Ingenuous manner they have eliminated all the undesirable features of the wide hip silhouette, leaving only what is charming. These new things make a clever psychological appeal for permanent success, not only through the adding of something new which every woman loves, but through the expression of youth in their lines. There is also a change in the waistline of our newest clothes. Now it has been dropped to Just below the normal, which we have always considered a trying point at which girdle the figure. So this is only- further evidence of the cleverness j expressed in our new clothes, because the longer waistline tends to flatten the figure from back to front when the sides are extended, so that there is absolutely no curve in spite of the so-called hip draperies. The bodice appears as curveless as a child's figure, thus bringing a great deal of youth into these designs. We may, therefore, dismiss the fear of making cur figures appear older which made us so loathe to abandon the straight chemise dress. Every woman is interested in knowing some of the ways In which this new silhouette is obtained. One French designer makes a straight black satin dress of chemise type and girdles it about two inches below the normal curve at the waist; then, on either side of the dress, she places narrow panels which support ever so many frills of beige colored lace, billowing one over the other from the waistline down to about eight inches above the hem. The black underdress Is very skimpy, so that the frilled panels In no way take away from the close outline of the figure. In coats the hip extension is attained both through the cut of the garment itself and through stiffening devices. Many coats have actual crinolines Introduced in their interlining. A model from Premot has sling-like pocket arrangements through which slips a girdle of fur. The bodice of the coat is cut to a very low waistline and a high Diretcorie collar bordered with fur is added. This may be said to be one of the most interesting coats to appear at the recent French openings. Many of the new dresses have high muffling collars. Some are of the Directoire type; others arc. of the straight, round, wrinkled style. Judged from a standpoint of beauty and becomtngncss they add nothing to the new dresses. Many of them are detachable, permitting them to be easily removed if desired.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Lynette's Best-Loved Stitcheries

Four Seasons Wall Hanging, 27" x 24", is on the cover
Lynette Anderson offers stitchers a new book filled with country cottage ambiance, with sweet bungalows and blooming gardens, angelic gardeners and adorable four-legged friends. She is inspired by the British country village of her childhood.

Lynette's Best-Loved Stitcheries: 13 Cottage-Style Projects You'll Adore includes
projects perfect for gifting and quilts to enhance your home's walls. Lynette loves to make projects that can be used every day.
Meadow Cottage Tote, 14" x 14". The tote includes inside pockets.
Sunshine and Flowers Pillow, 15 1/2" x 15 1/2"
I so love the use of applique and buttons and embellishments incorporated into the designs.
Lynette shares her techniques for transferring and marking embroidery designs, how to prevent thread shadowing, and includes a stitch guide. She explains how to use variegated floss successfully.
Count Your Blessings Mini-Quilt, 9 1/2" x 14"
Prairie Points enhance Lynette's needlecase holder and the scissors holder has a tassel cord, seen below. You learn so many techniques in this book!
Springtime Needle Case and Scissors Holder

Lynette shares her technique for giving fabric a vintage look by speckling, seen below in the Redwork pillows.

Redwork Pillows, 8 1/2" x 10"

Lynette offers a tutorial on her favorite applique techniques, turned-edge and Apliquick. The patterns are reversed so fusible applique can also be used.

I enjoy needle-turn applique myself but was interested to learn about Apliquick which uses semi-water-soluble paper and special rods to hold and roll turned edges of the applique pieces. Every stage of the process is shown in photographs and instructions.
One-Stitch-At-A-Time Sewing addy, 8" x 6" x 3 3/4"
The sewing caddy, above, has a hexagon back! Lynette includes English Paper Pieced hexagon instructions with photographs.
Potting Shed Journal Cover, 6 3/4" x 8 3/4", and Pencil Case, 8" x 5"
I love the oval insert on the Potting Shed Journal Cover, above. The lighter background for the embroidery makes it pop and the darker fabric frames it beautifully. The Hexie Pencil Case could also hold your needlework tools and threads!
Home Sweet Home Redwork,  3" x 6 1/2"
The book is sold as softcover and ebook with patterns available online to print.

I was given access to a free ebook by the publisher in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Visit Lynette's blog to keep up on her latest designs and news:
https://lynetteandersondesigns.typepad.com/
Lynette owns the Little Quilt Store in Australia where you can purchase her patterns and the tools, threads, and embellishments shown in the projects.
https://www.littlequiltstore.com.au/collections/all

Lynette's Best-Loved Stitcheries
by Lynette Anderson
Martingale
ISBN: 9781683560128
$27.99 softcover (-$8 ebook)
Publication Date: July 1st, 2019

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Fatler by Bill McKibben

"Put simply, between ecological destruction and technological hubris, the human experiment is now in question."~ Falter by Bill McKibben

I was a teenager in the late 1960s when I read Ayn Rand's novels. I was still reading for story and too young to understand Rand's philosophy. I never returned to reread her books. Bill McKibben's Falter has educated me on Rand and the impact of her ideas on shaping the world we live in today.

The list of Rand-inspired movers and shakers is impressive: Alan Greenspan was a personal friend of Rand and people who revere Rand include Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Paul Ryan, Rex Tillerson, Ronald Reagan, Mike Pompeo, Ray Dalio (a Trump confidant), and Donald Trump. 

Rand called her philosophy 'objectivism,' which is really libertarianism. It's anti-government, believing there should be no limits on the individual's self-interest and quest to personal achievement. There is no consideration of the needs of others, the people who can't or won't do for themselves, those leeches on society. Don't limit my rights and privilege for the common good and tax my wealth for the government to give to those people.

It is a philosophy readily adopted by business. Unimpeded growth without restraints is the goal of capitalism. Drill for all the oil and dig for all the coal anywhere, without limit. It's someone else's problem to clean up any mess we create. Too bad if we contaminate the water or air or devastate the land or cause earthquakes.

Right-wing politicians love Rand; don't tax me to pay for programs that benefit the losers; small government is good government. This leads to obscenely rich business owners, like the Koch brothers, funneling money to right-wing politicians who will protect their interests.

Then there are the Silicon Valley visionaries funding research into aging and how to live forever and genetic engineering and the creating of AI. 

Are these good things? Will these technologies improve human life? Or will they create a larger socio-economic divide, even a separation between regular humans and improved humans? What would a world without death look like? Would those living suppress the number of humans to be born?

McKibben asks, has the 'human game' begun to 'play itself out?' Has our progress advanced to the point that we are negatively impacting our species? Is continual growth sustainable? Growth in technology, wealth, improvement via genetic engineering?

Can we alter climate change? Will we slow down growth to a sustainable rate? Will we put our effort into renewable energy? We are the only species on Earth that can place limits on ourselves, band together to achieve outcomes that improve our mutual community. But...will we? Or will humanity's future look like the movie Wall-E, brain-dead screen-addicts floating in space while a robot runs our lives?

"There are people who...hate the idea of society, who organize campaigns against public transit, who try to dismantle public schools and national parks, who instinctively head for the gated enclave. I don't think their rule will last forever...but they currently possess a savage leverage, perhaps power enough to end the human game...

"The endless efforts to gerrymander districts, suppress voting, race-bait, gin up cynicism in our politics, confuse us about issues such as climate change--these are nothing more than efforts to weaken society so it can't exert power over its most dominant individuals."~from Falter by Bill McKibben

Will the pendulum be swung away from disaster by nonviolent activism and a WWII era rise in commitment to the common good--fighting for our lives? Our fate is in our hands.

I received a free book from the publisher through LibraryThing. My review is fair and unbiased.

Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out?
by Bill McKibben
Henry Holt
$28 hardcover
ISBN:978-1-250-17826-8

Falter is a brilliant, impassioned call to arms to save our climate from those profiting from its destruction before it’s too late.—Jane Mayer, bestselling author of Dark Money

Sunday, October 20, 2019

America Is Immigrants by Sara Novic

Sara Novic's book America Is Immigrants presents foreign-born individuals who came to America and had an impact on society and the world. She includes examples from all 193 members of the United Nations.

These individuals contributed to all areas, including technology, entertainment, industry, business, the arts and literature, medicine, cuisine, architecture, government, the military, and human rights.

Many of the contemporary individuals included were unfamiliar to me. Novic has included people who are not headline news, like the foreign-born doctors who saved President's Regan's life. Some are 'local heroes' like Mona Hana-Attisha, born in the UK to Iraqi parents. Mona noted the high lead levels in Flint children's blood. And others are internationally known, like Israeli-born Gene Simmons, Demon from Kiss or the German-born Albert Einstein.

"Pioneers" include Tammy Duckworth, born in Thailand; she served in Iraq and is a U.S. Senator.

"Builders" include Nikola Tesla, born in Croatia, visionary experimenter in electricity who championed AC current.

"Creators" include novelists Isabel Allende, born in Chile, and Chinua Achebe, author of Things Fall Apart, born in Nigeria.

"Defenders" begins with author, human rights leader, and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, born in Romania.

"Movers" includes Grammy winner and philanthropist Rihanna, born in Barbados.

"Explorers" includes science fiction writer Hugo Gernsback, born in Luxembourg, who coined the term "television" and edited Amazing Stories.

"Thinkers" includes Ishmael Beah, kidnapped and forced to be a child soldier in Sierra Leone. He wrote A Long Way Home and Radiance of Tomorrow.

Novic notes that not all of the people in her book became American citizens. She also did not include Native Americans, whose contributions are significant but do not fit into her parameters. Also, African Americans descended from slaves are not included, as they had no "agency and the search for freedom and opportunity" involved with immigration.

The fully illustrated book has one-page biographies on most of the people but some pages have brief bios on people within a specific group.

This resource will appeal to a wide age group from junior high upward.

I won a copy from Goodreads. My review is fair and unbiased.


Saturday, October 19, 2019

Helen Korngold Diary: October 13-19, 1919

Helen Korngold, Dec. 1919, New York City
Helen's family faces a crisis.

October
Monday 13
My last day at Maplewood. I just hate to leave. Everybody was lovely – teachers & youngsters too. Well, I was a big fool to turn down Mr. Richmond’s offer, but it’s too late to regret.

Tuesday 14
Papa is sick. Don’t know what’s wrong. Spent a sleepless night of it.

Wednesday 15
Pop is getting worse. I can’t imagine what we are going to do. Hope he gets better.

Thursday 16
Pop is still suffering. Makes it so hard for him.

Friday 17
Eloise is here. Thank goodness.

Saturday 18
Pop had a terrible night. He’s so weak.

Sunday 19
Worse and more of it. No time.
*****

I wish I knew more about Jacob Korngold's illness. I checked the newspapers and did not see any communicative illnesses mentioned. I don't find an Eloise on the family tree. 

October 14, 1919, St. Louis Star and Times articles:
 -
This article provides an idea of what Helen's teaching income would be when she became full time: $850 a year for a graduate of Harris Teaching College where Helen's sister Otilia* graduated in 1925.
 -
Idea beauty in 1919:
 -
 -

October 15, 1919, St. Louis Star and Times articles:
 -
 -
There was a great fear of Bolsheviks, or Reds, who could foment unrest by supporting unionizing. The newspapers are filled with articles about unionizers being arrested. A nationwide coal strike was going on at this time. It was warned the Midwest only had three weeks of coal left.
 -
 -
 -
October 18 , 1919, St Louis Star and Times, cartoon on prohibition:
 -
In 1919, Percy Grainger (1882-1961) had left the army and was offered the position of conductor of the St. Louis Orchestra! He decided to continue his career as a concert pianist.
 -
Oct. 21:
 -
 -
*****
*1925 Harris Teaching College graduates including Helen's sister Otilia
Harris Teachers 1925

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay

"We can only handle so much truth at any given moment, I suppose."~Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay

The world too often is quiet about things that should set off alarms.

Horrible things happen. Articles, buried deep in the newspaper, or a flash of video and a few spoken words on the screen, mention countries we don't know and perhaps don't care about. The people and their suffering are real but they are 'other', foreign, from countries where dictators rule or rival factions destroy, while we are cocooned in comfortable homes and easy lives.

Until it gets personal. Then the news is a clarion bell to wake us.

The Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay wants to wake us to the realities of life under a dictatorship that placates citizens with free birth control while suppressing journalism and truth, through his profoundly moving and beautifully written novel.

With early acceptance to the University of Michigan, Jay can coast through the rest of his senior year. But learning that his cousin Jun in the Philippines was shot by the police as a drug dealer turns Jay's life upside down.

Jay visited his father's Filipino family when he was ten. He and Jun became fast friends and were pen pals for years until Jay's teenage activities and concerns took precedence and he stopped responding to Jun's letters.

Racked with guilt, Jay wants answers. Jun was a good person. What happened that caused Jun to run away from his home? He wouldn't have done drugs. Why was Jun murdered? Why won't anyone tell him the truth?

Jay becomes obsessed, learning all he can about the Philipines and life under President Duterte. Determined to find answers, Jay proposes a trip to visit his Filipino family and learn about his heritage.

Staying with his father's siblings' families, Jay comes to understand that people are not always who we think they are and how growing up and learning the truth engenders more questions than answers.

Although YA fiction, Ribay's novel will speak to all readers. He is a master of his craft.

I received a book from the publisher through Bookish First. My review is fair and unbiased.

Sometimes I feel like growing up is slowly peeling back these layers of lies."~Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay

Patron Saints of Nothing
by Randy Ribay
Kokila/PenguinTeen
$17.99 hardcover
Jun 18, 2019
ISBN 9780525554912

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Autumn Bouquet by Sharon Keightley Combines Patchwork and Applique

I need to make an Autumn Bouquet quilt!

I love applique. And I love these quilts that combine piecing with applique! 

Sharon Keightley has chosen color schemes suitable for autumn days, with rich browns and warm oranges. Reproduction fabrics work wonderful in these quilts, and the traditional applique patterns recall historic quilts from the 19thc.

Rose of Thorns, 22 1/2" x 22 1/2"
This Rose of Thornes quilt has a primitive feel that I love. Sharon has a 'make it easy' tip and I could make the applique in a few days. And she has no-fail Wild Geese instructions. Maybe this is the one I need to make.

Hollys Garden, 22 1/2" x 22 1/2"
Holly's Garden is also in the running. Sharon makes it easy with wash-away applique and easy pieced border instructions.
Goose Crossing, 74 1/4" x 74 1/2"
Oh, no wait--Goose Crossing is too wonderful to ignore! I love the appliqued flowers set in the negative space created in this traditional, pieced quilt pattern. And such a great idea to include dark-colored flowers.
Ring a Rosie, 30 1/2" x 30 1/2"
Here is an idea I can use. Ring a Rosie has a wonderful printed border and I have reproduction fabrics I have been hoarding for just such a quilt. The pretty scrappy flower wreath is on a pieced background and is set with super-easy patchwork units.
Treasures From the Scrap Bin, 21 3/4" x 34"
I have bins of scraps all organized by size and theme. Treasures From the Scrap Bin would be a great way to use some up! The Sho Fly block center is combined with a graceful flower urn border. I love a flower urn border.

There are a DOZEN quilts to choose from! Something for everyone! All sizes!



I have saved my very favorite until last. Sharon's Surprise was inspired by her study of antique quilts that combined pink and red.

I love these colors. I love the flower block with its reverse applique and the unique scalloped border. I love the light background and the way the applique colors pop.

This is it. This is the quilt I need to make.

Sharon's Surprise, 30 1/2" x 30 1/2"


I was given access to a free ebook by the publisher. My review is fair and unbiased.

Autumn Bouquet - Patchwork and Applique Quilts from Reproduction Prints
by Sharon Keightley
Martingale
$25.99 softcover
ISBN: 9781683560180
Publication Date: August 1st, 2019