Like many quilters, I have multiple projects going on at once. Some in the design stage, some in the sewing stage, and some waiting for inspiration to know how to finish them. I have two with long-arm quilters as well.
I am trying to finish projects. And trying to check off as read books on my TBR shelf as part of NetGalley's #Reviewathon.
I have conceded I am no longer able to quilt fast enough to keep up with my quilt tops. I just picked up a quilt from the long-arm quilter. It is BIG. The fabrics were from Dear Stella. Now to bind it off!
the quilting
The back
I have made four pillowcases and a throw pillow to go with the quilt. And I am making a throw with the scraps!
Here is my latest quilt top finish! I bought the pattern from Bunny Hill several years ago. When I saw this fabric collection from Connecting Threads it all came together in my head and I love the result. I left it with the long arm quilter today.
I caught up with Barbara Brackman's new block of the month Hospital Sketches on her blog Material Culture. I love applique so these are a joy to make.
I finished the just for fun and play quilt with the Jane Sassaman Folk Tales fabrics. My son loves it and it will go to him.
I have been requested to make a table runner with this adorable print from JoAnne Fabrics.
The flu has been going around in my family. On my birthday we couldn't have a celebration so I treated myself to a trip to the bookstore and purchased The Overstory by Richard Powers and All the Lives We Ever Lived by Katherine Smyth. I have wanted to read The Overstory since it was a galley but wasn't able to get my hands on it. Smyth's book about reading Virginia Woolf is a good excuse to revisit To The Lighthouse.
I am currently reading- Cold Warriors by Duncan White. I am learning more about the Cold War history than I ever imagined.
- A Polar Affair by Llyod Spencer Davis, an immensely readable and enjoyable history of the study of Penguins.
- The Long Call by Anne Cleeves, a new detective mystery series
- Threads of Life by Claire Hunter, how through history women have used needlework for self-expression and political power
- We Love Anderson Cooper by R. L. Maizes, a short story collection
Then still on my shelf are the galleys for
- Adventure of the Peculiar Protocol by Nicholas Meyer, a new Sherlock Holmes mystery
- Inventing Tomorrow by Sarah Cole, about H. G. Wells
- Broke by Jodie Adams Kirschner, about the housing crisis in Detroit
- The Book of Science and Antiquities, a novel by Thomas Keneally
- A Good Neighborhood by Therese Anne Fowler, a novel about racism
- Family Record by Patrick Modiano, a novel about how "history influences identity"
- Blow Out, in which Rachel Maddow takes on the fossil fuel industries
I won another book from LibraryThing
- Mighty Justice: My Life in Civil Rights by Dovey Johnson Roundtree. I just started it--powerful prose and story!
And from GoodReads I won
- America is Immigrants by Sara Novic
NetGalley is running a #Reviewathon to encourage readers to plow through those TBR lists. I need to get to work!