Friday, March 30, 2018

April celebrations

I have been doing blog posts on holidays for a couple of months now.  It is fun to see what people around the world celebrate.  This month I have two.  I just couldn’t decide. 

The first is actually the whole month of April.  It is National Poetry month.  That alone should tell you what I am going to recommend.  Yup, poetry.  Do you read poetry?  If not give it a whirl. 

If you are not sure you will understand poetry, start out with some children’s poems. If you don’t like the structure of poetry, read some freeform poetry.  My favorite poet is Emily Dickinson.

Have you ever tried to write poetry?  Try it.  Know that all the words don’t have to rhyme but that might be a lot of fun to try.  Here is an experiment to try: go to a page in a book or newspaper and randomly pick out 5 words.  No fair picking only words you like.  Then with these words write a 4 line poem.  If you want to start easy, go with a children’s book or the funny pages in the newspaper.  You don’t have to publish it.  You don’t even have to show anyone your poem.  But as a line from a commercial once said, try it, you’ll like it.

The other holiday is April 22, Earth Day.  This holiday was created in the 1970s when the environmental movement was just getting started.  It is one that has special mean to me.  I recycle and reuse (and reuse and reuse) but it is a holiday when my dad would send me a Happy Earth Day card.  He always tried to find some card with a nature scene on it and make it into his own Earth Day card.

So on this day do something nice for the Earth.  Take your cans and bottles to the recycling center.  Plant some flowers (and if your ground is still frozen, plant some flowers in a pot).  Paint or embroider a picture of a natural scene.  Or take a walk and watch nature (and then come home and write a poem about it.  Ah, you knew I would get these two holidays together.)  Maybe even continue my dad’s tradition and send someone a nice card with a nature scene on it.

So                    Roses are Red
                        Violets are blue
                        Celebrate Earth Day
                        And poetry too.


©2018 Cheryl E. Fillion




Friday, March 23, 2018

Take In A Show

I wrote this last year but since it is quilt show time in my area of the country, I thought I would repost it.


I am writing this about a week before it will be posted.  On that posting day will be the Azalea Quilt Show in Tyler Texas, sponsored by our local quilt guild of which I am a member.

As I am writing this, I am frantically finishing up my entries, getting the items ready for the hand work demonstration I have organized (to go on during the show) and trying to figure out what to make for the potluck our guild provides for our vendors and volunteers. 
 
I just posted on my Facebook page about the show, inviting all my local friends to attend.  Have any of you been to a quilt show?  It is a fun place to go if you like quilts or if you like color, patterns and texture.  But it is also a good place to go to increase your creativity.

In fact, attending any craft or art show is a good idea for the same reason.  You can see what is trending, as they say now, in patterns, designs or colors. You can get inspired by a different way to do a design.  One quilt show I went to many years ago, displayed a quilt with a skeleton of a dinosaur which had its head and tail extended off the main body of the quilt. I never thought of having part of the design expanded like that.
  
Something you see at a quilt or art show might just click a memory of yours that you would like to capture in paint, or ink, or fabric.  It might give you an idea of something to make for a loved one. With quilts, it might show you just the arrangement of quilt blocks that you were looking for or just the pattern you wanted to make.

Even if you are not a quilter or a painter or photographer, going to an exhibit or show can still give you ideas.  The artist or the quilter’s perspective may show you a different way of looking at or thinking about a subject matter or just the world in general.
  
When you go to a quilt or art show, you are supporting the arts in your community and that in itself is a good thing to do.  If you are reading this, you are probably interested in creativity in one form or another.  Think about how your life would be without what you create.  Don’t you want to make sure creativity in all its forms is available for everyone?

So do yourself and your community a favor: go to a show.





©2017/2018  Cheryl E. Fillion


 






 

Friday, March 16, 2018

Sometimes You Have to Rip and Redo


Most of the needlecraft I do, I learned from books.  There were no classes available other than basic sewing in my home economics classes in school.  As the years went by, I continued to learn from books and practice. I found I preferred it that way. I would have become discouraged if I had been told to rip out what I had done and do it over.  Where is the fun in that?

At least finishing something as imperfect as it might have been meant I had accomplished something.  Ripping and redoing just causes the activity to be stressful and there goes the enjoyment.  As I said above, where is the fun in that?

So for the most part I don’t rip out what I have sewn, quilted or embroidered.  But there are times when what I’ve done just doesn’t look good and the only way I will be happy with it is if I rip and redo. And that is what happened last week.

I was machine quilting on my home machine a quilt for the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life.  Every year I do a quilt as a fundraiser.  In the past I have quilted straight lines but this year I wanted to do some gentle curves.

I had half the quilt  done when I really looked closely at the back.  The fabric between the rows of curves didn’t lay flat.  It puckered in some area and the fabric looked almost twisted in others.  Since this was a fund raiser, I wanted it to look nice. So I ripped it out and redid it with straight lines.

I learned long ago that even if my lessons came from books, with practice and doing new projects, my needlework became better.  It was the practice, practice, practice while I enjoyed the stitching that seemed to help. 

The problem with my Relay quilt was I hadn’t “practiced” the curved quilting before I tried it on an important quilt.  I realized I needed to do that first. So sometimes you do have to rip and redo before you can get better.  The straight lines weren’t what I wanted but the quilt did look better.

So if you are a ripper or a accepter of what you do even if it isn’t perfect, remember to practice what you are doing before doing it on some item that might have an important mission like a fund raiser quilt. My new goal now is to practice.

 
©2018 Cheryl E. Fillion