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January 31, 2008

A "spell"

Husband Gordon pinch hitting for the wife tonight. We had to rush Penny's mother to the emergency room this evening and she is now resting in a hospital room.  We think she may have had a mini stroke but will know more tomorrow.  She will be there overnight for observation and possibly several days as they monitor her progress.  Penny is there with her mother in the room, making sure her needs are taken care of.  I will be taking the laptop with me tomorrow just in case she has to stay longer. 

It is now almost 2am and time to get some sleep.  Penny and or I will let all of you know more tomorrow.

Your prayers are appreciated.
Gordon Fikes

January 29, 2008

Afraid to Go To Sleep!

Mackiepenny2 Ya know, it is not nice for hubby to break out the camera when wifey is happily snoring away. 

There I was... lost in one of my Alice in Wonderland Technicolor dreams, my trusty chenille Linus blanket pulled over my mouth and my other Linus blanket quilt on top of that. 

I normally don't wake up when the five little Westies walk all over me to get from one soft spot to another soft spot of the bed.

Apparently Mackie regressed to his Scottish Highland heritage and decided to climb on top of his mama.

Mackiepenny I was completely unaware that he had settled in for a long winter's nap with his nose against my nose.

Hubby has now just told me (as he is reading over my shoulder as I write this) that I was actually snoring... peeling paint off the walls... as Mackie was sleeping on my face.

Maybe Mackie fell asleep while on guard against the monster that was making such threatening sounds from within me.

Now, I have no proof that I snore. The various fur kids have never told me that I snore, and I'm never awake to hear myself snoring... so conclusive proof has not been submitted, in my opinion. *hummph*

Gee, at least Gordon could have brushed some powder over my face before snapping these pictures! I've hidden the camera tonight.

Mackie was asleep on top of me when Gordon woke up, and the two of us slept nose to nose for a good while, Gordon says.

I love you too, Mackie.

January 27, 2008

Wash Day for Collars

Washday_2 I love these colorful collars that I can just toss in the washing machine.  Washed up all the collars I could find last night and hung them out to dry this afternoon. 

This is a partial view of the east meadow. It is the side of the big farmhouse where we placed my grandmother's 1930's house... that Gordon and I are S-L-O-W-L-Y renovating. I also see some significant work we hope to accomplish on this east meadow this year.

I am encouraged though. Gordon has taken an interest in DIY Network and other weekend-warrior-type television programs. We are taking baby steps to becoming DIY-ers! 

Of course, it may help that every time Norm Abram's show, The New Yankee Workshop, comes on, I find a way to mention my lasting desire to marry that man!  *big hearty laugh*

Ah, but my handy fella (Gordon) pitched in this afternoon for a frenzied team effort at changing sheets, folding and putting up clean clothes, washing dishes and cleaning up the kitchen, shaking out or fluffing dog beds, etc.  Yep, I'll keep him! *big grin*

Next, I'm doing one of those 27 Fling Boogies before settling down to finish some porcelain pieces. Those screaming deadlines are always within earshot!  It sure feels good to FEEL GOOD again and to WANT to work!

January 25, 2008

My First Quilt-Related Swap!

Blockswap My first ever quilt-related swap. I received an email today confirming that my blocks had reached the hands of the Swap Organizer lady.

This is a No Sew Block Swap organized by Quilt Talk, an online group of quilters. An e-bee, if you will. (Get it? A quilting bee online is an E-bee?  Cute, huh?)

In this block swap for which I signed up, we sent a designated number of 6.5 inch blocks to the swap organizer. In this case, there were 38 or 39 swappers, so I sent 40 blocks plus a few extra in case there are some late signers.

The swap organizer will send back a package of 38 (or 39) different 6.5 inch blocks of all the different fabrics sent to her, and the challenge is to make a quilt from the blocks. 

Blockswapmessage_2 The fabric we chose is supposed to represent the state in which we live.

Mississippi is easy.  The magnolia.  I found a nine yard piece of beautiful magnolia fabric from Blank Textiles on eBay. (I'm not showing you a full image of the fabric on purpose. We are only supposed to "tease" about our fabric contributions until everyone has received their set of swapped blocks.)

My blocks took about two yards to allow for fussy cutting so that each block would have a pretty configuration of magnolia blossoms. That leaves me seven yards to use as a backing of the quilt.

Blockswapleftovers I also plan to use the scrap strips, resulting from the fussy cutting, to sew with some white-on-white fabrics in an alternating pattern. I'm "seeing" a border around the quilt that looks like a dark green and white awning.

I've never done a swap or made a quilt out of random colored blocks. When my swap blocks arrive, I'll be turning to you for ideas on how to turn those blocks into an interesting quilt.

There are many fun email discussion groups for quilting. Many of them conduct fun swaps. Maybe next year I will have a bit more time to play in other swaps.

With all the deadlines between January and August of this year, I knew better than to commit to anything more demanding than cutting out 40 blocks of fabric! *laugh*

If it takes a few years before my Swap Block quilt is finished, then that will be just fine. The fun is in the journey!

All Tucked in for an Ice Storm!

It is raining. The rain is freezing. The steps are frozen, and the driveway is quickly freezing over.

We've done our "In Case We Have an Ice Storm" shopping in nearby Kilmichael and Winona. Actually Gordon called back from Winona earlier this afternoon to report some early freezing precipitation.

We have a big slow cooker of venison chili simmering, tantalizing the dogs and Gordon every time the lid is lifted to give it a stir.  *grin*

We've checked the propane tanks to be sure we have enough propane to heat the buildings.  The water is dripping.  We sure don't want any repeats of recent water adventures!  Phew!

Lamplight Fresh batteries are in all the flashlights.  The kerosene lamps stay ready for extended power outages, but we've checked on them anyway and "eyeballed" the candles and matches.

Here in the isolation of the farm, our winter storm preparation is a well-practiced routine.

From this picture you can see that we need to trim our wicks. This is one of two old kerosene lamps used by my Great Grandmother and probably her father. 

I have fond memories of extended winter power outages and ice storms here  on the farm.  We only get a pretty ice storm every five or six years.  We are overdue by several years. 

Yes, Unc usually has to walk the 3.5 miles to town and 3.5 miles back to the farm in order to get the newspaper he and Mama MUST have. Yes, we usually lose phone and electricity for a day or two. Yes, I usually fall a few times on my rumpus from slippery icy patches while I'm out taking photos of the magical winter wonderland that appears when the sun comes out.

Gordon has yet to experience Mississippi when the dense trees shimmer with diamonds, and the woods crackle from breaking branches and falling icicles.  It will be different from the ice storms he knows from growing up in Texas.

Gordon brought home 3:10 to Yuma with Russell Crowe to help me feel better.  Yes, I'm enjoying the THIRD round of stomach virus, beginning last night.  Weight loss is good, but not like this! Russell should be a good tonic!

January 23, 2008

Sometimes Life is Surreal

Tatteredquilt Isn't there some reality show with Surreal Life in the title?  I have some material for such a show!

Maybe you have noticed that on this blog, I really try to focus on the positive.  It is good mental therapy for me to write about the positives, and I hope it is good therapy for you to read happy stuff.

I really need Erma Bombeck to help me write about the last few days and our plumbing saga, but I'll try to give you a short, short synopsis and tease you with some photos of what I WOULD HAVE BEEN writing about if PLUMBING had not gotten in the way.

Monday of this week, we awoke to the fourth plumbing emergency.  Gordon had to rescue the bathroom wall in the studio from my uncle, age 81, wielding a chainsaw.  He wanted to cut into the wall with a chainsaw to get to the pipes.  I kid you not!  Life is NEVER dull here on the farm!

Turns out, that fourth plumbing emergency... that turned the parking area into a wading pool... was a ten-minute fix for the professional, and the repair did not require cutting into the wall with a chainsaw. So that was a Positive Result.

There is something especially unnerving about starting one's day defending one's home and studio, albeit temporary living quarters, from a chainsaw attack.

BooksignaturePlumbing Emergency #2 and #3 were precipitated by the thermometer dipping to 14 degrees Fahrenheit.

#2 was a broken pipe behind the washer that put three to four inches of water on the pouring room floor.

Now, to keep this account my report focused on the Positives, we really did need to completely reorganize and deep-clean the 20' x 30' foot pouring room in the studio, moving, literally, the several TONS of plaster molds. 

This led to breaking old molds of porcelain designs that I decided on the spot to discontinue, retire, never make again.  A very hard decision made very, very easily when one has COLD water lapping at one's ankles.  This is a Good Thing

We are still into the total reorganization of molds in the pouring room which led to making more room for my fabric stash (yippee!) which led to sorting and refolding all that happy fabric.  See all these Happy Things that came out of a plumbing disaster? 

I also now have two shelves devoted to my happy yellow Tupperware! That makes me happy every time I look at the little kitchen nook we carved out in our temporary living quarters.

Flowerholderclose Please try to picture three of us, Unc, Gordon and me struggling against the indoor surge of water, moving what could be moved... sucking up water with Unc's huge, powerful wet/dry shop vac... me trying to rescue all the CLEAN sheets and towels that Gordon had thrown on the floor in his first responder attempt to soak up the water.  My "good" sheets and "good" towels.  No time to wring the water out. Heavy, heavy fabrics loaded with water that I could only drag to the threshold and dump outside on the sidewalk.

Then. Gordon let out a yell, and the room went deadly silent. 

The water that the shop vac had been working so hard to suck up all the time that we had been sweeping water toward its hungry nozzle....and none of us noticed that water was happily pouring out of the back of the shop vac, out of the little hole designed to drain a wet-dry shop vac when it is used for such plumbing disasters... but that little hole is SUPPOSED to be plugged when one is sucking up the flood water.

For thirty minutes, we had been sucking up water and dumping it right back on the floor, and NOT ONE of us noticed it until Gordon spotted the water gushing out of the hole like a garden hose running full force.

No, the men could not find the little plug that should have been in the shop vac. No one could remember where the shop vac was last used for water duty... which might give a clue to where the little plug had been left.

This was about the time I decided on retiring a good number of my porcelain designs, breaking the molds and master molds and simplifying my life.  Simplifying Life... that is another Good Thing.

I also decided to go shopping for a shop vac of my very own, in a pink or a yellow color.  You see, I already have a nice little collection of tools with pink or yellow handles that I have collected over years and years.

These Girly colors are supposed to SCREAM to ALL MEN, whether relatives or hired handymen, that the pink or yellow tools belong to Penny and are OFF LIMITS to MEN!

I probably could take a picture of my pretty Girly tools if you give me a day or two find my Girly tools by looking in all the tool stashes the men have made around the farm.   *sigh*  But my re-affirmed vow to find my Girly tools and buy a Girly shop vac is another Good Thing, something positive, right?

AtticspoolPlumbing emergency #3 was almost a repeat of plumbing emergency #2, except it was in the lower 20' x 40' lower level of the studio. Thankfully the shelves of molds are built on a 4" tall platform.

Then plumbing emergency #1 was precipitated by the first dip in temperature to 14 degrees Fahrenheit.  Yes, we have had two good dips in the last two weeks. 

This time, the hunters leasing the hunting cabin on the farm had not turned off the water and drained the pipes, as they are supposed to do (it's in writing), so our plumber spent two whole days inside and under the cabin replacing pipe, etc, etc, etc.

Here's the positive in that.  Our plumber replaced the copper pipe with some freeze-resistant PVC pipe...so we should be better protected in the future.  Plus, I made a mental note to always use freeze-resistant PVC pipe in future plumbing projects and to check behind the hunters anytime we are expecting a big freeze.

One more positive.  Every time the temperature dips suddenly to 20 or below, bugs are dying!  Fleas, ticks, the worms that eat at cotton or pecan trees, etc.  Those icky smelly Japanese beetles that were imported by the experts who thought they would be like our native Lady Bugs. 

I love those sudden cold winter dips in the temperature, primarily for the bug killing.  Ice storms and snow only insulate the ground. I want a sudden, hard, hard freeze that hopefully lasts for a few days. And sometimes, this non-chemical method of bug killing results in some plumbing adventures!

Mialawardsculptures So, this is what has been consuming our time and energy (along with those two stomach things tucked in among the plumbing emergencies.) 

I am SO behind in my porcelain deadlines.

Please also forgive me for not responding yet to your gracious, lovely email about Daisy's death. 

These pictures are a tease of some blog posts to come.

Today is another new day, and I WILL make progress on the porcelain orders and the continuing studio re-organization and in ferreting out my Girly tools! *wink*

January 20, 2008

Finished Botanika Block Two and Three

Botanikablock2 Actually, I finished block two and block three of Robyn Pandolph's Botanika Block of the Month Quilt a few days back. (Block two has been finished for longer than that.) But for some strange reason, I just have not gotten around to photographing them.

Botanikablock3 I did that this afternoon while photographing the first finished block of Baltimore Blue designed by Sindy Rodenmeyer of Fat Cat Patterns.

A couple of weeks ago, I did all the prep work to start sewing on the next block of Botanika. I'm waiting to start it after I have finished the Red and Green applique block on which I am working.

As soon as each month's block comes in, the fabric is washed and pressed.  When the background fabric arrived with the first block, it was first washed and pressed, and then I immediately cut it into the appropriate sized squares, pinked around the edges and have them all waiting patiently in a zippered plastic bag.

It has proved to be a nice little luxury to just reach for a prepared background block for any given quilt on which I am working.

Botanikabl1 Lots more pictures and recent happenings to share with you on this blog.

Would you believe I "enjoyed" a second round of that stomach stuff Friday and Saturday?! The second round was much shorter, thankfully, allowing me to keep some soup broth down last night.

So, once again, applique and quilting have been tangible therapy!

Finished Baltimore Blue Block One

Baltimoreblueblock1 Sunday night.  Three Westies washed , brushed and trimmed a little.

Also this afternoon I finished the last three little centers of block one of my Baltimore Blue Block of the Month applique quilt.  (The free pattern is available at www.fatcatpatterns.com. Each month's block pattern is free for that month only. The whole set of patterns is just $10.)

Gordon, Unc and Mama watched the AFC Championship while I sewed and photographed several finished blocks.

Now, on this cold early evening, two Mississippi men are quarterbacking the two teams vying for the NFC Championship, the New York Giants and the Green Bay Packers.

I am proud as can be of both Brett Farve of Kiln, MS, and Eli Manning from good Mississippi bloodlines.  In fact, I understand Mr. and Mrs. Archie Manning have moved back to Mississippi, to Oxford, as their primary residence. 

I MUST soon blog about my mother being the chaperon for Archie when he dated a young woman from Mississippi University for Women.  He was the star quarterback for Ole Miss at the time.  I promise, I will get to that interesting little story.

But for this game, currently in the second quarter, I have to cheer for the younger brother, Eli.  (Little brother to Peyton Manning.)

Gordon and my uncle Charles are both younger brothers.   I've personally observed on a number of occasions what can happen to Little Brothers. *Hurmmphh!*  Yep, I'll always be an advocate for Little Brothers!


January 15, 2008

Sunny Baltimore Blue Quilt BOM

Baltimorebluebom3 Yes, I remember that I promised to blog next about the six quilts that were found at a dump in North Mississippi, and I do promise to blog about them next.

Right now, I need to blog about something happy.

Baltimorebluebom Daisy, our 11 year old English Shepherd with severe hip dysplasia since birth, had a violent seizure last night, Monday night, and died. Her death was unexpected, and it still has not soaked in. I will give Daisy a post all her own as soon as I can write about her. Right now, I just can't think about it.

Can't sleep either. Raging migraine, so I've just made a new dog bed cover in these wee hours. That helped some. Worked on a pillowcase. It is ready for the hand-hemming part.

Baltimorebluewhole So now, I'll show you this sunny, happy new quilt I've started... I decided to do this Baltimore Blue Block of the Month Quilt from Fat Cat Patterns.  It started in January, 2008.

Baltimorebluebom2_2 It has taken a few weeks to find, order and receive the bluebonnet fabric I wanted to use, and I'm still waiting on some yellow rose fabric to use in the quilt.

Using the bluebonnet fabrics and the yellow rose fabrics in this quilt kinda makes it a tribute to my father and my  husband, both of whom grew up in and lived much of their lives in Texas.

There are still some fabrics to be chosen, but that search is part of the fun. My mother Alice, has been helping me try out the various fabric options, and that has been a good activity for the two of us to share.

I've not been able to work on this quilt more than 30 minutes a day. Porcelain and other deadlines are again filling each day.

But you know, that is ok. This quilting is pure therapy. Even sharing it with you right now is much needed therapy.

I've not even felt guilty about the number of block of the month quilts I am currently working on. The different projects fit different moods.

The sunny yellows and vivid blues in this quilt are just what I am in the mood to work on right now. Probably I am subconsciously longing for the arrival of the beautiful yellow daffodils that will start blooming as early as next month.

This Baltimore Blue BOM pattern was designed by Sindy Rodenmeyer of Garland, TX. Each month, the pattern for the block for that month is free to download, or the entire set of patterns is a mere $10.

She has many other patterns that are equally delightful. Her story-telling under the Family Dirt category is just wonderful!

Sindy even has a Yahoo email discussion group called Scratching Post for folks working on her patterns. It has been a fun community of fellow quilters!

Baltimorebluebom4_2 In photo 5, I share a trick Mary Sorensen showed us in a class she taught in 2006 in Mississsippi. She trims excess fabric from underneath several layers of applique before sewing the piece to the background fabric. It make the quilt have a more consistent thickness and makes it much easier to quilt.

This weekend, I finally decided on the background fabric for this Baltimore Blue BOM quilt. It is in the last photo.

Baltimorebluebom5 I only buy one-yard lengths when building my fabric stash, but fortunately, the eBay seller from whom I originally bought the subtle gingham pattern, still had pleny of yardage left.
The darkest blue fabric is from her also.

Story Time Treasures is originally from Meridian, Mississippi. She now lives in Texas, but once a Mississippian, always a Mississippian!  *grin* 

This Mississippi expatriat always has more fabric that I am able to buy, so each month, she managed to get the bulk of my fabric budget! *grin*

If you run across any of the yellow fabric, "Home Tweet Home" by Sue Penn for RJR Fabrics, please let me know. I adore this fabric, and sadly, I only bought a yard at the time.

You know, if you don't grab a fabric you love when you see it, it will be gone within six months. The production life of any fabric design is very, very short!

Now, at 4:40 a.m., I think I feel calm enough to get some sleep. The happy yellow and blue fabrics, thinking about this quilt, and sharing all of this with you has been effective therapy!

Thanks for reading, and especially for your comments! I look forward to reading what you have to say!!

January 13, 2008

If Quilts Could Talk

Dumpquilts6 "Wha... what was that?"

She heard it again, a scratching, rusty metal- against- metal sound.

She struggled to remember where she had heard that sound before, but she just could not quite focus her thoughts. It was all a dark, dusty... musty with time.

Wait, someone was opening the trunk! Finally! Fresh air! Light!

"Oh, hurry! Let me out! Please, hurry!"

It had been so very, very long.  She had struggled so hard for such a long time to keep up with the number of days... then months... then years since she had been carefully folded and lovingly placed into the trunk with the other younger quilts, the wedding dress, the embroidered pillowcases and those uppity lace underthings

In time, the others quit trying to talk away the endless hours and days; quit trying to remember the happy times. One by one, the treasures in the trunk fell into deep sadness and then fell into the black silence.  Heartbroken. Forlorn. Forgotten.

Red, as the other quilts called her, had been the strongest, keeping the others talking, remembering...for as long as she could. Then she, too, had no more energy, no more words...and fell quiet.

The lid to the trunk screeched open, and dust sprinkled down on her.  As she adjusted to the light, she caught a glimpse of two young faces just before she was jerked out and tossed aside. The Girl picked her up and looked her over quickly before flinging her on a pile in the middle of the floor.

"More old junk!," The Girl said with an unattractive sneer on her upper lip and a coarse tone in her voice.

"We can get a few bucks for this old trunk," The Boy said, and with that, he dumped the rest of the quilts and the embroidered pillowcases and the wedding dress and the uppity underthings on the floor.

The Girl snatched up the wedding dress and the uppity underthings, holding them up to her body. She twirled around and taunted the boy, and he chased her nosily down the steps, their crude cackles fading into the depths of the house.

Red lay for a good while in a state of shock...crumpled in a heap, her folds in distorted, uncomfortable angles. She watched the dust particles suspended in the beams of light that penetrated the attic through one small window.

The light was fading fast. She could not see the other quilts, but she softly called out to them.  In a few minutes, she heard their muffled, scared replies. Then night shrouded the attic in blackness, and the only sounds she heard were a few scratches of claws scampering over the boards and a few arthritic moans of the old house as it stretched in place.

The next morning The Boy reappeared in the attic and began carrying away items from the pile. Red saw the other quilts being carried away, but they were too scared to even cry out.

"Don't worry, girls," she said with forced cheerfulness. "We're just going to have a good airing in the sunshine."

She could hardly wait for The Lady to drape her over the clothes line and let the wind whip through her folds. Why, she was even looking forward to being thwapped with that metal thing The Lady used to shake out the dust and make her clean and fresh.

The Boy reappeared, little beads of sweat forming on his pock-marked brow. He did not look like a happy person, Red thought to herself. She did not remember that face among The Lady's children.

He picked up an old broken lamp and the radio that had been in the bedroom for ever so long. Then he yanked at one of the folds of the red and white quilt and rudely pulled Red over the radio in his arms, letting part of her drag along the dusty floor of the attic, down the steps and out the front door.

Red abruptly felt herself flying through the air, but instead of being unfurled to bask in the sunshine, she found herself falling in a heap in the back of a pickup truck with the old radio and the broken lamp and other familiar objects she had seen around the house. The other quilts were there too, some of them whimpering.

The engine of the pick-up truck strained and then growled to life. Smoke belched from the tail pipe, and they all lurched forward on a bumpy ride on a gravel road, dust churning up, fighting with the burning oil smoke of the old pick-up. The suffocating cloud of dust and smoke blocked the sunlight, leaving Red and the others to gasp for air.

"This was just too much! Where was The Lady? She would not let this happen to her things!"  Red felt a helplessness and a despair greater than she had felt during any of the hard times she and The Lady had survived.

Images chased memories, faster and faster. Red recalled The Lady as a very young woman buying her in a big piece of red fabric, cutting her up in pieces and then sewing her back together with the quiet little white cloth. Hours and hours Red and The Lady had spent together, on the front porch, as The Lady dreamed out loud of the man she was to marry and the children she wanted to have and the happy times she just knew they would have.

The husband came later that summer.  Red was spread out on the bed for the first time the day the wedding dress came to live with them. That first night, she covered her Lady for the giggles and the whispers and the kisses and the loving.

In time, Red and the rest of the house anxiously awaited the first baby to join the family. Not long after those first cries, many unfamiliar but happy faces came by to look at the new baby and beam at The Lady, both tucked under Red's proud blocks.

Red was never jealous of the other quilts that The Lady made for cover for her growing family. They were mostly made with scraps left over from the clothes The Lady made for her brood.

Red was always special. She only covered The Lady's bed, lovingly stroked each morning as the bed was made. She could always make her Lady feel safe and loved. Many an hour, she spent wrapped around The Lady  as she privately cried over the never-ending hard times and the disappointments and the shattered dreams and feeling so alone, even in the midst of such a large family. 

The pickup stopped bouncing, and the engine coughed and choked to a stop. The boy got out and started tossing items into a very large metal green box, sort of like the trunk back at the house, but much, much larger.

Red and the other quilts were flung into the big metal trunk, pinned between some crushed cardboard boxes and some crinkly bags. First, Red smelled stale beer and whiskey. "Ugh," she thought, "The Lady will not like this at all!"

Then rotten food smells reached her, and she felt something dripping on one of her corners.  The lid to this very large trunk slammed shut with a deep thud. Then the pickup strained and growled back to life. and bounced and clanked away into the distance.

Red did not even have time to try and collect her thoughts before she felt the box being lifted, up and up, and then it turned over, and the other crinkly bags fell over on her and pressed against her, and the beer cans and whiskey bottles and rotten vegetables tumbled across her red and white blocks.

She tried to call out to the other quilts, but she could not hear them above the noise. Then suddenly, the tumbling stopped, and Red heard two strange human voices shouting over machinery noise.

One voice was a woman's voice! Oh, it must be The Lady!

The huge box trunk slowly lowered to the ground, and there was the woman reaching for her, her eyes wide with intensity. There were laugh lines firmly etched around the edges of her soft brown eyes, and creases at the edges of her mouth, etched by years of smiles.

Once again, Red was flying through the air, the beer cans and whiskey bottles and rotten garbage being flung from her. 

Then she saw the other quilts being dug out of the big metal trunk, the garbage shaken off of them also. The woman scooped them all up and quickly put them in the back seat of her car while the deafening machinery noise resumed.

"Where was The Lady?" Red had never seen this woman who rescued them, but instinctively Red sensed that she and the rest of the quilts would be safe and appreciated again. This New Lady had a kind face, and she had seemed angry that someone had thrown away quilts like them.

Exhausted, Red and the other quilts melted into the upholstery of the back seat of the New Lady's car as unfamiliar music softly played on the radio and the New Lady hummed along. Warm, clean sunlight flooded the car, and it felt so delicious to all the quilts who had not felt sunshine for...well, they had no idea how long.

The car purred over the miles, and Red drifted into an exhausted sleep, her dreams a mix of her first Lady and this New Lady smiling and laughing and sewing together on the front porch in the rocking chairs.

©2008 Penny Sanford Fikes
All Rights Reserved
Please do not reprint or excerpt without asking first.

---------------------

This little fictional short story I wrote about the life of this quilt was inspired by A Dress A Day, a blog about vintage dresses. (My next blog post will tell the true story, as far as we know it, about the discovery of six vintage quilts dumped at a county dump in North Mississippi!)

But back to my inspiration: Erin's short stories about The Secret Lives of Dresses are listed and linked on the right side of the home page of her blog, below some ads. Those short stories absolutely mesmerized me when I first discovered them a bit over a year ago. I've re-read them all in the wee hours this morning, again mesmerized!

Here are two of my favorite descriptions written by Erin:

The Secret Lives of Dresses, Volume 6:
"She was typing--she did a lot of typing--but it was much slower than her usual rat-a-tat pace. There would be the crash of a single key hitting the platen, then a drop, then a pause, then the crash again. For a minute, I wasn't sure what the drops were--had she spilled coffee, and, more importantly, was it staining me? It was only when she started rummaging in the desk for a handkerchief that I realized she was crying. Crying! That's one of the worst things you can do in a dress, you know. Every time you cry in a dress you grind sadness right into it, deep down into the fabric, and it never comes out. Laughing in a dress -- now that's good. The laughter lodges between the warp and weft in little bubbles, like champagne. And kissing, kissing in a dress sets up a kind of vibration in the fabric that keeps wobbling there forever. But crying, even the drip-drip silent kind, that just grimes a dress up. I hate it. She'd never cried in me before."


The Secret Lives of Dresses, Volume 8:
"I think it got a bit too much for me then, and I don't remember much else until I felt the nice warm massage of the iron over me. I felt just-washed -- I must have been just washed -- and I was being ironed, which, truly, is just the best feeling. You can be all jangly and cross-grained and overwhelmed but the iron just makes it all go away, and there you are fresh and smooth again. It's better than anything."