I had a fun 2 days in Florence, AL giving a trunk/lecture and then a workshop.
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
Monday, September 12, 2016
Ohio Haiti Benefit Auction and Louisville, KY Railroad Bridge
Field work continues on the farm.
Paul and I had a trip to Ohio for a SLM Board Meeting and attended the Haiti Benefit Auction. He helped Levi Lees fry Mississippi catfish for the Friday evening meal.
This quilt, toy tractor & tricycle, and other items were donated to help raise funds for missions in Haiti.
There was an evening program with special music by this group of men, "Proclaim."
These mottoes are sure to beautifully grace someone's walls.
We left the auction a little early to get a start for home and stopped in Louisville, KY for the evening.
This old railroad bridge had been changed into a walk for pedestrians across the Ohio River.
And there was a nice park along the river.
Friday, September 09, 2016
2016 SAQA Benefit Auction
There are many wonderful pieces of fiber art on this benefit auction, including my "Willow."
You can see how I made my piece in a previous post HERE.
Monday, August 08, 2016
Flying Geese on My Design Wall
On my design wall ...
I'm working on a quilt using the traditional 'flying geese' block as inspiration. I set the blocks into a 'carpenter wheel' layout and colored them up to get this design.
You can see the start of this project here.
The changing sky captures my attention so often.
Friday, July 29, 2016
Weeping for Home
Weeping for Home
20"X25"
$650
Psalm 137
Detail
In the course of human history, many people have faced exile or been forced to seek new lives far from the shores of home. These refugees carry in their hearts memories of family, friends, and familiar landscapes that shine like treasured jewels in the darkness of uncertain futures. Weeping for Home is the fourth in a series of willow trees. This piece depicts a scene from Psalm 137, in which the Israelite captives wept by the rivers of Babylon when they remembered Zion, their former home. Their captors demanded they play music and sing, but the despondent slaves hung their harps on willow trees that lined the river, unable to sing the Lord's song in a foreign land. The lattice background hints at the Israelite's confinement, while the blurred colors reflect the loss of their distinction as God's special and separate people, His treasure.
Weeping for Home was created using fused commercial cotton fabrics and quilted with Superior thread.
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