Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Happy New Year, 2025!


Happy New Year to you and yours.  I hope this year brings a bounty of good things to each of you (and to my family and me, too). 

Are you anticipating 2025 with enthusiasm or dread?  Personally, I'm glad to see the backside of 2024 (good riddance, I say), though I'm not sure I have as much enthusiasm and anticipation for 2025 as the little girl in this postcard seems to express.

I forgot about the annual accomplishment/finishes/year in review posts so many publish around this time of year.  I'd participate but I had zero quilt finishes in 2024.  I had the bright idea to post the number of blocks I made but decided I didn't have the energy to count them--not that there were so many but that they were scattered around and I would have had to dig them out.  I sewed scrappy stars, 1" scrappy nine-patches, zinnias in little plaid baskets, Bramble Blooms I center block, and, at the beginning of the year, quilted part of Everyday Patchwork.

I'm hopeful that 2025 will be better than 2024.

Again, Happy New Year!

--Nancy.

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Christmas Can't Be Over Yet!

Even though Christmas at our house was small this year—almost nonexistent as far as celebrations—I'm not quite ready for it to be over.  Most years I'm not.  I complain that on December 26, radio stations quit playing Christmas music and by December 27, all hint of Christmas is gone from most stores.  With that in mind, I'm sharing these two short videos to help prolong the holiday a little longer.

Happy birds, then the man with the saw!  Oh no!  I liked the surprise.  In my opinion, kindness is never out of season. 



And this video....   I'm not a huge fan of Sesame Street or of "The Twelve Days of Christmas," either, but I think Count von Count is the perfect "singer."  The organ adds an almost magical touch with its musical variety.  (Be gone the rote repetition!)  I heard this before I saw it and wondered if they had dancers on the stage.  Seeing the organist, I realized that dancers weren't needed.


I hope you enjoy either or both of these videos!
--Nancy.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

A Crow, a Surgery, the Ocean, and a Little Plaid Basket (but not in that order)

To those of you who left comments on my last post, thank you!  I responded on the post and not to your email boxes.  There seem to be some glitches in either my computer, with my software, with my mouse, or maybe with gmail.  I lost all of your comment emails (and about two months' worth of other emails).  I hope you can forgive me for not responding directly to you.  

Knee replacement surgery was on October 22.  I think I'm doing better earlier this time than last, though walking with a walker is still slow and there's still pain.  It's hard to keep one leg elevated and do things like write blog posts at a computer, use a sewing machine, sometimes even stitch by hand.  Swelling is inevitable after a knee replacement, even with TED hose, hence the elevation requirement.

But, early in October, my daughter and I went to Dewey Beach, Delaware, for a few days.  One day each to drive down and back, but three glorious days at the ocean.  We had an ocean view from our hotel which sits just behind the dunes making it a short walk to the beach.  My daughter kept commenting on what a wonderful vacation it was, and it really was wonderful, but still challenging for me with a barely healed knee and being short on both strength and stamina.  I'd do it again in a heartbeat!

In my opinion you can never had too many photos of the ocean but one post can have too many of my ocean photos.  Here are a few.  We had days of both clouds and sun.  I never tire of watching the ocean.
ocean at Dewey Beach, Deleware
ocean at Dewey Beach, Deleware
ocean at Dewey Beach, Deleware
A trip to Dewey Beach wouldn't be complete without a walk through a nearby nature preserve (whose name I can't remember).  No part of it borders the ocean but a section borders the bay. 
And then there were the seagulls at Rehoboth Beach.  We saw them practically dive-bombing people who had purchased french fries. No fries for us!
seagulls against a grey sky
Back to knee surgery, but not about knee surgery.  If you think you might need ice packs (for scrapes or migraines or a sore back) this is a great, simple recipe.  In a gallon-size plastic zipper bag (best to use the brand-name ones) pour 3 cups water and 1 cup rubbing alcohol.  Zip and put into another zip bag, zip, then into the freezer.
homemade ice packs with water and alcohol
It's hard to photograph the contents of these ice packs but when frozen they are like crunchy ice.  Put a towel or other cloth around them before putting on skin. I highly recommend them.

The other thing I wanted to post is a pain scale my doctor included in a booklet they gave me before the first surgery. That pain scale always confused me--a scale compared to what?--and this chart clarified it for me.   Now the doctor or nurse or physical therapist and I are all on the same page when I say my pain is at a level 6 or 2 or 9, etc.
The Pain Scale
My only stitching has been on this little plaid basket.  I wasn't sure about the fabric but have decided I like it.  I'm looking forward to choosing flowers to go inside.
little plaid basket
Regular readers may remember that I'm not a fan of Halloween but I couldn't resist taking a photo of the dapper Edgar Allan Crow in front of the public library at Rehoboth Beach.  The librarians outdid themselves.
Edgar Allan Crow at Rehoboth Beach Public Library
My daughter and I stood outside the library trying to get a good look at all aspects of Edgar and take photographs.  At one point I stumbled backward over the edge of the sidewalk and, arms flailing, could feel myself on the way to the ground.  My daughter reached out her hand to steady me just in time.  It must have been a sight to behold.  When we walked into the library, the librarian behind the counter asked what we thought of their crow and told us what fun they'd had creating him.  It was then I realized that he'd probably been watching through the large picture window and had a full view of my near-fall.  What must he have thought, I've wondered.  Drunk?  Old woman?  Dizzy with admiration for Edgar?  I chuckle about it every time I think of it.

I hope you good readers are doing well.  Thanks for visiting.

--Nancy.

Monday, January 1, 2024

Sunday, April 9, 2023

Happy Easter to You and Yours

*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *
If you have a few minutes you might enjoy listening to one of my favorite Easter-time pieces of music, below.  It's called "Hosanna" and is part of Rob Gardner's sacred musical work, "Lamb of God."  (Youtube has all of the music.)  If seeing the musicians is distracting in the video below, you can follow the lyrics here.



I wish you a joyous Easter Day.

--Nancy.

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Happy New Year 2023

Happy New Year to you and yours, and even happier every day of the year!  I wish you all good things this year, including health and happiness.

Here's wishing 2023 is better than 2022!

--Nancy.

Saturday, December 31, 2022

Between the Old Year and the New

The week between Christmas and New Year's Day always seems busy to me.  It's a catch-up time for unfinished things, especially ones that need to be finished before January comes.  And then there's planning and preparing for the coming year, particularly as regards quilting, family history research, and blogging for both.

Burgoyne Surrounded is not one of those essential things, but the top is finished as far as the extra blocks.
It is now four blocks by five blocks and measures 75" x 94", which seems seems huge.  My husband and I sleep in a queen-size bed and my thought for this quilt is to add an applique border on the long side to make it closer to 82" x 94" so I can lay it horizontally across the bed.  Neither of us likes the weight of a quilt handing over the end of the bed, and I love having extra on the side so I can pull it up and wrap it around me.  So it might work

I'm envisioning the border across the top appliqued with oak leaves and acorns, which means I'm almost right back where I started two months ago when I decided against a border all the way around the smaller version of the quilt.  I think that must have felt too daunting to me at the time.
I have lots of  leftover 1½" squares and strips to be cut.  I don't know if I'll make another Burgoyne Surrounded quilt or not yet, but they'll become something.

For years now I've made my own purse-size calendar book.  Many years ago I bought one that worked perfectly but when the new year came, they weren't making that style any more.  So I made my own.  Closed, it measures ~4½" x 7". 
A couple of years ago I bought a ream of paper and took it to a binder who has a guillotine paper-cutter and a machine to punch holes in the edge.  Old school, I know, but I go with the idea that "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."  I'm also a person of habit and love consistency in some everyday things.  When the last week of the year rolls around and I don't have my calendar book finished, as happened this year, I feel rushed and focus my attention on just it.  Yes, it takes time to make it but I love it.  And now it's ready for 2023.

Christmas passed almost without my catching and enjoying it.

One of our favorite Christmas activities is going to Merry Tuba Christmas.  Thank goodness it was inside this year!  I love this experience for so many reasons.  The feeling of being inside a whale with the blubbery music all around fills me with wonder.  One of the other reasons I love it is because the audience is invited to sing along to some of the carols.  It reminds me of when I was a child and we sang from small booklets of carols.  Except with Merry Tuba Christmas, for someone who can hardly carry a tune, it's a great pleasure to know that the tubas are so much louder and cover any mistakes I make.

We baked Spritz cookies--so festive and delicious--
spritz cookies with marachino cherries
and made Buckeyes.  Yum!  From experience I now know that buckeyes are best with real butter (as opposed to vegan butter).
buckeyes
And the last event of the Christmas season came today when we visited the Nativity in the city.  It is a life-size or larger display of the Annunciation, of Mary and Joseph travelling to Bethlehem, of shepherds in the fields with their sheep, the Wise Men, Herod, and Mary and Joseph with the Baby.  My photos do not do justice to the atmosphere of the environment when in person among these displays.
State Auto Nativity display 2022
State Auto Nativity display 2022
State Auto Nativity display 2022
State Auto Nativity display 2022
State Auto Nativity display 2022
State Auto Nativity display 2022
This display has been set up every year since 1931 by State Auto Insurance.  For many years it was in front of the building, elevated in a narrow space between the sidewalk and the building.  It was okay but a few years ago they created a small park where they arrange the figures in groupings to create scenes.  It is amazing to me that a secular insurance company can create an environment that feels so special and spiritual, holy even.  There is a sense of hushed reverence and awe while in that little park.  

snow on the windowsill, December 2022
The weather now, in the 60s, feels like spring.  But on the Friday before Christmas we had snow and the temperature was -5 degrees with a "feels like" temperature of -32 degrees.  No doubt the 26 mph winds helped it feel so cold.  I think that's similar to what many experienced around the U.S., except, of course, the Buffalo area was worse.  I love the snow, not so much the negative temperatures.

This is the last post of 2022.  I would breathe a sigh of relief that the year is over but I'm not letting myself do that yet.  The way this year has gone, anything could happen in three more hours!  It ain't over till it's over, as they say.

Happy New Year to you!

--Nancy.

Saturday, December 24, 2022

Wishing You a Merry Christmas


Dear readers, I wish you a Merry Christmas and so many other blessings of the season--peace, hope, joy, time with family and friends, and as the card says, Christmas cheer, health, and few sorrows in the coming year. I also wish you peace with whatever comes your way in 2023 and the strength and courage to be strong. 

Thank you for visiting my blog and leaving comments. I appreciate them more than you know.

And also, one of my very favorite, short Christmas videos.  There are so many things I love about this but especially the reaction of one of the wise men upon meeting Jesus.  Priceless!



Merry Christmas!
--Nancy.

Sunday, April 17, 2022

He Is Risen!

How grateful I am for a Savior who knows and loves me, who suffered and died for my sins, and who offers me the gift of Eternal Life.  And he did and does the same for everyone.

Happy Easter!

--Nancy.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Merry Christmas!







At this season of light,
when we celebrate the birth
of the One Who is the Light,
I wish you and yours
a Merry Christmas!

--Nancy.

Sunday, October 31, 2021

All Saints Day Instead of All Hallows Eve (or Halloween)

When we lived in El Salvador the people didn't celebrate Halloween (or All Hallows Eve as it is sometimes called).  Instead, the day of celebration was November 1, All Saints Day or Día de los Santos.  It was celebrated as a holiday throughout the country.  Not being Catholic and never having lived outside the U.S. those decades ago, this was new information to me.

All Saints Day was a happy day for the people of El Salvador because they believed that their dead children had become angels and were in Heaven with the saints.  Nearly every family had at least one little angel to remember and honor.  Though they missed and sorrowed over their little lost ones, they celebrated the child's place in Heaven.

Cross with wreath in Sociedad, El Salvador, decorated for All Saints' Day or Dia de los Santos On the morning of November first we found vendors in the town square selling both fresh and paper flowers and greenery.  There were beautiful wreaths of fresh jasmine and other flowers.  There were equally beautiful bouquets of crepe paper flowers of all colors and kinds.  They had a beauty all their own because they had been very finely handcrafted by women in the village.

There was a long, steady parade of people, with their arms full, going to the graveyard that morning.  Families walked together -- most of the families of the village, it seemed -- with their flowers and wreaths; with shovels, rakes, machetes, and other tools; with paint and paintbrushes.  At the cemetery they cleaned the grave sites and chopped the grass.  They repaired and painted the wooden crosses or put new ones on the graves.  Then they added the wreaths and flowers for their dear infant-angels.  Tears were shed, prayers offered, and memories shared while at the grave sites.

Going to the cemetery was a beautiful and unique experience, but it was only one aspect of the day of celebration.

In the evening, the children celebrated All Saints' Day by begging door to door for pennies or pieces of cooked squash.  They were happy to be given either.  The squash they ate.  The
Children with candles on church steps for All Saints Day or Dia de los Santos in Sociedad, El Salvadorpennies they used to buy candles which they took to the entrance of the church and lit.  Taking turns, several children kept vigil with the lit candles while others continued to beg.  As candles burned low and went out, the children replaced them with new ones.  It was a beautiful sight.  There was a peaceful serenity, an unselfishness to the evening celebration of the children's own making.  As far as I could tell no adults were involved other than giving squash or pennies and keeping the little shops open to sell candles.  

The next day, November 2, was Day of the Dead or Día de los Difuntos, sometimes known as All Souls Day.  It was a somber day without much celebration.

After a celebration like Día de los Santos it's hard to go back to the American way of celebrating Halloween.  But you can be sure I'll be at the store on Monday to buy Halloween candy at half price!

However you celebrate this season, I hope it's a enjoy it!

--Nancy.

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Happy Valentine's Day, Friends

Years ago, perhaps 30, I saw an article in a magazine showing woven hearts-and-hands. 



Being a weaver at heart at the time, I made some for Valentine's Day that year.  These are leftovers from the ones I gave away.


A Little of the History of Hearts-and-Hands
Hearts-and-hands were created and given as early as the late 1600s as tokens of affection on any day of the year.  By the 1700s they began to be adopted as expressions of affection on Valentine's Day.  By the mid-1800s Godey's Lady's Book and Harper's Weekly include Valentine's verses and cut paper projects.  Read more here, at the American Folk Art Museum website

I wish you and yours a Happy Valentine's Day, friends.

--Nancy.

Thursday, December 31, 2020

Happy New Year to You!

Good riddance to 2020 and welcome 2021.


I know I should not be too excited about 2021 but I sincerely hope it's a better year than 2020 has been.  Gosh, we've had ups and downs--plenty of downs--since March.  As if Covid-19 wasn't bad enough by itself, the year was rife with discord and unpleasantness across society.

I know January 1 is just another day, the next day after December 31, but couldn't we all use a fresh start?  I'm not as full of enthusiasm and expectation as the little one in the postcard above but I can't help but hope!

Happy New Year to you and yours.  I wish you blessings galore.

--Nancy.

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Thanksgiving Greetings


Happy Thanksgiving to you and your loved ones.  I have an abundance of blessings, even during these strange, difficult Covid times.  I'm especially giving thanks for you who come to visit this blog and leave comments on my posts, even if only occasionally.  Please know that you are a blessing to me.

--Nancy.

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Not Embroidering on World Embroidery Day


Today is World Embroidery Day.  It was begun in 2011 by a Swedish embroidery group.  Google translates from the Swedish Täcklebo Broderiakademi blog,
In 2011, one of the Embroidery Academy's local groups took the initiative to establish a day to celebrate embroidery.  World Embroidery Day now falls every year on July 30 - in the middle of the wonderful Swedish summer!
I don't know how official or how truly established World Embroidery Day is but I know some embroiderers are celebrating.

I'm not an embroiderer.  I'll do almost anything to avoid embroidering something as simple a name label for a quilt.  But it hasn't always been so.  My mom taught me to embroider when I was 5 or 6.  I still have the little 5" hoop I used, though it hasn't been used for years.

The other day I was searching for a pattern in my father's rolltop desk and came upon this, long-forgotten.


The words are Gordon B. Hinckley's, from 2001, but I embroidered them in 2003, the year I had two hip replacements (before they were quick and minimally invasive as they are today) and was laid up for a month or more after each.  When I had admired a friend's pillow with this embroidery she copied the pattern onto fabric, and I, with little energy or mobility, embroidered it.

And then I came to the bees.  How to embroider those bees?  The penciled pattern on the fabric was ague, unclear and I was indecisive (even then!).  I searched for drawings and patterns for bees and found these that I thought might work.  But then I moved on to other things and this piece was left by the wayside.

Now that I've pulled it out, I'm remembering that I won some sweet bee fabric a few years ago.  Maybe I should put them together somehow.


If you embroider, I hope you celebrated today with some embroidering.  Happy World Embroidery Day to you!

 --Nancy.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Happy New Year

Happy New Year, blogging friends.  I wish you all the best in the coming year.


--Nancy.

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Belated Merry Christmas Wishes


I was so heartily enjoying my four little grandchildren, my daughters, and my son-in-law this past week that I missed wishing you, my blogging friends, a Merry Christmas.  But since I'm still celebrating the joyous event of His birth, I don't think it's too give you my belated wishes for a ...

Merry Christmas!

I hope it was a joyous holiday for you.  If this is a struggling time for you, I hope you found some small joy during this season of celebration.

Nancy.
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