Good Mail Day

Online shopping is a godsend, because I really dislike going to stores and shopping. The looking around and trying to find the right thing kind of shopping. If I know what I want and where it is, I will go to a store, get the item and leave. Online shopping allows me to browse, not talk to anyone. The only problem is the packages.

When I was a solo librarian TFQ would come to visit me and there would be boxes of stuff that had arrived – not a lot, but enough to be noticeable – that I had not opened. I knew what was in the packages and I knew I could open them when I needed to wash the fabric or use the tool. She just couldn’t understand it and would, thankfully and gleefully, rip open all of the packages for me and ooh and aah over my purchases.

One of the dreary tasks forced upon a solo law librarian is that you have to open tons of boxes. Every day scores of boxes and packages come with updates for the legal materials. The packages are taped within an inch of their sad lives and require special equipment and fortitude, as well as serious caffeine to get through opening. I am not kidding when I say that this takes all the joy out of receiving mail and opening gifts. It is probably part of the reason why I use gift bags.

I am now fortunate to work in a larger library where we have a person whose job it is to open the mail, route magazines and newsletters and journals, and process the books so they can be shelved.

it has taken me a long time to heal. This release from the tyranny of mail, however, has allowed me to start to take some joy in receiving packages. Today was a good mail day!

Stripes from TFQ
Stripes from TFQ

In no particular order, here is the mail report.

TFQ sent these with a little note saying that she found them in the remnant bin at The Quilting Loft! I believe that Angie has an online store. She is a really nice person, has a great shop (which you should visit when you go to Seattle! I am sure the cab drivers know where it is 😉 or you can look it up by clicking on the link). Go buy something!

How nice to receive a surprise!

I love using stripes in bindings. It makes the quilts look more cheerful and adds movement to them. Have you tried using stripes in a quilt binding?

I believe that the upper left hand stripe is a Jane Sassaman print. I went to her lecture last night and I think she was wearing an apron with that stripe as the ties. There is no selvedge, so I can’t tell you for sure, but I am sure TFQ knows and will chime in.

Yes, I went to a Jane Sassaman lecture last night. The opportunity presented itself and quiltmaking is my passion, so how could I not attend? I am writing the blog post as we speak (well, sort of since I am typing this blog post bit now) and will post it soon. Be patient. I have pictures, too.

EQ7 Upgrade
EQ7 Upgrade

Remember the post where I talked about the EQ7 upgrade? I have to confess that that was a cheap trick to try and get two free copies of EQ7 – one for me and one for one of you. They didn’t pick me. 🙁 . I was sad. I thought it was a good post, but they pick by random generator and it wasn’t my turn.

The bonus is that they offered me a good deal on the upgrade so I bought that and had to wait forever for it to arrive. It came today, though. YAY!!!

I was inspired by the arrival to consider doing a block of the month.

Consider.doing.a.block.of.the.month.

Artquiltmaker.com BOM

Do I need more work? No.

Am I somewhat willing? Yes.

The key is whether you will participate? Will you at least try it if I do it and commit to posting one or two blocks per month until the end of the year? I thought about not posting instructions, but I would produce rotary cutter instructions for the blocks and somehow enable you to download them. I would have to figure that out.

Let me know by commenting below and I will think about it, too. I am not doing it alone.

South African Fabric from Beth
South African Fabric from Beth

Beth is a reader who is in the process of moving to South Africa. I think she lives in Illinois now. Moving is terrible if you move across town, but moving across the world makes me more in awe of Beth. How was she able to send me a small package with a note inside (that is flower postcard) in the midst of such a momentous move?

I don’t know. Beth is a better person than me. My child, nieces and nephews will have to haul my body out of the house from under a fabric avalanche.I hope never to move unless it is to move my fabric to a studio where I can go every day for 8 hours a day and play.

Anyway, this lovely blue fabric will have the perfect home in a couple of different projects that I have going now and for which I am cutting patches. Stay tuned for more on that another day.

So, dear readers, thank you for reading and living vicariously. And thank you to the US Postal Service and the handsome UPS driver who all showed up to work today and made it safely to my house so we could enjoy some quilty goodness.