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Monthly Archives: July 2012

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Quilt Therapy Block a Day Table Runner Block 3

Quilt Therapy Posted on July 18, 2012 by TK HarrisonJuly 16, 2012

Block 3:  NOTE:  My cutting information will be based on the colors of the blocks shown.  Use your own cutting guides for the scrappy colors you choose.

  • Cut ONE (1) 2 1/4″ square from Pink, Blue, Purple and another Blue
  • Cut TWO (2) 2 1/4″ x 4″ strips from Peach and Yellow
  • Cut ONE (1) 4″ square from Light Blue

Sew TWO (2) rows together with the other Blue, Peach and Purple fabrics.  Sew ONE (1) row together with the Yellow and Light Blue.  Then sew the two rows that go on the top and bottom of the center row to the center row.

Block 4 Tomorrow!

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Quilt Therapy Block a Day Table Runner Block 2

Quilt Therapy Posted on July 17, 2012 by TK HarrisonJuly 16, 2012

Block 2:  NOTE:  My cutting information will be based on the colors of the blocks shown.  Use your own cutting guides for the scrappy colors you choose.

  • Cut FOUR (4) 2 1/4″ squares from Blue
  • Cut FOUR (4) 2 1/4″ squares from Purple
  • Cut TWO (2) 4″ squares from Purple

Sew the four patch squares together first.  Then sew the two Purple blocks to the four patch squares and finally sew the rows together!

Block 3 Tomorrow!

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Quilt Therapy Block a Day Table Runner Block 1

Quilt Therapy Posted on July 16, 2012 by TK HarrisonJuly 16, 2012

I love putting table runners on our dining room table.  Not only does it add a spash of color to an otherwise blah room, it helps to cushion hot dishes and have a place for the napkins and salt and pepper shakers.  Because I have a hard time carving out time in my day for making a whole table runner, I like to make a block a day – just a touch of quilt therapy each day sure keeps the blues away!

This is a scrappy table runner, so use up your scraps and make it fun!  In our house, that means letting the kids pick out the colors for one block each and then I get to pick out the colors to pull all of the other blocks together. 

The blocks are chosen for beginners and none of them have anything more than squares or strips, so anyone should be able to make this simple Quilt Therapy Block a Day Table Runner!

Finished Table Runner = 36″ x 8″
Finished Block Size = 7″
Unfinished Block Size = 7 1/2″
All Seams 1/4″

Besides scraps for your blocks, you will need 1/4 yard of fabric for the sashing and binding.

Block 1:  NOTE:  My cutting information will be based on the colors of the blocks shown.  Use your own cutting guides for the scrappy colors you choose.

  • Cut TWO (2) 4″ squares of Yellow
  • Cut TWO (2) 4″ squares of Blue

Sew the squares together by row and then sew the rows together to create your four patch block.

Block 2 Tomorrow!

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Sissy Chicken Farmers

Quilt Therapy Posted on July 12, 2012 by TK HarrisonJuly 12, 2012

My girls call my husband a sissy farmer.  The man has a Bachelor’s Degree in Range and Wildlife Management.  He has a Master’s Degree in Agricultural Education.  And he has a PhD in Practical Arts and Vocational Technical Education focusing on Agricultural Education and Agricultural Mechanics.  He is NOT a sissy farmer!

But, what they fail to recognize is that because of their emotional attachments to all stock we may have on our ranchita, they have coined him with a name that is totally because of THEM!   They name anything and everything that we have – our chickens, our turkeys, even bugs and snakes they may find and catch and try to keep (nope, bugs and snakes belong outside until you live on your own).  I’ve even seen them name a spider that was building a web on our patio – watching her everyday to see how much work she’d done or what flying insects she’d collected for food.  I cringed but kept my thoughts to myself.  I don’t want my insecurities to affect my kids – they deserve to get their own insecurities!

We are on round three of hatching eggs.  Last year, the girls incubated a batch of eggs and we had 17 chicks that lived.  A month later, some critter got into their pen and slaughtered every single one of them – didn’t eat them, though.  Just left dead chicks littering our land.  Carnage.

Then they incubated another batch of eggs later in the year.  From that batch, we have seven hens and one roostser that are free-range chickens – though we put them in the coop at night.

A month ago, one of those hens got broody and decided she was going to sit on her eggs.  We’ve had turkeys and guineas do this before, but never one of our chickens.  My husband said to leave her and see what happens.  We marked all of her original eggs so we’d know which ones she began roosting on, but all of the rest of the hens kept depositing eggs in the same bin in the coop – I know there were over 20 eggs at one point (and the number has grown since then).  There were so many eggs her little body couldn’t cover them!

Last Saturday, we noticed one egg was cracked and hatching.  Unfortunately, during the night, the mama hen killed two babies who hatched.  We think she was trying to help them out of their eggs and accidentally killed them with her beak – at least that’s what we told the kids! 

So, my husband set up “Operation Chickie” once again in one of the bathrooms.  This consists of a large Rubbermaid box with a heat lamp, sawdust shavings in the bottom of the box and a water and feed bowl.  We decided once the kids saw an egg that looked like it was beginning to hatch, they were to bring in into the house and place it in the new chickie box so it could hatch without assistance from mama hen.  All seems to be fine although we had one chick die because it could not hatch itself, we now have 11 lively chicks making a LOT of noise in the bathroom and driving the dogs nuts.  🙂 (the photo shows nine chicks but we had two more hatch since I took the photo):

Looks like we’re in the Sissy Chicken Farmer business again!

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Tote Bag for a Cause

Quilt Therapy Posted on July 11, 2012 by TK HarrisonJuly 11, 2012

I read a flyer on Facebook about a first cousin who had optic neuritis and was told by his physicians he would go blind within six months.  They were having a motorcycle rally and live auction to help defray the costs of his medical expenses and to help him get a service dog.  This struck me as interesting – not only that I hadn’t seen nor heard much about this cousin in years but also, optic neuritis is a common symptom of someone with multiple sclerosis.  I am checked regularly by an ophthalmologist and thus far do not have any symptoms of optic neuritis.  I asked his wife if he has MS and she said the doctors said he has a “slight case” of it.  I am totally clueless as to what that means, but research indicates MS is not genetic – though, I have seen it in a number of families so it makes me (and this cousin) wonder if that is truly the case. 

I am not close to this cousin and haven’t seen him since probably 1976 at my dad’s funeral.  I do visit with his sister every now and again on Facebook, but again, it’s been a very long time since I’ve seen her.  When we were little kids in elementary school, my dad’s oldest brother and his wife lived on a farm in Iowa.  Although many of our relatives on Dad’s side of the family got together on the weekends at Grandma’s house, Uncle Charles and his family didn’t participate.  So, every couple of months, Dad would load all of us into the car and we’d head over to Uncle Charles’ farm so he could spend time with his brother and we got to play with their six kids.  The kids were all older than us (probably late teens while we were in elementary school) but I do remember this tomboy enjoying playing with their five boys on their farm.

So, I volunteered to make a “Crown Royal” quilted tote bag for the live auction out of old “Crown Royal” bags that I had saved from my pre-marriage, pre-kid bartender days:

It will be interesting to follow along with this cousin to see how his “slight case” of MS compares to mine.  Obviously, he has different symptoms than I do at this point.  I pray that I do not end up with optic neuritis, of course.  And I also pray that he doesn’t have to deal with most of the symptoms that I deal with on a daily basis. 

I feel as if I’ve done something worthwhile for a disease that is robbing me of my brain cells and robbing a cousin of his eyesight.  It’s not much but I forced myself to make it despite MS rearing its ugly head by making me dizzy, giving me a migraine and having to take two days to complete this project when before I had MS I would have whipped this up in an hour or so. 

What causes do you support with your quilting?

Posted in Family History, Living with Multiple Sclerosis | Leave a reply

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