As the prospect of a very long long weekend loomed in front of me on Saturday morning, I realized that I had better stop all this nonsense and get a real, honest-to-god quilting project started. There were two reasons why this was of the utmost importance. One, because I was getting a migraine, and I have managed, over the last few months, to determine that my headaches are tied to my posture. When a migraine is brewing, I can be sure that I have been spending too much time with my head turned to the right. It's the way we have some of our furniture oriented with the television and the laptop, and though I can avoid sitting that way, it ends up happening if I am not vigilant about it. And the one activity that puts everything back in alignment and eases my pain - at least temporarily - is quilting. Whether it is the meditative aspect of the work or is just because I keep my head and shoulders more aligned when I am rotary cutting and stitching, or both, I don't know, but the dull throb in my head said, "Get thee to the cutting table," and I'm inclined to listen to the throb when it gets bossy like that.
And two, because a long weekend at home with my family means a long weekend AT HOME. I live with three of the laziest homebodies I have ever known; none of them would ever leave the house if they weren't compelled to, and usually the one compelling them is me. Saturday was absolutely beautiful, and Harper's friend Aidan was home, but I couldn't get her to go ask him to play because "he always wants to play outside." No! Quelle horreur!
But I knew one way to get Harper out of the house: a trip to the quilt shop where she would be allowed to pick out fabrics herself. I admit, it's a desperate move, but my only other choice was Chuck E. Cheese, so you can see my dilemma. I had a pattern that I'd been feeling wishy-washy about, but thought that since it uses a lot of fat quarters it would be a good project to let her in on and would give me something to do as well. This is the pattern:
Yep, another "Labyrinth." I guess I have a thing for mystical mazes. That or David Bowie's package.
Ahem. ANYWAY. One of the things I totally forgot as I was showing her what we were going to do, is that Harper, my darling girl, is a literalist. If she has a coloring book of a well-known cartoon character, then we must color that character and all sub-characters exactly the way they are depicted on the cover or in the show. Velma can never, ever, ever wear a blue sweater. It must be orange, and it must be the right orange. If you should perhaps be in a coloring mood yourself, and you ask her for permission to color in one of her books, she will narrow her little eyes at you and through clenched teeth ask, "Are you going to do it right?" Yes ma'am.
So, if we have, say, a quilt pattern, and there is a picture of the quilt, then we must - MUST - make our quilt exactly like the picture. There is no room for wild hares, flights of fancy, or any other freedom of thought. She's like a little brainwashed plebe from a dystopian novel.
We did our best to find 30 batik fat quarters that were exactly like the ones in the picture, though by the end I was pushing her to just "try" to pick ones that were pretty, that she just liked for themselves, instead of adhering like gum to the picture, and she stuck out her little lip and said, "This isn't turning out the way I thought it would." Sigh. Okay, sweetie. You can hold on to that big old stick up your butt. I love you no matter what.
I'm still unsure of how much I like the pattern, but it's great for my kind of quilting - which is to say, sporadic. I can cut up two fat quarters and make one block in roughly a day with the time I can generally wrest away from my kids, and that lets me feel like I am accomplishing something. Harper gets to make sure I am "doing it right" and that of course makes her feel like she is accomplishing something.
And this is what we have accomplished so far:
Not bad for a lazy, crappy quilter and her anal retentive daughter!
ROFLMBO!!! I'm a perfect cross between you AND your daughter. Now....imagine what my quilts look like. :D
ReplyDeleteThe only advantage Chuck E Cheese has over the quilt shop is that Chuck E Cheese sells beer... (Am I the only one who thinks that is a bit questionable by the way?)
ReplyDeleteLove the pattern pick!
Good to see you productive again! It allows us out here in blogland to have a chuckle or two. This one is definately a two! Can't wait to see this kiddo when she's 11 & 12, pre-teen, those are going to be some great years! lol!
ReplyDeleteI like the pattern -- I have another one of theirs to try sometime soon, called "Archipelago". I sympathize with you about the must-do-it-as pictured thing... why not take a photocopy of the pattern picture and color it how YOU might want it to look before showing it to Harper? Then she'll pick out your colors!
ReplyDeleteHey, that was a pretty nifty link you snuck in there, and it leads me to believe you might also appreciate the legendary, almost-as-old-as-the-internet-and-still-going-strong, David Bowie's Area: http://areaology.com/area.html
ReplyDeleteVery cool! I love Blue Underground patterns, and this one looks nice and easy! And at least you know what it's going to look like when it's done! :)
ReplyDeleteLove the pattern and you are a WAY nicer mother than me! Maybe your children will turn out with less issues than mine did. Don't you love admiring your quilt work? Love the pic - keep us all posted.
ReplyDeleteOur oldest son is the same way---use to eat in a circle---now he has two Phd's and continues to be anal retentive, but with a wife who smiles sweetly, rubs his head, and decides for them both. Your daughter sounds darling!
ReplyDelete