Dec. 2nd, 2011

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Yeah, I've been leery of the dark most of my life, and downright afraid of it when I was a kid. It bothers me less and less as I get older, but I still don't like being outside on foot after dark very much.

But my biggest phobia (as opposed to fear) is a terror of vines that came from two incidents in my childhood that resulted in long-term nightmares.

1) When I was little, the house we lived in in Southern California had a great deal of Baltic ivy (the kind with the really enormous leaves) in the front yard. My father used to whack it back with a weedeater to keep under control, and recruited me to help with the raking that resulted. You would not believe all the creepy stuff that lives/grows in big matted beds of ivy. Not to mention the fact that, as it turns out, I'm allergic to ivy. It gives me the same sort of rash poison ivy (no relation to the real stuff) gives regular people. When my mother figured it out, I was no longer asked to rake ivy. I was extremely grateful.

2) When I was a teenager, the house we lived in in Northern California had some English ivy (the kind with the small leaves) out front. One day I walked into the living room to discover that a sprig of it had somehow managed to grow under the siding, through the insulation, and come out through one of the electric sockets. It only grew about six inches into the room before it died, but I cannot describe how much that creeped me out. I had nightmares for weeks about long shoots of ivy growing into the house and strangling me. I'm shuddering just thinking about it.

This is why, when I drove across the U.S. South many years later as an adult, I spent a lot of time shuddering at the kudzu. And why I can't prune my own clematis [wry g]. I've tried. I just can't.
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In lieu of working on another enormous project this soon after the Yule Log Cabin fiasco (and while I'm working on the book, which is an enormous project of another type), I've been working on some smaller ones.

Here they are:

First, three bookmarks. The flower ones are from a book of state flower bookmarks. I just changed the wording from the state name to the flower name (and took some liberties with the lupine, as that image is supposed to be a Texas bluebonnet -- but we call that sort of flower by its real (scientific) name up here). The other one is from a Joan Elliott book of Native American cross-stitch patterns that I got from the library.

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And here's a couple of hand-quilted pillows:

The first one is for my mother for Christmas.

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Front and back.

The second one is going to the Job Carr Cabin Museum for its annual auction next spring. The cabin on the fabric looks remarkably like the real cabin, which I thought was cool, and the beige fabric not only has a pine needle design in the fabric, but I quilted it with a pine needle design.

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Front and back. I used the same stencil for the blue side of the first pillow and the leaf side of the second one.

I need more big quilting stencils, which I will do something about one of these days...
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According to two of our local meteorology bloggers ( Cliff Mass and Scott Sistek), the Seattle area is experiencing record high barometric pressure. And we'll be in this particular weather pattern for at least four or five more days.

Wild barometric pressure swings are a migraine trigger for me. And guess what I've got coming on, dammit.
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