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As I mentioned yesterday, I'm playing another round of wannabuts (things I want to thrift but only for the minimum price) on three different quilts at ShopGoodwill.com which I would like to repair, refurbish and add to my collection. This scrappy quilt reminded me of one my mother owned; did I win the quilt? Yep, I got it for $7.99 with no challengers. This row by row outdoors themed quilt needs some repairs, but I was outbid right away on it. The winning bid went for $20.00, which was a bit much considering how much damage there is to be fixed. I collect double wedding ring quilts, but I don't have a green and white one. The bidding for this ended up in a last minute sniper-fest, in which I did not participate, and the winning bid ended up being $21.00. One out of three isn't a bad outcome, and I'm happy with the quilt I did win. Stay tuned to see what it looks like when it arrives.

Wannabuts the Quilt Edition

It's time for another game of things I want to thrift but only for the minimum bid, the finished quilt edition. I have bid on three different quilts at ShopGoodwill.com which I would like to repair, refurbish and add to my collection, but only if I get them cheap. This scrappy quilt reminded me of one my mother owned and had me repair constantly; a friend of hers had made it out of polyester clothing fabric. I don't know what happened to Mom's (my siblings probably sold it) but I'd like to have this one as a reminder of her. This row by row outdoors themed quilt needs some repairs, especially around the raw edged applique pieces. I like the outdoors and I wouldn't mind saving it. I collect double wedding ring quilts, but I don't have a green and white one. This looks pretty old, and may need some minor repairs. Will I win it or the other two? Stay tuned to the blog to find out.

Not Bowl Filler

My guy and I were cruising a favorite antique mall back in January when I spotted these bags of perle embroidery thread. They're Anchor, DMC and more than a few Finca (and one very big surprise), and most of them were barely used. Every bag had been marked "bowl filler." I couldn't believe expensive embroidery thread would be used to fill bowls, and I kind of had to save it. Epecially seeing as I only have a couple balls of DMC because it costs so much (like $3.50 to $5.00 for one ball. A set of six can run up to $30.00.) I've also been looking in thrift stores for perle thread because it is so expensive. Here are the 33 balls out of the bags. They're in mint condition. What you're looking at here is Valdani variegated perle thread, aka the big surprise, which runs about $6.00 per ball. That's also why I never buy this brand: because it's so freaking expensive. Just these six are worth $36.00. If you add the other 27 at $3...

For Spring

I'm pulling together materials for several spring projects, including some fat quarters I found at the Dollar Tree. They're bright and pretty, and quite colorful, which hopefully inspires me to step outside my November beachy comfort zone. I've never worked with proper faux fur, only Minky, so I thought I'd also try to sew some bunnies from these Dollar Tree squares. Finally I've put together the background fabric and embroidery thread pallete for my vintage linens quilt. The fabric is actually European linen scraps from a sheet maker that sells their manufacturing trimmings, which I already used in two linen quilts in the past. It's really dreamy stuff.

The Church by the Sea

Back in January I realized I was thinking about the beach all the time while I was working on my projects. Nothing soothes me like the seaside, so that's why I picked out sea, surf and sand colors for my crochet blanket. When I improv'ed a landscape for my third mini-quilt, naturally I thought of sunrise on the beach. Repeating symbols often crop in any any artist's work. M.C. Escher spent his career working out the principles of tessellation. Keith Haring used interlocking bodies in his street art. Dali used melting clocks, ants, crutches and elephants to symbolize different aspects and ideas he wanted to communicate. I know why the beach keeps showing up in my art. It was a place of sanctuary for me as a child. When I was at the beach I was in my own church, and no one knew. That was where I communed with the universe instead of sitting on a hard wood bench being lectured to in Latin. Because I still feel so safe there, I am never as much myself as I...

Holy Cow

I thrifted a lot of tops, nearly all of which are new with tags, which arrived last month. This is Banana Republic. $49.99 for one blouse. Boggles the mind. If you want to see what else came in the lot, go to my album here. Not everything came with price tags, but from experience I can tell you this is about $500.00 in new clothes. I paid $19.99 for the lot, or $1.99 for each top.

Twenty Cents

I wanted some dress making fabric with which to practice pattern sewing, and saw a lot of nice looking yardage in this lot, which I thought might be mostly polyester or linings. Anyway, I bid on and won with one one challenger who gave up almost at once. This huge, heavy box arrived a week later, and as soon as I lifted it I thought, "Uh-oh." The memory of that gigantic lot of quilting fabric I got for pennies came back to me. It's not 103.5 yards of fabric like that other lot. It's 64.5 yards. I was right in that it most definitely is dress making fabric: mostly gown-quality silks, silk charmeuse and heavy satins. The five yards of navy blue silk charmeuse by itself is worth around $150.00. The satins are the high-quality type that can run as much as $80.00 a yard. Conservatively I think the lot is worth somewhere in the neighborhood of a thousand dollars. I bought it for $13.00, or about twenty cents a yard. Image credit: the first pic in thi...

Look Back

For my first mini-quilt of February for my 2025 calendar project I wrote a love letter to my guy and put it in this envelope, which I made from an old embroidered linen doily. I'm embroidering the writing on the love letter, but it's not finished due to a bad arthritis flare-up. I'll finish that when my hands calm down. I finished my colorblock Ocean Tranquility crochet throw, which helped me so much, and (at least to me) turned out lovely. Highly recommend this free pattern . My second mini-quilt of February was a simple embroidery and bead affair as I worked on my dexterity and finger control. In memory of my mom I cleaned and repaired Survivor, a vintage polyester diagonal strip quilt that I thrifted for $7.99. For my third mini-quilt of February I used treads, buttons and a crystal heart to work through some heartbreak. I repaired the handles on a thrifted Vera Bradley tote bag. My fourth mini-quilt of February has an embroidered pocket in wh...