Archive for September, 2007

Peanut Boil

September 15, 2007

 

My first major in college was photography. Eventually I landed in the education program, where I belonged, but for a short time I planned to become a professional photographer. I still find many uses for my photo urges- in fact, I am taking the pictures at my uncle’s wedding this December. The photo above is of my husband and was taken last Septemeber at the annual Peanut Boil. It is one of my favorites. My husband’s grandparents have hosted the Peanut Boil for 22ish years (no one is really certain of the first year!). His grandfather is from Louisiana where peanut boils were common.

Naturally, wikipedia has the best summary: “Boiling peanuts has been a folk cultural practice in the south of the US since the 19th century, where they were originally called goober peas. In late August, when the peanut crops would come in, unsold and surplus peanuts would be prepared in a boiling, and extended families and neighbors would gather to share conversation and food. Like a fish fry, peanut boils have been organizing principles for social gatherings.”

When my husband’s grandfather relocated to Missouri, he brought the peanut boil concept with him. Each year on the third Saturday in September 50 to 75 friends and family members gather. Their backyard is what I call the quintessential American backyard- complete with tree house, authentic tire swing, fire pit and assorted metal lawn chairs. No other food is served- just boiled peanuts and beer. Several people end up sitting on hay bales and playing music on guitars, banjos and keyboards. It is a fantastic tradition that I was happy to marry in to.

Tonight promises to be another great one! The weather is chilly and calls for jeans and a jacket, making me very excited for full fledged crisp fall evenings.

In Craft Land, I whipped up this little number last night. We are having dinner with my cousin and her husband in two weeks. They have a little girl whom we adore. She has a starring role in another of my favorite photos, taken about a year and a half ago at a wedding reception.

I wanted to bring a little something along for her, but couldn’t decide. Lucky for me, Kathy’s post earlier this week gave me some direction. I’ve been on a bit of a Pink Chalk streak between the pencil roll and the Note Taker, huh? :)

My cousin’s daughter is not quite ready for colored pencils, but she does do washable markers. I took a walk down fabric memory lane picking out the different colors. What’s great is that when she is ready for colored pencils, they need only swap the markers out! I am pretty much in love with the orange dot (Amy Butler) and red ribbon combo. (However, the anal retentive part of me is annoyed that Crayola decided to make four of the markers scented and, therefore change the marker body to black. Talk about throwing off my system!)

Does anyone else suffer from the “I really should go to bed, but I wonder what the next step will look like” sickness that gets me when I am working on something new? Good. Glad it’s not just me.

Up next for me in Craft Land is finishing my patterns for charm squares. More on that later!

Note Taker

September 5, 2007

As promised, here are photos of my finished Note Taker. I knew it would be an easy pattern to follow as soon as I saw the quality of Kathy’s instruction booklet. (As an aside…She really raised the bar. Sometimes people are creative but have trouble adequately describing the steps in their patterns, like I ran in to with the Fanshaw Dam pattern. Other people are fabulous instruction writers, but have zero creativity. Not so with the Note Taker instructions!!) However, little did I know how quickly it would go together! I think that the next one I make will have a pieced cover for even more “oompf.”

I heart this button and ribbon…

Book Ends

September 5, 2007

My book club will celebrate it’s third birthday in November. We are a group of middle school teachers and the books we read range from young adult novels to your normal “book club books” you see on the best sellers list. If you are in the market for a good read, I’d recommend most of the following (there were a couple that I abandoned after giving them my very best try!)…. I bolded the crowd favorites.

Nov. 2004 Big Stone Gap By Adriana Trigiani
Dec. 2004 Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim By David Sedaris
Jan. 2005 Winterdance By Gary Paulsen
Feb. 2005 The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini
April 2005 The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time By Mark Haddon
May 2005 My Sister’s Keeper By Jodi Picoult
June 2005 The Mermaid Chair By Sue Monk Kidd
Sept. 2005 The Life of Pi By Yann Martel
Oct. 2005 Speak By Lauri Halse Anderson
Nov. 2005 Good Grief By Lolly Winston
Jan. 2006 Wicked By Gregory Maguire
(This book inspired our FANTASTIC FIELD TRIP to Chicago to see Wicked, the Broadway Musical!!)
Feb. 2006 Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity By Elizabeth Gold
Mar. 2006 Night By Elie Weisel
April 2006 The Pact By Jodi Picoult
May 2006 Are Men Necessary? By Maureen Dowd
June 2006 Queen Bees and Wannabees By Rosalind Wiseman
July 2006 Marley & Me: Life and Love with the World’s Worst Dog By John Grogan
Aug. 2006 The Ruins By Scott Smith
Oct. 2006 The Poisonwood Bible By Barbara Kingsolver
Nov. 2006 Al Capone Does My Shirts By Gennifer Choldenk & The Old Willis Place By Mary Downing Hahn
Dec. 2006 The Devil in the White City By Erik Larson
Jan. 2007 The Time Traveler’s Wife By Audrey Niffenegger
Feb. 2007 The Catcher in the Rye By J. D. Salinger
April 2007 Nineteen Minutes By Jodi Picoult  (The group attended a talk by the author)
May 2007 The Book Thief By Markus Zusak
June 2007 To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper Lee
July 2007 Angels and Demons By Dan Brown
Aug. 2007 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows By J. K. Rowling
 

Coming up next are:

September- A Thousand Splendid Suns ( by the author of The Kite Runner)

October- Twilight by Stephenie Meyer

November- Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen (plus a trip to see The Kite Runner movie!)

 

 

Progress

September 1, 2007

Remember the Past Times Christmas quilt? It doesn’t look like much, but there has been progress.

 

Grouping the pieces into sets for each of the blocks was more time consuming than I had anticipated. This quilt may have to have a Christmas ‘08 goal!

Quite the contrary, one other project zipped right along today. I made the Note Taker, designed by Kathy of Pink Chalk Studio. Talk about an easy pattern to follow! Not only is it a fun project to make, but her directions are absolutely superb. Here are my fabric choices. It’s a mixture of Amy Butler and a few Denyse Schmidt fat quarters that I’ve been waiting for just the right project to use.

The Note Taker is actually finished, but I will wait for better photo lighting tomorrow. In the meantime, here’s a sneak peek…