Pile o' Pincushions

>> Monday, July 30, 2007

Our big plans for a baseball game on Saturday night - it was Crash Davis Bobblehead Night! - had to be scrapped because of rain, so I spent more time sewing this weekend than I expected. I made up 150 blocks for my new quilt AND whipped up a pile o' pincushions using nothing but scraps.

I took apart Alan's Hagrid wig and used the wool to stuff these. The red polka dot fabric is a scrap from the lining of Jo's Pelt of Elmo Poncho - one of my favorite projects ever.

I also made Jo a ladybug pincushion so she can have her own pincushion for her quilting, but I'm not happy with how it turned out. I sewed the buttons on before I put it together and stuffed it and the curve of the pincushion put the buttons in weird places.

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Gratz Industries HQ: Pouring the Foundation

>> Sunday, July 29, 2007

We finally got Jo back to work this week after three straight days of rain. Drought conditions all summer, and then we start building a house and, well - bring on the floods.

The evening after the foundations were dug, we got a serious gulley washer.


All the nice clean edges were washed away, and all the work the guys did to painstakingly measure out the depth of the trenches was completely undone. When work finally re-commenced, it took them all morning to shovel it level and properly deep. Then steel rebar was added to strengthen the concrete to come:



The wooden plate in the picture above formed one side of a "bulkhead," a raised area of the foundation that compensated for a bit of elevation in the building site. After lunch the cement truck arrived:


From the Spruce Pine Explosives Supply Company, no less! Proof positive that our new house will be dy-no-mite. (Sorry, I couldn't resist.)

Jo and I watched from my office window as cement was poured into the trench. (I was writing. Seriously.)

At the end of the day, we had what would have been the perfect radio-controlled car race track, had we had any RC racers:


Jo had to resist a great deal of temptation not to stick something into it - particularly her foot.


Tours of the work site are available.

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A Very Sad Story

>> Wednesday, July 25, 2007

How pathetic am I? Jo just trounced me at Wii bowling. SHE'S FOUR YEARS OLD FOR CRYING OUT LOUD! She didn't leave a single open frame! When it's her turn she just pops right up, zips her player into position and carelessly flings the ball down the lane. She even picks up spares - just as cool as can be the whole time. Near the end of the game she looked over at me and - completely without sarcasm - said, "It's ok that you didn't get a turkey Mommy. I don't get one every game."

I blame Alan.

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Breaking ground on Gratz HQ

>> Tuesday, July 24, 2007

It was a big day here yesterday at Gratz HQ, as ground was finally broken on our new live-work complex. We would have blogged about it that night, but, well . . . you'll see.

First those massive tree stumps needed to be uprooted. The backhoe made quick work of them.


There they are. I think it would be hysterical to make one of those chainsaw carvings out of these guys, keeping the tentacles and making the top look like the head of Cthulhu. Now THAT would be some scary chainsaw art.

The backhoe was also able to neatly stack up all the massive logs left over from the great felling. Hooray for pneumatics! Since these are both pines they're not good for fireplaces, so they shall not be burned. Instead, we plan to use them in our landscaping, turning the largest of them into benches. (Or, rather, logs you sit on like benches.) How we will move them again without the backhoe will remain a mystery not unlike how the ancient Egyptians built the Pyramids - even to us.

Once that work was finished, our septic tank had to be uncovered so the health inspector could verify that it will be in good working order for the new house. Finding the septic tank took a fair bit of digging however . . .

And five massive holes in the ground later, the guys finally found it. You can't even see it here - they've just found the beginning of it there in the corner of that crater. See? I knew there was a reason I never bothered to mow our yard.

After lunch, the guys got busy on the foundation. Today's mission: dig the trenches that will become the "footings" of the foundation. At each step of the way the trenches were measured to make sure they were level. What you can't see in this picture is Kenny off to the side with surveying equipment, measuring the grade. I took this picture from my office, where I was hard at work watching Marvin and his crew work writing two chapters of Something Wicked.

Here's what it looked like when they were finished:


You can see a smaller square cut into the larger one - this is where our bottom-floor screened-in porch will be. The exterior walls of the house form a hollow L shape behind this space, and I think they have to pour special footings any time they have load bearing walls. Hence the secondary digging.

Sparks flew - right beneath my window! - when the backhoe found our power lines. Luckily none of them got snapped. Our phone line, however, was not so lucky:

We lost our land line and our internet, of course, which was worse. BellSouth was thankfully prompt, and had us back up and running by mid-morning today. Our tech - Jamie, whom we're getting to know too well! - didn't bother repairing the underground line, and instead ran us a loooong phone line form the pole to the other side of the house, bypassing the work site entirely. When the new house is built we can shorten and hide the line again.

Progress Energy didn't prove to be as fast, so we're doubly lucky that line wasn't snapped. We got put on the work order list to have our line foundation bypassed by an underground splice, but we're told it won't be for another couple of weeks. Marvin tells us that won't pose too much of an impediment, but we'll see.

At the end of the day, this is what we had. That night we had a gullywasher of a rain storm, but the foundation trenches didn't seem to suffer too badly. The guys didn't work today due to the downpour overnight, but Josh and Kenny came out to make sure all was well and deliver some long pieces of rebar. We'll have to wait and see what they do with that tomorrow! I'll certainly enjoy watching from that window right there at the end of the house while I'm supposed to be working.

While all this construction was going on, Jo played with Marvin's two grandkids (both sons of Josh I think, the backhoe operator) by capturing a variety of bugs and small creatures around the yard. In addition to finding a very cool snake egg in the upturned dirt in the backyard, they managed to find - and snare - a pretty big black widow spider:

We always tell Jo that spiders are our friends, but, well, this one isn't.

Tune in tomorrow to see what new developments - and creatures - we have to report.

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Vashti Project, Day 8

Today we got messy with our dots. Messy - but simple. This was a really fun one.
Draw a circle on a piece of paper (we used card stock for the extra heft). Squeeze out some glue along that line. Cut a long strip of yarn and glue it down to make a circle. Keep adding glue and spiraling in with the yarn - butting it up as close as possible to the previous circle. Change colors whenever you feel like it. And here they are.Jo has recently started adding a smiley face to the O in her signature. Today the smiley became a person and the person became a family. The hearts are to show they love each other. Jo was very careful to point out that slash under the heart next to her (she's the one in the middle) is just her arm - it doesn't mean she doesn't love us.And here's mine. Jo thinks it looks like an Easter egg and maybe we should make egg-shaped ones for Easter.

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The Shirt Off Daddy's Back

Check out Jo's new dress! It's made from a short-sleeved button-down shirt that Alan doesn't wear anymore. Isn't it cute? Here's how to make it.

I started with a men's XL shirt. Button it all the way up and lay it on the table.

I used a simple A-line dress pattern that I've used before. Lay it out so that the center front is along the row of buttons and as close to the bottom of the shirt as you can get it. No hemming needed - yay! I left the "spare" buttons at the bottom because I liked how they looked.

Cut out one side of the front, then flip the pattern over and cut out the other side.

For the back I usually insert a zipper, but since I'm leaving the front buttons intact there was no need for that here. Instead fold the shirt in half along the back center and lay the pattern on it with the center back along the fold - but take away the center seam allowance. Cut out the back of the dress. On this one, lining it up along the bottom hem just barely let me keep the little tuck in the back of the shirt.

You can see in this photo that I had just enough fabric left to make a matching purse too. Sew the front to the back at the shoulders and sides.

I wanted to reuse the shirt pocket (it would have ended up in her armpit), so I picked it off the chest and resewed it down lower.Scavenge some binding pieces from wherever you can get them - I pieced together some strips from the sleeves. I cut them 1 1/2" wide and then I press over 1/2" (so much easier to press BEFORE it's attached to the curve of the armholes and neck). Cut two strips long enough to finish the armholes and one for the neck opening. Stitch down the binding with the raw edges against the raw edges of the openings, then fold the folded edge under and topstitch it down.
Voila! It's done - with no hemming and no zipper!

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Harry Potter Party at Malaprop's

>> Monday, July 23, 2007

First off: no spoilers here! Wendi and I aren't finished reading Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows yet. We've been trading it and Jo back and forth over the weekend, but now we both have to get work done and the reading has slowed down. We're both enjoying the book so far, but I won't say anything more.

Friday night I attended a Harry Potter release party at Malaprop's. What fun! I was one of the guest authors invited to judge the costume contest. I also dressed up as Hagrid. Here are some pics:


Me as Hagrid and Asheville author Allan Wolf as Mad-Eye Moody.


Before midnight, a Dementor guarded the Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows copies hidden away behind the silver curtain.


Doby the House Elf, looking a bit like he's been in a fight with Hagrid.



Ginny Weasley


The screaming portrait of Mrs. Black, and poor Moaning Myrtle.



Hermione Grainger and a very young (and cute!) Ginny Weasley.


Professor Quirrell


Rita Skeeter


At midnight, the Dementors are defeated and the books revealed. Get those cameras out of my way - I'm trying to take a picture!


Hagrid still enjoys meeting the little people - especially those with Harry Potter books in hand!

It was a great night. Love the books or hate them, you cannot deny that this was the publishing event of our era. When will we ever see crowded bookstores full of adults and children counting down to an on-sale date, screaming and cheering as the curtain opens to reveal the books? Alas, perhaps never again . . .

Until book 8?

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Illustration Friday - Poem

>> Friday, July 20, 2007

I spent all last week away from home - and the computer with Illustrator on it - so I had to skip a week of Illustration Friday. Now I'm back and I'm jumping right in before my week gets away from me. The theme this week is Poem. I decided right away to find a poem about a color and create a pattern using that color - so here it is.

I searched Poetry Archives using lots of different colors as key words. I decided on Fragmentary Blue by Robert Frost because the focus was on the color itself - the emotional response we can have to a color and the way we can hunger for a color.

Fragmentary Blue
by Robert Lee Frost

Why make so much of fragmentary blue
In here and there a bird, or butterfly,
Or flower, or wearing-stone, or open eye,
When heaven presents in sheets the solid hue?

Since earth is earth, perhaps, not heaven (as yet)--
Though some savants make earth include the sky;
And blue so far above us comes so high,
It only gives our wish for blue a whet.

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