Showing posts with label classes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classes. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2009

cakes, cakes and more cakes


As many of you know, India has been taking a cake decorating class with my mother. She just finished her 2nd session on Wednesday. Now, we have been eating a lot of cake, but it has been worth it to see her accomplish so great as the above cake! She made all the flowers and the basket weave on this cake all by herself in class. They decided to take the cake to church this week since we are all getting tired of eating cake, but we did get to enjoy the great job she did on this. Impressive, is it not?


Tuesday, November 25, 2008

another quilt workshop


On Saturday, I attended a workshop with Joyce Becker. She is an internationally known quilter and author of quite a few quilt books. You can check out her gallery of quilts here. She does fantastic landscape quilts and her stitching on top of the quilts is not something to be missed. She really brings her pieces to life with all the embroidery she does on them. She writes in one of her books about using dryer lint (yes, that is what I said) for mountains and highlights. She couches it down and she makes it work. She collects it from her friends when they have lint in interesting colors. She brought a piece on Saturday that she had even sewn sand down on. She said she broke a lot of needles doing that. There are few things that make me angrier than breaking a needle when sewing, so I doubt that is something I'll use, but now that I know it can be done... the possibilities are endless. It was a great workshop. I had to think beyond how I normally piece my work. I usually have a pretty good idea of what something is going to look like before I ever start, but she brought 2 pieces of landscape fabric and it was our job to combine them. We had to fussy cut (for those of you who are non quilters that means cutting specific parts out) which is something I almost NEVER do in order to bring the pieces together. I'm happy with what I came out with, though I still don't really see myself doing landscapes. I now know how to think about them and what to look for in fabrics if I decide I need to do one in a quilt. I also learned how to use tulle and organza for shading. If you look at the picture above, the trees in the distance came from the same fabric as the fabric in the foreground, but by attaching tulle over them it makes them look less crisp and further away. I've tried to use it before, but I've not had much luck and I still haven't sewn it all together but I feel a little more confident about it now that I have had someone explain to me HOW to do it. I was going about it all wrong. The best part of the workshop - well there were a few best parts for me, but I love that we all started out with the same two landscape fabrics, yet most of them look very different and how each person decided to cut them up and use them. I love that about quilting. You can all use the same fabric and you can try to cut it up the same, but they still never look exactly the same. Every quilt is unique. The other best part for me, is being fired up about sewing more so than usual. I'm determined to carve out more time to quilt in my hectic schedule. I've always focused on having large bits of time to quilt (like 3 or 4 hours), I'm going to work on being satisfied with 30 - 40 minutes at a time and squeeze it in more often. I need to learn to let that keep my thirst quenched so I don't get bitter about not having the large blocks of time I want since those are few and far between these days. Those 30-40 minutes add up into 3 and 4 hours and it is amazing when I know I've got to squeeze it in what I can accomplish. Quilting is my meditation, my nerve tonic, the thing in my life that brings me the most peace. I have really realized after the workshop how easily I let it slip into the background when we are busy, but I'm re-energized and for now my focus is clear again!

Lastly, Joyce talked about our failures and how much we can learn from them. We really learn more through failing at something than we learn by succeeding. I really like this because learning something new can be daunting and each new piece can be a challenge. When she talked about failing on Saturday, I was reminded that 2 of the quilts I have made that I most love I failed at the first time I made them, but when I got over the being disappointed in how they looked and remade them the outcome was stupendous and I learned what not to do and how to do it better the second time around. Each quilt for me is a journey into another quilt. With every quilt I make I learn something new to me that I can carry into the next one and make the next one better than the previous. I love the journey of learning and I love the idea of giving myself permission to fail at something knowing that good will come out of it.

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Thursday, September 4, 2008

Spanish at the Zoo

On Tuesday, we met at Bear Hollow Zoo to have Spanish class. This was our first official Spanish field trip. Dalcy (their Spanish teacher) came with sheets that had the animal names in Spanish and as we looked at animals, they had to figure out which one it was on the list. Some were easy to figure out and others were not so easy. They also had to answer questions in Spanish that Dalcy as them. It was really cool to listen to them communicating easily in Spanish. I learned a lot and we got super lucky that Hubb came along and spent the day with us.

Here's the group looking for the otters. They were not out and about.

Otter in Spanish is La nutria

Eagle is El aguila

BobCat - el gato salvage (this is a fat bobcat - they look so sweet it is hard to believe this cat could kill you if it needed to.)

trying to figure out bears which is El oso (I couldn't get a picture of the bears, they were in their homes)

Crocodile (this is actually an alligator, but Dalcy wasn't sure which the zoo had, so we learned crocodile) is El cocodrilo
My favorite at the zoo other than the otters, the groundhog or woodchuck is call El Torcas
La tortugas basking in the sun
El Pato


Saturday, March 15, 2008

Homeopathy

I'm very excited to say I have started an online class on homeopathy. Pursuing more herbal knowledge is something I have always pretty passionate about - especially with the kids, but as many of you know and can relate to, we haven't been able to always afford the things we want to do. Now things are looking up and this class was too good to be true and very affordable for me to do! I won't have any grand certification to help others and get paid for it, but my knowledge will be growing and I'll be better equipped to deal with our own health on many levels. Who knows what it will open up for us and for me in time. I am very thankful that we are in a place for me to do this and to learn whatever I can.