Sunday, March 19, 2017

Fashions of 1940's

I have a renewed interest in WWII and 1940's fashion styles.
I've taken to watching "Bomb Girls" on Netflix--I must tell you
this is fascinating for me--so much I didn't think about during
1940's.
In the small town of Fredericksburg, Texas (which is our second home) there is a fabulous
museum--National Museum of the Pacific War.  This past weekend we watched a
battle re-enactment of one of the battles--it's a sight to be seen and recognized!
Anyway, back to the Museum--there is a free exhibit of 1940's fashions--another
eye opening exhibit of what folks endured during those harsh times.

This dress is a patriotic fashion--Blue polka dot dress with red belt,
simply dressed demonstrated the wearer's duty to wartime conservation
To wear patriotic colors, like blue and red, further embodied American values

This is a two piece blue wool suit, called Victory Suit, represented
sacrifice and duty.  The slender fitted suit conserved materials by forgoing pleats 
and patch pockets.  There was some style in the design details.
The Victory Suit dominated the 1940's American fashion scene that
they came to be viewed as civilian uniforms

What were the limitations on fashions?  The orders were L-85:  L referred to 
civilian production; 85 applied to women and children and
L-73 was designed for men's garments.
L-85/73, issued in 1942,  grew out of a pact between the government and the American
fashion industry.  This law controlled the amount of material used in civilian clothing.
It mandated maximum measurements and outlawed excess pleats and even cuffs.
With this law outlawing major design changes, it encouraged maintaining the 1930's trim and 
narrow figures.

There were several other restrictions too: 
L-90--reduced elastic for girdles, bras--so much outcry, the restriction
deemed undergarments essential!

L-119 restricted fabric in sleepwear

K-171 restricted cosmetic lines due to ingredients

L-217 restricted leather for shoes:  it dicated six colors for women's
shoes and only two colors could be used in each shoe





Come back tomorrow for more on 1940's fashions


Saturday, March 18, 2017

Patriotic Wool Blog Hop

As usual, I'm a tad late to the party, but I can play catch-up quickly--there is a patriotic wool blog hop happening now--it's called Summer blog hop and in some places of the world, it seems like summer already!  Here we go!
First block from Farmhouse Threads, which was posted on March 10


Second block posted on March 17
Every Friday there will be another FREE block posted.
Each blogger has kits available too--a real bonus!

March 10- Rhonda McCray, Farmhouse Threads
http://farmhousethreads.com/
March 17- Shawn York, Rusty Crow Quilt Shop
March 24- Lisa Bongean, Primitive Gatherings
March 31– Jeni Gaston, Woolen Willow Designs
April 7- Debbie Busby, Wooden Spool Designs
http://woodenspooldesigns.blogspot.com/
April 14- Joyce Weeks, Geoff’s Mom Pattern Co.
April 21- Kathi Campbell, Heart to Hand
April 28- Linda and Donna, My Red Door Designs
May 5- Joan Grenke, Bits and Pieces by Joan
http://bitsandpiecesbyjoan.com/
May 12- Gloria,Vicky and Heather, Olde Green Cupboard Designs
May 19- Laural Arestad, Simply Put Plus
May 26- Kathi and Taylor, The Cottage at Cardiff Farms
June 2 – Finishing Instructions from Farmhouse Threads

Friday, March 17, 2017

St. Patrick Day

Do you have the luck of the Irish?  Are you wearing green today?

  • Corned beef and cabbage is a traditional St. Patrick’s Day dish. In 2009, roughly 26.1 billion pounds of beef and 2.3 billion pounds of cabbage were produced in the United States.
  • Irish soda bread gets its name and distinctive character from the use of baking soda rather than yeast as a leavening agent.
  • Lime green chrysanthemums are often requested for St. Patrick’s Day parades and celebrations.

Saint Patrick's Day, or the Feast of Saint Patrick (IrishLá Fhéile Pádraig, "the Day of the Festival of Patrick"), is a cultural and religious celebration held on 17 March, the traditional death date of Saint Patrick (c. AD 385–461), the foremost patron saint of Ireland.

Saint Patrick's Day was made an official Christian feast day in the early 17th century and is observed by the Catholic Church, the Anglican Communion (especially the Church of Ireland),[4] the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Lutheran Church. The day commemorates Saint Patrick and the arrival of Christianity in Ireland,[3]and celebrates the heritage and culture of the Irish in general.[5] Celebrations generally involve public parades and festivals, céilithe, and the wearing of green attire or shamrocks.[6] Christians also attend church services[5][7] and the Lenten restrictions on eating and drinking alcohol are lifted for the day, which has encouraged and propagated the holiday's tradition of alcohol consumption.[5][6][8][9]
Saint Patrick's Day is a public holiday in the Republic of Ireland,[10] Northern Ireland,[11] the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, and the British Overseas Territory of Montserrat. It is also widely celebrated by the Irish diaspora around the world, especially in Great BritainCanada, the United StatesArgentinaAustralia, and New Zealand. Saint Patrick's Day is celebrated in more countries than any other national festival.[12] Modern celebrations have been greatly influenced by those of the Irish diaspora, particularly those that developed in North America. In recent years, there has been criticism of Saint Patrick's Day celebrations for having become too commercialized and for fostering negative stereotypes of the Irish.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Hands2Help--Challenge!


Confessions of a Fabric Addict for the 7th year is sponsoring
this charity quilt challenge.  Here is the number of quilts that have been
donated in years past
2011:  47 quilters made 60 quilts
2012:  55 quilters made 94 quilts
2013:  65 quilters made 127 quilts
2014:  70 quilters made 145 quilts
2015:  67 quilters made 147 quilts
2016:  104 quilters made 194 quilts

Charity #1 - International Institute St. Louis

With all that has been in the news recently regarding refugees, there has been a lot of interest in making quilts for a refugee resettlement group.  A tip from a blog reader led me to the International Institute St. Louis.  The following is from their website...

Charity #2 - Happy Chemo!


Once again, Emily of Em's Scrap Bag will be collecting quilts to be donated to people undergoing chemotherapy.  This has been a favorite charity for the Challenge since the second year, and a whole lot of love and comfort has gone to them in the form of quilts over the past five years.  Emily accepts quilts of all sizes, from 48" square to twin size (approximately 65" x 88").  


Charity #3 - Camp Hobe via Stash Builder Box

Stash Builder Box is the brainchild of Amanda Kelly, and has a unique purpose (beyond building up your stash!)  Yes, you receive a great box of fabric and goodies each month, but in addition, 20% of the cost of your box goes to provide quilts for specific children's charities.  The charities change each three months, spreading the love around.  Amanda coordinates a team of HeartBuilders who take the supplies she sends and turns them into beautiful tops and finished quilts.  

She also accepts donations of completed quilts, so this year as part of the Hands2Help Challenge, you can choose to make quilts for this quarter's charity, which is Camp Hobe, a special summer camp experience for children currently being treated for cancer and their siblings.  Their mission is to create an atmosphere that enhances self-esteem, fosters independence and friendships, and creates a sense of belonging.

Your quilts for Camp Hobe should be at least 45" x 60" and geared towards children ages six and older.

Initial signups will be Sunday March 12th through Saturday, March 18th.  You will receive one entry for signing up, and can get additional entries for putting the button on your blog 

check out the website for further information on prizes, tutorials, other.



Wednesday, March 15, 2017

BEWARE--"The Ides of March!"

I so enjoy learning the true facts behind these legends--and the internet is a source rich in factual and not so factual information--  Here is one that I've heard all my life--what is the true meaning behind this saying?


You may remember the soothsayer’s warning to Julius Caesar to “Beware the ides of March,” but the term didn’t originate with William Shakespeare. The earliest Roman calendar, which consisted of ten months beginning with Martius (March), was believed to have been created by King Romulus around 753 B.C. At that time, dates were expressed in relation to the lunar phase of the month using three markers: Kalends (Kal), Nones (Non) and Ides (Id). The first phase of the moon, the new moon, was denoted by Kalends and signified the first day of the month; the first quarter moon fell on either the fifth or seventh day of the month and was referred to as Nones; the full moon fell on either the 13th or 15th day of the month and was referred to as Ides. The ides of March—March 15—initially marked the first full moon of a new year.
During the late Roman Republic, a new year’s festival was held on the ides of March in which people would gather a mile outside of Rome on the Via Flaminia by the banks of the Tiber River. Participants celebrated with food, wine and music and offered sacrifices to the Roman deity Anna Perenna for a happy and prosperous new year. Between 222 and 153 B.C., the ides of March also signaled the beginning of the new consular year, in which two annually-elected consuls took office as leaders of the republic.
In 46 B.C., after consulting with the Alexandrian astronomer Sosigenes, Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar by adding ten days to the 355-day year, instituting January 1 as the first day of the new year (beginning in 45 B.C.) and introducing a leap year every four years. Shortly thereafter, he was granted the title Dictator Perpetuus or “dictator for life.” Concerned with Caesar’s increasing power and monarchical leanings, a group of Roman senators stabbed the ruler to death on March 15, 44 B.C.—forever linking the ides of March with the assassination of Julius Caesar.  
Other things that happen on March 15-- A Raid on Southern England, 1360 A French raiding party begins a 48-hour spree of rape, pillage and murder in southern England. King Edward III interrupts his own pillaging spree in France to launch reprisals, writes historian Barbara Tuchman, “on discovering that the French could act as viciously in his realm as the English did in France.”
Samoan Cyclone, 1889 A cyclone wrecks six warships—three U.S., three German—in the harbor at Apia, Samoa, leaving more than 200 sailors dead. (On the other hand, the ships represented each nation’s show of force in a competition to see who would annex the Samoan islands; the disaster averted a likely war.)
Czar Nicholas II Abdicates His Throne, 1917 Czar Nicholas II of Russia signs his abdication papers, ending a 304-year-old royal dynasty and ushering in Bolshevik rule. He and his family are taken captive and, in July 1918, executed before a firing squad.
A Deadly Blizzard on the Great Plains, 1941 A Saturday-night blizzard strikes the northern Great Plains, leaving at least 60 people dead in North Dakota and Minnesota and six more in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. A light evening snow did not deter people from going out—“after all, Saturday night was the time for socializing,” Diane Boit of Hendrum, Minnesota, would recall—but “suddenly the wind switched, and a rumbling sound could be heard as 60 mile-an-hour winds swept down out of the north.”
World Record Rainfall, 1952 Rain falls on the Indian Ocean island of La Réunion—and keeps falling, hard enough to register the world’s most voluminous 24-hour rainfall: 73.62 inches.
 CBS Cancels the “Ed Sullivan Show,” 1971  Word leaks that CBS-TV is canceling “The Ed Sullivan Show” after 23 years on the network, which also dumped Red Skelton and Jackie Gleason in the preceding month. A generation mourns.


Tuesday, March 14, 2017

PI--E Day!

Let's celebrate PI--E Day with this crochet wrap! 


The design is from Margo Bauman (AKA flyingflower)
The texture changes from raised to flat with each successive digit of Pi (3.141592653589793238). 

A fun asymmetrically symmetrical wrap - or is it symmetrically asymmetrical?
The texture changes from raised to flat with each successive digit of Pi (3.14159…).
Math geek or not, it is a fun piece to make and wear.
Uses Tunisian Simple Stitch and Tunisian Reverse Stitch
Solid color looks great, too!
Why celebrate PI Day?  Pi Day is celebrated on March 14th (3/14) around the world. Pi is the symbol used in mathematics to represent a constant — the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter — which is approximately 3.14159.
Pi has been calculated to over one trillion digits beyond its decimal point. As an irrational and transcendental number, it will continue infinitely without repetition or pattern. While only a handful of digits are needed for typical calculations, Pi’s infinite nature makes it a fun challenge to memorize, and to computationally calculate more and more digits.
For me, I think I'll have an Apple PIE!  

Monday, March 13, 2017

History of Colors


Laphams Quarterly visit this website and see how the color has involved over the years.  You might think that color has been in our world forever, but the pigments are discovered!

This book is good read on the development of paints for the canvas

"Colors  The Story of Dyes and Pigments",
another read of how we achieved the colors we
use today

And if you are into natural dyes, then this is 
the one for you!  BLUE!  One of the most
amazing colors we have in our life

And RED!  The little bug that transformed 
how we color our world.





What???

 As usual, we’ve been running around—no method to our madness!  Gifts bought, gifts wrapped, who did we forget?  Plans made, plans cancelled...