
Monday, September 15, 2025
"QUEEN MARY'S GARDEN" © 2024 - It's All About the Plumage...

Wednesday, September 10, 2025
"QUEEN MARY'S GARDEN" © 2024 - "A Predatory Bird, Large and in Charge"
This is Proud Mary. She's a killer, but this predator in our backyard valley has a sweet side...occasionally. No giggling, Sue. There are swarms of them soaring on the hot air thermals (again, remember we are on a molehill trying to BE a mountain).
Every now and then she likes to dive bomb toward her earthbound prey, only to let up at the last minute.
She thinks that is h-i-l-a-r-i-o-u-s!!!
If she wasn't so absolutely cruel and terrifying, I would bare my little feathered chest and look vulnerable just to get an up-close look. But that greatly increases my odds of getting maimed. All of these potential killers look exactly alike! But there is no hope in Hell or Heaven that she can lift me and fly away. Ha!
Even though most my feather color palette is completely absurd, I've been trying to use fabrics for bird bodies, feet, and some wings that actually look like bird parts. I've been collecting small pieces of tone-on-tone possibilities for a long time. Here are a few of my favorites.
Swirly...
Occasionally, a fabric line will come out with pieces depicting shingles, tiles, stones, and bricks that are appropriately vague enough to pass as bird bodies.
Stoney...
Spotty, woody, geometric, woven, animal, ordinary...
I like to use a funky tone-on-tone fabric instead of a solid. It creates movement across the quilt, snatching the eye from motif to motif.
This next little fellow just has Short Stack written all over him (yes, that is his name). He just looks delicious, in a jelly bean, Trix Cereal, breakfast pancake kind of way. Haven't seen one? That's because he is so small...and mute, maybe too quiet to be nibbled.

Sunday, September 7, 2025
"QUEEN MARY'S GARDEN" © 2024 - "Feathers are flying!"
Tiny pieces with a few glue dots are my building materials. Tweezers have always made handling them possible.
Glue basted and ready for stitching! I stitch the individual motifs together before applying to the border background. I can move the birds and beasts around a few times as the ambiguous design process continues. Having already stitched motifs before, I'm free to make last minute changes.
Next, a fish dinner for a never quite full pelican. Mr. Tubb's tiny eye was a fun challenge. Fabric with tiny- to medium-sized black dots make the reverse applique easy.
I made twelve different sampler blocks for my retreat group, The Magnolia Quilters, challenge. Ha! The non-piecer finished them first!
We went up to our family property in Grass Creek, Kingston, Ontario, CA for a better view of the 4/8/2024 total eclipse.
It got pretty dark! This was mid-morning at corona. We met up with immediate family from all over. There may not be another total eclipse in mine and Steve's lifetime (but one for our daughter in 2035, I think).
If you can enlarge pictures, you can actually see the dark moon right in the middle of the sun!
I finally succumbed to the seductive Kaffe Fassett and started another project. USA economy, you are welcome.
I performed doll amputations for future weird crafts (Barbie and her friends donated heads for the pincushions I distributed at the retreat of March 2025, gals).
Until next time, don't lose your heads and have a good time!
In stitches,
Teresa - - - - - - -






























