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Tuesday, September 30, 2014

The Bear on the Wall

So many of my quilts are "memory" quilts, and this is no different. I am drawn to bears--not because I particularly love bears, but because I associate so much with them. My mother had a dear friend named Faye that she taught with for many years. They shared many things together, including an affinity and love for art. Faye did a lovely oil painting of a grizzly bear lumbering over a log with a towering, craggy mountain in the distance. She gave this painting to my mother and it hung in the dining room for years. That bear certainly was a silent witness to a great deal of my history.


Forget being the fly on the wall, that bear was there for announcements, pronouncements and a whole bunch of laughs. I will share one of the best.


My mother became the de facto caregiver for an older woman who lived across the street. Mom got her groceries, ran errands for her and was always available for a good chat. One particular Thanksgiving, mom invited Lou over to our house for dinner. She showed up that day dressed in her best. Silky floral shirt adorned with a gigantic rhinestone sunburst pin, a freshly coiffed purplish red wig and fire engine red lipstick carefully applied into a large, exaggerated moue. Dinner was fun. Lou regaled us with stories of her days waitressing and kept us all in stitches. It all went really well until she leaned forward to get seconds. "Oh hell," she muttered, dabbing furiously at her shirt, "I got my tit in the gravy." The silence that followed that comment was thick and heavy. It felt like every molecule of air had gotten sucked out of the room.  Everyone suddenly had an intense interest in the food on their plates and the scrape of silverware seemed unnaturally loud. I was very young, but I knew something outrageous had just happened and I watched my family to see how I should react. My dad was biting his lip, my mom looked a little put out, and my teenaged brothers looked like they were about to explode. Dinner carried on. We swallowed our laughs until after dessert when we could truly relish the infamy.


That's what memories are, right? A moment that blossoms into an infamous EVENT. That particular memory certainly lives on. Try spilling something on your shirt at my house if you have any lingering doubts.


So, my house needed a bear on the wall. This pattern is from Juliet at thetartankiwi. She has a 12 inch bear, and this 30 inch bear (plus a lot of other animals) for sale in her Craftsy shop. (The pattern is for the block only.)   I used some parchment paper to draw the border design for paper piecing.  I taped down the paper on my cutting mat and used a pencil and one of my rulers to draft the pattern.  Parchment paper is mostly see-through, so it is easy to see the grid lines underneath. Plus, you can roll it out in whatever length you need. I use it quite a bit. I never have it in my kitchen because it's always in the sewing room!


I had so much fun picking the fabrics for this project that I wanted to do a reprisal with my scraps. Paper piecing yields a lot of funky shaped scraps that I am loathe to throw away. Rather than sort them out and put them in the "I'll get to them someday" bin, I decided to make a matching pillow sham with "made" fabric. I just sewed these little bits together until I had bigger pieces. I squared the bigger pieces to 5" and dog eared the corners with alternating 2.5" squares of cheddar and turquoise. I finished it off with matchstick straight line quilting. I don't know if I am happier that I have a matching pillow or that I used up the scraps. Probably both.


I am definitely happy to have a bear on the wall; one that will be a silent witness to new pronouncements and new memories. Who knows, maybe he will be one of the best ones.




















9 comments:

  1. Your bear quilt turned out gorgeously, and I especially like how you photographed it in the corn fields - perfect for the coloration of your quilt and the time of year! I think the best memories are ones like your Thanksgiving story. Thanks so much for sharing it with us. :)

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    1. I am relieved that the pictures from the corn field turned out. Getting those pictures was more of an adventure than I had counted on. I am glad that most Iowa drivers aren't as aggressive/unhinged as the guy who ALMOST crashed into me pulling into that corn field.

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  2. Love your story and love your bear!!! I've been looking at this pattern, so tempted to buy it...

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    1. Get it! For $5, it is a fun way to rediscover and work with your stash.

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  3. What a beautiful blog post and an honour to have helped to enable you to create your own bear on the wall. I hope that he is witness to many many happy memories.
    Juliet x

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  4. Oh my goodness -- I love your bear!!! I'm not normally drawn to those colors at all, but here they really really work. Especially with the corn in the background. :D And what a hilarious story!!!

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  5. WHAT A FABULOUS QUILT! And wonderful stories. I'm imagining now how this bear heritage might manifest itself in the next generation ...

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  6. Just found your blog and had to start following- I love your mustang quilt and this bear one too- definitely have that bear pattern in my wishlist now. You did a great job choosing awesome fabrics for each piece- that's one of the hardest parts of paper piecing for me.

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  7. What a great take on this pattern. Wonderful colors and the border suits it so well.

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