Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

WIP Wed: Japanese Quilt

It's Wednesday again (so soon?!), so I'm joining in on Freshly Pieced WIP wed link party.  Come join us!!

I really shouldn't, but I started cutting out yet another quilt.  Part of it is because I'm hoping to get a NEW (to me) SEWING MACHINE later this week that I hope will greatly improve me FMQ-ing ability.  Part of it is due to the subject matter.  I'm still in shock about the Japanese earthquake and now the nuclear threat.  In our own family, I worry about my husband's cousin's wife, who is from Tokyo, and has family there.  It's affected me personally in many ways. 

As mentioned, before on my blog, I watched my own family flee from Hurricane Katrina, which filled their house with 2-3 feet of water, as well as my dad's church, a block away.  It took them years to reconstruct their house and the church, and the anxiety we all felt still is with us.  The devastation I see, on what little news I can bear to watch, is even too much to bear.  So this disaster has brought back all of those feelings and anxiety, and sadness.  I don't want to air dirty laundry, but I partially blame Katrina for my dad's death, due to the fact that even a few years after Katrina, in the city of New Orleans, there were no cardiologists or pulminologists to be found on-call the week-end my dad suffered from a pulmonary embolism.  Still there's insufficient medical personnel there, one reason I'm very glad that my family now lives in Dallas.  Short story long, I'm just sick with my own personal knowledge of what lays ahead for the people of Japan. 

We also live about 50 miles away from the Hanford Nuclear Site, the most contaminated nuclear site in the United States.  It was also the place where the nuclear material came from for the bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan.  We have here in Pendleton, 50 miles away, nuclear fall out shelter locations.  We all know what iodine tablets are.  So that threat is also a very real one to me.  It's overwhelming.  I cope partially by sewing and creating.  Just as I made my family a quilt after Katrina, I hope I can find a good family to give this one to in Japan eventually.  Until then, I'll send what help we can afford in the form of money, and encourage everyone else to do so.  If everyone sends a little, it adds up!

Friday, March 11, 2011

Broken Resolution, Monochromatic Quilt and Japan


After fighting with my machine quite a bit for the last few weeks, I finally gave up and broke my New Year's Resolution to finish 2 quilts for every 1 I start.  I literally couldn't do free-motion quilting on it for more than a few minutes at a time between problems.  It began skipping stitches a few weeks ago, and has been getting worse and worse.  I've been working her hard, and she's old and probably tired, and never really meant to do the jobs that I demand of her.  I've been looking for a new machine, after wanting one for a while.  We finally have the money, and I think I may have found her, but don't want to say anything for fear that I may jinx it.  So after the above picture, I put away the darning foot, and quilt, then started working on a new quilt.

When I saw the modern quilt challenge contest to create a monochromatic quilt, I knew immediately what I wanted to do.  We have a wonderful Native American Indian Museum close to us, the Tamastslikt Cultural Institue on the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.  It's an amazing museum of their history, lifestyle, the natural history of the area, as well as recent European settler history and the way their lives and customs have changed.  There is some incredibly beautiful leather robes, clothing and bead work on display there, and one robe in particular is my favorite.  They do not allow pictures, so I drew a sketch one time then taped it into my "idea book" as a possible quilt to make.  The monochromatic challenge fits this well, as I wanted to make it look like the leather that it's sewn out of.  I've had the fabric and pattern all figured out for a while, now I'm getting going on it.  Here's the first block.

As I have been sewing today, I have been listening to the radio news channel about the devastating earthquake in Japan.  It's out of Portland, so I also have been listening to Tsunami warnings and emergency updates, school closures for the coast, shelter locations, traffic updates, instructions, press briefings and governor statements.  So far it seems like Oregon has been spared any severe damage, but my thoughts and prayers go out to all of the people in Japan right now.  As I was digging out my brown fabric, I came across this piece that I bought a few months ago on a shop hop from a shop owned by a lady who spent part of her childhood in Japan.  I think this will be in my next quilt. 

After watching my family go through Katrina and its aftermath, I know all too well what some of the Japanese people are going through.  I know that there's a lot we don't know, and won't for a while.  I know that life boils down to such basic things afterwards... life, family, food, shelter, water, medicine, safety.  I know that so much work is ahead of them.  I know that much grief will be felt.  I know it will change people's lives in ways they never would dream of.  I know that recovery will take many many years.  I know that the tragedy will bring out the best and worst of people, but in the end that the best will prevail.  I know that finally there will be hope and that life will continue.