Now I love to go to the 5-cent baskets in quilt stores, and now have a HUGE basket of my own filled with pretty bits of fabric that I wouldn't buy if it were yardage. I pulled out all the fabrics I thought my grandchild might want to look at, went through my old stash of commercially printed fabrics, and cut out 3 1/2 inch blocks, putting them together fairly randomly. After I'd sewn several rows, I thought that the onlooker needed a calm space to rest the eye, so I inserted a large (maybe 12 x 12) square of a restful orange with white polka dots, and then kept on with my scrappy blocks. Stand back....better, but now the middle is boring. So I filled it with funky little appliqued houses. Originally, I was going to put a splended mola of fishes in the center, but I decided to move it to the back. Then, after playing for several hours on my design wall, I decided that the back had to be all REDS. The binding is a mess o' reds connected together in one long strip. The quilt turned out bigger than I thought. It's actually more like a floor blanket, but it got a nice reception at the Space Telescope Laboratory of Johns Hopkins University. That's where my lovely daughter-in-law, the astrophysicist, works. She was told to come to an Important Meeting in a room off the cafeteria, and voila!...there were all her colleagues, friends, and us family.

And here's the back:

In quite a different mood, I just finished a large piece (31 x37) based on a photo I took in Seattle. I call it SPRING COMES TO THE INNER CITY.

I've also been trying to hustle on doing a 12 x 12 for the 2009 SAQA auction. I've long been interested in Ms. Josephine Baker, and what an astonishing life she has led. She's a much more complex woman than the beautiful young black girl who danced almost naked in Paris! Here she is.........in progress.

Wait'll you see her with her JEWELS on!!! I call it THE MARVELOUS MS. JOSEPHINE BAKER.