Ninety Degrees in the Shade
Every January for the past several years, I've vowed that this is the year to get the UFOs finished up. And I diligently pull a few out and do some token stitching. And that's about it.
You prolly haven't noticed that I made no such promise this year. Instead, I've stacked up the flimsies and taken them, two at a time, to the machinist, to turn them into real quilts. Several have been done, and actually bound, so a new stack of finished quilts is forming.
Even though Ninety Degrees in the Shade is made entirely from Civil War repros, to me it has a modern look about it. The blocks are all the same, but the color placement makes them look like different blocks.
The name comes from my childhood, back before air-conditioning was in our homes. Come August, there'd be a sweltering scorcher of a day and without fail, my mother would proclaim, "It's ninety degrees in the shade." I never knew whether this was actual or an alternative fact, but it doesn't really matter, does it?
Today we had the weather and the time simultaneously to go out and photograph finished quilts. So that's what the next few posts will be.
Comments
xx, Carol
Yep, "90*F in the shade" is a common saying from my Southern childhood, too. Also "It's so hot you could fry an egg on the sidewalk." describes a summer scorcher.
Hugs!