Latest Crop of Spiral Seam Dresses

From around the net: 

oscar_de_la_renta__ivory_silk_organza_wedding_dresses_10854_view0 Blue-and-White-Wedding-Dresses-3Accessories-White-Spaghetti-Straps-Silk-Satin-Pnina-Tornai-Wedding-Dresses-e1322225011835 

The white ones are Oscar de la Renta and Pnina Tornai

http://coolspotters.com/clothing/proenza-schouler-spiral-striped-long-dress

They only used striped fabric cut on the diagonal, not spiral seams  :-) 

Proenza Schouler Spiral Stripe julia-stegner-and-proenza-schouler-gallery

http://www.lovemydress.net/blog/2012/01/so-loves-vintage-win-100-voucher-to-spend-online.html

This one does use spiral seams but only on top! 

6a0120a65f64b9970c0168e668f7ba970c-580wi

http://dollsoutfits.blogspot.com/2011/05/spiral-dress-for-14-kish-doll.html

And that links to a doll pattern for sale: 

http://www.dolloutfits.com/patterns/robespirale/index.html

IMG_5411-1 robespirale_pic4

http://community.theknot.com/cs/ks/blogs/wedding_style_file/archive/2010/10/15/bridal-fashion-week-sneak-peek-vineyard-collection.aspx 

Charlies Angels spiral dress

Not sure if I've shared this before.  There's Farrah Fawcett in a white gown that is the ideal spiral shape. 

Here's a spiral seams wedding dress, called "Rae" by Priscilla of Boston

Vineyard_DressSketch_Rae rae6465larger_image rae_priscilla_of_boston_vineyard_collection

For some really pretty spiral skirts and dresses, check out the brand "Sacred Threads" on ebay. 

287241740_o 287755466_o 28806 a1af_1_sblbe8d_1_sbl9233_1_sbl29311fd65_1_sbl2810729103

Crazy Quilt Squares

Today's random great idea. 
Yes, of course those masterpiece quilts you see entered in the fair are BETTER. 
And the first square of such is always great fun, and the second and third square in pattern are easier, then the fifth and sixth squares are efficiency itself. 
But after that, it starts to be a bit too much like "work" and "doing what I'm supposed to be doing" neither of which are my really strong talents. 
I do find myself craving a more "pieced", organized look, without quite getting started on a pattern...
So I did this  :-) 

crazy quilt squares 1 crazy quilt squares 2

Foundation square, with  one piece in the center, and others added as they may fit around it. 

crazy quilt squares 3 crazy quilt squares 4

This is fun!

crazy quilt squares 5 crazy quilt squares 6

It has enough of the "puzzle" quality to keep me interested.  Where's the next piece that will fit? 
I rock at jigsaw puzzles.  Also, this is using up my little bits and scraps, and FRUGALITY is a talent of mine, which I inherited at the genius level  :-) 
I was raised by famous Great Depression survivor pack rats, under whose tutelage I learned never to get rid of anything that might someday have some use thought up for it. 
I've had a lot of clutter issues to get over, as you can imagine  :-) 

crazy quilt squares 7 crazy quilt squares 9

But I do love my box of scraps

Sharing Miscellaneous

The favorite fabrics quilt is done, bound and in use! 

favorites-on-the-bed-1

And here's a bunch of miscellany that can only be filed under that delightful word.  Some have been sitting in my Sharing folder for months, getting gradually older and less relevant, but I just can't delete them until I share them.   And that's what a blog is for! 

cabelas-Dodge-homemade-camper

Somebody's homemade camper.  I LOVE this.  Someday I would love to make a homemade van conversion camper thingie myself.  I don't suppose mine would look this camperish on the outside! 

Here's a project that I could totally do: 

http://www.campervanlife.com/self-builds/darrens-mercedes-sprinter

I would want a van that you can stand up in, like a furniture van or delivery van.  I would want nice bathroom facilities, but I wouldn't care if it had any kind of kitchen or not, as the sort of thing I'd like to eat while travelling is avocadoes and apples and mixed nuts.   I would drive around the country staying a few weeks or months in each place, visiting my grown up kids or going to conventions.  I'd put solar power on the roof...

Speaking of mixed nuts. 

eds-trail-mix

Ed bought raw cashews, pecans, walnuts, etc and mixed them up with raisins.  Yes, it's a bit pricey, but it's so good and so nutritious!  

card-to-look-on-tineye

My favorite Christmas card image this year.  That's my idea of a perfect scene. 

kitty-dive-dive-1 kitty-dive-dive-3

Here's Kitty in the "Dive!  Dive!" position

boys-room-airport  boys-room-Lego-wonderland

Lego Airport. 

Mike-Lego-castle-387 Mike-Lego-castle-381

Lego Castle

Lego-hotel-1 Lego-hotel-4

Lego Hotel 

Dave-at-library

Awwww, look!  The adorable little child has learned to use the decimal system to find what he wants at the library! 

cow-dane

Somebody's Cow Dane that I passed in a parking lot.  I can guarantee you it's not Photoshopped, but I can only hope they don't dye their dog like that on purpose just to make us do a double-take! 

RV show 49

Here's a sick bastard who's tied a teddy bear to his bumper just to impress us all with what a sick bastard he is. 
I said, "That is a truck full of MEN!" and the kids discussed whether or not that was true; one thought it might be a woman in the front seat. 
We sped up to find out.  Indeed it was THREE men in a pickup truck.  Ed says women in groups of three or more is trouble waiting to start, but here we have three men and a pickup truck and a teddy bear...

pencil-sharpener-v3

My pencil sharpener catcher thing basically disintegrated; it was past the point for duct tape (see previous post about that) and time to do something new.  

Oxi-Fresh-painted-car

That's an imaginative paint job!  I've been seeing cars and vans with these pretty all-over graphical designs, but all of them so far have been commercial.  Wouldn't it be great fun to buy some auto paint in cans (not spray cans) and some disposable brushes and just let Karen loose on a vehicle? 

egg-toast-cast-iron-2

The perfect breakfast is anything cooked in cast iron.   It just tastes better.  I took a picture to capture this sizzling moment in time. 

goodwill-plate

Finishing up with a really pretty saucer that I saw at the Goodwill.  What on earth would I do with a saucer?  But I couldn't let it go without taking its picture.  It was just so pretty. 

Seattle Doesn’t Get That Much Rain

Today I found this :-)

http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/04/seattle-doesnt-get-that-much-rain/

Seattle Doesn't Get That Much Rain


Today I found out that Seattle doesn't really get that much rain compared to most U.S. cities. In fact, Seattle ranks 44th among major U.S. cities in average annual rainfall, getting approximately 38 inches annually. Cities that get more rainfall than Seattle include such as Houston Texas (48 inches), New Orleans (60 inches), Mobile AL (65 inches), Memphis (52 inches), Nashville (48 inches), and pretty much every major city on the eastern seaboard, such as New York (43 inches), Philadelphia (41 inches), Miami (58 inches), and Boston (44 inches).

So why does everyone not from Seattle think to go outside in Seattle without an umbrella is tantamount to committing suicide? Partially because of the entertainment industry producing things like Sleepless in Seattle, Frasier, and the like which portray it as such. (Along with always showing a Seattle skyline where somehow the space needle is by far the tallest thing in Seattle. Even though the Space Needle is actually about average in height compared to the 25 or so skyscrapers in Seattle; coming in at about 600 feet including the needle. With Seattle possessing quite a few skyscrapers around the same height and 6 skyscrapers taller than it; including the Columbia Center at 937 feet, which has more floors, 76, than any building in the U.S. west of the Mississippi River and is the 20th tallest building in the United States).

But the primary root of this rainy misconception really lies in that Seattle has a relatively high amount of days per year with precipitation (158), compared to such places as New York (119), Boston (127), and Nashville (119). All cities that get an average of about 16% more rain per year than Seattle, but also average between them about 36 less days a year of precipitation. So it rains a lot less in Seattle, but is spread out over about a month more of days than those cities. This is why almost no native Seattle-ite carries an umbrella generally. When it does rain, it tends to be a very light drizzle that isn't bothersome. It almost never really "rains" as most people from places like Alabama, Boston, or the like think of rain. On top of that, it never really storms in Seattle either. Seattle gets an average of a mere seven days a year where thunder is heard, for instance.


Another contributing factor is that Seattle doesn't have a very uniform distribution of cloudy or rainy days from month to month like Boston, New York, and many other major U.S. cities have. As a rule, it pretty much is cloudy with occasional light drizzles from October through March in Seattle. Then from April through September, Seattle gets almost no rain and from June through September almost no cloudy days. Makes for a very nice climate if you don't like large changes in weather. Around 45 degrees Fahrenheit and cloudy in the winter, with only an average of 8 light snow days, and around 75 degrees Fahrenheit and sunny in the summer.

So how does this city that is right next to the Puget Sound and relatively close to the Pacific Ocean manage to have such a mild climate and get so little rainfall, yet have so many more cloudy days than places like New York and Boston? Seattle-Tacoma (Tacoma being a neighboring city that most rain estimates include in estimating Seattle's annual rainfall) is protected by the Olympic Mountains where the Olympic National Rain Forrest is located. The Olympic mountains and rain forrest, about 80 miles to the west of Seattle on the Olympic Peninsula, gets a staggering 142 inches a year of rain coming off the Pacific Ocean. This trims off most of the precipitation coming from the ocean before it gets to Seattle. On the other side, Seattle's climate is protected from arctic air by the Cascade Range which is a major mountain range East of Seattle extending from Washington down to Northern California.

So in short, if you like sunny not too hot summers, mild winters but with lots of cloudy days, and ridiculously beautiful scenery everywhere you turn, Seattle's the place to be. If you like more evenly distributed cloudy vs sunny days throughout the year and hate nature, then not so much. Either way, if you visit Seattle, don't bring an umbrella. People will look at you funny. Unless you want to visit the Rain Forrest; then definitely bring an umbrella, strong bug spray, and try not to get lost; the animals will eat you.



Got this from Wikipedia:

Downtown Seattle averages 71 clear (sunny) days a year, with most of those days occurring between May and September[65]
Seattle's climate is usually described as Oceanic or Marine west coast, with fairly mild, wet winters and very warm, dry summers. Like much of the Pacific Northwest, according to the Köppen climate classification it falls within a cool, dry-summer subtropical zone (Csb), with 'cool'-summer Mediterranean characteristics.[66] Other climate classification systems, such as Trewartha, place it firmly in the Oceanic zone (Do).[67]
At 944mm (37.17 in.), in reality, the city receives less precipitation annually than New York City (1201 mm, 47.28 in.), Atlanta (1290 mm, 50.79 in.), Boston (1055 mm, 41.53 in.), Baltimore (1038 mm, 40.87 in.), Portland, Maine (1128 mm, 44.41 in.), Jacksonville, Florida (1304 mm, 51.34 in.), and most cities on the Eastern Seaboard of the U.S. Seattle was also not listed in a study that revealed the 10 rainiest cities in the continental United States. This is due largely to Seattle's dry summers, which result in statistically moderate annual accumulations. Seattle receives the largest amount of rainfall of any major (pop > 250,000) U.S. city in November, and is in the top 10 through Winter, but is in the lower half of all cities June–September. Thunderstorms are rare. Seattle reports thunder on just seven days per year[70] For comparison, Fort Myers, Florida reports thunder on 93 days per year Kansas City 52, and New York City 25.


Between October and May, Seattle is mostly or partly cloudy six out of every seven days[65]