Showing posts with label I hate snow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label I hate snow. Show all posts

Saturday, February 6, 2010

6 to 10 inches???

Meet my snow removal crew.
Otherwise known as my husband and son. These guys aren't professionals, which explains why they waited until the snow stopped falling before they started trying to remove it.
Our local weather people predicted that we would be getting somewhere between 6 and 10 inches of snow with this latest winter blizzard. I wasn't happy about it, but the truck and my guys can handle 6-10 inches.
We woke up today to TWENTY TWO inches of snow and no power. Opening the shop was out of the question for several reasons. The most important one is that we couldn't GET there.
That probably seems reasonable, considering the volume of snow on the ground, but we live NEXT DOOR to the shop! It is a mere 650 feet from the house and as you can see from the photo, we own a plow!
Today I learned that you can't plow 22 inches of snow. It is just too much. We also live on a hill, so there is the question of exactly where do you plow it to?
Starting at 6am, my snow team began plowing and salting and shoveling and scraping their way to the bottom of the hill. I offered to help, but the third shovel was at the shop (remember, the power was off and there wasn't much else I could do). After much deliberation I trudged over the hill to the shop to check on things (heat, lights, etc) and shoveled my way back to the top of the driveway. That's my path - just one shovel width wide - that you see in the photos.
It is now TEN hours later and my snow team has almost cleared the driveway and they still have the entire parking lot to deal with.
Thankfully, tomorrow is Sunday and the shop will be closed. That gives us a whole extra day to deal with all of this white stuff. The bad news is, they are predicting snow for Wed., Thurs., Fri., AND Sat.
I hope they are wrong!





Friday, February 22, 2008

Pastel Challenge

SNOW is a 4 letter word.
TWO HOUR DELAY is a more welcome term. While I do enjoy curling up on the sofa with my morning coffee, watching the alphabetical list of schools scroll by to jumping out of bed and into the shower, the novelty is wearing off.

It isn’t really the snow or even the lack of business that bugs me. It’s the canceling, rescheduling, salting, sweeping, crud all over your car, wet shoes, lost glove, sweep, shovel, salt, sloppy mess that is wearing a little thin. Although I complain about it, I secretly need it. It’s February in Pittsburgh that allows me to truly appreciate May through October. I lived in Florida for 7 years. Believe it or not 80 degrees and sunny gets a little boring.

Yucky days are best spent inside sewing. No problem there. I spent all day yesterday and I do mean ALL DAY, struggling with the selection of the fabrics for a pastel quilt for Timeless. I should say “positioning” the fabrics; the selection had already been limited to 12 – 15 pieces. I laid out a project on the design wall and sent a quick digital photo to New York. Isn’t technology wonderful? I thought so too, until they saw the photo and decided it was “too square”. After some give-and -take they finally agreed to a Kaleidoscope project, tons more work than my original idea, but I have to agree, it’s more interesting. The project requirements are that I must use all pastels. I must use a minimum of 12 but not more than 16 fabrics. It should be “large” and naturally they want it to be a show stopper.

These formula projects are always a challenge. I spend hours designing and calculating to their needs, making sure that the fabric requirements work into normal size cuts, estimating yardage, analyzing the project from both the shop owner (their customers) and the consumer (my customers) point of view so that it works for everyone involved. Then I send a photo or design idea and the people that do not quilt or in most cases even own a sewing machine say things like “It’s a little too square looking”.

Let the challenge begin…… It’s why I love my job. These situations, because I refuse to give up, force me to be more creative. The silly demands insist that I think outside the box (or should I say square?) and create something beautiful that I would have sworn was not possible. Like a knock your socks off pastel quilt with little or no contrast.
I've decided to share the progress of this project with you from start to finish. That way you will get to share the joy and frustrations along with me. Let's start with the working photos. Those are cut pieces stuck to the design wall that were rearranged in each photo. The peach fabric is way too intense in the first one. The yellow is overpowering in the second. After hours of struggling with the exact placement of the blues and greens, I decided to literally scrap all of them, cut the pieces and let them fall where they may. I like that one best! I've made the yardage requests, once the real fabrics arrive we can get started. Did I mention we have a deadline to meet?