I've got another four in the works right now, in various stages of being put together. I'm running low on some of the solid colors. I thought about maybe introducing purple and/or a different blue or green, but since I don't have enough (or any) of those in the solid scraps box, it's not really an option. While I could make a trip to the fabric store, the whole idea was to utilize my scraps, so that's that. When what I have is gone, I'm done with the blocks.
They are quite large, about 13 inches square, unfinished. So I'm sure, depending on how I decide to set them, there will be enough for a decent sized quilt.
While I was in the sewing room this week—which also happens to be a storage area for a lot of other stuff, including papers and keepsakes from my late mom and dad—I happened upon an old cassette tape. I popped it in an old boombox and heard my grandmother's voice. On the other side of the tape was my aunt's voice. Both were recorded in March 1982.
My grandmother was losing her eyesight due to macular degeneration, and reading and writing letters had become difficult for her. Instead, she exchanged cassette tapes with her daughters who lived out of state (we lived in Wisconsin), wherein they shared family news and other happenings. These were the days before email and cell phones, of course. When long distance telephone rates were high (a one-hour phone call could cost as much as a tank of gas), but postage to mail a cassette tape was cheap.
So there was Grandma, maybe sitting out on her porch (from the sound of traffic passing) on a spring day in the deep south, talking about a cousin's wedding she'd recently attended, her azaleas in bloom, and other things. On Side B was my aunt in Texas, talking about similar things in her "letter" to Grandma, about her roses and what else she was planning to do in her flower beds, etc.
I wanted to transfer this tape digitally, both to preserve it before the tape broke or degraded further, as well as share it with my siblings and cousins. So that was my other project this past week.
Thankfully, I'd pinned a tutorial on this subject that I'd run across a few months ago. I followed the instructions, bought a patch cord for $7.99, and using free Audacity software, was able to transfer the tape to my computer and save it digitally.
Source: Bespoke Genealogy |
As much as they communicated this way over several years, I don't think many of these tapes survived. Wouldn't it be neat, though, if some day, someone finds one of my mother talking to Grandma with our family news at the time?