Quilting Adventures 2015: Day 5

25 03 2015

Last day at Quilting adventures (QA today). We did a bit more stuff on marking fabrics, this time with oil- and water-based crayons. And then it was time to say goodbye for another year to old friends and new.

I stayed overnight in New Braunfels (Gruene, actually [pronounced ‘Green’]) with Kim and her Mom–the QA organisers. Kim showed me some of the Hill Country around New Braunfels, which I had never seen before despite this being my third trip to the town. What a pretty place! I can see why tourists keep coming back. We also walked some of the old area of Gruene, including the Gruene Hall, where many a famous act has played. Check out the line-up for April:

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Quilting Adventures 2015: Days 3 and 4

13 03 2015

We’ve spent the past two days learning to use Tsukineko All-purpose Inks, Fantastix applicators, and Fabrico markers (also Tsukineko), as  well as artists’ coloured pencils and oil crayons to enhance fabric. Lura Schwarz Smith taught this part of the class. So much of the past two days was learning the techniques via demonstration and some hands-on practice; however, there’s not a lot of ‘product’ to show for how much we’ve learned, so there aren’t many pictures. I finally did some stitching late this afternoon prior to the walkthrough of everyone’s classes, doing some thread painting of the hair and shirt of the boy’s face I had traced and coloured with inks, markers, and pencils yesterday and last night after ‘show and tell’.

After a rocky start with drawing a face yesterday (guided by Lura), I felt much more comfortable working from a line drawing, tracing it onto fabric, and then shading it with the various media. It was quite amazing (and scary!) how some horrible emotions bubbled to the surface during the freehand drawing phase — faces were one of things I was awful at when I did Art at school (I was fine with still life, pattern and design, and poster work, but could never get faces right… all those yucky feelings came back…).

I also had two more photos printed onto fabric, taking advantage of the printer that Kerby and Lura had bought with them.

I won’t have a chance to start stitching work on any of the photos I’ve had printed until I get home — we’ve had so much learning of techniques in this workshop that there hasn’t been much time to ‘do’ and work on our own pieces. But that’s OK. Learning new stuff is why I chose this workshop. That said, I guess I’m a bit disappointed that I haven’t made any progress on the photos I had printed. However, that was MY expectation based on previous experience at other workshops; Lura and Kerby have definitely fulfilled all the expectations listed for the workshop.

Here are the photos from the end of today for each of the students in my class (all five of us!).


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This was my design wall late Wednesday afternoon. The boy in the lower right has been partly shaded with inks. The boy on the top left was my freehand drawing of a face — the one that gave me such angst.

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My design wall late Thursday afternoon. Two more photos printed on to fabric (corn from Santa Fe and a frosted leaf from Michigan), and a fabric chosen to perhaps border the fox. More ink and coloured pencil work etc. on the boy in the lower right, including thread painting of his hair and shirt.





Quilting Adventures 2015: Day 2

11 03 2015

We spent much of today on ‘walkabout’, taking photos around the resort, and then processing them in Photoshop Elements, and getting some printed on fabric. We learnt lots, but so far we haven’t got much ‘product’ to show for it, though that may change tomorrow when we start to work with our printed photos.

The photos below are of the design walls of those whose photos have been printed so far. Next step is enhancing the photos with paints, markers, and/or thread — the really fun part for me!

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Quilting Adventures 2015: Day 1

10 03 2015

I spent last night working on homework!

Day 1 of Quilting Adventures (in New Braunfels, Texas) with Kerby and Lura Schwarz Smith was in the classroom at our laptops learning photo manipulation techniques in Adobe Photoshop Elements. Why? Because it rained and rained and rained almost the entire day here in Texas Hill Country. We might get out and about today to take photos if the rain abates. But yesterday and last night was all about prepping our existing photos ready for printing on fabric.

The printer Kerby is using is fantastic — he printed our binder cover pages yesterday after we’d manipulated our photos, and, with the combination of the inks, the paper, and the printer, they turned out brilliantly — see below for mine. (For the techies, the printer he used was an Epson R3000, with Ultra Premium ??? Matte paper. Out of my price range at nearly $1400 for the printer in Australia and inkjet cartridges at $50 each [NINE cartridges].) The results were great, but you’d have to be doing a lot of photographic printing on paper or fabric to justify that sort of cost. US price is about $700 for the printer… yes, Australians get price gouged, again…)

As so much work was done on the computer, the only photo I have to share is the cover page I created from a photo I took of a protea in my garden. It’s significantly reduced in size — the original is 31 MB TIFF; this one is reduced to 25% size, saved as a PNG, and is just under 1 MB (click it to view it larger).

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Only in Texas…

Needed to share this quirky ‘only in Texas’ moment. When I arrived at the venue and checked into my room, I found this ‘Texas star’ in the bathroom 😉 The rooms here are all decorated in a rustic Texas theme and the Texas star is everywhere. But in the years I’ve been coming here, I’ve never before seen a gold star on the loo paper 😉

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First Class from SYD to DFW

7 03 2015

The flight was long (it always is) but totally uneventful. Not a spot of turbulence for 14.5 hours (yes,  we had a great tailwind!). The Qantas First Class experience was exactly that – first class. But then with 3 flight attendants to look after 14 people,  and two loos just for us,  you’d expect that.

I haven’t processed all my photos yet,  but here’s a taste of the suite and the food. The photo of the plane is of another A380 that left a few hours before ours did.

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Points upgrade to First Class

6 03 2015

I got my points upgrade to First Class on Qantas for the long leg from Sydney to Dallas.  Woohoo!! And this time I was notified early,  not at the gate on boarding,  which meant I got to experience the First Class Lounge at Sydney airport.

This is an all-day lounge,  meaning you can check in as early as you want on the day you’re flying and take advantage of the services on offer.

I checked in about 9:30am,  had breakfast of Eggs Benedict with smoked salmon,  then had a spa treatment (back massage). Later I had lunch – three tasting plates of salt and pepper squid with green chilli and aoili, buffalo mozzarella with heirloom tomatoes,  black angus minute steak,  followed by pavlova with lychees and raspberries in a glass topped with pashmak. Delicious. And table service too.

A quick shower about an hour before boarding and I’m all ready and relaxed for my 16-hour non-stop flight,  in First Class on an A380.

And we’ve just got the first boarding call…. See you on the flipside….

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In light of SkyMall folding…

27 01 2015

For those of you who have never travelled on a domestic flight in the US, there’s a magazine in the seat pocket of most planes called SkyMall. Well, an announcement was made last week that SkyMall was filing for bankruptcy.

So what was SkyMall? Basically a mail-order shopping catalogue of cheap (and not so cheap), tacky, crud that most people most of the time would never use. But it was always worth a chuckle while waiting for the plane to take off, or while in the air.

I was going through some photos recently, and was reminded of SkyMall because I took a photo of this page on my last trip to the US around mid-October (i.e. just before Halloween). It’s an example of all that was tacky about SkyMall 😉 A remote-controlled tarantula. Yea, just what I need… NOT!

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Making plans…

26 01 2015

I’m off to the US in a month or so, and I realised that my calendar was getting chock-a-block full of activities — I think I’ll need a holiday by the time I get home 😉

  • Day 1: Drive to Perth (2 hours), fly to Sydney (5 hours), overnight at Sydney airport
  • Day 2: Fly to Dallas Forth Worth (16 hours), go to a concert that night, overnight at DFW airport
  • Day 3: Fly to San Antonio, stay overnight with friends
  • Day 4: Friends take me to Texas Hill Country where I’ll check in for my quilting workshop
  • Days 5 to 9: Five-day quilting workshop, show and tell etc. in the evenings
  • Day 10: Friend shows me Texas Hill Country, then back to San Antonio airport to fly to Miami and meet up with another friend
  • Day 11: Friend and I board our cruise ship
  • Day 12: At sea, relaxing
  • Day 13: Cozumel, Mexico – spend day at a beach resort
  • Day 14: Trujillo, Honduras – spend day on a walking tour  of a nature park (shore excursion)
  • Day 15: Belize – spend day at Mayan ruins 2 hours from Belize City (shore excursion)
  • Day 16: At sea, relaxing (do a cooking class on board that day)
  • Day 17: Key West, Florida – likely bike riding, stand-up paddle boarding or kayaking, visit Hemingway’s house, have Key Lime Pie!
  • Day 18: Disembark at Miami; possible culinary tour of Little Havana?
  • Day 19: Everglades private tour; culinary tour of South Beach
  • Day 20: Fly to Pittsburgh, have dinner with friends
  • Day 21: Day off in Pittsburgh — nothing planned as yet
  • Day 22-24: Attend and speak at conference in Pittsburgh; participate in evening social networking activities
  • Day 25-26: Fly from Pittsburgh to Dallas Fort Worth to Sydney to Perth then home (no overnight stays, except on the plane from DFW to SYD)

I wonder if I planned to fit in too much? 😉





Sue’s visit

29 12 2014

Those who follow me on Facebook know that my good friend Sue (from San Diego) flew out to Australia to spend 8 days with me over Christmas 2014. She also spent a couple of days in Sydney and Hawaii on the way to and from Western Australia, but this post is about her summer Christmas visit to the southwest corner of Western Australia.

Here’s a summary of what we did (this is for her information as much as mine, as she didn’t keep a travel journal). I may not have all the dates/places exactly right, but they’re close enough!:

  • Friday 19 Dec – Pick up Sue from Perth airport, visit a friend of mine in Perth, travel home, visit the local kangaroos and watch the sunset over the Leschenault Estuary.
  • Saturday 20 Dec – Big day of touring today — some 400 km of driving. We started with Gnomesville, where Sue left the gnome she brought all the way from California. Next was the Donnnybrook Market and bakery and roadside cherries (to die for!), then Balingup (Tinderbox, Mystic Gems – antique section, lunch at Mushroom Cafe), followed by Bridgetown (where we called in on friends), Karri Gully where we hugged some magnificent big trees, Cambray Sheep Cheese (near Nannup), and Simmo’s Ice Creamery (near Dunsborough) for some ice cream.  Our second last stop was spending an hour or so visiting friends at Yallingup, then getting to the Busselton Jetty just on sunset.
  • Sunday 21 Dec – Bunbury Farmers’ Market, Woolies supermarket (supermarkets in other countries are always interesting — you can see new products and be amazed at how much you recognise from your home country etc.), Bunbury and its beaches.
  • Monday 22 Dec – Coles supermarket, lunch with my parents in Eaton, play some pool at a local tavern.
  • Tuesday 23 Dec – Dolphin Sea Kayak Tour (with Dekked Out Adventures), where we paddled down to where the Collie River empties into the Leschenault Estuary, across the estuary, and out through The Cut into the Indian Ocean. There were heaps of dolphins just around from The Cut (‘The Lounge’), and they swam between us, next to us, under us, and emerged close to us. Just a magical experience!
  • Wednesday 24 Dec – HaVe cheese (Harvey) and camels, shops, Buffalo Beach, and Belvidere on the Leschenault Peninsula.
  • Thursday 25 Dec – Jetty over the estuary, Buffalo Beach
  • Friday 26 Dec – Wellington Dam (near Collie), Big Rock on the Collie River below Wellington Dam, where we were very lucky to see about eight very endangered red-tailed black cockatoos. Sunset excursion to see the local kangaroos.
  • Saturday 27 Dec – Drove back to Perth via Southwest Highway, stopping in at Cohunu Koala Park in Byford, where Sue held a koala and fed and patted kangaroos and wallabies; Fremantle cappuccino strip and Fremantle Markets; Port/Leighton beaches to Cottesloe, Kings Park
  • Sunday 28 Dec – Drop Sue off at the airport for her flight back to Sydney.

When I asked Sue about some of the highlights (in addition to the stuff we did above), she said: big birds (especially the noisy galahs, cockatoos and others from the parrot family), horizons stretching forever, flat land/undulating land, plantation pine and gum trees, crystal clear blue skies (NO pollution/haze), eucalypts, countryside, farms, cattle, sheep, horses, kangaroos in the wild.

Her one word to sum up our little corner of Australia: ‘pastoral’. Her multiple words said often over the week: ‘Oh. My. Gosh.’

Here are some of the 300+ photos I took during the week. Click on a photo to view it larger.

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Arriving in Perth

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Standing among some of the thousands of gnomes at Gnomesville

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Jerome Gnome from San Diego, left by Sue

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Hugging a karri tree (Karri Gully park, between Bridgetown and Nannup)

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Cambray Sheep Cheese — cutting the Manchego wheel

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Busselton Jetty at sunset

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Hugging ‘Mr August’

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Learning about Nuytsia floribunda (Western Australian Christmas Tree)

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Experiencing dolphins up close and personal near Bunbury

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Marvelling at the endless sky, water, horizon, and beach near The Cut on Leschenault Peninsula

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Local Pink and Grey Galahs in a neighbour’s front yard; native grass trees behind

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Buffalo Beach

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Endless summer at Buffalo Beach

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Trying out free motion quilting for the first time! There’s a lot of concentration happening here 😉

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Some of the many local kangaroos (mum and joey emulating a Qantas tailfin logo)

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Emulating a lizard basking in the sun at Big Rock near Wellington Dam

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Getting very up close and personal with ‘William’

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Feeding a wallaby

And here’s a map of some of the places we went: map_of_sues_visit_dec_2014   While Sue thoroughly enjoyed her visit, I also thoroughly enjoyed having her here and seeing parts of my own backyard I hadn’t seen or experienced before.





Point Peron

1 12 2014

We had to go to Perth last week for an appointment in Rockingham. On the way home, we took the scenic route to Mandurah via Shoalwater and Waikiki, detouring into Point Peron.

These are some of the views from the lookout at Point Peron. The first looks back to the suburb of Shoalwater; the second looks out past the reef to the Indian Ocean.

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