• Department of "well, duh!"

    From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 15 22:53:58 2021
    The last two times I went out, I came back without the safety pin in
    the ankle of the right leg of my sweat pants. That is, of course, the important pin -- the left leg isn't going to get caught in the chain.

    So I decided that from now on, I'll sew that leg -- an enormous bar
    tack would be almost as quick as a pin, and much more secure.

    But if I ride with an important temporary stitch, it's probably a good
    idea to take a needle and some coarse thread along, just in case. I
    can weave the needle into a swatch of wool and put it and a piece of
    thread into a "Pill Pouch" (teeny ziplock bag).

    So what can I stash a needle in that I always have with me?

    My little notebook is an obvious candidate for such things -- that's
    where I keep spare bandaids (not in much demand now that I've stopped
    sweating them off). But I'm always pulling the notebook out of my
    pocket and opening it; the pill pouch is likely to fall out.

    When I'm riding is almost the only time I have my wallet; I always
    carry it even though I have no use for coins, bills, and cards now
    that I'm not allowed to go in anywhere. I could put the needle into
    the pill pouch that I carry a new flosser in. (Also in no demand now
    that I'm not allowed to eat along the way.)

    But to fit into the card pocket, it really ought to be inside
    something stiff.

    Something stiff like my calling-card sewing kit.

    <http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/RUFFTEXT/SEWKIT/SEWKIT6h.JPG>

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Sat Jan 16 11:27:26 2021
    On Fri, 15 Jan 2021 22:53:58 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:


    The last two times I went out, I came back without the safety pin in
    the ankle of the right leg of my sweat pants. That is, of course, the >important pin -- the left leg isn't going to get caught in the chain.

    So I decided that from now on, I'll sew that leg -- an enormous bar
    tack would be almost as quick as a pin, and much more secure.

    But if I ride with an important temporary stitch, it's probably a good
    idea to take a needle and some coarse thread along, just in case. I
    can weave the needle into a swatch of wool and put it and a piece of
    thread into a "Pill Pouch" (teeny ziplock bag).

    So what can I stash a needle in that I always have with me?

    My little notebook is an obvious candidate for such things -- that's
    where I keep spare bandaids (not in much demand now that I've stopped >sweating them off). But I'm always pulling the notebook out of my
    pocket and opening it; the pill pouch is likely to fall out.

    When I'm riding is almost the only time I have my wallet; I always
    carry it even though I have no use for coins, bills, and cards now
    that I'm not allowed to go in anywhere. I could put the needle into
    the pill pouch that I carry a new flosser in. (Also in no demand now
    that I'm not allowed to eat along the way.)

    But to fit into the card pocket, it really ought to be inside
    something stiff.

    Something stiff like my calling-card sewing kit.

    <http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/RUFFTEXT/SEWKIT/SEWKIT6h.JPG>

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Frank Krygowski@21:1/5 to John B. on Sat Jan 16 13:30:27 2021
    On 1/15/2021 11:27 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 15 Jan 2021 22:53:58 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:


    The last two times I went out, I came back without the safety pin in
    the ankle of the right leg of my sweat pants. That is, of course, the
    important pin -- the left leg isn't going to get caught in the chain.

    So I decided that from now on, I'll sew that leg -- an enormous bar
    tack would be almost as quick as a pin, and much more secure.

    But if I ride with an important temporary stitch, it's probably a good
    idea to take a needle and some coarse thread along, just in case. I
    can weave the needle into a swatch of wool and put it and a piece of
    thread into a "Pill Pouch" (teeny ziplock bag).

    So what can I stash a needle in that I always have with me?

    My little notebook is an obvious candidate for such things -- that's
    where I keep spare bandaids (not in much demand now that I've stopped
    sweating them off). But I'm always pulling the notebook out of my
    pocket and opening it; the pill pouch is likely to fall out.

    When I'm riding is almost the only time I have my wallet; I always
    carry it even though I have no use for coins, bills, and cards now
    that I'm not allowed to go in anywhere. I could put the needle into
    the pill pouch that I carry a new flosser in. (Also in no demand now
    that I'm not allowed to eat along the way.)

    But to fit into the card pocket, it really ought to be inside
    something stiff.

    Something stiff like my calling-card sewing kit.

    <http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/RUFFTEXT/SEWKIT/SEWKIT6h.JPG>

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips

    In my experience, pants clips work only for a short while. Back when I
    used them my cuffs gradually worked out of them as I pedaled. That's why
    I switched to safety pins. For me, these come undone only very rarely.

    The alternative I've considered is adding snaps to the cuff of the
    pants, either with the male and female directly in the fabric, or
    perhaps with one of them on a short bit of webbing sewed on in a way
    that would keep it hidden. But for me, the safety pins are adequate.

    BTW, it seems that when the pins have failed, it's been by bending
    enough to pop loose. Last year, to prevent pins rusting, I bought a pack
    of brass pins. Turns out their metal is thicker and much more resistant
    to bending. I've not had one pop loose yet.

    The downside is the thicker pin is much harder to push through denim.
    But I think it would be fine for sweat pants fabric.

    --
    - Frank Krygowski

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to frkrygow@sbcglobal.net on Sun Jan 17 05:43:12 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 13:30:27 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    On 1/15/2021 11:27 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 15 Jan 2021 22:53:58 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:


    The last two times I went out, I came back without the safety pin in
    the ankle of the right leg of my sweat pants. That is, of course, the
    important pin -- the left leg isn't going to get caught in the chain.

    So I decided that from now on, I'll sew that leg -- an enormous bar
    tack would be almost as quick as a pin, and much more secure.

    But if I ride with an important temporary stitch, it's probably a good
    idea to take a needle and some coarse thread along, just in case. I
    can weave the needle into a swatch of wool and put it and a piece of
    thread into a "Pill Pouch" (teeny ziplock bag).

    So what can I stash a needle in that I always have with me?

    My little notebook is an obvious candidate for such things -- that's
    where I keep spare bandaids (not in much demand now that I've stopped
    sweating them off). But I'm always pulling the notebook out of my
    pocket and opening it; the pill pouch is likely to fall out.

    When I'm riding is almost the only time I have my wallet; I always
    carry it even though I have no use for coins, bills, and cards now
    that I'm not allowed to go in anywhere. I could put the needle into
    the pill pouch that I carry a new flosser in. (Also in no demand now
    that I'm not allowed to eat along the way.)

    But to fit into the card pocket, it really ought to be inside
    something stiff.

    Something stiff like my calling-card sewing kit.

    <http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/RUFFTEXT/SEWKIT/SEWKIT6h.JPG>

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips

    In my experience, pants clips work only for a short while. Back when I
    used them my cuffs gradually worked out of them as I pedaled. That's why
    I switched to safety pins. For me, these come undone only very rarely.

    The alternative I've considered is adding snaps to the cuff of the
    pants, either with the male and female directly in the fabric, or
    perhaps with one of them on a short bit of webbing sewed on in a way
    that would keep it hidden. But for me, the safety pins are adequate.

    BTW, it seems that when the pins have failed, it's been by bending
    enough to pop loose. Last year, to prevent pins rusting, I bought a pack
    of brass pins. Turns out their metal is thicker and much more resistant
    to bending. I've not had one pop loose yet.

    The downside is the thicker pin is much harder to push through denim.
    But I think it would be fine for sweat pants fabric.

    You are probably just wearing the wrong type of pants. Try "plus-4's".
    or "Knickers" I think they are called in the U.S., and your problems
    will go away :-)
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Frank Krygowski@21:1/5 to John B. on Sat Jan 16 18:53:54 2021
    On 1/16/2021 5:43 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 13:30:27 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    On 1/15/2021 11:27 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 15 Jan 2021 22:53:58 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:


    The last two times I went out, I came back without the safety pin in
    the ankle of the right leg of my sweat pants. That is, of course, the >>>> important pin -- the left leg isn't going to get caught in the chain.

    So I decided that from now on, I'll sew that leg -- an enormous bar
    tack would be almost as quick as a pin, and much more secure.

    But if I ride with an important temporary stitch, it's probably a good >>>> idea to take a needle and some coarse thread along, just in case. I
    can weave the needle into a swatch of wool and put it and a piece of
    thread into a "Pill Pouch" (teeny ziplock bag).

    So what can I stash a needle in that I always have with me?

    My little notebook is an obvious candidate for such things -- that's
    where I keep spare bandaids (not in much demand now that I've stopped
    sweating them off). But I'm always pulling the notebook out of my
    pocket and opening it; the pill pouch is likely to fall out.

    When I'm riding is almost the only time I have my wallet; I always
    carry it even though I have no use for coins, bills, and cards now
    that I'm not allowed to go in anywhere. I could put the needle into
    the pill pouch that I carry a new flosser in. (Also in no demand now
    that I'm not allowed to eat along the way.)

    But to fit into the card pocket, it really ought to be inside
    something stiff.

    Something stiff like my calling-card sewing kit.

    <http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/RUFFTEXT/SEWKIT/SEWKIT6h.JPG>

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips

    In my experience, pants clips work only for a short while. Back when I
    used them my cuffs gradually worked out of them as I pedaled. That's why
    I switched to safety pins. For me, these come undone only very rarely.

    The alternative I've considered is adding snaps to the cuff of the
    pants, either with the male and female directly in the fabric, or
    perhaps with one of them on a short bit of webbing sewed on in a way
    that would keep it hidden. But for me, the safety pins are adequate.

    BTW, it seems that when the pins have failed, it's been by bending
    enough to pop loose. Last year, to prevent pins rusting, I bought a pack
    of brass pins. Turns out their metal is thicker and much more resistant
    to bending. I've not had one pop loose yet.

    The downside is the thicker pin is much harder to push through denim.
    But I think it would be fine for sweat pants fabric.

    You are probably just wearing the wrong type of pants. Try "plus-4's".
    or "Knickers" I think they are called in the U.S., and your problems
    will go away :-)

    Oh, they'll be coming back! Just wait and see! :-)


    --
    - Frank Krygowski

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to frkrygow@sbcglobal.net on Sun Jan 17 08:24:20 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 18:53:54 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    On 1/16/2021 5:43 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 13:30:27 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    On 1/15/2021 11:27 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 15 Jan 2021 22:53:58 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:


    The last two times I went out, I came back without the safety pin in >>>>> the ankle of the right leg of my sweat pants. That is, of course, the >>>>> important pin -- the left leg isn't going to get caught in the chain. >>>>>
    So I decided that from now on, I'll sew that leg -- an enormous bar
    tack would be almost as quick as a pin, and much more secure.

    But if I ride with an important temporary stitch, it's probably a good >>>>> idea to take a needle and some coarse thread along, just in case. I >>>>> can weave the needle into a swatch of wool and put it and a piece of >>>>> thread into a "Pill Pouch" (teeny ziplock bag).

    So what can I stash a needle in that I always have with me?

    My little notebook is an obvious candidate for such things -- that's >>>>> where I keep spare bandaids (not in much demand now that I've stopped >>>>> sweating them off). But I'm always pulling the notebook out of my
    pocket and opening it; the pill pouch is likely to fall out.

    When I'm riding is almost the only time I have my wallet; I always
    carry it even though I have no use for coins, bills, and cards now
    that I'm not allowed to go in anywhere. I could put the needle into >>>>> the pill pouch that I carry a new flosser in. (Also in no demand now >>>>> that I'm not allowed to eat along the way.)

    But to fit into the card pocket, it really ought to be inside
    something stiff.

    Something stiff like my calling-card sewing kit.

    <http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/RUFFTEXT/SEWKIT/SEWKIT6h.JPG>

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips

    In my experience, pants clips work only for a short while. Back when I
    used them my cuffs gradually worked out of them as I pedaled. That's why >>> I switched to safety pins. For me, these come undone only very rarely.

    The alternative I've considered is adding snaps to the cuff of the
    pants, either with the male and female directly in the fabric, or
    perhaps with one of them on a short bit of webbing sewed on in a way
    that would keep it hidden. But for me, the safety pins are adequate.

    BTW, it seems that when the pins have failed, it's been by bending
    enough to pop loose. Last year, to prevent pins rusting, I bought a pack >>> of brass pins. Turns out their metal is thicker and much more resistant
    to bending. I've not had one pop loose yet.

    The downside is the thicker pin is much harder to push through denim.
    But I think it would be fine for sweat pants fabric.

    You are probably just wearing the wrong type of pants. Try "plus-4's".
    or "Knickers" I think they are called in the U.S., and your problems
    will go away :-)

    Oh, they'll be coming back! Just wait and see! :-)

    Certainly! All one has to do is get some gal with big boobs to be
    photographed in a pair and advertise then as being NEW! INOVATIVE!

    But along those lines, why not "virtual pants"? After all I an
    entertained by visions of naked bicycle riders and virtual clothing is
    only a rag away :-) https://edition.cnn.com/2020/05/05/us/naked-bike-ride-portland-coronavirus-trnd/index.html
    I note that Jay is not seen in the video.
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 16 23:20:49 2021
    On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 05:43:12 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    You are probably just wearing the wrong type of pants. Try "plus-4's".
    or "Knickers" I think they are called in the U.S., and your problems
    will go away :-)

    I think mine are plus sixes -- but they don't go at all well with four
    pairs of tights, three shirts under a jacket, and three pairs of thick
    socks.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 16 23:21:37 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 11:27:26 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips

    Clips don't work.

    I think that they were invented when cuffs on pants were in fashion,
    and wonder why they are still around now that nothing stops them from
    sliding down.

    Bicycle clips are sold in needlwork shops -- I gather that they do
    work for keeping quilts-in-progress rolled up.

    Hah! After writing that, I paged down some more and found a
    twelve-pack of quilt clips!


    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to frkrygow@sbcglobal.net on Sat Jan 16 23:18:50 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 13:30:27 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    The alternative I've considered is adding snaps to the cuff of the
    pants,

    That was my first thought, but I wear varying thicknesses of tights
    under the sweat pants. Then I considered adding a strap to close with
    a D ring, but that would leave an end flapping around, and at the rate
    that I sew, it would be shorts season before I figured out how to do
    it.

    Velcro has not, in my experience, been reliable.

    I used to add tabs to the ankles of my jeans, that could be snapped
    together. Either that or I had an antique pair of jeans with that
    feature, and couldn't figure out how to duplicate it. I think it was
    the latter, but it was long, long ago, and before I started taking
    notes.

    I should give a brass safety pin a try -- I'm almost out of the steel
    ones anyway. I don't like brass pins because they make bigger holes
    in the fabric, but sweat pants will wear out long before it could
    matter.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Sun Jan 17 12:53:58 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 23:18:50 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:

    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 13:30:27 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    The alternative I've considered is adding snaps to the cuff of the
    pants,

    That was my first thought, but I wear varying thicknesses of tights
    under the sweat pants. Then I considered adding a strap to close with
    a D ring, but that would leave an end flapping around, and at the rate
    that I sew, it would be shorts season before I figured out how to do
    it.

    Velcro has not, in my experience, been reliable.

    I used to add tabs to the ankles of my jeans, that could be snapped
    together. Either that or I had an antique pair of jeans with that
    feature, and couldn't figure out how to duplicate it. I think it was
    the latter, but it was long, long ago, and before I started taking
    notes.

    I should give a brass safety pin a try -- I'm almost out of the steel
    ones anyway. I don't like brass pins because they make bigger holes
    in the fabric, but sweat pants will wear out long before it could
    matter.

    https://www.amazon.com/puttees/s?k=puttees
    Expensive though ;=)
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Sun Jan 17 13:01:07 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 23:20:49 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:

    On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 05:43:12 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    You are probably just wearing the wrong type of pants. Try "plus-4's".
    or "Knickers" I think they are called in the U.S., and your problems
    will go away :-)

    I think mine are plus sixes -- but they don't go at all well with four
    pairs of tights, three shirts under a jacket, and three pairs of thick
    socks.

    I strongly recommend "insulated underwear". I once changed the starter
    on a fishing boat, at anchor off the coast of Maine in sub zero
    weather with nothing on but a cambric work shirt, dungarees and
    insulated underwear :-)
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Sun Jan 17 13:12:55 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 23:21:37 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:

    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 11:27:26 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    Why not
    https://www.amazon.com/bicycle-pant-clips/s?k=bicycle+pant+clips

    Clips don't work.

    I think that they were invented when cuffs on pants were in fashion,
    and wonder why they are still around now that nothing stops them from
    sliding down.

    Bicycle clips are sold in needlwork shops -- I gather that they do
    work for keeping quilts-in-progress rolled up.

    Don't they use "quilting frames" any more. I vaguely remember at a
    State Fair once seeing some ladies demonstrating how to make quilts
    and they something similar to a "sweater drying" frame except much
    larger.

    Hah! After writing that, I paged down some more and found a
    twelve-pack of quilt clips!
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Frank Krygowski@21:1/5 to Joy Beeson on Sun Jan 17 11:58:06 2021
    On 1/16/2021 11:21 PM, Joy Beeson wrote:


    Clips don't work.

    I think that they were invented when cuffs on pants were in fashion,
    and wonder why they are still around now that nothing stops them from
    sliding down.

    Hmm. I never thought of that. Seems likely!


    --
    - Frank Krygowski

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Tue Jan 19 09:13:13 2021
    On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 20:59:40 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:


    On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 13:12:55 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    Don't they use "quilting frames" any more. I vaguely remember at a
    State Fair once seeing some ladies demonstrating how to make quilts
    and they something similar to a "sweater drying" frame except much
    larger.

    I used to have one of those, and felt a bit guilty using it for a toy
    when my great-great grandmothers had to make do with much-inferior
    frames for serious work.

    I wonder what I did with it?

    I used it as a large embroidery hoop, but I did make a quilt out of a >patchwork door curtain; even though I used large stitches and stitched
    only along the edges of the blocks, it took a long and tedious time;
    no wonder that when quilts were serious bed covering, they held
    "quilting parties", so that several women could work at the same time,
    and they had somebody to talk to while they were sewing. Or at least
    so I gather from old books.

    The quilt clips are for machine quilting, when you roll the quilt from
    both sides toward the part you want to quilt, to make it fit through
    the throat of a sewing machine.

    I saw a quilting frame set up at Lowery's once, with a rail on which a
    sewing machine could slide back and forth to quilt a strip all the way >across. I presumed at the time that such things were sold to people
    who quilt quilts that other people have pieced. I don't recall how
    patterns were made; I think maybe the machine could be moved for and
    aft as well as back and forth.

    I thought that sewing machines with extra-wide throats were "long-arm >machines", but Wikipedia says that "long arm" refers to a machine a
    step bigger than the quilting frame I saw at Lowery's, with the >sewing-machine head on a small cherry-picker arm.

    I couldn't find a name for a sewing machine with an extra-large
    throat.

    I did find a picture of one, for sale for thousands of dollars.

    My mother was a 4H Agent for quite a few years and I think I remember
    that "some of the girls" did some quilt making as some sort of a
    project.

    I wonder, is the 4H still alive and well? At the time it seemed like a
    good idea, teach the girls how to cook and sew and the boys how to
    raise beef critters but now I suspect that life on the farm is
    somewhat different :-(
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 18 20:59:40 2021
    On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 13:12:55 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    Don't they use "quilting frames" any more. I vaguely remember at a
    State Fair once seeing some ladies demonstrating how to make quilts
    and they something similar to a "sweater drying" frame except much
    larger.

    I used to have one of those, and felt a bit guilty using it for a toy
    when my great-great grandmothers had to make do with much-inferior
    frames for serious work.

    I wonder what I did with it?

    I used it as a large embroidery hoop, but I did make a quilt out of a
    patchwork door curtain; even though I used large stitches and stitched
    only along the edges of the blocks, it took a long and tedious time;
    no wonder that when quilts were serious bed covering, they held
    "quilting parties", so that several women could work at the same time,
    and they had somebody to talk to while they were sewing. Or at least
    so I gather from old books.

    The quilt clips are for machine quilting, when you roll the quilt from
    both sides toward the part you want to quilt, to make it fit through
    the throat of a sewing machine.

    I saw a quilting frame set up at Lowery's once, with a rail on which a
    sewing machine could slide back and forth to quilt a strip all the way
    across. I presumed at the time that such things were sold to people
    who quilt quilts that other people have pieced. I don't recall how
    patterns were made; I think maybe the machine could be moved for and
    aft as well as back and forth.

    I thought that sewing machines with extra-wide throats were "long-arm machines", but Wikipedia says that "long arm" refers to a machine a
    step bigger than the quilting frame I saw at Lowery's, with the
    sewing-machine head on a small cherry-picker arm.

    I couldn't find a name for a sewing machine with an extra-large
    throat.

    I did find a picture of one, for sale for thousands of dollars.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

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  • From Frank Krygowski@21:1/5 to John B. on Tue Jan 19 14:49:36 2021
    On 1/18/2021 9:13 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 20:59:40 -0500, Joy Beeson wrote:

    I did make a quilt out of a
    patchwork door curtain; even though I used large stitches and stitched
    only along the edges of the blocks, it took a long and tedious time;
    no wonder that when quilts were serious bed covering, they held
    "quilting parties", so that several women could work at the same time,
    and they had somebody to talk to while they were sewing. Or at least
    so I gather from old books...

    My mother was a 4H Agent for quite a few years and I think I remember
    that "some of the girls" did some quilt making as some sort of a
    project.

    Regarding that sort of teamwork:

    It's an aspect of society that seems to have sadly diminished. I've
    greatly enjoyed the times I've been part of a team to fence in a garden,
    build a treehouse, remodel a room or a house, make sausage, etc. But it
    seems those opportunities are few and far between these days. Now we
    just hire someone, and they do it while we watch - or watch TV. I miss
    working with others.

    I think maybe I'll become Amish.


    --
    - Frank Krygowski

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  • From John B.@21:1/5 to frkrygow@sbcglobal.net on Wed Jan 20 05:42:19 2021
    On Tue, 19 Jan 2021 14:49:36 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    On 1/18/2021 9:13 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 20:59:40 -0500, Joy Beeson wrote:

    I did make a quilt out of a
    patchwork door curtain; even though I used large stitches and stitched
    only along the edges of the blocks, it took a long and tedious time;
    no wonder that when quilts were serious bed covering, they held
    "quilting parties", so that several women could work at the same time,
    and they had somebody to talk to while they were sewing. Or at least
    so I gather from old books...

    My mother was a 4H Agent for quite a few years and I think I remember
    that "some of the girls" did some quilt making as some sort of a
    project.

    Regarding that sort of teamwork:

    It's an aspect of society that seems to have sadly diminished. I've
    greatly enjoyed the times I've been part of a team to fence in a garden, >build a treehouse, remodel a room or a house, make sausage, etc. But it
    seems those opportunities are few and far between these days. Now we
    just hire someone, and they do it while we watch - or watch TV. I miss >working with others.

    I think maybe I'll become Amish.

    Along that line, I wonder how many can use a hammer to drive nails, successfully, any more :-)
    Or know that the face of a nailing hammer isn't flat, for that matter
    :-)
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

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  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 22 13:34:28 2021
    On Tue, 19 Jan 2021 09:13:13 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    I wonder, is the 4H still alive and well? At the time it seemed like a
    good idea, teach the girls how to cook and sew and the boys how to
    raise beef critters but now I suspect that life on the farm is
    somewhat different :-(

    My sisters took boy's 4-H, and there were boys in my girl's 4-H club.

    I took cooking and sewing. I remember trying to make smaller cookies
    while using exactly the same amount of dough. I *think* that I
    realized that in order to make them smaller, you have to make them
    smaller soon enough to get three more-or-less matching cookies to
    exhibit.

    (The instructions read that one must measure out exactly the same
    amount of dough every single time to make the cookies uniform. I did
    not see the contradiction with "these cookies are too big".)

    In those days, starting over with a fresh batch of ingredients would
    never have occurred to me. Might have occured to a bystander who
    wanted more rejected cookies, though.

    We were well off by 1940's standards, but waste was a cardinal sin.
    I still feel that inanimate objects have rights.

    --
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/
    The above message is a Usenet post.

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  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Sat Jan 23 09:56:12 2021
    On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 13:34:28 -0500, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:

    On Tue, 19 Jan 2021 09:13:13 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    I wonder, is the 4H still alive and well? At the time it seemed like a
    good idea, teach the girls how to cook and sew and the boys how to
    raise beef critters but now I suspect that life on the farm is
    somewhat different :-(

    My sisters took boy's 4-H, and there were boys in my girl's 4-H club.

    I took cooking and sewing. I remember trying to make smaller cookies
    while using exactly the same amount of dough. I *think* that I
    realized that in order to make them smaller, you have to make them
    smaller soon enough to get three more-or-less matching cookies to
    exhibit.

    (The instructions read that one must measure out exactly the same
    amount of dough every single time to make the cookies uniform. I did
    not see the contradiction with "these cookies are too big".)

    In those days, starting over with a fresh batch of ingredients would
    never have occurred to me. Might have occured to a bystander who
    wanted more rejected cookies, though.

    We were well off by 1940's standards, but waste was a cardinal sin.
    I still feel that inanimate objects have rights.

    "Waste a cardinal sin"... I remember my folks bought an innerspring
    mattress for their bed and I remember how they bragged about it and
    told friends how comfortable it was... and stored the old mattress in
    the attic "in case we might need it some time"

    And as a small child I wore girl's underpants as all my mother's older
    sisters had girl children and "one didn't throw good clothes away just
    because they were outgrown". You passed them on to "someone that needs
    them".

    But I will admit that my wife of 49 years still has clothes that she
    probably couldn't get into if her life depended on it and when I say
    something like, "If it doesn't fit Throw it Away!" she says something
    like. "But, it's still good" and hides it away in the closet :-)
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

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  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to frkrygow@sbcglobal.net on Sat Jan 23 21:58:02 2021
    On Sat, 16 Jan 2021 13:30:27 -0500, Frank Krygowski
    <frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    BTW, it seems that when the pins have failed, it's been by bending
    enough to pop loose. Last year, to prevent pins rusting, I bought a pack
    of brass pins. Turns out their metal is thicker and much more resistant
    to bending. I've not had one pop loose yet.

    The downside is the thicker pin is much harder to push through denim.
    But I think it would be fine for sweat pants fabric.

    I came home with both pins today -- switching to brass did the trick.

    I noticed that I frequently grabbed where the pin is when lifting my
    right ankle over the saddle; that's probably how the steel pin got
    bent.

    One side of the old-jail steps was clear, and I did three laps before
    going on to the courthouse. There is a doormat at the top of the
    steps; I had thought that that door was nailed shut. It does have
    hinges, but no sign of a knob or any other way to open it from the
    outside.

    So what does an emergency exit need with a doormat? Come St.
    Patrick's day, I can go into the museum and ask, if California has an unprecedented attack of common sense and doesn't spread the new
    strains around. (Alas, New York is even crazier.)

    I climbed the east steps of the courthouse six times instead of three
    because I couldn't get to the sourth steps without passing too close
    to the protesters. The were very polite, simply standing silent and motionless, holding signs that said "pray for an end to abortion". I'm
    praying that they somehow avoid the trap that the temperance movement
    fell for.

    But it's soooo tempting, and looks soooo quick and soooo easy . . .
    and would lead, if successful, to aborting all children who are
    inconvenient to the state. Any mother who objects is obviously in
    need of a guardian to make decisions for her.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

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