Happy New Year! 2023

Happy New Year! Welcome to 2023. I hope your year is off to a good start. We have celebrated the new year with a wonderful church service this morning and a glorified Sunday afternoon nap! I love a good Sunday afternoon nap!

This new year finds me more thankful than ever to be alive and having health to do the things I want to do. It is a new chance to do things that are fulfilling and give life meaning. It is a chance to start over. The past few years haven’t been much fun for most of us. But here we are at the beginning of a brand new year once again. This year holds all kinds of positive possibilities that bring us hope that things are going to get better.

A new year. A new start. A “do over” so to speak. I’m all for that!

This is the year I hope to start a king sized quilt for my bed. I have PLANS y’all! This quilt is going to be made from the Nantucket Summer fabrics by Camille Roskelly. I love the blues in that line of fabric (see the picture below). I have done a good bit of dreaming about this quilt but have yet to get going on it. I have most of the fabric that is needed but it is patiently waiting for me to get started.

Some of the Nantucket Summer blues that I plan to use in my king size quilt.

As far as a pattern for this quilt, I am thinking of using the Swoon pattern. I love how other people’s quilts turn out in this fabric. I am afraid it will mean a lot piecing (meaning it will be slow going) and I guess that’s why I haven’t picked it up to get started yet.

I have started another quilt though! I actually have a few other works in progress, all in various stages. Mostly, I am working on some lap sized quilts for the couch. I want to have something new for after all the Christmas decorations are taken down. I am hoping to work on a house refresh tomorrow.

This is my current project. This pattern is named “Sweetcake” in the “Oh Happy Day!” book by Corey Yoder of @Corianderquilts. The Fabric is called “Happy Days” by Sherri and Chelsi from @aquiltinglife.

(above: Sweetcake piecing all cut up and ready to sew!)

Last year, after a serious house disaster, I had to leave the Christmas tree up most of the year (there was no place to put it if I did take it down). My tree was decorated for Valentines day and Easter before I could find a way to take it down. It was a joy to have the lights up for such a long time. Last year’s Christmas tree took on new life the longer it stayed up and it was fun to re-decorate it for each season. We will see how long it takes to get the Christmas tree down this year; I am in no hurry again!

That tree getting extra chances last year reminds me of how God offers us renewal in each season of our lives. He carefully rearranges and redecorates our lives with things that matter most; family, friends, “Framily”, endurance in trials, comfort when our hearts are broken and on and on. And about the time we think it’s over, He gives new babies to remind us that life is still worth living and should be cherished.

I am thankful that the Lord gives us second and third chances. We can have a new start by coming into relationship with Him. He offers forgiveness of past mistakes and wipes the slate clean and keeps giving us chances to start new. Scripture says that He will ultimately make all things new when we get to heaven and I am looking forward to that!

2 Corinthians 5:17 says He also, right now, offers to make us into new creatures. He wants to give us that coveted fresh start. “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” The old passes away. What a promise!

Psalm 103:12 says that “as far as the east is from the west, so far does he remove our transgressions from us.” We are created anew when we come to Him with an humble faith asking to be made new. That internal renewal is offered and accomplished at the point we choose Him and, thankfully, every day after that forever. If you don’t know who Jesus is, you can read about Him in the book of John in the Holy Bible. That’s a good place to start in getting to know who He is.

We all have a chance to do things differently now that it’s a new year. I hope that you will choose to do it with Jesus in your heart this year.

2023 used to sound like it would be so far off in the distance! But this is where we are today! May the Lord bless you this year as you choose to start anew. And, I hope you are starting the year with fresh desire to create beautiful new things! I plan to do that with quilts!

The Creator

Creating things, originally, was God’s idea.  “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” (Genesis 1:1).  He created the sun, moon and stars.  He created plants, trees and all living creatures.  He looked at all He made and was satisfied with it and called it “good.”

And then He created humans in His image.  We are image bearers of God.  He lovingly, carefully, miraculously, with forethought and intention made men and women to bear His likeness.  That blows my mind!  

Have you ever thought about how miraculous the formation of a human body is?   It takes trillions of cells forming into other cells, and all the sequences have to go just right for a human to be produced.  Amazing!

Many of us have a deep desire to create something good with our hands.  It is so much fun to see the end result of the thousand decisions we make when sewing a quilt.  Picking a pattern, deciding which fabrics to use and where exactly they should go for the best outcome.  Picking thread, cutting out the fabric (hopefully in the right sizes the first time), piecing the blocks (my favorite part!), seaming them all together with sashing and borders, layering them with batting, then backing them.  THEN comes the knitting together of the whole thing — the actual quilting where the pieces become one whole beautiful product.  The top, middle and backing get stitched together to make a sturdy yet comfortable quilt that is used to bring warmth to whoever gets to use it.     

It’s a such a satisfying process to me. I look at the end result and (hopefully) say “that’s good!”

If you think about it for a minute, you might realize that we follow God’s pattern when we create a quilt.  Like He took a bazillion nano particles of all shapes and sizes and fuzed them together to form a body with an exterior fleshly appearance, we quilters take fabric, chop it up and sew it back together to make a quilt top (the pretty part of a quilt). Albeit not nearly as complicated as forming a human, quilts can be particularly fussy to put together as each piece has to be added at the right spot or the final product won’t look right.  I suppose that’s true when it comes to making a human too, now that I think of it.  🙂

God added the inner workings (like quilt batting) between the flesh and the spirit. He gave us a heart to beat, kidneys, liver and bowels so that our body would function as intended. He gave us a spirit so that we might know Him.  He then carefully knitted us together in our mother’s womb; you could say He quilted us together to make us a whole human body.  He created us!

Job 10:11 says  “You clothed me with skin and flesh, and knit me together with bones and sinews.”

Psalm 139:13, “For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother’s womb.”

I have often wondered why God would make the world with humans.  In our flesh we are flawed sinful creatures and we messed up His good creation with poor decision making and downright selfishness.  But He created us with a purpose; He sees and knows things we don’t know.  He made us with all our character traits, physical appearances and quirks— and then gave us the freedom to choose or reject Him.  He loves us and wants a relationship with us.  He is our Father; we are His children if we decide to love Him back.

I am a mother.  It’s a privilege I don’t take for granted.  As I grew up, I always wanted to be someone’s mom.  Children are a gift that teaches about who God is.  In dealing with my children I learned how deep His love for me must be.  Something happened to me when I heard their first cry.  My heart changed, it grew with a deep love for this crying helpless creature.  At that point I knew I would give my life for them. And that’s what I did.  I gave up my preferences, time, effort, money, sleep, and I don’t remember what else.  All that mattered was that they grew up to know God.  That was my mission.  

God looked at the children He created and decided that He would give His life for us.  That’s why Jesus came.  Love was his motivation.  Mercy, grace and redemption was His gift that stitches us together into a complete child of the King.

As a mom, I learned to deeply appreciate the vastness of God’s love for me.  In the letting them go, as they grew up and moved away, I saw how hard it must have been for God to let His Son leave heaven for a mission that would include much suffering.  There is only one explanation for this: it had to be a love “that surpasses knowledge” (Ephesians 3:19), and is as “high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is His steadfast love toward those who fear Him” (Psalm 103:11).

Today, as you create beautiful things in your home, sewing studio, kitchen, or work place remember that God loves you and created you with a purpose.  May His love fill your heart and fuel you to keep creating good things.