CONGRATULATIONS TO LINDA WADE FOR WINNING THE FEBRUARY GIVE A WAY!!
I will get with you to get you your gift!
I am in a swap where we have to use our sewing machines that have all the neat stitches on it to make the card. I thought and thought and could not come up with anything. Then it hit me. American Flag. I was going to sew star embroidery on the left side and then for the stripes do the different stitches out of red, white and blue thread. When it was time to do that I already was out of the mood so I thought that I could take scraps that I had sewn together and cut out the card. Put my star in the left hand corner and then do all the different stitches and writing on the card. This is what I came up with. PEACE AND LOVE! You can take the girl out of the hippy environment but you cant take the hippie out of the girl! 60’s rock!
PEACE!
I sure have enjoyed the Olympics so far this year. I was reading something this morning about how during 1964 the entired United States Skating team died in a plane crash. My parents must have shielded us from news and of course we did not have the Internet like we do today so that may be one reason I did not know about it.
You can read about it here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabena_Flight_548
After all these months , well since October I finally got to meet the finder of my message in the bottle, Susan of Panama City, FL. I had lost her address and if any of you readers recall I posted a message on here if she saw it to contact me.
I remembered where she said her place of employment was and I went there with Aunt Jan. She was startled when we asked if Susan ___ works here? She then said “I am Susan.” She was very nice and she gave me her email address and her home address so I can mail her something real soon.
Susan if you are reading this, it was a pleasure to meet you. I hope to get some more bottles made up and find somebody to take them far out to seea for me. ANY VOLUNTEERS? I would love to send them out in all areas on the coast!
Juliet Madsen of Parker quilts on a long-arm machine in her home. Quilting is her new calling, having been badly injured in 2004 while serving as a paramedic in Iraq.
Juliet Madsen of Parker quilts on a long-arm machine in her home. Quilting is her new calling, having been badly injured in 2004 while serving as a paramedic in Iraq.
This patriotic quilt was designed, pieced and quilted by Juliet Madsen. She will send it next month to a wounded U.S. soldier in a hospital in Germany, from which evacuated troops start their journey back to the United States.
This patriotic quilt was designed, pieced and quilted by Juliet Madsen. She will send it next month to a wounded U.S. soldier in a hospital in Germany, from which evacuated troops start their journey back to the United States.
‘Wild About Flowers’
is theme of
2010 Colorado State Fair
quilt contest
Millie’s Sewing Center of Pueblo and the Colorado State Fair invite quilters to enter an annual contest in August. This year’s theme is “Wild About Flowers.”
Prize money of $1,700 will be divided between first, second and third places in amateur and master divisions. The entry fee is $5 per quilt, which must be an original design and have been made within the past 24 months.
Judging will be based 35 percent on visual statement, 35 percent on design and originality and 30 percent on workmanship.
Entry deadline is Aug. 26, and the winning quilts will be on display during the state fair, scheduled Aug. 27-Sept. 6 in the Creative Arts Building at the fairgrounds in Pueblo.
For entry forms or questions about the contest, call 800-876-4567, ext. 2080, or go to http://www.colorado statefair.com.
By Sherida Warner
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Army veteran Juliet Madsen stitches fabric these days, but not long ago she was in Iraq, stitching together wounded soldiers, prisoners, even civilians.
As a paramedic traveling with the 82nd Airborne division, Madsen herself was injured in 2004 when the Army truck in which she was riding was blown up by an IED, an improvised explosive device.
She’s lucky to have survived the detonation that ended her 17 1/2-year service career and left her with a traumatic brain injury.
Madsen, who now lives in Parker, later had a stroke and needed several surgeries.
Through physical therapy and vocational rehabilitation provided by Veterans Affairs, Madsen found a new calling. She is now a long-arm machine quilter, working on a 14-foot Gammill with Statler Stitcher given to her by the VA. Her business is called Stroke of Luck Quilting & Design.
Not only does she use quilting to creatively express her day-to-day struggles from her Iraq experience — she also deals with post traumatic stress disorder — but Madsen completes quilts that are donated to evacuated troops in military hospitals in Germany. These servicemen and women are beginning their journey back to the United States. (She was flown to such a hospital when she was injured.)
Some quilt tops are made by other volunteers, Madsen says, but “95 percent of the quilting is done by me.”
She likes to try new fabrics and designs, especially “bright, vibrant colors.”
Recently, Madsen was recognized for her dedication with an Outreach Award given by the Colorado Quilting Council. Through an Ultimate Sew-In and Auction in Denver, she raised $8,790 last year to help fund the 2010 National Veterans Wheelchair Games scheduled July 4–9 in Denver.
About 600 athletes with disabilities such as spinal cord injuries, amputations and neurological problems will participate.
“It’s an enormous undertaking” for the city of Denver, Madsen says, enthusiasm flowing from her voice like light from a bulb.
At her Ultimate Sew-In, 54 quilters gathered to piece quilts with fabric and thread supplied by Madsen. Any color could be used, and quilts were made for both genders.
As a result, more than 300 finished quilts were sold at auction. Rather than keep them, winning bidders put their names and messages to wounded veterans on labels that were attached to the quilts.
Those then were sent on to Germany, while the money raised stayed in Colorado.
Madsen continues to collect quilts from volunteers and stitches more herself.
She and her husband, a retired Black Hawk pilot who now helps care for her, are the parents of three children, ages 17, 15 and 12.
“Family is most important to me,” Madsen says, adding that it’s been difficult for them to adjust to her ailments and much slower pace.
When making a quilt, she doesn’t use a pattern “because they can be hard to follow, and I get frustrated easily.”
But her goal is to design and sew a quilt symbolizing every branch of the armed forces — even one depicting a U.S. Navy Super Hornet fighter jet — which will be “wicked cool,” she says.
Madsen deserves a big salute from all of us for her extraordinary efforts and dedication to her fellow wounded and disabled veterans.
E-mail Sherida.Warner@ gjsentinel.com.
In the past I have posted cards I have received. Now is the time for you to see the ones I made to go out in swaps this week. Hope you enjoy.

2 of 4 "M" Group.. I used scraps of whatever I could find for the outside borders. This one even has Christmas and Halloween together. You cant tell it. It blends so well.

Card 4 of 4 "M" Group. Look how I used my embroidery built in my machine to write M's and Men on the card!!!

This is a "shaker" card. It is a card that you make, put all kinds of loose goodies in the clear envelope, seal it up and when you shake it up the stuff moves all over the place. I was in a Shaker Group and St. Patricks Group and I liked the concept so much I made both cards the same. I hope the ladies like them. There are beads, 4 leaf gold clover coin, 4 leaf clovers and glitter!!!
Today was my parents, William Thomas Epps (Billy) and Retha Dean Fitzpatrick Epps 58th Anniversary. They had only been married 24 years when my father died. In this picture you will see Mother and Daddy, Karen, David who is no longer with us, and Chris (me). Daddy died 1976 and Mother died 1994.
Mother cooked for me today.. Now you all wonder how that can happen and she is no longer with us.. Well I would like to know myself. I had a hen that was in the freezer that during Thanksgiving , Wal-Mart had buy one hen get one free. I got two. Froze one and cooked the other. We had to dig in the bottom of the freezer for some corn meal I had in there that I get each year during the fall at Homestead Hollow in Springville, AL. They have an arts and craft fall and winter show and it is very nice. The corn is ground there while you watch. So naturally since there are not any preservatives it has to be frozen. While we were going through the freezer I found the hen. I took it out day before yesterday and it has been thawing in the refrigerator.
Today at 1 pm I decided to put it in the crockpot. I washed the hen in cold water, put it in the crockpot and put water about half way up the sides of the hen. Then I got a stick of butter and put it inside of the hen. Turned it on high and left it. This evening around 5:30 pm I looked at it and it was not done. I took it out and put it in the enamel roaster I have and poured the broth all over the chicken and put it in the oven at 450 degrees for about 1 1/2 hours. You just have to watch it to determine your temperature in your stove. They all are different. In the meantime I had some raw dressing that I made for Christmas and it was frozen in a freezer bag. It also had been thawing out in the refrigerator. I sprayed Pam on a pyrex dish and poured in the dressing and cooked it in the oven the last 30 or 40 minutes the hen was in there. On top of the stove was fresh pinto’s that I had canned this summer with some of the chicken broth and anyone that can knows the canned food is already cooked all you are doing it just heating it up. I had it on real low and it just simmered with the broth. I never think my cooking is good but I promise you I believe Mother cooked this for me. It tasted just like hers.. Oh my it was so good. My mother could cook better than anybody that I know. We could not wait sometimes until supper. Her food was awesome. This time this meal that she cooked for us was awesome! I have enough for tomorrow and the next day.. I can sew like mad and not have to worry about cooking. I am proud I finally made something that I absolutely love. I plan on taking the left over broth and freezing it in little containers so when I need something to season the bean..well I have it.. MMM DEAN.. that is a saying in our family that our father used to say to her when he took a bite of something she cooked. MMMPH Dean!!! “It” will know what I mean, dont you IT????
Happy Valentines Day and Anniversary to my parents . After all if it were not for them, I would not be here writing this would I?