Monday, December 28, 2015

Over this past Christmas week, my Romanian neighbors had a wonderful time.  Yes, I was peeking and listening to their parties and loud music.  I only had to look down the street to peek.  I met the man who lives down the street one day when his truck almost knocked over an electrical pole because he was hauling a large, overly tall, trailer.  He didn't see what happened and so I ran down the street to tell him.  And then I heard his accent, and warmth and good memories flooded over me.  He was Romanian.  When I was eighteen, I dated a man from Romania named Horia.  He was quite something.

This past week, when my son was coming and going, visiting friends and relatives for Christmas, and I was baking or cooking, or sitting... I heard the music.  Wonderful, joyful, deeply resonant, perhaps gypsy music.  And saw my neighbor and two other young men riding "hoverboard" type things while they pushed their children in strollers.  They were racing the strollers up and down the street while they rode circular hoverboards.  I didn't think "only in America", I thought - how innovative and fun-loving they are!  I didn't see their wives but once or twice, yet the men were taking care of the children with such a fun-loving attitude.  They resonated Freedom.

The Freedom of America.  In America, people from other lands can come and live and work and raise their children without a care as to who hears them, who sees them, who likes their gypsy music, or who doesn't.  It's what my father fought for.  For the Flag of the United States of America.  Not simply the world-known symbol of Freedom, but the blood and glory of the price of real Freedom.

Americans traveling abroad today are told not to display anything "American", in case we should be a target.  A target, each of us.  Each of us carries The Right To Vote.  The Right to say yeah or nea.  That is what the target is.  It is said by the story of Revelations that at the end, we will have a choice, that all peoples will have the right to vote yeah or nea.  We in America have that inherent choice now, in every action we take.  We are a Nation that has struggled very hard to develop and maintain true Freedom, and we still work on making sure each of us have choices, and that our right to choose is recognized by all.  The Right to Vote, however, is the Right of every American citizen who lives within the law.

My Romanian neighbors will always be Romanian, unless they choose to become United States citizens.  Unless they choose to become citizens of the United States-the Freedom of choice is open to anyone still here in America.  The Right To Vote as an American, to uphold the Constitution of our Nation.  My father fought so that my Romanian, Syrian, Pakistani, Indian, French, Canadian, and American neighbors could run free down the street with their children.

Honor the Flag, Say The Pledge Of Allegiance, Live The Freedom.


Wednesday, December 2, 2015

I have posted some videos on YouTube showing me quilting Quilt No. 1 with some of the different sewing machines I own.  The quilts after this will be quilted a little differently, with straight-line stitching instead of each individual square being quilted.






Monday, November 30, 2015



The first quilt is coming along very nicely.  The sewing machines I have used in making this quilt so far are:

1891 Singer model VS2 treadle
1923 Singer model 128 handcrank
1937 Singer model 15-88 treadle
1952 Singer model 15-91 electric
1968-1972 Singer model 237 as an electric.
and
me- at least 1/2 of this quilt was hand-quilted by me, which is what took a longer time than if I had done it all by machine.

A few more blocks to quilt, then the borders and binding.




This quilt is now finished.  The last areas of quilting and the binding were sewn with my 1891 White model VS2 b sewing machine, shown below.



This quilt was also trimmed on my new (old) re-painted board that was our train board and is now my quilt trimming board.  It is painted with an American flag.


A note about this quilt- being the first, it is special.  It is also special because many different machines were used in the piecing and in machine quilting.  Additionally, many of the squares were hand-quilted by me.  The quilt met with a slight accident toward the end of quilting - a grease or oil stain got on it from somewhere on the antique White sewing machine treadle, even though I take a lot of precautions to prevent such an occurrence.  In removing the stain, a variation resulted in the fabric which means this quilt will not be given away, but I will keep it as the "first" quilt in honor of my father and his Service. In addition, I may be doing more hand-quilting on this quilt, even though it is finished as it is.  My original work in quilting, many years ago, was as a hand-quilter, on muslin whole-cloth quilts.  I may add a touch of that to this quilt by adding more hand-quilting.

I will be adding the motif shown below to the blocks of Quilt 1.  The flower motif will represent American soil.


Wednesday, November 11, 2015



American Experience - The Battle of The Bulge (The video on YouTUbe has been removed, the PBS DVD can be purchased at this link)

at minute counter 1:12:51 is my grandfather, Chester T. Fickett

Here is another good documentary of The Battle of The Bulge






4Troops - "For Freedom"

Sunday, November 8, 2015



The Honorary Sewing Machine


My father's 1883 White VS2a (BS) sewing machine, that I am using to piece quilt number three.




A short video showing me piecing the quilt top with this machine.


Tuesday, November 3, 2015

I have decided to assign a "task" to each of the sewing machines that I will be using to make the Quilts For Veterans (c).  The four oldest machines will be for piecing the quilt tops.  The two machines from 1919 and 1926 will be for joining rows together, and two machines from 1952 and from 1968-72 will be for machine quilting should I decide to machine-quilt the quilts.


Below:  1872 Wheeler and Wilson No. 3, 1872 Howe (Stockwell) Model A, and 1897 Singer model 27 (against the wall) and in front of them, on the right is the 1891 Singer Fiddlebase model Vs2.  These will be for piecing.


On the left in the foreground in the photo above is the 1919 Singer model 66-3 that will be for joining rows.  Below is the 1923 Singer model 128 Hand-crank machine that will also be joining the rows.


And in the photo below are a 1952 Singer model 15-91 on the right and a Singer model 237 from 1968-1972 on the left.  These will be doing the machine quilting.


In addition, I have my 1937 Singer model 15-88 in the portable treadle which will be the machine I use should any of the other machines have a sewing issue.


I will be adding my 1931 White Family Rotary electric to the line-up as well.  The labels will be sewn on with a modern desktop portable sewing machine, shown below.



Update:  The 1931 White model 31 was donated to honor my father's generosity.  The model 237 electric has been sold, as has the 1923 Singer model 128 hand crank.  These machines were "extra" in that I wasn't using them enough for the quilts.  I have added a newer, modern machine, the Brother LX3014, a fairly inexpensive but sturdy 2016 machine.


Monday, October 26, 2015











WAR

I currently have many sewing machines, and I am researching the dates of the wars that the United States has been in, to ensure I have a sewing machine from the time period of each war.

I have been using a 1937 Singer model 15-88 for the quilts, but what I may be doing is rotating among my machines and the different time periods,  in order to reflect all of our wars, and all of our veterans. I seem to have machines from just after the wars ending, when our veterans would be coming home.

Elias Howe received the first U.S Patent for a sewing machine in 1846


-Sewing machine invented - (1846 1st U.S. Patent)




Current machines / Time periods

French and Indian War -1754 to 1763

American War of Independence or the Revolutionary War - 1775 to 1783

War of 1812 -1812 to 1815

First Seminole War -1816 to 1819

Second Seminole War -1835 to 1842

Texas Revolution -October 2, 1835 to April 21, 1836

Mexican-American War 1846 to 1847

Third Seminole War -1855 to 1858.
War Between The States (American Civil War) - 1861 to 1865
Spanish-American War - 1898
Philippine-American War 1899 to 1902
1891 White VS IIb Treadle Head
1901 White Family Rotary Treadle Head


-World War I - 28 July 1914 to 11 November 1918
1916 Singer 66-1 "Red-Eye" back-clamp Treadle Head (with handcrank, 66-3)

-World War II - 1939 to 1945
1934 Singer 99-13 electric (Gram's machine, sewed Mom's baby clothes, separate)-converted to handcrank
1937 Singer 15-88 Treadle Head (with handcrank)

-Korean War  - 25 June 1950 to 27 July 1953
1952 Singer 15-91 electric - Dad gave me, he served in Korean War

-Vietnam War - 1 November 1955 to 30 April 1975
1959 Singer Spartan (used as a handcrank machine)

Two  1968-1972 Singer Model 237s

-Operation Urgent Fury was a 1983 United States Invasion of Grenada
1984 Singer 6212C Electric

-Gulf War - Iraq - 2 August 1990 to 28 February 1991
-War In Afghanistan -  7 October 2001 to 28 December 2014
-War in Afghanistan - 2014 to present
-Military Intervention Against ISIS / ISIL - 2014 to present

-I used a Singer Model 6012 for the years 1989 to 2005, but no longer have it.
-Portable Mini Sewing Machine (HandyStitch or Singer Stitch Sew Quick) - plastic and electric - will represent wives, husbands and children who might be doing their own mending when their service person was or is away on duty. At the least, it will be used to sew labels or an American Flag patch to the quilts. I may be using the American Flag patches as labels - solidarity from the family of one veteran to another veteran.

-2015-2016 Brother LX3014 electric sewing machine
__________________________________________________________________
1931 White Model 31 donated to a new owner in honor of my father's generosity.
__________________________________________________________________

I also currently have:

1950s Gateway Junior Model NP-1 (toy machine)
Five 1953-1955 Singer Model 20s
1 1930s Singer Model 20
12 1950s-present hand-held sewing machines, made in China
5  1950s Dexter hand-held sewing machines, made in the USA
2015-2016 Brother LX3014



Thursday, October 22, 2015

Quilt labels

I have decided that since all of my quilts will be in memory of my father, Thomas J. O'Meara, Sr, and his Service in the Unites States Army during the Korean War, that instead of labels stating that, each quilt will have a patch of the American Flag sewn at one corner.

Whenever war, or conflict, or famine, or earthquakes, or mass trauma hits the world, I find myself saying "Where are the Americans?" "Where are we?"   We are right here, and always, right there to help, in the middle of it, helicopters, boats, planes, people, boots, all there to help - and our flag says it all.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

§ 6. Time and Occasions for Display.

" a) It is the universal custom to display the flag only from sunrise to sunset on buildings and on stationary flagstaffs in the open. However, when a patriotic effect is desired, the flag may be displayed 24 hours a day if properly illuminated during the hours of darkness."

From:

4 U.S. Code - Chapter One - The Flag



4 U.S. Code § 8 - Respect for flag





The Pledge of Allegiance

“I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

YouTube Video of The Pledge Of Allegiance

Red Skelton's Pledge of Allegiance

John Wayne : The Pledge of Allegiance

Saturday, October 17, 2015

I found another Organization making quilts for service personnel :

Fallen Hero Quilts
The next two quilt tops are cut and ready to be pieced:


I am considering machine-quilting the next two.  I would like to have three quilts done within a month or so, and machine-quilting is much faster.  In the War Between The States (The Civil War), the Army did not provide blankets, and quilts were made as quickly as possible.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

I am machine-piecing the quilts, but hand-quilting. This means there is more time involved,  but I feel,  more thoughts for those who serve.



Friday, October 9, 2015

Organizations similar to my mission:

Fallen Hero Quilts

Home Of The Brave Quilts

Quilts of Honor

Quilts Of Valor

The above are large organizations, and you are encouraged to work with them or donate through them if you choose to.

My mission started as a way to honor my father's service in the United States Army, and this has been the only way I have been able to move forward since his recent death.  My father was a veteran who did not accept many non-government benefits in our society that are there to assist them.  I know he felt someone else needed assistance more than he did.  I have decided that a further way to honor his sacrifice of serving in our armed forces is to help to provide a quilt for each veteran that I can.  The organizations above, as I said, are very well organized.  I did consider making quilts to give to them to distribute.  The problem with that for me was I knew I would be wondering who received the quilt (s).  My mission is to make it more personal if I can.  I plan on contacting the government services that can help with recipients, such as The Veterans Administration, but I also am looking more locally into the situations of our homeless vets.

I grew up here on Cape Cod, and my family lived here together for many years. Cape Cod has changed since I first came here to live 46 years ago.  There are more homeless, there is more crime, there are more people in need.  I hope to establish a working relationship with a shelter or organization here on Cape Cod that will help me get my quilts to homeless veterans.

I will update my progress with the label for this blog "Mission".