Mavis Quinn – Bleat, Clay, Blubber

Mavis Quinn, Bleat, Clay, Blubber
Mavis Quinn, Bleat, Clay, Blubber

This is a Special Report by intenerate (illiterate, Ed.) cub reporter, Mavis Quinn…

Hello Dreary Readers,

I am happy to say that I am back, out of jail, on parole, and ready for my next assignment for my great magazine Where Cuckoo Women Create.com.org.biz.

As you may know my Editor-Who-Is-Large sent me on a year-long assignment called Bleat, Clay, Blubber, based upon a best-selling book by that name.

You see, Marvin had decided to “spend some time apart” from me so he could “delve more deeply into his analog radio repair business.” Where have I heard that before?

I was shattered to say the lease, so Editor thought it would be best for me to go abroad. She asked me to cover the wool industry in New Zealand, the pottery industry in China, and the whale bone jewelry of the peoples of southern Argentina. These places all seemed really, really far away, but what Editor wants Editor gets!

In the end what I really found was my inner fleece and the meaning of strife.

Read on…

Faithful companion, Tanya
Faithful companion, Tanya

For the first leg of the journey I spent three months in the wilds of New Zealand, living with a flock of sheep and a dog called Tanya.

Canned or fresh - there really is nothing like opossum for dinner!
Canned or fresh – there really is nothing like opossum for dinner!

I lived on opposum meat and kiwi fruit.

My flock of sheep - the little one was my favorite - Mitsy
My flock of sheep – the little one was my favorite – Mitsy

Not too much happened, but I am happy to report to you all that yes, sheep do indeed bleat. And often. AND LOUDLY! And they do have a lot of wool.

My ship - the Turpentine nosebleed, or something like that
My ship – the Turpentine Nosebleed, or something like that

The first mission accomplished and it wasn’t a day before I was shipped, and I mean on a ship – for seven weeks – to Mongolia to live in a yurt and explore where the best clay comes from. Who knew Mongolia had clay? I thought it was all dust storms and beef.

My Mongolian host family
My Mongolian host family

The first thing I realized is that there would be no yummy Mongolian Beef dinner like the stuff I get at my local Mongolian restaurant, The Dusty Yurt.

This might have been one of my sheep
This might have been one of my sheep

To “welcome” me to the village, my host family made me a special dinner – roasted whole lamb. It looked just like my favorite lamb Mitsy, and I burst into tears and ran out of the yurt!

After that I took to my grubby yurt bed and didn’t come out for a week.

When I did emerge, I set about the task my editor sent me on – finding good clay.

My Mongolian yurt and the "hills"
My Mongolian yurt and the “hills”

The locals were very kind and shared their clay with me by slathering it on my face each day, before sending me to “watch” for storms at the top of the highest hill.

KYRT Radio
KYRT Radio

It was not a happy time for me, as these people listen to the carpet radio all day and it just made me miss Marvin all the more. I begged Editor to send me elsewhere and she happily obliged.

The Kon Tiki - not as big as the Turpentine Nosebleed
The Kon Tiki – not as big as the Turpentine Nosebleed

Traveling alternately by ox cart, camel, rickshaw, the shoulders of a Yeti, the Kon Tiki, and a canoe carved out of an endangered Lupo tree, I arrived at the final leg of my journey, a stay with the native population of the Southern Argentinian coast.

My host family in Tierra del Fuego
My host family in Terra del Fuego

Meeting my host family was nice, but I really felt overdressed for the occasion.

They did have jewelry, but not so much whale bones. More feathers, actually.

Tierra del Fuego - My home for 37 days
Terra del Fuego – My home for 37 days

They had a lot more birds, and a few seals.

My host family in Tierra del Fuego in their Sunday best
My host family in Tierra del Fuego in their Sunday best

I didn’t understand a word they said, and I was very cold all of the time. Everyone got dressed up (in feathers) on Sundays (or Thursdays – I couldn’t be sure) and we all ate bird meat and seal meat and there was quite a bit of belching.

I couldn’t find much of that whale bone jewelry baloney and frankly I was tired of traveling around and stuff. So, I gathered up a pile of bones I found in an old building (The National Museum, Ed), and after my toes had completely frozen off, I packed my bags and headed home.

My trusty plane
My (t)rusty plane

This time I got to take a plane.

That’s where the trouble started. You see, I was on the plane with my pile of whale bones and someone got it into their head that I was a voodoo priceless or something (Priestess, Ed.)

The guys who arrested me
The guys who arrested me

So, when I got off the plane some police people took me in a little room and took all my whale bones away from me.

Apparently these are not whale bones
Apparently these are not whale bones

Then they arrested me and put me in a jail cell with a woman called Simone.

Apparently my bones were not those of a whale. How was I supposed to know that they were some national treasure of a dinosaur? Do I look like a Palintologist? (Paleontologist, Ed.)

Simone - my cellmate
Simone – my cellmate

Now Simone was a very interesting person who kept claiming that she was being falsely imprismed. (imprisoned – Ed.) But I know that I was the one who was not a criminal and that led to a fight where we slapped each other a very much lot and then my nose got broken and I had to go to the hospital and then Editor had to come and get me and she was mad. And when I say mad I mean really angry.

So next up she wants me to look into this computer thing called Pinetreerest. I think it’s about some green trees.

(The views expressed here are entirely those of Mavis Quinn and not our magazine. Any animals harmed in the making of this post are not our responsibility. Editor)

P.S. I miss Mitsy.

Fashion Weak – a Special Report from Mavis Quinn

Fashion is IN!
Fashion is IN!

MEMO

To: Mavis Quinn

From:  Editor – Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine .com.org.biz

Message:  Cover Fashion Week for the magazine. Show the latest trends and the IN fashions. No budget for a fashion model, so take photos of yourself. No shenanigans this time!

MEMO

To: Marvin Quixote

From:  Mavis

Message:  Editor wants me to cover Fashion Weak. I always suspected that fashion was weak. Directed to cover what’s IN. Unclear what that means. Must do research. Will pick up anniversary gift for your parents while I am out. You’ll have to go to the Ecosystems of the Scottish Bogs lecture without me.  Shucks. Take good notes and we can discuss it over a Soy Chai Latte later.

Hello Dreary Readers, this is Mavis Quinn reporting from chic Walnut Creek’s Broadway Plaza Shopping Centre. Commonly referred to as Rodeo Drive North, Broadway Plaza sports high-end stores like Tiffany’s, Neiman Marcus, Macys, the Hallmark store and Bob’s Calendars and Games Emporium. And three Starbucks!  Wow!

Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine is always at the front of fashion trends and this time we are covering fashions that are IN and fashions that are weak.

Helene is IN!
hÉLÈnË is IN!

My first stop was a meeting with Nordstrom’s fashion director hÉLÈnË. (One name only – three accents)

She has some shopaholic debt that she is working off so she couldn’t afford a shirt, but she was wearing the IN item of the year: FUR (fake). She agreed to take me on a tour of her super duper store. (Could she have shaved her armpits? Really I mean, the pit hair was dark and blended into the vest, but please!?)

We toddled around the Point of Ew department and I learned that stripes are IN.

Stripes are IN
Stripes are IN

With the waist band around my neck and the shoulders a full foot taller than me, I think that, while IN, this look might be considered WEAK! It doesn’t matter that I am only 5 feet tall – that’s just not right.

hÉLÈnË took me to the Point of Zoo department next and informed me that FUR (fake) was the IN item this fall. Having never visited this department, I was very curious to see the IN fashions for animals.

Fur Scarf for a Horse is IN!
Fur Scarf for a Horse is IN!

Who knew?

Feather Boa for a deer is IN!
Feather Boa for a deer is IN!

Who knew?

Feathers for Frogs - IN!
Feathers for Frogs - IN!

Amazing!

And then we went to the Point of Pew department and, unfortunately, things got dicey!

hÉLÈnË took me to a particularly fragrant section of the store and showed me the latest IN fashions for humans.  Unfortunately, this intrepid reporter seems to be allergic to FUR (fake) and things began to turn for the worst. It started with a little watery eyes.

Black Fur is IN!
Black Fur is IN!

This Vinyl and FUR (fake) coat was hot – I mean I was pretty sweaty in this shot – and with the watery eyes came a dry mouth and an itchy nose.
.

Boots are IN!
Boots are IN!

This FUR (fake) vest was not as hot as the jacket, but this photo was taken right before the first big sneeze.  hÉLÈnË moved away a little and made a sour face.

She set me up with this next IN item, a stringy fur vesty thing, and she had me pose in front of a mirror real good for a super-fashionable photo.

Stringy Green Fur is IN!
Stringy Green Fur is IN!

As you can see a monster sneeze is about to happen and then the anaphylaxis began to set in. hÉLÈnË ran away in search of a towel for herself, and the last thing I remember was the fleeing site of her black armpit hair before I passed out on the cold store floor.

Fortunately, an innocent bystander ripped the FUR (fake) off of me in time and I was able to regain consciousness.

At that point I decided that perhaps I was just fashion weak and I snuck off before hÉLÈnË returned with a paramedic and the store’s security detail.

There was just a little shopping I had to do before I headed out…

Gift for Marvin's parents. IN!
Gift for Marvin's parents. IN!

Perfect for Myrtle and Myles Quixote’s 47th anniversary.

MEMO

To: Mavis Quinn

From:  Editor – Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine .com.org.biz

Message:  I said fashion WEEK!

MEMO

To: Editor – Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine .com.org.biz

From: Mavis Quinn

Message:  Oh, never mind.

Where Cuckoo Women Create

Mavis Quinn
Mavis Quinn

This is a special report from Mavis Quinn, cub reporter for Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine .com.org.biz

I recently had the pleasure of meeting with the amazing Maverick Quilter Alethea Ballard and seeing her wonderful house where she makes her exuberant quilts!

I had heard so much about these alleged exuberant quilts, and seeing them in person really was something else – Ouch! – sorry – I just tweaked my shoulder writing that.  (My arm is in a cast, as I took a bit of a fall getting into her sewing room – but that’s another story)

As a roving reporter for Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine.com.org.biz I am trained in all sorts of self-defense moves, first aid, and evasive manoeuvres, and, believe me when I say, I used them all on this visit!

Upon arrival at Alethea’s delightful home, I tripped over the front door, chipped a tooth, bumped into the couch that blocked the way, and I was directly  in the “State of the Art Sewing Center.”

State of the Art Sewing Center
State of the Art Sewing Center

Alethea does her custom “scribbly” quilting right by the front door on this sweet HQ 16 sewing machine.  Her delightful matching box and bag storage system from Le Back Dumpster in Cappuccino and Cafe O’Lay colors is just right for the decor of this area.  Versatile and fashion forward!  Alethea has acquired the latest in power systems in this amazing orange extension cord layout.

Just around the coffee table and beyond the Lay-Z-Boy is the office where Alethea’s books and patterns get written.

Modern Office
Modern Office

I felt privileged standing in this delightful sunny corner of the living room.  Of course, I couldn’t sit down – I mean, where would I?  I know Alethea is a short person, but does she really need three binders to sit on?  I spied more of the matching Caffe Latte-colored storage box system in use in the office area; such a great way to tie the two work areas together.  A delightful lamp was somewhere there on the desk, and, I believe, some fine art might have been on the walls behind some stuff.

At this point I took a quaalude and asked for a refreshment to help calm my nerves.

After a brief coffee break I used 200 joules from my portable External Defibrillator Device to shock my heart, as the mud Alethea calls coffee sent me into cardiac arrest or atrium fibberlation or something.  Following that, I was given a tour of the elusive sewing room.

Wow!  I mean OW!  Was I in for a treat!

At first, I couldn’t find the door behind all the piles of fabric in the hall, and then I had that accident I mentioned.  I was standing there all peaceful-like, and the next thing I knew I was a*s over t*ts and had dislocated my shoulder.  I then used my emergency shoulder sling to tie my arm to my body, and I was ready for the adventure called the Sewing Room!

Cutting Table and Open Floor Area
Cutting Table and Open Floor Area

The ceiling was adorned with colorful Chinese lanterns and the cobwebs draping them only added to the bijou feeling. The room has very handy design walls on three sides and each one is just layered with unfinished projects!  I mean layered – as in what the h**l!

I was able to see the convenient cutting/ironing table.  It’s that thing on the left there.  It is just the right height for ergonomic cutting and ironing.  You know, a maverick quilter does want to work comfortably!  And notice the inches of floor space available for someone to stand and cut.  We should all be so lucky to have that kind of work space!  And yes, music fans – that IS an accordion case there – don’t ask!

Corner Sewing Kiosk and Scrap Storage Area
Corner Sewing Kiosk and Scrap Storage Area

Alethea’s fabric is such a prominent feature of the room and her scrap strips were practically spilling out of their mocha-colored box.  Actually they were TOTALLY spilling out of the box.  Some got wrapped around my shoe and it took 10 minutes to free myself from the mess.  But this isn’t about me.

Speaking of fabric – there is nothing more inspiring than a well-organized fabric storage area.  Boy – what can I say about this?

Floor to Ceiling Fabric Storage System
Floor to Ceiling Fabric Storage System

It is DEFINITELY floor to ceiling – and more floor, too!  Wow – just think of all the quilts and stuff that can be made from all of this fabric!  I really can’t think about it because my head really hurts right now – but you, dear reader, go right ahead.

And lastly I come to the main design wall, and what can I say?

Cutting Edge Design Wall
Cutting Edge Design Wall

Are you kidding me?

I am heading out to my MRI now to see if they can find what is causing that ringing in my ears and the tunnel vision I have been having since my trauma, I mean special visit, to this unusual quilter’s home.

That’s all from Where Cuckoo Women Create Magazine .com.org.biz, I am Mavis Quinn stumbling off…