Patchwork Blankets In Progress
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I stopped by my parent’s house after work today, and my mum showed me how much she has done on the next blanket. For those who missed the earlier posts, this is our latest merchandise for fundraising – handsewn patchwork blankets, done by my mother who is 80 years old (but has better eyesight than me!).
I like doing patchwork too, but not as a hobby, though, so since I was already there, I might as well make myself useful.
Needle and thread, mum?
My mum insists on using the finest (and I mean, the FINEST…so fine that you can barely see the needle) needle to sew the pieces together. I could barely make out the eye of that needle, let alone thread it! So there was no way I could manage that needle.
Don’t you have a bigger one?
Ah, this I can manage. But threading the needle took some time too.
My mum says the hardest part is threading the needle (well of course, because she is using the finest needle, that’s why).
She showed me all her designs, done on an exercise book. It was all very mathematical, something I could definitely appreciate. Mathematics, after all, is the science of patterns. I keep telling my students that, but they always fail to see it. Once you discern the patterns, you’ll have solved half the problem. They think mathematics is all about punching buttons on the calculator. Now, that’s really sad….
Anyway, I started sewing.
It instantly reminded me of primary school days where towards the end of the year, we would spend the last few weeks doing needlework in class. Did you do that in your time? We did. We would knit, crochet or simply sewed. Our teacher (if female) would do the same too! I remember in Year 6, we all helped our teacher sew a big hexagonal patchwork blanket, complete with manila card pieces and all.
School was fun in those days….
No ipads, you know.
My mum brought out all the cloth for me to see and match. She’s buying cloth to make these blankets now.
Hmm…colour-matching…that’s physics. Primary colours, secondary colours, pigments, you know…
I’ve reminded mum that she must rest her eyes.
She assured me she does.
We already have a first bid for this blanket, from Jasmine Ong in Melaka.
Jasmine’s opening bid is RM150!
Ahem…I helped sew it too!
Also, this post is also specially posted for Hasanah Wan Abd Rahman, one of our readers. You wont believe how small the world is….
Read this email from Hasanah, which I received this morning:
Dear Dr. Chan,
I had goose bumps when I read Hasanah’s email and I replied immediately. While “Chan” is such a common surname in Kampar, being a town populated largely by Cantonese Chinese, that has to be my family that she described because she’s got every detail right (spot on!). And her brother must be Uncle Wan Radzi, a close personal friend of ours, who was the ADO (Assistant District Officer) of Kampar, who, incidentally, watched me grow up since I was 3 years old!
A long story cut short, yes, it’s all correct! My mum remembers Hasanah as my mum taught her in school and my father remembers Uncle Wan Radzi most fondly too.
Isn’t it a small world?
AnimalCare connects!
Hasanah, here’s my mum’s photos for you! She remembers you fondly!
Source: http://myanimalcare.org/2013/08/05/patchwork-blankets-in-progress/
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