I had a memory today. I was using a set of pot holders I made to take some carmelized brussels sprouts out of the oven (because if you are going to eat brussels sprouts, why not carmelize them?) I was remembering a conversation with a friend about using the "good ones". I do use the "good ones". I don't see a point in saving them for a rainy day - they make me happy every day! And when they've just gotten too singed, frayed and downright loved to pieces, I make more. It's a very happy and fulfilling cycle.
As usual, I digress. I then thought of how maybe I should start making something here or there to save for my girls for when they head off to start their own homesteading. I still have some of my very first belongings that were given to me when I moved into my first apartment: Gramps' screwdrivers, Mom's hammer. I love the feeling I get when I take those simple things out and think of receiving them 20 years ago in my very first home away from home.
And as my internal conversations go... I then thought of my Great Grandma Walburga Baalman, my great-grandmother on my paternal grandfather's side. I have fond memories of my grandma's house. It was bright aqua blue with white trim. She had a chain link fence around her backyard which was bordered with a flower bed on all sides as was the house. My grandma always wore pressed powder and bright lipstick. Her hair was a beautiful silvery gray and then bright white. She had a rock collection in her flower beds that consisted mostly of gigantic crystals and open geodes from her travels. She collected paper weights filled with spiders and butterflies and intricate glass designs. She loved Kewpie dolls and crocheted tiny little intricate dresses for all of the dolls in her collection. She also tatted beautiful doilies.
I didn't really remember how many things I have from my Grandma Baalman until today. I have a large crystal from her garden, a Kewpie in a pink crocheted dress, the baby blanket she made for me when I was born and a set of bath towels from my "hope chest" that every girl in our family received. I've always been a very sentimental person. My youngest daughter Cannon is just like me in that way. I remember even from that very young age of about six years old knowing that my Grandma wouldn't be with me forever. I had a sense that she would leave us before I was old enough to have my very own set of bath towels made for my "hope chest". (I also longed for a Lane Company cedar hope chest to put all of my treasures in.) I wanted a set of those bath towels made just for me by my grandmother so badly.
I think my grandmother must have had the same sense about her time with me. I will never forget the visit to her house when I received my towels. They were just like I wanted too. White with aqua blue trim and a rainbow of crocheted flowers hand stitched on. It is possible my love for aqua blue stems from my Grandma Baalman. It is possible that everyone's love of aqua blue stems from all of our Great Grandmothers collectively.
I have them. I have never used them. They were too precious. And still are. For now. I might see a day in the future where I'll be ready to start enjoying them daily. Until then, I think I'll stitch up a few little traditions for my own girls and stash them away.
Funny thing. As I'm sitting her typing this with the towels sitting next to me at my desk I just noticed the manufacturer label:
Made in U.S.A.
CANNON
All Cotton
Coincidence? Probably. Am I crying anyway? Absolutely.
oh how lovely, Violet!
ReplyDeleteI use a crocheted afghan that my Grandma made for me...it's on my sewing room chair. It's the only thing that I have she made for me & I love it. I also have her dishes that remind me of big family dinners over the holidays... It makes me sad that my younger cousins probably don't remember too much about her.
ReplyDeleteCharlotte - Writing this post also made me think of my cousins. I sat down and hand wrote a letter to one of my aunts to try and track a couple of them down. With paper and an envelope and a stamp and everything. I feel guilty for how strange that experience felt.
DeleteWhat wonderful memories and gifts! Thank you for sharing, I love to hear the history behind other's stitches. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the trip down memory lane!!! I have my towels & had to look at them (from my hope chest), mine are one of my favorite memories of great-grandma. I love that picture of her. Thank you again! Tenille
ReplyDeleteTenille! I was thinking of you while writing this! I was going to email you the link tonight. Who knew you read my blog?! That makes me so happy. Miss you cousin!
DeleteSo sweet ~ family hand-me-downs are amazingly good at bringing you back to a remembered time. I'm glad all your memories are so bright and loving.
ReplyDeleteoh my goodness Violet, you have no idea how much this touched me. Stirred so many fond memories of hand made items passed on from loved ones. they touch our souls like none other.
ReplyDeletethank you!
Kathy/ AKA Coco
I have a beautiful old oval shaped dish that belonged to my gandmother. I offered this to my elder sister when clearing out my mas home for her move into care. My sister rejected it which i am pleased as i am sure it would have fallen to the back of the pantry never to be seen again. I use this and it does bring back happy memories of large (i am one of 12) family Sunday lunches (hot). The dish has really lasted through time. It is not even chipped. It is blue and white and i am not a blue person but i make it fit within my scheme of things. I also have a large crystal vase of hers which gets lots of use too.
ReplyDeleteYour story certainly brought back memories and the importance of gifts handmade for our families to treasure. I must make a start on the youngest girls glory box! I have always found that word hilarious...not sure of its origin.
Lovely blog, i stumbled here from flickr...will pop back x
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ReplyDeleteViolet, What a touching piece. Made me cry. Thank you for sharing that.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was home recently I slept under a quilt my grandmother made for me when I went off to college. Nothing fancy, just some big squares sewn together, tied in the corners, kind of falling apart now; the batting an even-older wool blanket. It even had fabrics in it that I know were leftover from dresses that I made for myself in high school. I think I'll ask my sister to send it back to me and I'll fix it up. :-)
Oh, and your new fabric line is fabulous!!! I've not made anything in blues but I might now...
Oh Violet, this is so beautiful! I too was brought to loving memories after reading this. I so get that about the screwdrivers and hammer. We have a spoon from my late grandfather, my Opa - my brother and I refer to it as The Spoon. Just an ordinary spoon, but it was a "souvenir" from when my grandfather was in WW1, in Russia. It probably has a street value of 29 cents, but to us it's priceless.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing… you made me cry. The good kind of cry. And thank you for sparking my own wonderful memories. I love you!