Sunday, May 31, 2020

The Inadvertent Seamstress










As we learn to work through The Time of Coronavirus, it's my hope that mask-wearing will become more about health than politics.  As always, we can make a personal choice and live what we believe. 

Masking has been around long enough now to start to get a grip on the information and make more informed choices. I found data on the filtration efficiencies of different types of masks.  The source is www.turn-keyenvironmental.com/breathing-masks-are-not-equal.


Coming in most efficient at 89.6% is the notorious and now high-value N95 mask.  All three of the men on our cul-de-sac found these in their workshops, Ron only recently.  He had two.  I'm wearing the used version.  We're saving the unused one because. 





Next up at 33.3% efficiency are surgical masks.  All of ours are still in the box because.





Least efficient at 6.1% are dust masks.  We have plenty of these around. 










On the low side of in-between at 11.3% efficiency is the cloth mask in its various permutations.

Two quick-and-dirty no-sew bandana styles.

The bandita bandana.






The slightly more elaborate version, folded and attached behind the ears with elastic bands.






This is the Million Mask Challenge, or maybe it's now the 100 Million Mask Challenge, version. When the CDC decided maybe we should mask, everybody with a sewing machine started making masks for family, friends, healthcare workers, strangers...anybody.   Ron's sister-in-law Carol Ann is part of that movement and sent a couple for Ron and me. 



I've been in a mask-wearing situation a grand total of 3 times since our stay-at-home orders started March 31, and these versions have served me well.  However, I believe I will be wearing masks in public for a long time, and I have in mind that eventually I'll have a selection of stylin' masks to match my wardrobe.   Like Queen Elizabeth!


Rachael the psycho on Twitter: "So Queen Elizabeth dey wear to ...
Source:  Twitter

Several versions have evolved and there are more tutorials for DIY mask-making on-line than you can wade through in a life time.  I've looked at my share; all of them are pretty straightforward to make.  I decided it was time to fire up the sewing machine and try my hand at a couple of versions I like.

The first version I tried is a fitted mask.  The Fabric Patch quilt shop in Ephrata, WA (www.thefabricpatch.net) has numerous tutorials, and referred me to a pattern designed by engineer Jesse Killian.  He went nutty in the engineer way, and made patterns for narrow, average, and wide faces, plus numerous sizes for variations of a couple of face measurements.  I measured and chose a pattern size.


 If you think this fabric looks like an apron I recently made, you're right! There are two layers of fabric for each piece.
 



Each half is sewn together together at the middle, then the halves are sewn together for two layers.


Though the pattern is for two over-the-head elastics, for some reason I decided I wanted it to just go over my ears.  Yeah, that's a different pattern. Jesse would have been shaking his engineer head at me!




Elastics fixed.  However, not being an engineer or even much of a measurer, I measured incorrectly and the mask was much too large on the sides.  I put a couple of darts in to adjust the fit.  Jesse's got a headache by now!



Not being an experienced mask wearer, the try-on of this mask was pretty much a goat-rope.  First, it took me several tries to realize there was NO WAY I could get this mask on or off without removing my glasses.  I tried, repeatedly.  Poor glasses!  Next, putting those elastics on over short hair resulted in this craziness.  Yeah, hair sticking up all over, then needing to be pulled out from under the elastic and smoothed down...


The end result was good enough, but that's about too much fussing for me! 



Next I made this version, called a 3D mask.  The first tutorial I watched happened to be by a young Vietnamese woman.  Her demonstration was clear and the translations were pretty hilarious, so I stuck with it.  This mask takes a single piece of fabric of the size on the left.  The first step is to fold it in half, as on the right.


Corners are cut off and it's sewn, leaving the two sides open.


Then turned inside out.



Folding and more stitching.




Elastics sewn in, more folding and stitching.




The final result.





Ask me if I learned my lesson about the glasses for the try-on.  Nope.  I thought with the over-the-ear version I could leave them on.  STILL NO!  Poor, poor glasses.


Right now I'm liking the 3D version best because it's easier to put the elastic behind my ears than over my head. The first version can be made with ties instead of elastic, and I'll probably end up making one of those for comparison. But I need to gain some experience.  I need to wear them and see how I like the fit & breathe-ability of each of them over time.  I need to get the glasses thing nailed down. The off and on thing for sure.  But after the mask is on, there's some fiddling to get the glasses situated for the progressive prescription to be in the right place.  





Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at twenty or eighty. Anyone who keeps learning stays young. The greatest thing in life is to keep your mind young.

                                                                                                          ----Henry Ford


Sunday, May 3, 2020

MAY WE?











It's May, and isn't it nice to get more thoroughly in to Spring?  I'll answer:  YES! 

Spring is starting to show up in the yard.  There are still a few of the tiniest bulb flowers; now it's mostly daffodils and tulips.  Ron purchased some pansies to brighten things up, as he does every year. 



Grape hyacinth among iris leaves
Tulips


Pansies


  Though we're still in the throes of the Pandemic, there is starting to be a familiarity to it all.  I'm fortunate to live in an area that is not experiencing a large surge in either illness or deaths, and no one I know personally has become ill or died.  That's because 1) I'm lucky and 2) STAY-AT-HOME WORKS!

That being said, I'm ready to grab some May mojo.

DONATIONS

Will there be another stimulus check? How Congress may send more money
Source:  cnbc.com
   
Like everyone else invested in the stock market, Ron and I are taking a hit.  Some caution is in order.  We are still able to increase our monthly donations, however, and when (if) we get our stimulus money, we'll donate that as well. Besides staying at home, it's what we can do.

TINY DECK CONCERTS





Grand piano 1080P, 2K, 4K, 5K HD wallpapers free download ...
Source:  wallpaperflare

I have an ambitious program  of weekly concerts planned, alternating violin and flute.  Ambitious is a relative term:  they're still TINY!  I've got music for the first few concerts under my belt, and will start this coming week.  Related, I'm also thinking about what I'm calling Open Door concerts on the piano.  Open Door is literal:  I'll open the doors and windows of the piano area to let the sound out.  Once a month would be enough for that.  




JASMINE'S AGILITY TRAINING


This is NOT an example of orderly storage!

We'll be starting that any day now.  The equipment is a tangled mess, and will need to be sorted.  I had a thought about taking her to the baseball diamond in the park at the front of Kachina Village...silly me!  Parks are closed!  So it will be deck work 'til they re-open.  Jasmine has been a little under-stimulated all winter, so she'll be happy to start up.


 HIKING SEASON





Sue and I didn't know our February Sedona hike would turn out to be our last hike.  It was still too chilly and wet for hiking here in Flagstaff, then the Covid-19 thing hit, then I was training for the Duathlon.  Well, it's time now!  I know people are enjoying walks and hikes together with social distancing.  I'll have to decide my risk tolerance as far as companionship.  I've been isolating thoroughly; Ron does any shopping in town.  And here's the truth about Covid-19:  when you have contact with anyone, you're having contact with everyone they've had contact with.  We're still under Stay-At-Home orders in Arizona for a reason.

TAI CHI


Taoist Tai Chi Society - Wikipedia
Source:  wikipedia


I've been SO enjoying Tai Chi on the Deck!  It was one of the reasons I started practicing Tai Chi again.  Though I can now do the entire 108 move set, I want some polishing.  There's a very good website with a very good instructor who goes through every move of the set. He had a falling out with the main organization, though, and his videos are not sanctioned.  The Taoist Tai Chi Society I belong to is a large world-wide organization with an older style of top-down administration led by "Masters" and has an exclusive philosophy.  The only sanctioned videos on-line are ones made by the founder Master Moy.  They're old, and as the form evolves over time, there are differences between what he's doing and what we're taught now.  Additionally, they're meant to demonstrate the form, not instruct. I've used them in the past; they're difficult.  I'm going with the unsanctioned website.  Is that like not wearing a mask?  

COOKING SCHOOL




It's grilling time, and Ron is our grill master!  I've been pumping out evening meals seven nights a week since we've been staying at home.  It's more than I've ever cooked in my life!  Once a week grill meals are in the regular rotation now.   It'll give me a chance to focus more on side dishes. 

READING



Recently I watched the movie A Wrinkle in Time, a remake of a young adult book written by Madeline L'Engle in 1962.  The movie was nothing to write home about, but I was intrigued enough by the story to want to read the book.  Even though it would have been popular when I was age-appropriate, somehow I missed it.  I'm no snob when it comes to YA literature, though.   To my delight, a little research revealed that it's a 5-book series!  I'm in!  I found and ordered a MATCHED BOX SET!  Heaven!  I've started A Wrinkle in Time. YA books are written for the 12-18 year old set.  I'd consider this book on the 12 year old side.  I'll see if the character ages through the books.  Compared to recent series like Harry Potter and The Hunger Games, these are a lot less edgy.  I'm looking forward to a good long read!  





Just keep going when it’s tough. Just keep going when it’s long.

----- Maxime Lagacé

Friday, May 1, 2020

FIRST-EVER ONE-WOMAN SPRINT DUATHLON



APRIL 30, 2020




9 Bike Clipart duathlon Free Clip Art stock illustrations - Clip ...
Source:  clip.cookdiary.net















 Ready for the first leg, a 3 mile run.  I had a protein smoothie for breakfast instead of my usual heavier fare.  It will last me for this run and not a minute longer! 





 Ready for the second leg, a 12 mile bike ride.  I brought a peanut butter & honey sandwich to eat between these legs, but because of the running could only eat half of it. It will have to last the whole of the bike ride. 



Ready for the third leg, a 1.5 mile run.  I did get a little light-headed during the bike ride.  I had a Recovery formula smoothie waiting for me at the end of this leg for just such an eventuality.  



















 Thanks to the team cheering me on by text during the event!