The
Case of the “Missing” Quilt
I guess
it all started when I was young and got hooked on Nancy Drew books.
Last year while cruising Etsy, I saw things made out of Nancy Drew
fabrics and followed them to the Moda page where there was an entire
series! I knew I had to have it for something, just not sure what.
I decided to make a rag quilt so I purchased 2 layer cakes of fabric
and tracked down another yard or so of assorted matching fabrics. I
had this quilt in mind for months before actually starting it. Our
retreat was coming up and I decided that I would make the quilt
there. I pieced and paired all of my fabric and was ready to go. At
the retreat I worked hard on Nancy Drew. I was getting so excited
thinking of having her on my lap when I watched tv, having a cup of
tea, or just reading with her.
I
finally had all of the blocks sewn together and took it outside to
spritz it. I gave it a thorough spritzing so the rag part would curl
nicely. Grabbing some dollars and quarters, I set out to find the
guest laundry, starting to get excited to see what it would look
like. I put Nancy in the dryer, fed the quarters, and nothing –
twice. I proceeded to the front desk where the young lady (probably
19 years old) was sitting. I told her of the dryer dilemma and she
came to check it out. She also fed it many coins but it just was not
going to run. Trying to be as helpful as she could, she offered to
put it in the commercial dryer for me. OK that seemed safe, I told
her for just 10 or 15 minutes and that would be enough. I did not
want her to fry in the industrial dryer.
I went
back to the sewing room trying to start a new project but just sort
of waited, and waited, never heard from her again so I went looking.
What I found was horrific! Since the front desk girl was probably a
little inexperienced, she put Nancy in the industrial WASHER and not
the dryer. The washer locked itself and I mean LOCKED with a huge
metal arm and lock, there were pipes running into it and I saw my
poor Nancy inside this huge machine with what looked like some dirty
sheets. My immediate thought was that bleach and hot water would be
pouring in at any minute! Front desk girl said “don’t worry I
hit the Emergency Stop button!” She was also trying to pry it open
with a butter knife. I was starting to freak out, ok I was already
freaking out at this point. She could not get it open and said we
had to wait till 10pm when the night guy comes in.
I went
back to the sewing room again, everyone knew it was bad, really bad.
Jean came with me and I showed her the lockup that Nancy was in. We
took pictures and laughed, but I was not really laughing. We went
back to the room again to wait for 10pm. I was sad at this point,
thinking I would never watch tv with Nancy, never have tea with
Nancy, and was already missing her terribly.
Well
everyone in the room had a Nancy Drew joke for me and they all seemed
to have a ball with it! (I can laugh about it now.)
The
night guy evidently got her out but did not know what to do with her.
Luckily, Julie was out there and she took control of my quilt, it
was still soaking wet when she brought it to me. We put Nancy in the
REAL industrial dryer for 10 minutes and I just brought her back to
the room. Seriously, that evening was filled with drama, excitement,
almost tears, joy, everything! Probably better than a real Nancy
Drew mystery and so glad I spent it with my sewing buddies.
Locked inside the industrial washer! |
Hotel laundry holding her hostage! |
The night Nancy got kidnapped will forever be one of the most memorable in my sewing lige. So glad she got "sprung" undamaged!
ReplyDeleteThe night Nancy got kidnapped will forever be one of the most memorable in my sewing lige. So glad she got "sprung" undamaged!
ReplyDeleteGreat story!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great story! I'm glad the quilt mystery was solved, and I look forward to seeing the Nancy Drew quilt. She was always my favorite when I was young.
ReplyDeleteThat was such a crazy night, scary and funny with the jokes we made up, but I knew you just wanted Nancy back. Glad it had a happy ending. It will always be a memorable retreat memory.
ReplyDelete