In 1916, fourteen-year-old Antonio Gentile submitted a
drawing for a design contest to create a mascot for Planter’s Nut and Chocolate
Company. His sketch of a peanut with arms and legs was selected, and Antonio
won five dollars. Andrew S. Wallach – a commercial artist – added white gloves,
a monocle, top hat, spats and a cane to create the Mr. Peanut that is still on
every package. But the founder of Planter’s, Amedeo Obici, (Right now, are you
asking yourself why his name wasn’t Planter, or why the company isn’t called Obici’s?)
didn’t just hand the teen a five-dollar bill and move on. He became close with
the Gentile family. He paid for Antonio’s education. He even footed the bill
for schooling four of Antonio’s siblings. Antonio eventually became a doctor.
His original crayon drawings of Mr. Peanut sat in a drawer for nearly a century
until someone rediscovered them and donated them to the Smithsonian in 2014.
Linda's Page
The musings of a crazy quilt lady
Tuesday, 14 July 2026
Sixteen Kitty Cats
Monday, 13 July 2026
Golden Checkerboard
“Young men and women are peacemakers when they forgo the
temporary pleasure of self-gratifying activities and involve themselves in
service projects and other acts of kindness. Persons who seek to reduce human
suffering and persons who work to promote understanding among different peoples
are also important workers for peace. So are faithful mothers and fathers who
lovingly care for their own children or shelter foster children and raise them
in righteousness rather than leave them to be scarred and twisted by the sins
of others. Our missionaries seek to be peacemakers. By inviting all to repent
and come unto Christ, our missionaries are working for peace. As followers of
Christ, let us follow Him by forgoing contention and by using the language and
methods of peacemakers. In our families and other personal relationships, let
us avoid what is harsh and hateful. Let us seek to be holy, like our Savior.” –
President Dallin H. Oaks
Saturday, 11 July 2026
Green Marble Frog
There are lots of unwritten rules that we follow, because our moms raised us that way, because it’s good manners, or because we’d rather not get punched in the face. Here are some:
Never use your speaker phone in public. Sharing the audio from your game or video at full volume is also considered rude.
Wash hands when using the bathroom. Be sure to shower regularly, too. Your nose is not designed to smell YOU, so it’s safe to assume you stink and act accordingly.
When entering a train, bus or elevator, let the people who are ON get off first.
Remember “please” and “thank you.” They really are magic words.
Don’t let your kids scream and run amok in public. We’re more likely to think your children are adorable if they’re also quiet and well-behaved.
There are more, but they all boil down to: "Do to others as you would have them do to you." – Luke 6:31
Friday, 10 July 2026
Night Music
I think most people are aware John Wayne’s real name was Marion Robert Morrison, that Marilyn Monroe was born Norma Jean Mortensen, and that Cary Grant was really Archibald Alec Leach. But did you know Cher is short for Cheryl Sarkisian and Sonny was really Salvatore Phillip Bono? Vin Diesel’s real name – Mark Sinclair – makes him sound like such a milquetoast. So does Whoopi Goldberg’s (Caryn Elaine Johnson) and Elton John’s (Reginald Kenneth Dwight). Post Malone sounds like the kind of guy who’d cover himself with tattoos. Austin Richard Post does not. When Katy Perry started her singing career, she adopted her mother’s maiden name, because Kate Hudson was already taken. David Tennant changed his name from David McDonald at age sixteen, because there was already a British actor by that name. Albert Brooks’ parents named him Albert Lawrence Einstein in 1947, even though the other Albert Einstein had been world-famous since 1919.
Thursday, 9 July 2026
Sixteen 2026 Challenge Blocks
I’ve followed the Riley Blake annual quilt block challenge
since 2021. (I could have used a quilt block challenge the previous year, when
all my in-person block-of-the-month classes disappeared forever. Better late
than never, right?) So far, all the challenges have involved sets of sixteen 10”
quilt blocks with patterns released almost every week – there’s a break to
catch up the last week of each month – between January and May. At the end of
the challenge, we’re given a finishing plan to use the blocks. Sometimes I use their
plan, and sometimes I make my own. I usually make extra blocks. The most
elegant 10” blocks are designed on a 4-patch or 5-patch grid. Anything else just
ends up looking clumsy. A couple of this year’s blocks are prime examples. I do
hope there will be a quilt block challenge in 2027. But it might be time to
consider a different block size.
Wednesday, 8 July 2026
Eight Split Four-Patches
When the game Monopoly first appeared, it didn’t have
tokens. Players used buttons, coins or whatever was on hand. The game was
purchased by Parker Brothers in 1935, and the tokens were a battleship, a boot,
a cannon, a thimble, an iron and a top hat. I don’t play it much these days,
but I could be convinced to try if you let me pick the Scottie dog. I’m not an
enthusiastic Monopoly fan because it’s the opposite of what a board game should
be. It doesn’t bring people together. And that’s by design. Its whole purpose
was to teach the evils of unregulated capitalism. Once a player pulls ahead, he’ll
just get richer while everyone else slowly goes bankrupt. The winner is usually
the most ruthless player. That guy who always insists on being the banker? Yeah,
him. If you’ve ever seen a game of Monopoly end in tears or a broken friendship,
now you know why.
Tuesday, 7 July 2026
Fourteen Kitty Cats
In patchwork quilting, the most important skill to learn is
the scant quarter inch seam, meaning you sew slightly less (the width of two
threads) than a quarter inch from the fabric’s edge. The word “scant” is there
because when the seam is sewn and the fabric is pressed, the fold “eats” a tiny,
almost imperceptible amount of cloth. If your seam is ever so slightly off in
either direction, your finished block will be “off.” It will cause no end of
frustration when you try to set it with other “off” blocks in a quilt. One way
to check your seam allowance is to cut three pieces of fabric exactly 1.5
inches wide. The length doesn’t matter, but three or four inches will do. Stitch
them together, then press and measure again. If the width is 3.5 inches, bravo!
If it’s wider, your seam allowance is too small. Narrower, the allowance is too
big.






