A friend arrived from the Netherlands last night and brought me 100 tulips !! They were wrapped in brown paper - which is how they sell them in the Netherlands - and looked good all clustered together, but since I opened them just seem to keep expanding, spreading their colour and soft scent everywhere.
Today I helped Lyn set up her new machine and start making more blocks.
Then I came home and my daughter and I made this dress for her - it's made of light blue linen, cut on the bias and trimmed with bias binding (so we're sticking with the biased theme).
The hardy deciduous shrub was named for William Kerr, British horticulturist from the 1800s, who also introduced the Lady Banks rose and nandina to our gardens.
With flowers as golden as a sunrise, Kerria japonica brings sunbeams to the shadiest spots of a garden.
Interestingly, this used to be a shady spot in the garden, but the neighbour's tree fell in a storm last year so now it gets a lot more light, but it still seems to be happy.