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Metamorphosis

Can something old be made new again?



The morning had been long and the sweaty auctioneer struggled to sell all his merchandise before the few remaining people left at the auction site packed their cars and left.


A box of miscellaneous items sat on the table. No one would bid. The auctioneer added another box. No bids. He added another box, one that I had peeked in and saw some patchwork. I bid $1. No one else bid, so I loaded the three boxes in my car, filling the back for $1.


I unloaded the boxes in the garage and started going through them, my favorite part of auctions, searching for treasure that someone packed away with a lifetime. The contents included old bedspreads and polyester clothing which were immediately transferred to the garbage can nearby. One box had some board games, dog-eared books with the covers missing, empty cassette tape containers. One box had a ragged crib quilt.


The little quilt was ragged around the edges, loved to death by a child long ago. A big grease stain covered one side. The small fabric pieces had been intricately hand- stitched, and I could see a grandmother sitting, patiently stitching, thinking about a little one that would arrive soon.


I couldn't throw it away.



The quilt was soaked and cleaned and dried in the sun. With a pattern, some thread, stuffing, and a little time, the quilt was transformed, made into something new, and saved for another child to enjoy.




Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.2 Corinthians 5:17

Comments

  1. That is just so sweet and a perfect Bible verse to go with it! I made a stuffed cat from pieces of an old quilt a long time ago.

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  2. I always say, young people today throw away stuff that only needs a little imagination to make it new again.

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  3. I don't know how I missed this post. I have done the exact same thing. My next door neighbor was throwing away a quilt her mother in law had made for her kids a long time ago. It was on top of her trash can, I said, "can I have it?" Of course she let me have it. I made Christmas ornaments and I think a teddy bear, too. I also made a teddy bear out of a quilt given to me by my aunt when I married and out of an old torn up table cloth of my mom's. It is a great way to remember them by and it lets us display them instead of sticking them in a drawer. You got lucky - you did a great job on the teddy. They aren't the easiest thing to make.

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