As I drove
home on a Friday evening, the full moon ahead of me glowed through a band
of white clouds. They extended overhead as far as I could see, with the
moon poised right in the middle of the bright pathway. I hoped that a
talented nighttime photographer was on the job somewhere with a similar
view.
When I
reached my stopping point and relocated the moon among the treetops, the
cloud pathway was no longer part of the picture, and I decided on another
sky-related project. Usually I like to start the weekend with my head in
the clouds, but I spent the rest of that evening with my hands in the
clouds.
A few moons
had already come and gone since a relative presented the idea. He'd been
redecorating little by little, and one letter reported, "I finally
found curtains I liked that went with a comforter I liked." But with
an odd combination of window sizes in the bedroom, some of the curtain
material needed to be cut and hemmed to fit. Since I have a sewing machine
and had done similar projects once upon a time, he asked if I'd be
interested. He said there was no hurry.
About a
month later, he brought the fabric pieces and measurements to a halfway
point and suggested how the material could be divided. After I picked it
up, he reminded me, "I don't much notice how things look
anyway."
It sounded
like a no-lose project.
I had
wondered what color and fabric design would appeal to him. Appropriately
enough for someone who wouldn't notice the appearance, there wasn't a lot
to see. The material was thin, with what looked like rows of indistinct
white clouds — the cumulus type — in a light blue background. To me,
it suggested floating off into dreams, counting clouds instead of sheep.
The box of
cloud-filled material stood neglected in a corner of my living room for a
while. When I finally took a closer look, on the night of the full moon, I
was happy to find that one panel was just about the right size as it was.
Another
large piece appeared to be cut at an angle. Besides that, I wasn't sure
which end was up. A crooked sky would not be the best, and who knows what
might happen if the clouds were upside-down. The rain might even fall out.
I chose an end to be the top and pulled threads to make relatively
straight lines for cutting. The sky frayed a lot.
Later I had
second thoughts about which was the front and which was the back and
wondered how a person could tell with clouds.
I also
observed that in brighter light the material shimmered and rippled as if
the clouds were reflected in water.
As I
measured and cut and stuck pins into the clouds, I discovered that the sky
was longer on one side than the other. I had to revise my plans. If I had
remembered the directions suggested to me, the second arrangement was the
plan to follow anyway. At least we came to the same conclusions.
I suppose
I'll have clouds on my hands for a little while yet before they're all
sewn up. Then maybe I'll wash them and hang them out in the sun to dry.
After that I can pack up the pieces of sky — more than there were at
first — so they can make themselves at home at windows just their size.
If the full
moon can find them there, it can shine through the clouds again any time
it passes by.