The mechanical thrum stuttered through the dark apartment. Unable to sleep, Jack Morrow fed fabric through the old Singer, eyeing the stitching with every push.
These past few months, the sound occupied most of his time. The 94-year-old worked 10-hour days, missed meals and occasionally fell asleep at his machine. But he couldn't quit.
After years of making quilts for needy newborns, he was determined to reach 500 by the time he turned 95.
"Unfortunately, I'm kind of that way," Morrow said. "Give me a project to do and I won't stop until it's done."
In early August, he reached his goal, giving the blanket to Bundles of Love, a charity that distributes thousands of diapers, blankets and other baby essentials annually to families across the state.
The blanket he finished days before his Aug. 10 birthday displayed big robot characters. Not his most complicated but, as he explained in blue-inked cursive on a yellow sticky note stuck to the quilt, "This one looked so cute. I couldn't cut it."
This journey started seven years ago, when Morrow and his wife, Jackie, 88, moved into the senior living apartment complex Realife Cooperative of Bloomington. Morrow's wife suggested her easily restless husband join a club that made blankets for Bundles of Love. Morrow knew little about sewing, but he thought he'd give it a shot.
"My father has to be kept busy and he likes doing things with his hands," said his daughter, Nancy Dahlman.