Saturday, 31 December 2022

Looking Ahead and Back

Last week several of us met at Jeanette's for a stitch day and gabfest. It was a lovely way to spend a lazy day over the holidays. I got lots of stitching done on the Pumpkin Lane piece (more later) and got some ideas for what I might want to stitch in the future.

Barb, Marilyn, Jen1, and I all love Winter Rose Manor and all of us already had the chart so we thought, "Why not do our own stitchalong?".  I mined my stash for some possible fabric and headed to Kim's yesterday to buy the flosses I need beyond what I have in my stash. I did a couple of substitutions - a pinker shade (CCW Bella Rosa) for the house, and a whiter shade (Khaki Mocha) for the snow and basket.

The fabric is Picture This Plus 40ct Fawn - a piece from Kim's remnant box from a while back.

You see, one of my 'resolutions' is to use up as much of my stash as I can before shopping for more stuff. I only buy items to fill in the gaps - what I don't have for a particular project.

Another start I want to do is the Redwork Pears chart that I got when we visited Hobby House Needleworks. It's an Annie Beez Folk Art design. I purchased the called-for Cranberry Cocktail silk to go with it. Again, I will find a suitable fabric from my stash for this project.

It will be a very quick stitch.

There are lots of wool felt appliqué projects I'd like to work on. I never did work on any of the ugly Christmas sweater ornaments. Jen1 gave me a French General mini charm pack which are the perfect size for an English Paper Piecing project. It has all these beautiful patterns in the 2 1/2" squares.
I also have the 5" squares of Liberty fabrics.

Then there's a bunch of sewing I'd like to do. I could use some more project bags. Of course, I could finish some projects to free up some I already have...

I'd also like to make myself another project roll and something for all my cute Peanuts prints. I received more selvages from Sue and Jen1 so would like to create more items from them.

Yesterday I put the final stitches into the model for 'Houses on Pumpkin Lane' by Pansy Patch Quilts and Stitchery. I can't show you the last three houses yet but you can see how big a project it was to put them all onto one piece of fabric - 347 x 277 or 19.3" x 15.4" on 36ct. The first four houses are available from your LNS or the Pansy Patch website. Butternut House and Candy Apple House release to shops next Thursday, January 5, 2023. The last three will be available at Market the first weekend in March. They are sold individually but the layout and borders are a free .pdf download from the website


I started it about June 25 and I'm so pleased to have it finished before year end. I don't think I've ever worked so much on one piece in such a short time. Especially one this big. The called-for fabric is 36ct Sand by Picture This Plus.

I have another model I would like to get finished ASAP. Teresa Kogut sent it to me back in August and I've only been able to work on it intermittently.

The colours are very rich and very much in the palette that Teresa uses a lot.

Today also would have been my sister, Valerie's, 78th birthday. 

I have been thinking about her and her daughters a lot and know they'll be missing her terribly. 

I will be very glad to put 2022 behind me and look forward to lots of crafty pursuits, fun with friends and family, and a very Happy New Year and 2023. I wish all the same to you as well.

Friday, 23 December 2022

The Pressure is Off

I think I got everything done that needed to get done before Christmas. I was in a bit of a panic at the beginning of this week as I was still painting cards, wrapping gifts, buying last-minute items, composing and sending our annual Christmas newsletter, finishing an ornament for the guild's ornament exchange, and prepping for the holidays.

This is the ornament I stitched for my Secret Santa person. It's the Vintage Christmas Ornament by Victoria Sampler and was in Issue #34 of 'The Gift of Stitching' from November 2008. It's a digital stitching magazine that quit publishing in 2012 because of Internet piracy. All the issues can be purchased here. I used threads from my stash, white 28ct Monaco cloth, sparkly beads, and cording made from Perle cotton. There was just a little bit of Hardanger with the Greek cross in the centre.


You can see the rest of the ornaments we exchanged here

I can now reveal the ornaments I stitched and mailed a couple of weeks ago. Holy Night by Barbara Ana. I used gold beads for the stars, HotFix 'jewels' for the snowflakes and stitched a Rhodes star.
I had coordinating fabric for the back.
I used a beaded border around this one. It's from the 2005 Christmas issue of Just Cross Stitch magazine. I corrected the key signature.
Not surprisingly, all the finishing items were from my stash - fabric, cording, threads, beads, etc.
The niece I stitched this for loves 'bling' so I alternated cross stitches with HotFix jewels in the border.

Next year I must get my finishing done sooner - perhaps dedicate a day in November for the task?

I sewed some gift items for some of my stitchy friends but, of course, wrapped and gifted them before remembering to take photos of them. Suffice it to say they were well received.

I have already ordered a bunch of 2023 charms. 

I only baked one recipe this year - my pressed sugar cookies. There was no green and red candied peel left at the bulk food store when I got there so I used quartered green and red candied maraschino cherries. They tasted really good on the cookies.
I gave all but a few away.

Next week we hope to get together for a sewing/stitching day. Once Christmas is over, we can relax a bit. The days leading up to Christmas is a very busy time so it will be nice to have it all behind us. 

Skip and I have been invited to a friend's place for Christmas dinner so I don't have to worry about preparing a dinner that day. Scooter will be with his mother and that family. We will see him again in the new year. I owe Skip a birthday dinner from a local, fancy restaurant and have a seasoned, spatchcocked chicken in the freezer just waiting to be thawed and cooked. 

We have been thoroughly enjoying spending the evenings in front of our wood-burning fireplace and Christmas tree, streaming videos. I get quite a bit of stitching done on the models I'm working on.

Almost all the ornaments on my tree were handmade. I love turning off all the lamps and sitting in the glow of the electronic candles (on the left of the mantle) and my tree lights. Such a cozy feeling.

Skip is STILL having tests done. I believe there will be at least one more before they determine what treatment he'll undergo. It is really annoying to be in this holding pattern for so long. 

That aside, I hope to get a LOT of stitching done over the next few days. 

I wish all my readers lots of joy over the holidays however celebrate the season.

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanzaa, Festive Festivus.

Wednesday, 14 December 2022

More Cards and (Relatively) Local Yarn

I've spent the last couple of days painting, bedazzling, stamping, and crafting Christmas cards.

I did a couple of patterns that I painted last year and a few new ones.

Not a single one is original thought.
They all were inspired by YouTube videos.
I like that they don't take a lot of time to paint. I have a very short attention span for things like this.
They look so spiffy with HotFix jewels and some metallic paint.

I cut the watercolour paper to fit card stock card blanks and envelopes. 

Skip and I have been watching the vlog of a shepherd from SW Ontario throughout the pandemic. Her YouTube channel is Sheepisly Me and as I write this it's lambing time - my favourite time of the year. She has several groups of ewes so lambing occurs about every 4 months.

The last couple of years she has sent the shorn fleeces to the Mariposa Woolen Mill to be processed into rovings and yarn. The sheep are bred for their meet, not their fleece but the mill does a lovely job creating lovely, soft yarn. 

Mariposa also dyes the yarn to Sandi's specifications and this year the theme was 'Blue Christmas'. I missed buying some last time she offered the yarn for sale but this time I set my alarm and managed to score a skein of the 2-ply worsted in the 7 minutes before all was sold out. (Sandi has 867,000 subscribers to her channel so I had a lot of competition buying some of her yarn.)

It arrived in the mail today and is lovely.
I'm looking for the perfect pattern for 100m of worsted weight variegated yarn. A hat would be nice.


Wednesday, 7 December 2022

Making Cording

I saw Vonna Pfeiffer's new video on a different way to make cording which works for very long strands. Her previous one is also very good.

I use the Kreinik cord drill she uses 


but one could also use a single beater on a hand mixer or a drill to twist the strands. I've used both quite effectively.

I wanted to make cording that looked like that two-colour butcher's cord and thought #10 crochet cotton from my stash would work well. I didn't have enough DMC floss so this was a very acceptable substitute.

Thin yarn like sock yarn would also work well.

I also had a spring clamp which I often use to anchor the block of wood into which I screwed a cup hook. This works with Vonna's older cording video instructions. For the newer technique you simply need to clamp the ends onto something with the clamp. No need for a cup hook.
I used two strands of each colour. When cranking the cording drill I count the number of turns I do on the one colour, then do the same on the other colour. When the two colours have been joined, I crank in the other direction about half the number of turns. 

In fairly short order I had made 4 long strands of bi-colour cording. Here's a little bit I snipped off after wrapping an item I'm getting ready to mail today.

I had everything on hand so didn't have to go out and buy decorative cording. If you do a lot of gift wrapping or ornament finishing, I do recommend you invest in this cording drill. 

OR

If you happen to have a fringe twister, it would also work to make cording. (pictured - Leclerc fringe twisters)
And now to head out and mail my parcels.

Sunday, 4 December 2022

Semi-stealth Finishing

 Today I completely finished finishing four of the Christmas ornaments. I can't show the fronts but can show the backs. 

The cording is the same colour as one of the colours on the front.

The backing fabric matches the colours of the stitching very well and has a wintry sentiment. "The true warmth of the season..." and "Today is a good day to be thankful...".
I was fortunate to find backing fabric that perfectly matched the beads on the front. Reds can be hard to match. This was a spool of cording I had in my 'finishing' stash.
This cording was also a purchased spool. I covered the join at the centre back with a HotFix jewel. 

I just need to get these in the mail to their respective recipients.

I have one more stitched ornament to FFO. I may try something a bit different. I have only 2 - 2022 charms left. Phew! That was a close one.

First Christmas Decoration

Yesterday I set up my little Christmas candle 'pyramid'. It's not a tradition or memento from my childhood, I only bought it in 2019 at the Christmas Market in the Distillery District in Toronto. It came with 4 candles which burned right down after a couple of lightings. Replacement candles (10mm) were hard to find or ridiculously expensive so I substituted tea lights and it works fine. If you turn up the audio, you will hear our mantle clock ticking and the light tinkling of the bells on the pyramid.

Today I will get some of the sewing done I need to do. Hopefully I can accomplish more tasks and show on here the ones that aren't secret.

This year I'm not going to sweat what doesn't get done. 

Lots of Stitching I Can't Show You and Late Night Activities

I have not done a post in weeks. It isn't because I haven't been stitching. I have been stitching like a fiend for an upcoming deadline and have had little time to do anything else. I just can't show it because it's for Market in March.

I did sign up for the Jingle Ball and finally got to meet Teresa Kogut via Zoom at her live chat tonight. Only 20 people were online (as opposed to over 600+ at her meet and greet last night) so I figured I'd have a chance to introduce myself. 

I didn't have my camera on initially so only my name was showing. Teresa noticed it so I turned my camera on. Hopefully we'll get to meet in person some day. It was so nice to actually chat with her.

I'm going back to stitching the model for her when I get the current one (#8 of 9 for Pansy Patch Quilts and Stitchery) done or close to done.

I did a bunch of ornament finishing but I can't show them either as they are gifts and need to get mailed off. I will definitely take photos and post them after Christmas. For our guild's ornament exchange, I have the piece stitched, I just need to FFO it.

I have some sewing I want to do as well. I'm going to have to set up my sewing machine in the dining room again to get that done.

The last couple of weeks we we've been busy with Skip's appointments. Only one more procedure for him next week then hopefully his treatment can begin. We have been rather enjoying cocooning at home. It isn't much different than what we've been doing during all of COVID. We haven't really made any Christmas plans - it will be low key - but I'm definitely going to festoon the house with much of my Christmas finery.

I have a bunch of Christmas baking I would like to do as well. 

Last night I thought I'd replace the burned out bulb in my clothes dryer. It took me over a week to figure out where the light was and it was a total pain to remove. I couldn't find any local stores that had replacement bulbs (10W) so ordered a pair from Amazon. They did not offer only one bulb. Good thing, too, because the first bulb I struggled to put in didn't work. Rather than trip the power breaker for the dryer which would have plunged the laundry room into darkness,  I pulled the dryer out to unplug it. Some stuff fell off it and other stuff beside it fell down and made lots of noise. Of course, I started this project at about 11pm and Skip and Scooter (visiting for the weekend) were already in bed upstairs. I had to reassure Skip I was OK after some of the crashing noises. 

Have you pulled your dryer out of its spot lately? I don't remember ever cleaning under there in the 26+ years we've lived in this house. So of course, I had to vacuum, then wash the floor where the dryer had sat. I finally got the second bulb in (and it worked - yay!), the floor clean, the fallen items picked up, the dryer plugged back in, and the dryer vent cleaned out it and reattached, and the dryer and back in place. Phew! That was a real workout. Boy, do I ever have a lot of stuff to clean out of the laundry room. But that will be another time.

The other Amazon purchase I made when I ordered the light bulbs was a moisture tester for our firewood. If you burn wood that is too wet, creosote will build up in the chimney and can catch fire. I got the thing to work and was pleased to see the firewood I had just brought in from outside was dry enough to burn. When I actually started the fireplace tonight, it had dried even more so we had the perfect level of moisture for our cozy fire this evening.

Here I am again composing this at 12:30am. Hopefully tomorrow I can tackle a couple of tasks on my to do list and cross them off.