It was brought to my attention by a stitcher that there are a few errors on the alphabet (A, D, E & F) of "I Live In The Garden". Here is a picture of the correct stitch placement of this part of the chart.
Saturday, June 5, 2021
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
I Really Do Live In The Garden
Weather permitting...I am a gardenholic. From March to November I spend most of my daylight hours outside...digging in the dirt! Rainy days, I get some housework done and evenings, after dinner until bed, I stitch. It's a rainy day today so, here I am, avoiding housework!
My garden has expanded each year. I tried to grow some tomatoes and squash in the backyard several years ago with some success. We had a deer problem.
Expanded that and fenced it in...Amended the soil...but still not getting the results I wanted.Then I found these fabulous raised beds. Starting with this large one in the corner of the front yard...yes I put it together myself...
I built it around our arbor with the bushes blocking it nicely from our road. Sun ALL day and everything planted in rich compost...Okay...that worked well...just not enough room! So...
Saturday, March 27, 2021
Finishing Instructions: God Shed His Grace
I cut a sturdy piece of cardboard slightly larger than the stitched piece. I used a piece of batting sandwiched between the stitched piece and the carboard, wrapping the stitched piece around both and securing in the back with acid free Stitchery Tape. (If you prefer, you can lace your piece.)
Lay your stitched piece on some potential fabrics you may have or at a fabric shop to choose your finish fabrics.I then covered two pieces of foam core with my chosen fabrics, again securing the fabric on the back with Stitchery Tape. I centered each piece and used E6000 glue to secure them.
Thursday, March 18, 2021
Finishing Instructions for "A Stitcher's Wallet"
To finish your stitched piece into a usable "wallet" to hold your stitching supplies, trim your stitched piece with about 3/4" border around the stitched area. You may want to stabilize your stitched piece by backing it with a fusible interfacing. Cut your interfacing slightly larger than the stitched area. This will help protect the stitching from coming apart with repeated use of the wallet and help it hold it's shape when stitching the lining to it.
I lined my wallet with a coordinating piece of flannel fabric cut a foot longer than the stitched piece in order to fold a 3" deep pocket on each end. You may want to sew a decorative trim on each pocket before sewing your pieces together. I used a twill "ruler" ribbon I bought some time ago at JoAnn Fabrics (I see it's available online at Walmart now). On the other pocket I used a piece of cotton lace.After stitching your trim on the pockets, fold them back as pockets and with right sides together, pin your stitched piece and lining together. Tuck your ribbons for tying into the center of each end securing the end of the ribbon centered on the outside edge with a pin.
Stitch your pieces together leaving an opening on one side to turn your piece right side out.Before turning, clip your edges 1/4" inch from your seams and clip each corner.Turn your piece right side out and use a chopstick or corner tool to gently square your corners. Blind stitch the side opening closed.
The thread rings I got in the jewelry section of JoAnn Fabrics. The silk ribbon I used for my closure was purchased from Shepherd's Bush in Ogden, UT.
Hand sew thread rings on the edge of one of the pockets. Gather your tools...counting pins, needles, needle threaders, frogging needles, scissors, etc. and store them within or on the outside of the pockets. The thread in your threaded needles will cling to the flannel and stay threaded!
You can tuck your threads and thread rings into a pocket and your scissors into the other.
Saturday, March 13, 2021
2021 Let's Go!
Since the 2021 Nashville Needlework Market was cancelled, Janis of Noteworthy Needle decided that a virtual Needlework Expo would do the trick! Wow...what a lot of work she put into it and what a success it was/is. Designers signed up and began creating their "booths" with their new designs, best sellers and sale items. We "manned" our booths with the ability to chat on camera with the shop buyers. Shops could browse the booths, chat live or message and place their orders in real time. Although the "virtual" part is over, the booths remain open to registered shops for message orders for the remainder of the month.
So...busy, busy, busy...printing, folding, bagging charts and filling orders. Several lengthy trips to the Post Office with boxes and envelopes!
Here are my new designs that premiered at Needlework Expo:
Wow...It's been too long! Got busy gardening, designing and family issues and just got out of the habit of keeping this up. Other media outlets: Facebook & Instagram are quicker. Somehow the Pandemic sapped my motivation for so many things. Communication and socializing are probably the things I miss the most...so...let's get back to it!
We just got in the 2020 Nashville Needlework Market in March last year right before everything got shut down. All went well and to my knowledge no one who attended got sick. In case you missed last year's designs:
Alphabet de Fleurs
This is my interpretation of Margaret Matilda Baron's sampler stitched in 1834 at the age of 11. She was my great-great-grandmother's sister-in-law. The original sampler is not in the best of shape and was just impossible to recreate the flowers...so I created my own. The verse is from The English Reader, published in 1813, and called Folly of Envy:
2020 ~ Sew Over It
This sampler is fraught with many representations of the Pandemic Culture of 2020: the border represents the virus with masks in-between; the letters are 6 stitches apart; between the rows of letters there are directional arrows; the 5 star rating for 2020 is just half a star; Pandemic buzz words (covid 19, quarantine, homeschool, social distancing, work at home, was your hands, shelter in place, sanitize, mask up) are subtly stitched in "medical mask aqua" (Island Breeze); we endured the Pandemic "one stitch at a time" and are now "sew over it". Even the thread colors are significant: "Island Breeze" not only medical mask aqua but, an island breeze we'd all like to be feeling; "Brick" the virus smashing the idea of an island breeze.
The last design released in 2020 was originally published in Punch Needle & Primitive Stitcher Magazine in the 2019 Christmas ~ Winter Issue.
Santa's RideSanta's Ride includes the finishing instruction as shown. The wood house wall hanging and snowflake ornaments were purchased from Hobby Lobby.
There you have my 2020 offerings!