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Friday, December 30, 2022

A new Jacobin Embroidery Project


So when I start a new piece like this 

using a dark fabric my marking pens won't show up on,

I will draw/trace my pattern on a piece of  thin tissue, 


then outline the pattern in a contrasting thread on the piece, 


using 1 strand and a loose straight stitch, that is easy to pick out as you go

I use the tissue from clothing patterns because I have a lot of it

 but you can buy pattern tissue from the store. 



For those of you Following along on Instagram


will already have already seen the progress on this piece

The books I use for the stitches however, Beyond Tatiana Popova's wonderful Crewel Embroidery book, She is From Ukraine and It would be wonderful if you all could support her by buying either one of her patterns, books or one of her kits.

If you do please buy through her website and not amazon as more of the proceeds go to her and not the corporate overlords for another stupid yacht.


The other books I use for stitching patterns I have not shared before they are 

Crewel Birds and Crewel Twists by Hazel Blomkamp, 

Crewel Embroidery by Shelagh Amor, 

& Creative stitching by Sue Spargo, 

Which you can find anyoldplace.



A hoop or stretcher is a must when you are going on this little adventure 

you really do need to keep it taught  so I recommend a hoop that has an internal ridge to keep the fabric from slipping

Or stretcher bars with tacks or rollers and side pullers you can tack it to 

Otherwise your beautiful, time consuming                                *It took me f*&king hours!*                                                 Work will be irretrievably puckered and we don't want that!




On to some of the specialty threads I have been playing with

They come from Oliver Twists by Jean Oliver

She has specialty thread mixes that are to die for! but the website is vast and you do have to hunt things up, so don't go broke looking around because there is a lot of tantalizing stuff there to play with! 

I suggest looking for "one offs" and "Tidbits" 


And so here we are at the end of what I have to say


I really need to fix that feather!















 

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Jingle, jingle


                                                               Happy Holiday's Everyone!

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

How I transfer a pattern

 Note; This is how I do it. 

I learned these methods by first what I was taught by my mother auntie and grandmother,

Then my own trial and error over 50 some-odd years of Embroidery, beading and sewing.

I am not THE expert but I am a competent sewist in many forms of needle and thread.

I don't know hwy I felt the need to qualify my skills but I did, so there you go.


I start off with a sketch and tissue paper.

I like to use leftover tissue from dress patterns

there are packages you can buy with sheets of plain tissue though they are thicker than the stuff that comes in dress patterns.


Trace and pin to your project



next step it to sew the outline with 1 strand of whatever thread is going to show up on your fabric

Then fill as you prefer

this works difficult fabrics like velvets, dark fabrics and a myriad of  techniques from gold work to simple embroidery


then there's my favorite pen the dritz or clover brand water souluable blue pen



I mark both sides of all my seams, it looks ugly 

but it washes out with a bit of water so go for it!


I also use a ruler or any handy straight edge or curve for marking as I like my stitches to be as straight as I can manage.

They are wonky enough already!

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Pink Jacobean box

 No I haven't a better name for it right now.


And as usual I forgot to take pictures until I was mostly done


so here's a picture of the back!


I used a pink silk satin scrap from my stash 

which should have been bigger but whateves

we'll figure out the how when were done right?

So the jumping off point were a bundle of specialty threads

in greens and oranges that caught my eye which have been languishing in my stash for eVer

It's a skein of multiple kinds of silk thread called Oliver twists one offs by Jean oliver

Which I supplemented with PatinaRG brand rayon cording,

some random Chinese silk cording and  watercolors by Caron, Threadworks, DMC etc. bits and peices


I then covered a cigar box with paper inside and most of a fat 1/4 outside

and some cute washitape to finish the ratty ends


And as you probably guessed my scrap was too small so I had to add a 2" border of the bottom fabric around it to get it to fit

after mounting it on a backer board, a piece of card board cut to fit the top, I noticed that the edges were wonky!


Aghhhh!


A bit of 1/4" Velvet ribbon to the rescue!

I hand sewed that around the wonkiness to hide the transition from silk to cotton because it was really, really wobbly!


I got it as straight as I could but you will notice


once I point it out.........o0



That when you look at it straight on it 

bows out in the middle

Which goes to demonstrate, if you stand back far enough no one will notice!

Except you


Because you are your worst critic!


Stop that! 


It's beautiful!



And done!

Oh, yes, there are a few beads thrown on there for sparkly


You knew I couldn't get away without a bit of  added pop right?


It's not worth doing unless it unnecessarily complicated

and fussy


I might be getting the hang of this

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Feeling my scraps

 I will argue here that Crazy quilts are the ultimate in scrap quilts


I might even go further and argue, Crazy quilts are the ultimate in crumb quilting


No fabric matches in any square 

is also harvested from old thrifted clothing


and is no larger than 2"-4" wide and 2"-6" long



Embroidery on a seam is no longer than half the size of the square.

In my case, I'm most comfortable with 10" squares so no seam is longer than 3" to 6"


Buttons are used with abandon, in blobs, sprays and scatters

As are beads and sequins


Embellishments are usually made from lace motifs 



Jewelry parts that are broken or have lost a mate



Every square uses no more than 3" of lace



The same for Gimp, Ribbon ends, braid and soutache


Lots of silk ribbon embroidery


Not that I'm biased 


I'll make a scrap Quilt out of anything


Applique



English paper piecing


Stuffed animals


Costumes





Quilts  


Even decorating my home with them


When life gives you scraps


Decorate



After a certain point Scrapping becomes a way of life




 relieving plainness or monotony by adding beauty of color or design or as is the usual all of them at once






















Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Took a little trip

Time for a selfe in denver


Up Grandad bluff
 It finally rained here in the GNW! Hallelujah! And boy did we need it!

 Everything is greening up from the crunchy yellow and brown sear we had all this summer, though I'm sure the new complaint will be,

 "It's so gloomy out!" at today's sit-and-sew!



So what have I been up to this month? Quite a bit.

Camping

We took an extended car trip to Colorado and Wisconsin, to visit my side of the family, which was lovely! 


We filled our days with lollygagging and dawdling, talking and visiting and tons of sight seeing!

DDH over lacrosse

On the way home we stopped at rushmore on our way to Crazy Horse, 

which is IMHO a better, more worthwhile use of your time and money.

Crazy Horse
And seeing the hard work that is being done by an all volunteer group of dedicated people is inspiring!

Rushmore is the wort kind of Tourist trap, the kind you feel ripped off by. 

The obligatory rushmore
Again, My own never to be humble opinion

Though we took a nice selfie together!

Resting at Bears ears
Bears ears was also a lovely stop.

We walked around the entire base and took in the sights and the people who came to climb, sight-see and heritage walk.

On the way home we drove through the hot, in some places it was 106*! No matter how high we put the air in the car at that point you could still feel the hot trying to seep in!

Erstwhile travelling companion

It was so hot the poor car skellies hairdoo got seared!


We were gone for 3 weeks of Relaxing and then needed to go right back out again,



Off to Canada this time, for my best friends daughters wedding, that trip too was lovely! 



On the road again
Until we were coming home, into the teeth of  all the  icky brown smoke from surrounding wildfires.

 They had been raging on for months and are very hard to put out when there is no rain to help.

So we are home again and I have quilting to do, I have 3 community service kiddy quilts, 2 commissions and soo many projects to finish

but more on that later.

Thursday, October 6, 2022

New Stove

So this is what I have been staring at since June 14th

Lovely right?


Yes, I did cover it with a stray piece of  wood, but still.


4 months without a stove is.................Difficult


Isn't she pretty!!

There are so many little things you do on a stove that you just can't duplicate anywhere else.

I now have a new appreciation for the humble stove

I did not have before and in fact took it for granted 


to such a degree, it took a month to not be surprised it was no longer there and another month to readjust my cooking to reflect its loss



I ended up, after a week of boiling water in a microwave, buying an electric kettle.

Eggs become vEry difficult

Don't get me started on sauteing, melting butter, searing and browning meat.

All things I do so regularly that not having a stove was crimping my style, not to mention my menu!

Thank goodness we went on a 3 week vacation, in the middle of this or I would have been driven spare!

Though the story is still fraught with OMG. This is nOt the stove we ordered from Lowes.

ThAt stove has yet to arrive, is still vaoprware, as far as I can tell

 because its delivery got pushed out yet another 2 weeks.     O0!!!

So! Needles to say We got fed up. When needs must Amazon to the rescue!

Lowes called remanded our deliver two more weeks on Sunday, so we sat in front of the computer for a couple of hours contrasting and comparing what amazon had and got our stove 3 FREAKING DAYS later on Wednesday promptly at 1pm.

A trip to the hardware store, not lowes or home desperate because they are useless, we are all set up and cooking! Yay!

This is why Amazon is eating peoples lunch. When the local's you try to use, give you no recourse and no feed back, both customer service departments on line, on phone and in store, suck hairy balls, I will truck with the evil empire.

 

Sunday, October 2, 2022

Crazy quilted Book cover Tutorial

This old thing started life as a 2014 Crazy Quilt International, Spring Fling challenge piece hosted by Therica Burrows

Where you bought the 7 fabric scrap, lace, motif and charms package and made a block with it 

the rules as I remember them were you had to use at least 5 of the fabrics and could add as many as 2 of your own and you had to use all the motifs and laces. I think I used everything in the package but one of the little blue birds

 So I finally decided what to do with it!


I made it into a book cover

I mounted the block onto a heavy card stock 

by first basting it taught 

When doing this I recommend having more than 1/2 an inch of turn over though!

I then glue the edges down to keep it there and stop any fraying from getting any worse!

Fabritack, aileesns Jewlit, or Gemtac work well for this.


Now for the inside, I measured out a piece of fabric the same size as the original block added pockets to each corner by folding a square 1/2 the length of the side.

I embroidered them because of course I did....

made handles and ribbon enclosures if you want to take a pencil for notes with you.



I then cut out 3 pieces of  card stock for the backing and it should all measure 1/4" smaller all around than the front. This part It should fold like a book so these pieces need to accommodate that.

The middle spine should be at least 3/4" wide and the sides should be 1/2 the size of the whole less 3/4" for the spine AND 1/4"for movement

I then glued the cardstock to the backing, there needs to be room for the whole thing to fold around a book so you want to accommodate this movement by leaving 1/4" on either side of the spine.


Let it fully dry before you take on the next bit 3-6 ours depending on your glue choice 

I positioned the pockets, handles and the ribbon closure & pinned it

I folded over the edges 1/4" and sewed it all down along the edge, as close to the edge as possible, so everything was firmly attached to the backing and the cardstock.


I think this gives you some extra firmness as well, you don't want your book flying out because the handle came loose!

Last step is to glue it all together

I do this by squeezing glue around the outside about 1/2 an inch from the edge and then spiraling in to the middle


Take a scrap piece of cardstock or a craft sponge and spread it evenly across the card 

When you get to the edges be very careful to spread the glue thin because you don't want glue squeezing out to the front when you set it together

It's always easier to put more on, much harder to take it off.



Put the back onto the front smoothing down as you go being careful to not get glue on the business side of the piece

I keep a wet cloth or paper towel around so I can wipe my hands between steps


Pace clamps around the edges &/or put a heavy book on it to set the glue.

I have used binding clips, hair pins, and on one occasion a hemostat and tension pliers because it needed just one more!



And Bobs you're uncle, a book cover! 


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