This year it seems I've been having more bouts of 'Startitis' than usual. I could blame it on our cool, damp summer -- unusual for us but welcome after two years of extreme heat and drought in these parts -- but seriously, honestly folks, that's just an excuse. No matter the weather, I think it would have hit anyway. So what have I got to show since my last creative post?
In knitting?
I've yet to cast on the second of the pair of "Shepherd's Socks" I started in June -- but I started and finished an entirely different pair in three weeks in July -- those Fable (fake cable) Socks I mentioned -- and miracle of miracles! I have a photo:
I used a ball of Lang Jawoll Cotton, which was lovely to work with and is delightful on the foot. And look at the stitch definition! I have one more ball left and will definitely make another pair.
I've made a bit more progress on my "Simple Thing" scarf, but discovered I'd dropped a stitch on one of the knit-in i-cord edges and had to rip back some rows; then it was a challenge to get back into the rhythm of the 4-row pattern again, so it doesn't look much longer than it was in the last photo I showed...but it is. Trust me! 😁
In new knitting starts, I've cast on the first glove of a pair for my son for Xmas (his request), using a DK-ish weight handspun Corriedale I bought at the Rose City Fibre Festival in Camrose in May. It's pretty dense fabric but I'm getting gauge...
Yarn: 100% Corriedale - Handspun by Kristi Pattern: Good Basic Gloves Designer: Rita Buchanan |
My other new start was another pair of socks, barely on the needles: a pair of mosaic stitch socks to which I was referred by a fellow sock knitter in the Sox-a-long 2025 group in Ravelry. Too early for a photo; I'm barely past the 1 1/2" of 2x2 ribbing. Stay tuned! Meanwhile, you can get the gist of the pattern on Ravelry HERE. Funky!
Rug-hooking? I confess I've done very little of that, but I've drawn out a new landscape to fill the last bit of the current fabric on my Cheticamp frame:
Yes, I took the photo -- earlier this summer, just off a township road near me. I've started some outlining of the piece, only to discover I have no black wool yarn (except fingering, which is too fine, even doubled), which I want to use for the fence posts, so yes...put in an order for 2 heavier-weight skeins of black (one on sale with a discount!) and added a yard (not a metre, even if it is in Canada) of 60" wide linen to shore up my hooked art backing stash. That's my story, and I'm sticking to it! 😉 It's on its way and should be here mid-month.
Now then, about quilting...
I've not done so much of that.
I'm still waiting for the Celtic Knot quilt -- the Big One (116" square!!) to be long-armed. We took it in to the shop June 21 and were told it should be ready by the end of July...but no. I just 'phoned and was told there were '2 small ones' still ahead. I explained that it was an anniversary gift for a date shortly after Labour Day and that I still need to bind it and get it to my daughter's in Edmonton to give to her friends. "The end of this month" was suggested -- not acceptable! It's already been almost seven weeks! I would acquiesce to no later than August 19. The message would be passed to the long-armer (one of the owners of the shop) and I was told that if there were a problem with that, I'd be advised ASAP. I must confess, I'm rather disappointed. 🙍
I have yet to start the August Block for "A Quilting Life", too, though the pattern is printed.
I did manage to finish another top for a comfort quilt, and this one has a bit of a story. Many years ago now -- over 20 -- when Japanese-style prints were in vogue for quilting, I bought a selection of them plus some solid black fabric to make a quilt I'd seen in one of my magazines. Every Friday I would go to my favourite LQS in Calgary (that's where I lived then) and that's where I began to work on it. It involved cutting the fabrics into wide bands and reassembling them with narrow strips of the black in between.
And that's all I remember of it. One Friday, I got home from my sew day to discover I didn't have the magazine in my things. I called the shop and they looked high and low (it wasn't a recent issue of that publication) and couldn't find it. In the end we decided it must have been picked up and taken by someone who was also there that day -- and thought it was just an old, second-hand one free for the taking. I let it go.
Fast forward to now, when I am trying to use up stash to make comfort quilts -- and I decided to figure out how to make something of what I'd already assembled all those years ago.
I managed to slice up the wide pieces into blocks, which I reassembled into four-patches and put back together, with a nice black border. It measures about in seven rows of six blocks -- about 54" x 62":
I'm really rather pleased with how it turned out! That said, I have enough of the fabric -- all with the black strips running through it -- to make another -- so that will come in time. Who'dda thunk it?!
Then there are the 'bonus triangles' which I'm drowning in! I've found a pattern or two featuring hour-glass blocks, so I'm busy assembling these with an assortment of sizes of the 'bonus triangles', doing so as 'leaders and enders' with other projects:
Stacks and stacks... |
Sewing pairs... |
And then...when shopping for fabric for the back of my son's birthday quilt -- back in the spring -- I found a wonderful novelty fabric, just perfect for a gift for the future recipients of the Celtic Knot quilt. They are big fans of the Edmonton Oilers hockey team so...I've made them a pair of king-sized pillow cases that will decidedly not match their new quilt -- but I hope they like 'em anyway!
So that's it from the sewing room...but in addition to the up-coming quilt binding, I'll soon be back there because I have two stitchy gifts to fully finish.
Yes, there's been lots of stitching!
I still have to turn the little "Songbird Cottage" into a needle book, and now I have another small piece, a gift for a dear friend whose husband died August 13 last year. This year on August 23, they'd have celebrated 50 years of marriage...but that was not to be. I hope this little piece, which I plan to finish as a tiny pillow, will bring her some comfort:
Pattern: "To a Dear Friend" Designer: Black Bird Designs Stitched with 2 strands of floss over 2 threads on 34-count unlabelled linen fabric (not 28-count as mentioned in my last post. |
It's hard to see from the photo, but it's a heart-shaped design and will be a heart-shaped wee pillow. It's one of the sweet designs in the reprinted book from Black Bird Designs, "A Heart Remembers", which I bought a few years ago.
Then there are the stitching Works In Progress (WIPs)!
All through July, my focus piece was the good-sized Canadian sampler, "Emeline Hotchkiss 1846", reproduced by Kathleen Littleton of Cross-stitch Antiques. I've made very good progress, but definitely have a ways to go!
Then there's my current Sunday Stitch, of which I'm very fond: "Proverbs 31" from Plum Street Samplers. I'm so close to finishing this little piece -- I can taste it!
Fabric: 40-count Porcelain Threads: red: "Pippy"; grey: "Greater Porpoise" -- all materials from Roxy Floss/Evertote in London, Ontario, Canada |
Then there's some spinning, which I really enjoy in the summer. I'm participating once more in the Summer Spin-in, hosted by the Two Ewes Fiber Adventures group on Ravelry. In my last creative post I'd finished spinning the singles from the last of the hand-painted Falkland braid I'd won from the group's 2023 SSI, and had selected roving from stash with which to create new singles, so I could make two-ply marls.
It's rather a funky colour-way but I suspect it'll make some fun mittens!
What's left? Only the garden which, with the unusually wet, cool summer, has provided me with abundance, to whit:
- I've been eating so many salads with my leaf lettuce that I'm beginning to feel like a rabbit;
- The green beans are being enjoyed, and some have been par-boiled and frozen for later consumption;
- Most of the zucchini have been manageable -- I've given away a couple of salad-worthy ones -- but I overlooked one, and he's now on his way to becoming muffins and Z-bread;
- The cherry tomatoes are just starting -- and there are lots more flowers but I'm not sure they'll amount to fruit (sigh); and...
- Then there are the raspberries. I think I've got most of them, but I've picked at least four times -- 8 cups per pick -- and there may still be a few left. They've been weighing down the canes to the point of breaking, and in my last foray (Tuesday), they were falling off onto the grass if I so much as looked at them sideways! I've made 16 cups of jam and have given away countless cups, fresh, as well as enjoying them myself!
2nd Feed of Beans - Aug. 5, 2025 |
The baking zuke - Aug. 5, 2025 |
More 'reasonable' zukes, and first cherry tomatoes Aug. 6, 2025 |
Raspberry Jam - July 22, 2025 |
Like every good crafter/gardener, I have assistants who love to supervise my activities, or simply pose. Featured: my young fellow, Smokie, age 2 years:
"Still Life: Young Cat with Produce" July, 2025 |
I think that's all the news that's fit to print for this time, Gentle Readers! I'll leave you with my usual link to Nina Marie's "Off the Wall Friday". She has fallen head-over-heels for rug-hooking, and I'm delighted!
Let's all go out and -- however we do it -- Create Beauty Every Day (as my rug-hooking mentor, Deanne Fitzpatrick, is wont to say).
A bientot!
1 comment:
I understand about startitis. I always want to do all the things. There seem to be so many wonderful patterns. I have favourited the circuit socks so I don't lose them but they will have to wait. I love all the projects you have in progress.
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