First off, my rug-hooking art inspiration, Deanne Fitzpatrick has declared, "March is for Makers", and created a month-long, Monday through Friday Zoom "hook-in" for all willing and able. For $31 CAD a slew of us from all over the globe have joined in. Some show up every day. Some -- like me -- are Monday, Wednesday, Friday folks. ALL of us are having the time of our lives and getting lots of hooking done in the hour we share together.
So...in the last week I've blocked, bound and fully finished two small hooked pieces, and sketched out, designed and drawn out a new, larger piece -- all of which I hope to show at the local Art Show/Sale in April. (I await notice of acceptance; it's a juried show. Though I've been in it most of the past 17 years, and was Featured Artist in 2023, that's no guarantee of anything! That keeps my halo from pinching my ears, as my mother would have said! 😉
Duo - 12" square, framed Assorted yarn and fabric strips hooked into burlap
And...
Holly's Bouquet - 9" x 12" Mounted on stretched canvas Wool yarn and fabric strips hooked into burlap
Once those pieces were done and dusted, I had to put a new one on the Cheticamp frame, and so..."Pussy Willows, Cat Tails" has come to be. It's inspired by this Gordon Lightfoot ballad:
I started with a sketch, and then...this outline on the burlap:
I began yesterday to hook an outline of some of the leaves for the cat tails (bull rushes, so-called, where I grew up in Quebec), and have now filled in more of the leaves:
The vision is coming together...
Meanwhile, the 2026 "Piece-by-Piece" fundraiser opened at the Lacombe Performing Arts Centre on the evening of March 4. It was dark and snowy, so I didn't attend the opening but dropped in yesterday afternoon when I was running errands in town, and took this shot:
The blue arrow points to my piece, "Under a January Moon", mounted on stretched canvas, which I mentioned in my last post.
The smaller pieces (i.e., not the requisite 12" x 12") were contributed by youngsters aged 10-12, whose parents are artists and who also participated in the exhibit. For more information or to call in a bid, check out this section of the LPAC website -- with thanks.
To round out my good 'hooking' news this week, my dear friends at the gallery at Curiosity Art & Framing in Red Deer informed me that recently they sold THREE (!!!) of my hooked pieces in one day! Gobsmacked?! You bet! Gone are 2 small pieces ("All That Blue, Green and Gold", "Slough View") and a larger piece, "Tree Island". To say that I'm 'over the moon' about this is missing the mark. Having been known for a long time as an art quilter, to find that these hooked pieces have found homes is a surprise, a delight and a blessing!
But there are other 'ems' in March...
In the stitching world, it's "Monochromatic March"! Who knew?! Folks who cotton on to this theme are stitching one-colour projects. A favourite is the 2026 Stitch-Along (SAL) from Jacob at Modern Folk Embroidery, of which I spoke in my last post. Here's my progress as of February 28th:
While I'm about to start the narrow section just below all that I've done so far, I'm also -- given The State of the World Right Now -- working on another quasi-monochromatic piece. I say "quasi" because the thread I'm using is a Sulky 12-weight "Blendables" thread and so is variegated with a blue and a green. You'll see what I mean when I show you this bit from "Disagree" by Rebel Stitcher, to which I've returned after a few months "away":
Of course, other forms of stitchy commentary aren't monochromatic. I'm not fussy. If I like the sentiment etc., I'm happy to stitch along -- including this piece -- a free pattern -- from Ellen Reid of Maximum Cross Stitch, entitled "Go Show Love". I introduced it in my last post; here is where I am now:
In the quilting world -- or, at least, in my corner of it, "M" is for the ongoing Mystery -- Bonnie Hunter's 2026 version, "Lupines and Laughter". Though the last clue and the Big Reveal happened in January, it always takes me some time to get it all together. As of now, I've prepared all the blocks for the size I'm making (75% of the full size in the pattern), which means I have 6 rows of 6 blocks each, and I'm starting to assemble them, row by row. Here's my progress so far -- three rows assembled, but (NOTE) not yet attached to each other:
Of course, before I could lay them out for the photo, one of my trio of Studio Supervisors had to give her stamp of qualified approval!
Miss Sylvie, trying not to look the least bit interested!
The other bit of a quilty 'mystery' -- the Block of the Month from A Quilting Life -- has a March block out too, but all I've done thus far is print out the pattern! Stay tuned for that in a later post.😊
Knitters, not to be left out of this 'em is for March' trend, have ongoing Make Alongs (MALs), a Lenten Mystery Knit Along (MKAL) and at least one group focused on using an M-yarn, declaring it to be Malabrigo March.
I'm participating in the Lenten MKAL, but as it's not over until Easter, I really shouldn't spoil the fun by posting a photo.
I'm not active in any MALs this month -- but I did finish my February socks on time for them to be included in the Socks from Stash February challenge:
Pattern: Fancy Rib Socks from Patons & Baldwin book #37 published in 1947
This month, that group's challenge theme is "Folklore and Fantasy", and while I have a suitable pattern in my library -- from the Hobbit et al -- it's another richly textured pair and my brain is too full to take it on at the moment! LOL!
That said, besides the Lenten MKAL, I'm continuing to whittle away at my mitred-square blanket, the Bernie sweater, another plain top-down raglan pullover, and the Sylph cowl, which will be for my 2026 Warm Things box:
This photo is from December; it's now about 11 inches long. As my 'out-and-about' project, it's not getting a lot of love, so it's slow going, as the pattern calls for it to be 26" long before seaming the ends together! I'm using 2 yarns held together and have only 1 ball of one of them, so will knit until that one has only enough left for a cast off.
All that aside, what's a new month without a new start -- of something?
A few weeks ago, I won a pattern prize from Karen of "Recreational Knitting" on YouTube. I really get a kick out of her, her sense of humour and her outlook on life these days. Anyway, it was a prize related to a key word in the comment section for one of her January posts -- having to do with the "12 Cast-ons of Xmas", I think. I got to choose a pattern I'd had my eye on, and I pickedthe Sea Haven pullover from Jennifer Shiels Toland, a designer to whom I'd been introduced on yet another podcast: "Ruth Loves to Knit".
It's gorgeous! It's a top-down sweater with a textured yoke, and you can knit it with long or short sleeves (I prefer long). Karen obliged, I received the pattern in my Ravelry "mail" and this past week I cast on, using deep stash: Elspeth Lavold's "Silky Wool" in a textured grey called "Stormy". Here's my progress thus far:
I've had this yarn for at least 20 years, having bought it at my favourite LYS back when I lived in Calgary. I've no idea if the LYS is still there -- it moved locations after I left the city in 2008; it was a great shop!
When Deanne put together "March is for Makers", she was thinking about how March is often a 'lean' month in much of Canada. The stack of firewood is dwindling, the veggies and fruit that are in cold storage have nearly run out, and it's too early to plant anything but a few seedlings in pots in a sunny spot in the house or -- if you've got it -- under 'grow lights' or in a green house.
March can also be messy underfoot -- snow melting and refreezing for treacherous sidewalks, puddles of water with ice hiding underneath, or maybe even the start of Mud Season.
And this March has become messy for other reasons, of which most of us are fully aware, by which we are appalled, about which we are more than simply worried. And so, Gentle Readers, let us remember our role in this: to bring light, comfort, and caring into our small corners of this world -- working with our hands to create beauty, tranquility, warmth and firm, clear, unexpected resistance. As Nina Marie has posted over at Off the Wall Friday: creativity is the way we can hold on to our own sanity and help others hold on to theirs. As we are children of a great Creator, and created in love, let's remember our call to bring that to others every day.
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