Showing posts with label Curiosity Art & Framing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curiosity Art & Framing. Show all posts

Friday, December 01, 2023

Racing Towards the Finish Line

 I don't know about you, but when I get close to finishing something, all I want to do is focus on that one project until I cross the finish line with it.  Sometimes there's a deadline involved -- and sometimes not.

In my last post, I'd finished a number of things and was close to finishing others.  Over the last three weeks**, I've made more progress, so I decided it was time to share.

**By the by, how did we arrive at December already?!

As of yesterday (when it was still November), I'd finished the 'Caribou Mountains Hat' for my neighbour's wife, using the same yarn (Diamond Luxury Baby Alpaca Aran) in a different colour:



My friend Joyce in the UK has received her cozy cashmere chemo caps and is wearing them with pleasure, as she reports it's quite chilly there now.

I'm almost finished the first of the 'Woodpile Socks' for my friend Brenda, as I'm nearing the end of the toe decreases -- and will be finished with that today:



The Pinwheel Strings quilt top got quilted and bound -- and now lives in its new home with a neighbour:



I started and finished cowls -- one each for two friends of mine.  Here's one of them, modelled by the lovely 4 litre ice cream pail... 😉

Pattern: Simple, Yet Effective Cowl
Designer: Tin Can Knits
Yarn: Heidi's by Hand Trail Merino Worsted - Skein 1

Here's the other, lying beautifully flat on my coffee table.  I just love the texture in this one!

Pattern: Simple Simon Cowl
Designer: Hanna Illuzzi
Yarn: Heidi's by Hand Trail Merino Worsted - Skein 2

And I finished a tiny cross-stitch sampler that will also be given away -- probably matted for framing or putting on a stand:

Pattern: free from Colorado Cross-stitcher 
Floss: all DMC floss - 2 strands over 2 threads
Fabric: a scrap of 28-count even-weave fabric


I also finished a little gift for some dear friends in Ontario, who moved to a new home there about a year ago.  They're Jewish, and their 48th anniversary this year happens to fall on the first night of Hanukkah, so I finished this little pillow for them.  They called the other evening to say it had arrived safely and they were delighted to find a spot in their living room for it:

Pattern: one of two "Jewish Pillows"
Designer: Mani di Donma
Floss: All DMC - 2 strands over 2 threads
Fabric: 32-count Weeks Dye Works 'Wild Flax'

I think all of us could use a bit of shalom in our lives just now, don't you agree?

What's left to finish?  Well, aside from those "Woodpile" socks, I'm still plugging away at "Nevermore" from Lila's Studio -- and very focused now, because I'm on the last border.  

Less than 1/2 the last border to finish!


Close-up of the bottom border

I panicked briefly as I began this last bit, because I'd finished the called-for colour ("Lagoon" from Gentle Arts Sampler Threads) and couldn't get any more quickly.  I found the right match in my stash -- "Chesapeake" from Weeks Dye Works -- but it was getting low too!  What to do?!  Blessedly, my LNS -- Cabinet of Curiosities in Stettler, Alberta (yes, it's related to "my" gallery, Curiosity Art & Framing in Red Deer) -- had two skeins of DMC 500 that is a great match.  I bought 'em both!  Now to get it finished, pressed and laced to mat board so I can mail it off to my nephew and his new bride in B.C.  They can frame it themselves, to suit their (ahem!) unique taste.

On the quilting front, a few weeks back a friend gave me a small bag of scraps, so I decided to challenge myself to use the limited quantity therein, and the limited palate, to create something to give back to her.  Et voila!  I managed a "Funky Logs" table runner:


I used my own stash for the backing, batting and binding; otherwise, the blocks were made from only what she gave me.  I presented it to her yesterday, knowing she's a 'matchy matchy' sort of quilter; she was rather amused -- and I hope she'll find a place for it!

I've finished making all the hexagons for the One Block Wonder quilt top, but have set it aside for the moment as my brain's not yet ready to tackle designing that finished top.  The other challenge with design right now is...lack of a design surface.

The 'design bed' -- the long twin bed in my guest room -- is currently difficult to access because of the number of items that have had to be stored away in there to protect them from The Kittens.  And the photo above showing the table runner on my studio's design wall?  That was the last item to be put on there before Sylvie Kitten (the black-and-white feisty one) lept up on it.  I'd caught her trying this more than once but one day, when I wasn't in the house, she brought it down completely!!  I'm now pondering how to refurbish it and remount it.  (It's a slab of blue foam insulation covered by Thermolam, and is a good 20 years old.)

This means that currently most of my 'designing' is being done on my cutting table or my ironing board.  To that end, I've turned my attention to using up more stash in a new quilt top to give away.

I'd bought a kit of nineteen-thirties reproduction fabric back-in-the day -- again, probably almost 20 years ago.  It was intended to become an English paper-pieced project -- some sort of Grandmother's Flower Garden or something.  Anyway, a while back I decided I'd never make that.  I even gave the hexies and the pattern to the local charity thrift shop -- but I kept the fabric.  

This past week I found just the right pattern for it -- "Add It Up", a free pattern from "Quilts & More" that I found on AllPeopleQuilt.com.  It's been a wonderfully soothing pattern to work on -- even with a typo in it that called for 89 background (white) squares -- when it turned out to be 189!  

Here are a couple of progress photos:

At the top: background rectangles.
Centre tray: print rectangles, Block 'A' units.
Bottom tray: Block 'B' units

On the cutting table:
more Block 'B' units ready to assemble

I don't have enough of the fabric to make the wide borders for the top, but have found some options in my stash that will suit; I'll pick one when the time comes.  Meanwhile, I have the rhythm of the nine-patches to thank for a certain amount of peace of mind this week.

Order out of chaos: that's my on-going mantra!  

Yes, there is art work I could mention. I've got pieces in an online gallery hosted by Artists in Canada, and invite you to visit between now and December 10 for the current group show and sale, entitled "Regional Differences".  I also have holiday-themed items showing in the Curiosity Art & Framing gallery in Red Deer -- and I invite you to visit the gallery in person or check out my offerings HERE.

But Advent has arrived, a time in my faith practice for reflection and prayer, even as I might join in on the trend to knit or stitch or otherwise make something material each day from now through Christmas.There is much to ponder and pray about: for comfort, for peace (far and near), for sanity, for civility, for generosity, for understanding, for caring -- for hope.

I leave you with those prayers for your own homes, families and friends.  Until next time...a bientot!






Friday, November 10, 2023

"All the Things" -- and Then Some!

 I can't quite believe I posted only once in October -- but there it is: almost a month ago.  It would appear that my longing to "make" or -- more honestly -- "do" All The Things was made manifest, and I simply got down to it!

I'm continuing to make order out of chaos, to be sure.  "Making" is the only way I can keep my sanity while the world goes to Hell in a hand-basket, and closer to home, my kittens continue to need a watchful eye lest they dismantle most of what surrounds them!

Here's this week's Life with Kittens report:

      • This week they discovered how to remove the plunger-style plug from the bathroom sink.  My solution?  Keep a small amount of water in that sink at all times, as they need their paws to do that trick and, being felines, wet paws are definitely not on!
      • This week they figured out how to get past the barrier and slip underneath the closed door to the sewing studio, where Miss Pookie-cat has her 'nest' in one of my fabric baskets (not fabric I use for my work, of course!)  She will put up with their being in the same room -- as long as they're quiet.  They love to sit in a basket in front of the south-facing window and watch the birds, or nap in the late fall sunshine.  In the end, there's been nothing for it but to keep that door open.
      • This week they've turned into thieves.  They knocked my (closed) rotary cutter from my cutting surface to the floor and hid it under a set of rolling drawers.  My favourite seam-ripper and my favourite thread have disappeared, as has a tube of face make-up that was sitting on the counter next to the bathroom sink. They also love to steal Pookie's food when she's outside -- so I've had to put it in a drawer in the room to keep that from happening.
      • This week they figured out how to open a clear plastic box of sewing pins, so I've had to put elastic around it -- in both directions -- to keep them from spilling pins everywhere and -- heaven forbid! -- swalling one!
      • Despite all precautions, I had to construct a "wall" around my houseplants and cover my over-wintering geraniums with one of those little 'green-houses' you can buy at nurseries and the hardware store:  


    • And yes, the hanging plants have had to be entwined as high up as I could put them to keep their vines from being played with!
  • And their fascination with water means that they also couldn't keep away from the operation of the small humidifier I use in the winter.  As one of my FB friends pointed out, clearly they're mist-ified by it!  😆


Are we having fun yet?!  😉

I'm thankful, though that as they're growing into cats, though, they seem to be napping more frequently, and this has enabled me to get down to 'making' in earnest.  I've developed a bit of a routine to keep my day as calm and settled as possible, beginning the day in its darkest hours with my coffee and writing in my journal.

I follow this up with computer time -- viewing e-mails (I get an early-morning daily post of inspiration from knitter/author Clara Parkes), checking the news (I prefer to remain informed; I've never been good at keeping my head in the sand), and turning to knitting while this is going on.  I might continue with a recent-to-me favourite YouTube podcast about knitting: "Quail's Knitting Nest".  One of the lateste episodes "fell into" my feed, and now I'm watching back-issues.  Joy (Quail) is a lovely knitter, a Master (certified in the US), with a down-to-earth, calm demeanour.  Check it out if you think it might be just the tonic you need while you knit.

On a knitting note, since my last post I've had a couple of new starts, as well as a number of finishes. To whit:  I finished two hats for my friend J, who's undergoing chemo for cancer:

Pattern: 'Scraptastic Hat'
Designer: Jane Tanner
Modification: mock cable rib
Yarn: elann.com Peruvian Baby Cashmere

Pattern: Freshwater
Designer: Alison Green
Yarn: Michel and CIA Luxury Collection Baby* Silk
 

*Baby alpaca, that is!

I started that pair of socks for my friend B, who gave me the kittens, and I'm well away on the gusset of the first sock:

Pattern: Woodpile Socks
Designer: Bethany Hill
Yarn: Estelle Yarns Highland Alpaca Fine


The yarn for these socks is rather more rustic than I thought it migh be, given that it's almost 1/2 and 1/2 alpaca and highland wool -- but I trust the hand will soften a bit when washed (it's a hand-wash yarn).  The stitch definition is fantastic, though, don't you think?!

While I'm not making a lot of Xmas gifts this year, I am making some new winter hats for my neighbours; the ones I gave them -- which they were wearing yesterday on their walk -- are starting to show their age.  I've finished one for the hubby, and started one for his wife, using the same pattern and yarn -- just in a different colour.  His is done in "Plum" -- colour #2211; her's will be in "Royal" -- #2213.  (Note: the photo was taken before blocking; check the pattern page for how it looks on the head!)

Pattern: Caribou Mountains Hat
Designer: Kalea Turner-Beckman
Yarn: Diamond Luxury Baby Alpaca Aran


While I didn't start the Lunenberg Pullover I mentioned in my last post, I did cast on another pullover -- the Cilin Sweater, which I found in the Fall 2023 issue of Interweave Knits.  I'd completely frogged a cardigan that had languished for years, and am using the yarn for this pullover instead.  I'm not very far along -- it starts with a front panel of cables -- but I've loved every stitch!


Close up of the start on the front panel.


Next  up in my routine -- after the day has moved into daylight hours -- I might continue knitting, or do some household chore or other.  And if the weather is cooperative, I take a mid-morning walk, with a stop at the Post Office to check for mail.

After lunch, I turn on Tom Allen's show "About Time" on CBC Radio 2, and let his patter and lovely (classical) music serenade me as I get into my sewing/quilting groove.

Since my last post I've focused on these things:

First...six more wee art-quilt 'tags' for Curiosity Art and Framing, "my" gallery in Red Deer:


First up...

and next...


Each is one-of-a-kind; These are all on my Artist's Page on the Gallery website, should you be at all interested.  😊

In other art news...I belong to Artists in Canada Art, which is putting on an Online Show & Sale, running from Nov. 24 throught Dec. 10.  As members are from all across Canada and work in a variety of media, the theme for the show is "Regional Differences".   Each participating artist will post two pieces for purchase  There'll be a link and more info here and on my 3F Creations Facebook page once the opening arrives.  Stay tuned!

As for other artwork -- I'm still working on a piece of hooked art inspired by a flower bed in my meadow:  "All the Pretty Poppies".  Given the Inquitive Kittens, I've had to store all the materials and the piece -- in a large hoop -- away in the guest room, and to work on it when I can, or feel the need to do nothing but hook yarn through burlap.  I don't work on it as often as I do my other crafts, but still, I'm making some progress.  Here's what it looked like at the end of a session of work last week:


And yes, I've done even more since this photo was taken!

Meanwhile, the #keepitoutofthelandfill (Keep It Out of the Landfill) Project continues!  Just yesterday I finished my latest quilt top, consisting of blocks I'd made into pinwheels from half-square triangle units.  It measures 55 1/2" x 66 1/2", and I plan to quilt it up and give it to an elderly neighbour.  I still have enough string squares to make 20 HST units -- five full pinwheel blocks -- and more strings than you can shake a stitch  er, stick at -- so there'll be another one in my future, I'm sure.



And yes, my stacks of hexagons in the One Block Wonder project continue to grow.  I've not counted them up, but I have only 2 more strip sets to cut into triangles, and each set makes between 140 and 147 triangles.  At 6 triangles per hexie, that's another 22 or 23 hexagon blocks.  I think I had seven strip sets in total, so that would come to...154 or 161 hexies...depending...!!

Per the pattern instructions, I've tried to stack them according to colour dominance:


Once I've finished making the blocks, I'll have to figure out a way to arrange them in a single space.  I only hope my "design bed" (a 'twin extra-long' unit in the guest room) will suffice!

In mid-afternoon, usually around 3 p.m., I turn to stitching.  This week I Fully Finished "Here Be Dragons", which is a Christmas gift for my son.

First, I backed it with a piece of quilt batting, and centred it on a piece of acid-free mat board, in preparation for lacing:

Front prepped

Back prepped


After lacing, I fit it into a modest frame from Michael's -- without glass or plastic "glass" -- and put a piece of cardboard (which came with the frame) over the back.  On the cardboard I put a label with the piece's provenance, and clipped the hanger to the top,  I'm rather pleased how it turned out:



In 'active' stitching, I've been focused on "Nevermore" from Lila's Studio, which will be a combination 'congratulations on your wedding' and Christmas gift for my nephew and his new bride.  I mentioned it in my last post (scroll down on that page) -- and have now finished significantly more of it.  

Only the wide bottom border left to do!


In the line-up next: a little pillow project from Mani di Donna for some friends whose wedding anniversary is Dec. 7 (I'm almost finished that one, too), and then finishing "Keziah Campbell"...and another wee gift item for yet another stitch-appreciatig friend.

If I get all the stitchy/knitty/quilty gift goodness finished by the end of the first week of December, I've promised myself I'll relax and spend time stitching and knitting whatever I choose.  We'll see how that turns out, eh?!

I don't know where Nina-Marie is today...but there seems to be no "Linky Party" over at her blog, so I'll just leave you with the reminder that...

Tomorrow, November 11, is Remembrance Day.  In this time of so much war and turmoil, so many triggered tempers and seekers of revenge, let us never forget the cost of war -- paid by all of us, no matter our age, gender, race, creed, faith or culture.

Lest We Forget...

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
    That mark our place; and in the sky
    The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
    Loved and were loved, and now we lie
        In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe: 
To you from failing hands we throw
    The torch; be yours to hold it high. 
    If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
        In Flanders fields.

                  - Written by Lieutenant Colonel, Dr. John McCrae

Until we meet again, friends...may you be well, may you be safe, may you be content, and may you be creative!  A bientot!

Friday, July 15, 2022

Christmas in July -- and Other Adventures!

NOTE: I started this blog post almost two weeks ago.  I've decided to continue it, so many Gentle Readers may find it long.  I apologize for the inconvenience. 

It's July!  How'd that happen?

Sigh.  It seems I've been asking myself that very same question every month -- since January!  How about you?  Decades ago my mother (RIP 2004) told me that "after age 21, time disappears".  The older I get, the more I acknowledge how right she was!

This July hasn't been particularly July-ish as to weather in these parts -- far more rain and cooler weather than expected.  Heck!  Last week -- just at the end of  June -- I had to have the furnace ON for a while a couple of mornings to take the chill out of the house!  Go figure!

No matter.  The rain has made the yard and garden Happy, Happy, Happy!  So almost everything is BURGEONING with growth and blossoms.  Why "almost"?!  Well...my pansies...planted in a rather heavy but shallow planter...have barely escaped drowning.  Some of them have died.  I've had to put a mini greenhouse over them to try to keep the water at bay -- but that's only worked when the winds permitted.  Sigh.  "It is what it is", as they say.

On the "Not Gardening" front, all of this moisture has meant it's been too wet to mow the grass! 

It's also given me more time indoors -- for stitching, knitting and quilting!

The main quilting going on has been the completion of three comfort quilts for two Ukrainian families soon to be arriving in the area.  One is "Hearts of Hope" (the Bonnie Hunter pattern); the other two are nine-patch variations.  All are quilted, and two are partly bound -- with a deadline to deliver them on the weekend of July 9.  

As for thoughts of Christmas, well!  I seem to be on the "Christmas in July" bandwagon this year.  I've often started making Xmas gifts in July -- or even earlier -- depending on the number and type of gifts in question.  Stitched gifts often take me longer than knitted ones.  However, this year there seem to be a number of "alongs" -- knit-alongs and stitch-alongs in particular -- that have given me a) motivation to keep going with what I'm currently working on; and b) an excuse to start new projects!  😁

With the start of this new month, Jeannette Douglas has put out another mini-bouquet pattern in her series of twelve for 2022.  Because she teaches so many classes in the US, this is a nod to July 4th; however, many of her Canadian followers -- like me -- will be doing it in red and white, for Canada's flag.  This month's pattern is the first on the third of four rows in all -- so I had to begin by extending the left side border of the piece, and then stitching enough of the second horizontal border to accommodate the new pattern, a pretty blue-and-yellow floral garland:


And here are the threads I picked for my Canadian version of "Patriotic July":

DMC 934 (dark green), DMC 3831 (red),
DMC "Blanc" (white), and
Classic Colorworks "Pine Needles" (dark olive green)


I've made quite a bit of progress on two other summer-time starts, too.  First, the "Growth Chart" that will be a Baby's First Xmas gift -- I hope!


Isn't he cute?  And the strawberry fine is great fun to stitch.  Because this is an old and rather poorly done chart -- hard to read the symbols, as I think I mentioned in my last post -- I've had to 'fudge' some of the placement of the colours, but I think it's turning out alright.

I've also done a great deal more on the "Summer Bird" -- part of a series of three from Black Bird Designs, in the "Loose Feathers" line:


That large flower is just so pretty!

Once I get the leaves etc. near the flower finished, I have to map out the bird, which I'm doing as a red-winged blackbird, common here in these parts in the summer.

Then there have been a couple of finishes!  First, "Gingham Summer" just breezed along.  I'm thinking it will soon be a little pillow for my bowl:



The second was a start and a finish in the last couple of weeks: "Summer Bower" from Modern Folk Embroidery.  I saw it on a podcast -- "Curious Crafters" flosstube -- and fell in love.  What's more, I had the perfect little piece of fabric and the perfect overdyed floss to do it the way I wanted -- both from the supplies I inherited from my late friend Candy.

No idea what the linen was (no label) but it was the right count for the project, and worked beautifully with the floss.  I don't know how much there was in the partial skein of floss when I began, but I had very little left when I finished: 18" of 6 strands and 18" of 4!

Front - mystery linen, Needle Necessities floss.

Backing.  The arrow points to a slit
in the cloth that will be used for stuffing
the cushion, and then sealed over with
a scrap of fabric and maybe embellished.

So what about Christmas pieces?  I'm not a seasonal decorator -- I don't even put up a Xmas tree some years, and when I do, it's usually up from mid-December to Epiphany (January 6) and that's IT.  So I'm not talking about tree ornaments.  Rather, in addition to the "Growth Chart (above), I've got at least one more stitched gift planned:

"Q" is for Quilter
from The Victoria Sampler
No hardanger this time! LOL!

I bought the pattern and accessory/thread pack years ago -- it dates from 2007 and I think I got it when on a retreat at the VS in 2008 -- and I found just the right piece of white linen: 28 count, but unlabelled, so again it's a mystery.  I have several friends who quilt; this is for one of them, but I'm not telling who!  😉

The other piece will be just for me; it's a Jeannette Douglas from 2003, which I probably bought around 2005 -- fully kitted at the time:

"Red Christmas" -- Jeannette Douglas Designs


It finishes at 3 5/8" x 8 1/8", so I may just make it into a needle roll for my bowl. Time will tell!  I've never worked on a red linen -- and the fact that there's Kreinik Very Fine Braid (#4), bugle beads, petite seed beads (Mill Hill for both), as well as white Soie d'Alger Au Ver a Soie to work with -- that'll be an adventure!

There's at least two knitting projects lined up for Christmas -- a pair of socks and a cowl.  The socks are boot socks -- promised for some months now to my dear friend in Montreal.  I've cast on "A Nice Ribbed Sock", and I'm using ONLine Supersocke "Worker Color" yarn in "Blue Jeans" (my friend's fave colour).  This is a lovely, relatively mindless 3:1 rib -- and this will make the fourth time I've made this pattern up.  Clearly a winner in my books!  😁 Based on notes from a prior pair in a similar-weight yarn, I'm using 3 mm needles and cast on 60 stitches.  They'll probably be worn over another pair of socks or tights or whatever -- for warm winter walking!

And I know that if my sock mojo flags -- as it has so much this year! -- I'll have a motivational resource at my finger tips: I've linked up with the "Christmas in July" KAL over at the "Frivolous and Frugal Podcast" group on Ravelry!



Pattern: "A Nice Ribbed Sock" 
Designer: Glenna C.
Yarn: ONLine Supersocke 6fach "Worker Color"

The ball of yarn looks that way because...well...a while back I started a different pair of socks with this yarn, got bored with the pattern (yes!  More boring than ribbing!) and frogged what I'd done.  These will serve a better purpose.  

In other knitting, I'm working on at least 4 pullovers, all in various stages: a Millie in a bright, multi-coloured synthetic yarn; a Turtle Dove II in a rich, heathered teal wool; the Sock Knitter's Pullover from sock yarn scraps; and a new one: a bottom-up pullover with some Fair Isle colour work on the yoke: the "Man's Fair Isle Sweater" (in the smallest size, for me), designed by Wendy Baker in Rowan's Scottish Inspirations. I'm making that in some Classic Elite Tweed I bought in another life (i.e., 20 years ago in Calgary), and enjoying the mindless 'round and 'round of it, as I'm on the body, headed toward the sleeve shaping.  

On the "Millie", I'm still doing yoke increases; on the TDII, I'm working on the first sleeve; and on the Sock Knitter's Pullover, I'm working on the body -- headed toward the hem.  The sleeves will follow!

On the quilting front -- no new artwork, but I enjoyed an Artists' Date (a la Julia Cameron) with my dear friend Mary W. and new friend Arlene W. almost 2 weeks ago now.  Mary lives in Camrose; Arlene lives some distance north and I, a similar distance south -- so we met in the middle.  We enjoyed a long, delicious lunch at Mainstreet 1908 -- new to Arlene, who'd not been to Camrose before, but a favourite with Mary and me -- and now a favourite for all 3 of us!  We followed that up with visits to two locations that defined us as art quilters: Quilting from the Heart and Candler Art Gallery (and shop).  Yes, there were purchases: fabric for some...but not me.  I bought, instead, packages of "quilters clips" -- one in each of two different sizes -- to use when creating flat-folds for my stitching!  And I got a spool of "regular" white thread in order to quilt the "Hearts of Hope" comfort quilt for Ukrainian refugees soon to arrive in our area.

Yes.  A friend of mine who attends a church in Red Deer contacted me a few weeks back because she knows I make comfort quilts and have made some for Edmonton-area refugees.  Did I have any I could donate to two families -- currently in Poland -- who were sponsored by a member of her church?  YES!  I had "Hearts of Hope" finished, as well as two other "nine-patch variations".  

Blog post paused...and continued again on July 14, 2022...

RE: those aforementioned quilts: It turns out that the families are still in Europe, so I was able to slow down my efforts.  That said, all three of the quilts are quilted, and two are bound:

Hearts of Hope
Designer: Bonnie Hunter
53" W x 55" L - borders modified by me


Backing 


9-patch variation


9-patch pieced backing
48" W x 61" L


The beautiful backing fabric on "Hearts of Hope" was a gift from my dear friend C., whose sister bought a roll of it with which to make curtains -- and had a good portion of it left over.  The fabric is 55" wide, so there was some piecing in the back of that quilt, but it's wonderful polished cotton -- a bit heavier than 'regular' quilting cotton, but it doesn't affect the drape.  I will make use of it many more times before it runs out!

There's been progress in some of the cross-stitch since I started this post too.  After I finished the border work on the "Mini Bouquet" series (shown above), I began the July motif (sorry; no photo) -- and I started the two new "Christmas in July" pieces.  Both of these involve specialty stitches, which are fun -- but need to be done when I'm fresh and thinking clearly.  If I get too tired -- watch out! LOL!


July 7 - my start -- Queen Stitch blue flowers!

July 10 - progress -- metallic threads in the top
flower, and a quail done with silks, 1 thread 
over 1 thread!

July 13 - more progress -- white silk Queen 
Stitches, a cross-stitched "Q" and quince blossoms


I've left that one there for the moment.  In the midst of it, though, I also started "Red Christmas" from Jeannette Douglas Designs:

Fabric: 32 count Zweigart red  Belfast linen
Threads: Kreinik #4 Very Fine Braid - 032 Pearl
and Soie d'Alger - Blanc


The stars are in the Kreinik; the moon is in the silk -- again, one thread over one thread.  This -- and the quail in the "Q" piece -- were the first times I'd ever done one-over-one, to my recollection.  I'm rather proud of myself for accomplishing that!  Note: this pattern is dated 2003, and I think it's out of print now.

On the art front...

First, a bit of rusting, as for the past few days we've had nice hot, sunny weather (quite a difference from that at the start of this post!)

Last spring I was given a large rusting grate -- something my neighbour was going to throw out, till I spied it.  Finally, I got a chance to use it!

Fabric placed on top of the rusty grate,
sprayed with vinegar-water, wrapped in plastic 
and put out in the sunshine.

Rusted fabric soaking in a baking soda 
solution to try to neutralize the corrosion a bit.

Muslin pieces dried and ironed

Assorted scraps of linen and even-weave
fabric, dried and ironed

I've no particular purpose for the larger pieces yet, but an idea is brewing for the linen strips. 

Second...an Art Adventure!

As those of you who follow me elsewhere likely know, I was selected to be part of a small group of artists from across Canada, who would spend several days in our Glacier National Park -- near Revelstoke, British Columbia.  This event, known as Art in the Park, is usually biennial -- ie., every other year -- and it was to have happened in 2020, but...you know.

So it was rebooked for 2021 -- and then...you know.

SO, it was rebooked for 2022 -- and it's happening!  I leave Sunday for Revelstoke, and on Monday, drive up to the Rogers Pass to stay at a Parks Canada venue there until mid-day on Friday.  There are eleven of us, including at least one more artist from Alberta, one from B.C. and one from Ontario.  We're expected to get to know each other a bit, be inspired by each other's work, hike in the area, be inspired by what we see, hear and experience, and return home to make at least three art pieces by the end of the year.  In January 2023, these are to be sent back to Revelstoke to be exhibited at the Revelstoke Visual Arts Centre, after which it will go on a 1-year tour.   A portion of the proceeds from the sale of any of the artwork will go to the Revelstoke Visual Arts Society.  😊

The first day includes an orientation to the Park, and then a tour of the area.  The next three days focus on "art and exploration"; each evening there's a group campfire for anyone who wants to go.  We help clean up and leave mid-day on Friday.

I've been vascillating between excitement and anxiety for the last couple of weeks, as details began to come together.  I've not driven through the area since 1994, and never on my own.  I've bought a little cell phone -- with a 1-month voucher -- in the event of emergencies.  Though there are several 'dead zones' along the route through the Rockies, I've got a plan with a major provider that reportedly has fewer dead zones in its service repertoire.  There's only cell service at the venue -- no wifi.  I don't expect to have my phone on me most of the time; I have a camera for photos.

I'm determined that this phone is -- for me -- just a phone.  It's a computer-wannabe and isn't very good at what it does -- mainly because the keyboard is so useless for someone who learned to type 50+ years ago on a Remington manual typewriter.  I've mastered electric typewriters, computer keyboards and laptop keyboards, but my phone doesn't type as fast as I do and tends to misspell everything.  Sigh.  

If I didn't have my laptop, I'd have never been able to use the darned phone, because it was set to time out so quickly, I couldn't get it to do what I wanted.  We don't speak the same language so when I look up something, it has no idea what I'm talking about!  Blessedly, I found out via my laptop how to prolong the 'sleep' time on the phone, so that if I pause to think, it won't doze off.  

I've made a little case for the silly thing, and that's where it will rest most of the time -- even if it's plugged in for charging.  And because the phone number is only good for 30 days, I've written it on a scrap of paper and pinned it inside the case; it's not worth memorizing! LOL!   

I've not owned a sleeping bag for decades, but have to provide my own bedding and towels.  My bed-roll will include a quilt, of course!  😉

I had my car inspected on Tuesday -- no problems at all; it's Good to Go, which is a relief.  It was worth the $70 at the local mechanic's outfit.  I told them I made the appointment because I could hear my late hubby's voice in my ear:  "Get the car checked out, Sweetie."  He was no mechanic himself, but he was very particular about ensuring our family car was in tip-top shape for all those trips we took with our kids over the years -- from Calgary to the Okanagan, and/or Vancouver, and/or The Island and back, visiting The Grandparents and Cousins.   

I'm driving up the day before and staying over at the end, so that I can take my time and be rested and refreshed -- it's over 6 hours' drive each way without stops, which of course means it'll be 8 to 9 hours for me!  I've got new paper maps to refer to (no point in using GPS on my phone on a route full of dead zones!), and have planned where I'll stop and refill the car, in order to do this as economically as possible (the price of gas is higher in B.C., especially in the summer tourist season, and especially this year, given all that's been going on in the world).





I'll have my laptop with me for those two nights in a motel in Revelstoke...and I've sourced the local supermarket and...yes...for the Friday afternoon, a yarn shop!  Fondling yarn will help me to unwind and process the experience, and there might just be a bit of 'souvenir yarn' coming home with me too.  😁

Of course, I've assembled art materials, including a sketchbook with removable pages -- because  "Part of the project will include keeping a journal of your experience in Glacier National Park.  Artists should be prepared to share parts of the journal as storyboards to accompany the exhibit."

For any bit of down-time I can find, I'm taking my knitting (goes without saying), possibly some cross-stitch (something fairly 'mindless' -- that wee gnome-studded Growth Chart might be just the ticket!), and several art pieces that have been waiting to have their facings sewn down and/or their hanging sleeves attached.  I figure that I could share these with the other artists as examples of my current work.

And so, Gentle Readers, you can see why it's taken me so very long to get this post written.  I'm going to link it to Nina Marie's Off the Wall Friday, and bid you adieu; stay tuned for the Art in the Park Report when I return home!

In closing, I want to say a special thank you to Teri, Mary, Elizabeth, Jenny and Phyllis, who each bought some of the art I had on exhibit at Curiosity Art & Framing -- helping me defray some of the significant increases in the cost of the trip since 2020, particularly with respect to fuel and motel accommodation.  I'm at a loss for words in appreciation of their support and encouragement.  And thanks to my daughter Gina and my cyber-friend Susan L., for assuring me that I really could do this!  You are all the Very Best friends and family I could have.