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I love it all: embroidery, canvaswork, quilting, crochet. So much to do, so little time.





Showing posts with label Rosewood Manor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosewood Manor. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2016

Leap Year List - April Report

Hey Blog Buddies,

The calendar says it's Spring, but the weather here has been really crazy.  It certainly isn't unheard of for it to snow here in April, but on Saturday we had sleet, horizontal snow, graupel (tiny hail-like pellets) and bright sunshine in a constant rotation about every 10 minutes.  And let's not forget about the high wind that lasted all day long.  Yesterday, the temp hit 70 degrees and now it's snowing lightly again.  Spring in Chicago.

On to the stitching...

Last month I posted this photo of
Rosewood Manor's A Tree by Itself.
I know I posted a photo of the finish
a couple of weeks ago, but...

here it is all framed and hanging on my wall.
(Yes, I do still have some wall space left.)

From last month, Carriage House Samplings'
The Song They Sang.

Yes, another framed finish!


Here is last month's photo of 
Needle Delights Originals' Autumn Logs.

Here it is now.
That brown thing in the lower left corner
is the beginning of the border.

We haven't seen any progress on this one all year.
This is Long Dog Samplers' Dawn Chorus.

Here it is now.
There is the obvious progress,
and the progress that you can't see.
I ripped and restitched all of the black in the middle tree
because my tension was too tight and
too much white was showing.
That was my big roadblock on this one.
It's still not perfect, but it's a big improvement.
This piece is now back on track!

I know a lot of stitchers just love to start new projects,
but I am not one of them.
I think about it, and procrastinate.
I've been trying to talk myself into starting
my blackwork horse for a long time.
I've got the nasty part done.

I traced the outline onto tissue paper,
and basted it onto the fabric.

Then I ripped the tissue paper off.
You may notice that in the process of
removing the paper, some of the basting stitches
have stretched and sagged.
This is normal.

But then I started reading the instructions
(what a concept!)
and realized that there was a chart!
I didn't have a chart in my package.
So I contacted the designer (Tanja Berlin)
via email and received a PDF chart
the very next morning.
Now I'm thinking that I should just cut
all the red basting out and follow the chart,
because life's too short.
Wish me luck with this one.
Hopefully you'll see some actual stitches
next month.

My EGA chapter hosted a Stitch-in-Public Day
at a local library on Saturday
(the day of the crazy weather).
We had a pretty decent turnout, considering.
Here is a photo of our members' stitching
in the library's display case.
Each item is a different technique.
Next year I will wait until
the glass door is swung open
to take my photos!
(You can click on the photo to make it bigger.)

That's it from here.
Hope your April is going well.
Thanks for visiting!

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Almost Three Years in the Making...

It's finally, finally done:  Rosewood Manor's A Tree by Itself, started on April 4, 2013, and finished yesterday.  This finish deserves its own post, so here it is:




And the close-ups:







So many zany birds, rabbits and the occasional deer.

The verse in the big photo is a little hard to read:
Hold on to what is good,
even if it is a handful of earth.
And hold on to what you believe,
even if it is a tree which stands by itself.

Verses are usually what sell me on a sampler.

What slowed me down were all the color changes;
there were 31 shades of green alone!
I'll have to find a monochromatic piece
to start on next...

That's it for today.
Thanks, as always, for visiting!

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Leap Year List - March Report

Hey Blog Buddies,

Happy March!  Hope you enjoyed the unusually long month of February.  Even though it was a day longer, it still went by too fast.  But that happens when you get older.

I've been doing my version of one-at-a-time stitching; you'll see the same four pieces that were featured here last month, to-wit:

Needle Delights Originals' Autumn Logs.
This is where I left off last month.

Again, three more logs were added,
but it required more stitching because
the logs are getting longer!


Last month's photo of Rosewood Manor's
A Tree by Itself.

I am finally on the home stretch with this one;
the end is in sight!  Wheeee!


Here is last month's version of
Carriage House Samplings'
The Song They Sang.

I have quite a bit of letters
to stitch on this one...


And finally, DebBee's Designs' Angles.
Here's where I was at last month.


Aaand we have a finish!
I suppose I could have finished any one
of the other three projects with less effort,
but I chose this one to finish instead.
I guess I just wanted to be done
with dealing with all the satin threads.
DH is very relieved that the "devil project"
(his term) is done.

Now that it's finished,
it's time for some close-ups.
...the bargello area...

...one of three double fan doubled stitches...

...those serpentine stitches used up a lot of thread...

...this stitch reminds me of the old test pattern 
that TV stations would run overnight in the early years.
(No, kids, TV programming wasn't always
broadcast 24 hours a day.)
But I'm dating myself.

This is my reworked Spratt's Head stitch,
reworked because I used the first length
of Neon Rays right off the card,
and the creases in the ribbon
just won't relax by themselves, as I had hoped.
You can see them in the large photo above.
One must use either a flat iron
or the water treatment to get rid of them.
I chose water, as I don't have a flat iron.
Easy and free.

I should (might) have another finish next month.
We'll see--no promises.

That's it from here.
Hope your weekend was filled with fun
and some stitching, too.
Thanks for visiting!

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Leap Year List - February Report

Hey Blog Buddies,

Happy Groundhog Day!  Both Punxsutawney Phil (the celebrity groundhog) and Woodstock Willie (our local groundhog) predicted early spring this year.  They may be on to something, because we are having a thunderstorm right now!  Near Chicago.  In early February.

But enough of weather predictions.  You're here to see some stitching, right?  Let's get right to it.

I worked on four pieces from my 10-item rotation this past month.  First up is Needle Delights Originals' Autumn Logs:

This is where I was last month.


And this is what it looks like now.
I am where I need to be with this SAL.
(It's kind of slow moving.)
The photos look very similar,
but three logs were added.

Next we have Carriage House Samplings'
The Song They Sang.
This is where I was last month.


Here's where I'm at now.
I've been working on this in the evening,
because it's relatively small and easy.


This is Rosewood Manor's
A Tree by Itself.
Not gonna show the entire project
because I'm unwilling to
deconstruct my Millennium frame
to get the whole thing in the photo.
But this is where I was at last month.


Here it is now.
This photo is a tad misleading
because the motifs to the right
of the largest "tree"
have been there for a while.
The ones to the left of that tree,
on the bottom, are the new ones.
This is going really slowly
considering that it's worked on every day.
But I'm chipping away at it.

Last but not least, here is
Angles by DebBee's Designs,
my ANG chapter's challenge project.
This is where I was at a month ago.


And here it is now.
I am really surprised at how much I have done.
I gave myself a monthly goal of 15 "areas,"
as they are called in the lengthy chart,
so that this would be finished by
the deadline at the end of June.
But I went way beyond that
because this piece is actually addictive.
The only thing that's annoying
is the satin floss, but I'm dealing with it,
and it does give the piece a nice sheen.

So that's it from here.
Hope everyone that's in the path of
the blizzard that's north and west of here
stays safe and warm.

Thanks for visiting!

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Leap Year List

Hey Blog Buddies,

Hope your holidays were happy and fun.  Thank you so much for the nice comments on my end-of-year recap post, and throughout last year.  They make my day.


Happy Leap Year!  I've seen quite a few leap years (more than 10, less than 20, heheh), and in my experience, major life events tend to occur during leap years.  My parents' wedding, my birth, our wedding, the adoption of our first dog, and the purchase of our current house all happened in leap years.  Maybe I just have too much time on my hands to be coming up with this trivia?!

Anyhow, I thought I would call my rotation a Leap Year List this year.  It's a catchier name, and I don't usually stick with a strict rotation anyway.  I just stitch what I'm in the mood to stitch on any particular day.  Eleven projects that I'd like to focus on made the list this year, some old, some new.  Let's start with our old friends:



  Dawn Chorus by Long Dog Samplers.
Still haven't fixed that tree, so it's currently at a standstill.

Save the Stitches by Blackwork Journey.
Hopefully including this piece
will inspire me to get going on it.

The formerly neglected A Tree by Itself
by Rosewood Manor.
I worked on it most of last month and
I'm still working on it!
Here's the photo I took at Christmastime.
Notice the treetop with no trunk next to the
rabbits at the bottom left.

Now it has a trunk and flowers.
I count each completed motif as a mini-finish.
Woo-hoo!


Here is Autumn Logs by one of my favorite designers:
Kathy Rees of Needle Delights Originals.
I have done a lot of her pieces,
and have quite a few more in my stash.
This is my ANG chapter's SAL.
Anticipated completion date:  end of June.

Kindred Spirits by With My Needle.
This is the workshop I took in Shipshewana, IN,
in October.
It's true that most of these are smalls,
but taken together,
it's a good-sized project.

I showed these four sides of the pin cube a while ago.
This project has been neglected ever since.

This one is brand new (to me):
The Song They Sang by Carriage House Samplings.
I bought the chart a few weeks ago,
and it just elbowed its way onto the list
(and I even started it!).
The verse starts out:
"It was early, early in the Spring..."
so the drab colors are appropriate for how it looks here in March.
Can you tell that this is my new favorite?
I'm so fickle...

This was an ANG class that I signed up for but missed
because I was out of town at said 
Shipshewana workshop.
The design is by Jennifer Riefenberg.
I haven't started it yet.
It's not huge, but it's tricky because
I have to transfer two designs
onto the canvas: the puzzle pieces and the
overlapping rectangles containing the various stitches.
This one will need some study
before I'm able to start stitching it.

This is a rare (for me) painted canvas:
Chicago Collage by Lynn Deininger.
This has been kitted up in my stash
for at least four to five years.
I have a stitch guide by a third party (not Lynn)
which is complete gibberish to me,
so I'll have to make my own stitch decisions.
I think that a lot of the areas 
will get the tent stitch/basketweave treatment.

Here's another one that hasn't been started:
Blackwork Horse by Tanja Berlin Designs.
Transferring the design to the fabric
will be a challenge with this one.
I won't elaborate here but, trust me,
you'll hear about it down the road.
This one has a deadline, too:  end of July.

I had actually planned to start the
Prairie Schooler Alphabet on January 1st,
but I decided that postponing that start
would be the prudent thing to do!
I have all the charts, and they
keep beckoning me.
So, to satisfy my desire for a PS project,
I plan on starting this one:

It's a much more manageable size,
and I think the verse is very appropriate
for this leap year, too.

Instead of starting the PS Alphabet on January 1st,
I did the sensible thing and finally put some
stitches into this one:

Angles by Debbie Rowley.

I finished the Spratt's Head stitches
--I love that name--
in the upper left corner (Area 1).
For the longest time all I had
was the one blue Spratt's Head stitch.
Area 2 contains the large upright
rice stitches on the diagonal.
Area 3 is made up of four Amadeus stitches.
They are a kind of Rhodes stitch
for those of you not familiar with them.
Only 79 more Areas to go.
Seriously, the chart is 105 pages long
with two additional fold-out sections!
But it contains detailed diagrams of
all the nutty stitches that make up this piece,
so I'm not complaining.  Much.

This is my ANG chapter's challenge project.
If I finish this piece by the end of June,
I'll get rewarded with a tote bag.
If not, I'll owe the chapter's treasury $10.
Gotta get busy.

I have a couple of smaller projects
that I'd like to finish this year, too, namely,
Eastern Bluebird by Tanja Berlin
Yes, the bird is actually finished!
I have to be in the mood to do
the last blossom and all those leaves, though.

and 


Ruby of the Forest by Marsha Papay-Gomola.
This one is from 2011.

Both of these were EGA-sponsored classes.
That's part of how I get into trouble.

And you know that  later on this year, 
something new will
come along and catch my eye
that I'll want to start right away.
It always does.

Wishing everyone a happy,
healthy and stitchy New Year.
Thanks for visiting!