Category: Assorted

  • Retrospectoscope

    I am sewing.  My projects have been a mixture of successes and near-misses, truthfully some of those misses are fairly widely off the mark, but not unwearable. There have been times when I have grumbled at myself over making "rube" mistakes, at errors that could have been caught earlier because I certainly know better.  Yet none of my efforts have been wadded up and tossed in the trash.  Reconnecting with old skills appears to be a meandering path. 

     

    It also takes rookie mistakes sometimes to remind oneself of why things are done the way the are done.  There is something about saying "I didn't think it mattered in this case" and admitting that you were wrong, that it did indeed matter. There is something also to be said about moving forward anyway, about living with your mistakes, and accepting that it is all a process.  Perfection doesn't come down like a lightening strike from the hands of God, however much we might wish that it did.   I told myself initially that I would start simple, that I would wear what I made, mistakes and all, if possible, and that I should remember my younger, beginner, self.  Even though I have skills, some of them are quite rusty, and others seem to have retreated into deep hiding.  I am a begin-againer. 

     

    I am sewing for myself now, but what I actually want to look at today is some sewing I did earlier in the spring.  Sewing that was not for myself, was not particularly difficult sewing, but which nonetheless rekindled that love of making things, and reminded me of some of the why's and wherefore's of my path.

    PentacostMix

    This past Sunday was Pentecost.  My church was filled with joy and balloons and people wearing red. I had never been to a church filled with balloons on Pentecost before I moved and found this church, but it is a thing of joy.   But this post is not about Pentecost, or about church except insofar as it references sewing for church.

     

    The color of Pentecost is red and the church is draped in red.  There are two ecclesiastical reds in the Episcopal church however, Pentecost red which is bright and vibrant and a deeper red, a Holy Week red.   There are in fact many shades in between given the variations in the way fabrics take dyes, but that is not the point of this post either.   My church only has one set of red hangings for the altar, and this is not unusual.  Our hangings are actually Holy Week red, but I doubt very few people care about this minor point.  I like ritual, and I like knowing that there are colors associated with seasons and saints and all kinds of what-have-you; but that is my inner medievalist, medievalist and lover of ritual. I doubt most people even notice the difference. I am not thinking we need to buy (or make!) more.  Rather, in thinking about shades of red I am also reminded of the direct connection between reds, between the somber red of Holy Week, and the vibrant red of Pentecost, between blood and fire, between despair and joy.  We cannot have the balloons and the flames and the joy without also having some acquaintance with the dark side.   Our joy can only burst forth after we have been dipped in despair.

     

    But the red hangings also reminded me of a spring sewing project, specifically a Holy Week project, a project about which I did not blog, partially because it was "too simple" but also because I was once again under the weather  and struggling with heart rhythm issues and I didn't have the energy or wherewithal to write.

     

    But now, even as we embrace the future, the retrospectoscope has been opened.

     

    Back in April I wrote about making a cover, or dress, for a small cross.  I also made covers for all the processional crosses in the church, and another dress for the standing cross, this time in red for Holy Week.  Our church had not, at least in my memory, used red for Holy Week beyond Palm Sunday, and we did not have the appropriate covers for the processional crosses.  And so I made some. 

     

    CrossCover2

    It was a fun project.  First I had to find a red fabric that was as close to the red fabric already in use as possible.   Then I had to measure the crosses and draft patterns for the covers.  They were pretty simple geometric shapes, but I did have to think about such things as proportion, or where to place the channels for the drawstring ties in order to create an attractive balance.  Because I had to measure the crosses and create the patterns and figure out how the drawstrings would work.  None of this is as complicated as an actual dress, but it was still a good way to restart the process of thinking about making things, about sewing, and about sewing math.

     

    It was also a good refresher course in technique.  I figured out pretty quickly that sewing the rather tight curves at the top of the cross cover was a tad tricky, and that I much preferred using hand-stitching to gather fabric where necessary, and basting curves in place by hand rather than by machine.  Handwork may be slightly slower, but it offers much more control.  Or perhaps this is just a temperamental thing. It seems I am far less interested in speed than I am in the process and the idea of doing something well.   Making the cross covers reminded me of this and allowed me to practice skills which continue to come to be useful.

     

    CrossCover4

     

    I made three cross covers for processional crosses.  I neglected to take pictures of them in use, but I admit to feeling absurdly happy when I saw them in church during the church service.

     

    ChapelCross

    I also made a second dress for the small chapel cross, this one in red.  The second dress had deeper pleats than the first dress, the result of actually thinking about the pattern and the shape and the way volume and shape influence each other.  But this dress was also made out of a fabric with more drape, a fabric that handled volume in a different way, and that contributed to the dress as well.    Even the same dress, on the same figure, in different fabrics can be entirely different.

  • Studio Time Two

    I spent most of Saturday, and in fact a significant part of the weekend, in the studio.  

     

    My time was spent in a mix of making, mending, cataloging, and contemplating; all in all this is not at all a bad mix.

    Banner3

    Initially, I was there to make baptismal banners.  We had three baptisms this past Sunday.  I took over this ministry from someone else.  The work is not difficult, but it is a bit meticulous.  Apparently there was also a bit of a learning curve, but there have been quite a few baptisms lately and therefore my focus has become more consistent.  As you can see the positioning of doves has migrated over time.  But the picture is here for another reason, not to critique my placement.

     

    Much of the contemplative part of my weekend revolved around the fact that I am running low on inherited supplies, and have learned that the previous supplier has closed her business.    Initially I was researching suppliers, and the world seems filled with people who have begun crafty businesses, including those who supply precut felt designs.  

     

    Eventually however my focus shifted as the realization sunk in that I could explore the options of creating my own symbols, letters, and figures.  After all, the same technology and equipment that has enabled others is available to me.  It is not like I have not contemplated this before.  Making my own supplies will also allow me greater flexibility in banner making, especially with the ability to accommodate longer and more complex names in the spacing of the banners.  I am still in contemplation mode on this issue, however, as I know full well that I am inclined to jump headlong into any new idea, and then never really master the follow-through.  There is ample evidence of many previous half-baked plans in my studio.  It is quite possible that I am getting ahead of myself; quite possible that I need to slow down and think this through.  On the other hand, felt letters and figures are simpler than many of the ideas that have been running around my brain for quite some time now, and felt-cutting might well be a good beginning project to see if I actually want to tackle the learning curve necessary to work out those fantasy ideas.  I do not need new supplies immediately. I do need to stop dreaming and start exploring process.  I am intrigued about the many ways an upset in one routine can open the horizon to exciting new possibilities.

     

    But banner making did not occupy the majority of my weekend.  

    Buttonbutton

    There was mending.   A coat needed new buttons.  George gave me this coat for my 40th birthday.  Since I am now 63, I cannot reasonably complain about buttons that have come loose, or even feel too badly about having lost one of the original buttons, therefore needing to replace the lot.   But buttons are necessary if I plan to wear the coat.  I am happy with the result.

    Vestment

    And the gold thread on one of the clergy stoles was fraying with wild threads sticking out in several places.  I neglected to take a before photo.  I managed to anchor most of the loose threads, and I had to replace one thread with a bit of what is actually a nicer quality thread than the original, but I am not convinced you can tell the difference in the above photo.   This is only a temporary fix as this trim is fraying at multiple points, and will serve only to get through this Advent season. 

    Screen Shot 2021-12-13 at 8.04.10 AM

    Luckily this particular rayon galloon is frequently used and is available for purchase at a quite reasonable price, especially given the cost of replacing liturgical vestments.   A bit of spiffing up will therefore occur in the new year.

     

    But a good part of the weekend was spent in simply photographing and cataloging.  At the moment I am still working through the fabric that is already on the shelves; once that is catalogued, I can unpack more, and also start organizing and cataloging the yarn stash.  These are all good things because not knowing what I have, or not knowing where to find the proper supplies only leads to more, and often unnecessary, acquisition and chaos.

     

     

     

     

  • Sneak Peak

    IMG_0745 Here is a little peak at what is coming up in the sewing room:

    These fabrics have all been washed although I am still in the process of pressing a few of them.

    Today however, I think I shall spend what sewing time I find, perusing the new Vogue Patterns magazine and the new Fashion Sewing Group newsletter.

  • Kreativ Blogger

    Oh My!

     Kreativblogger

    Pam who is the author of Off the Cuff Style, has awarded me the Kreativ Blogger award and I am completely thrilled and honored.  This seems especially amazing to me as I have felt lately that any creativity has been locked up in my head and I have not been the best blogger.  

    I have been treading lightly around the cusp of creation lately and now I feel I must really allow myself to plunge right in.

    Here are the rules:
    1. Copy the award to your site.
    2. Link to the person from you received the award.
    3. Nominate 7 other bloggers.
    4. Link to those on your blog.
    5. Leave a message on the blogs you have nominated.

    This award has been sweeping the sewing blogs the last couple of days, and I am a little late to the party.  There are so many blogs I enjoy that it is hard to choose just 7, and I shall try to choose 7 that have not been nominated multiple times, but then I am a little behind in my blog rounds as well. 

    Shannon at Hungry Zombie Couture always has interesting things to say and inspires me to no end with the incredible number of marvelous things she turns out.  

    Another blogger who completely awes me with the fabulous things she sews and knits, her amazing skills and her incredible generosity is Marji who writes the bog Fiber Arts Afloat, A Misnomer.  I still want to be able sew and knit like Marji when I grow up.

    Or maybe I want to knit like May, over at May Studio.  I risk damaging my keyboard every time she posts a new creation because I can barely stop drooling.  She is a fabulous sewist also.

    Continuing on with the knitting sewists, or is it sewing knitters? I only recently discovered Lisette's blog La Cubanita Cose.  Now I look forward to every new post and the wonderful things she creates for herself and her family.

    Another new blog, to me at least, is Gry, whose blog, From The Stash, just blows me away with the marvelous things she creates.  She makes me look at the things I want to make in a different way.

    Nancy creates beautiful quilts, sews fabulous bags, knits, and has a gorgeous garden among other things, which she shares in her blog Not So Fancy Nancy.  Her sense of color always thrills me and sometimes I go back and look at her posts over and over again.

    And last, but by no means least is Sewing in the City, which always makes me smile. Fabulous clothes with a modern-retro sensibility and a talent for prints.  No wonder I keep coming back.  

    There are all kinds of wonderful bloggers out there and I enjoy following so many.  I think we are all creative bloggers.
     
  • Please just finish something

    Would that I had gotten my sewing room as organized as the sewing room closet, also known as home to the turtleneck collection, the sweater collection, and the boot collection as well as some fabric.   At some point during the summer I had shoved all the UFO's into that closet hoping to consolidate them and go through them, perhaps even finish a couple, but I haven't gotten to that yet. 

    PICT0877
    Now they are all on the cutting table, a mountain of reproach, a testament to dreams unrealized.  The weight of unfulfilled promise is crushing.

    How can I begin something new when each new project gets started and abandoned, only adding to the pile of "could have beens". 

    My short term goal is to finish a UFO (or more) a week.  And also to finish every new project I start.  I cannot add to the mountain of regret.

    PICT0881
    My determination has been strengthened by the completion of another project, albeit one that is non-sewing related with the exception of a few pattern drafting/alteration.  Who knew that pattern paper was so useful?

    PICT0880
    Presenting the new landing at the top of the basement stairs.  I take no responsibility for the landing, which was created by removing the door at the top of the stairs (edge by first blue step) and putting in a new door (out of sight at the bottom of the photograph). 

    The floor however, is mine.

    This is just a commercial-grade vinyl, left over from something else.  I had planned on glueing the vinyl down to an underlayment I asked the carpenter to intall after he ripped up the old carpet.

    Somehow, in my distracted state  on Monday, with the carpenters, electrician, pest-control guy, and a very confused and unhappy Mr. Distracted, I managed to let the carpenter leave without putting down the 1/4" plywood.  He did trim the opening where the door had been very nicely with molding down to the yucky subfloor which was complete with a few holes.  Obviously it would not do.

    After I got the DH calmed down from the hubub, and after dinner, I assessed the situation and realized that I could not put down the vinyl floor, that the stair-lift people were coming today to install the stair-lift, and I had a lot of work to do.

    PICT0879
    There was no way I would take up the molding, put in the floor and put the molding back, trimmed to size.  So I had to work around it.  Hence the table paper.  Since the landing wasn't square anyway, it proved handy.

    I had feared that my skills with a saw and would not be adequate for cutting the plywood to the right size and shape. But I managed to get it in just perfectly,

    I am most proud of those little notched corners around the opening to the once door.  Sometimes any finished project is a great boon to creativity, and there has been a severe shortage of completed projects, on any front — home or personal — the past few months.

    Now to tackle those UFO's.  Well, perhaps I will sleep first.

  • State of the Projects

    February is almost at an end and I seem to have made little progress in terms of fiberly ambitions.  I have done a great deal of thinking about what I wish to sew and knit and not enough actual sewing or knitting.  Well, there has been more knitting than sewing.

    Still….
        The pile of UFO’s remains constant.
        There is no evidence of stash reduction.

    But I am having fun working on things.  Unfortunately no current project is near completion.

    Here are a few peeks at what is currently in progress:

    February27a
    Dreaming_of_spring2
    Redwing1
    Owen

  • New Mail

    Lots of new inspirations came in the mail:

    Inspirations
    This is more dream-mail than actual useful sewing information but that’s fine by me.  We are actually out more than we are in this week and next so anything that fuels my virtual-sewing is loads of fun.

    I do have a pattern pulled out (or three) and some fabric prepped and ready to go should any substantial piece of sewing time materialize.  In the meantime I have gotten the neckline finished on "Rage Management":
    Ragemanagementa10

    Now I just need to seam it up and re-block since I did a fair amount of ripping and re-knitting after the first blocking.  I had hoped to wear it tomorrow, but I think it will still be wet, especially as it is after noon and I haven’t even started seaming and have no idea when I will be able to begin.

    I also need to make some serious progress on deciding on my next project, making swatches and plans, and find something portable as there appears to be a fair amount of sitting-and-waiting time looming on the near horizon.

  • Bits, Pieces, and Unexpected Changes

    Burda Tee: I am wearing the new tee today even though it would look much better with my gray pants.  Unfortunately both pairs of gray pants were at the cleaners and I did not think it appropriate to run there first and dress behind the press.  Also, I had to be out at 7:00 and my dry cleaner was not open at that hour.  So I wore black.  You don’t get to see much of the tee:

    Burdatee4 When I attempted to take photos without the cardigan I ended up with a terrible chipmunk face so those photos have already been moved to the trash bin.  I don’t know if I was shivering because I don’t normally have that much of an overbite (it is cold and gray today) or it was just bad photographic karma. 

    Anyway, you saw the detail photo yesterday.

    I was dreaming about pattern alterations and this top last night and I came up with all kinds of simple and complicated schemes.  But when I woke up and looked at the top on me I realized that I messed up the top of the front sleeve piece, the one that forms the side piece along the shoulders.  I changed the angle of the sleeve cap where it meets the body of the shirt, I needed to change that to match the changes in the front pattern piece.  But I left the top of the sleeve the same so that the angle of the neckline relative to the sleeve was inadvertently changed.  When I changed the angle of one seam, I should have  changed the other one so that the relationship between the two seams was properly maintained.  Hopefully this is an easy fix.

    I will be making more of this shirt, as I do like it, especially in its original shape, and it suits me right now to continue obsessing about a single pattern.  I am not usually this focused, once a pattern has been made once, I want to move on, but right now I like the familiarity of this pattern  and the idea of new tees.

    Embroidered Tweed:  I decided that I am going to make the simple V-neck dress with the embroidery on the bottom.  I called Kashi today and he is sending some more fabric so that I will be certain to have enough, and more than likely, too much. But I have ideas about what to do with any excess as well.  You will have to wait until fall to find out what they may be.

    Retirement:  Part of the reason that I am so content making one tee pattern over and over right now, and the reason that I find only a few minutes each day to sew, is that life has gone a little haywire on me of late.   Last Thursday G announced to the office that he was going to retire, effective the end of this week so I have lots and lots of work to do.  Although we stop doing our normal business this week, the office will be open for some time as I collect payments and close out the accounts receivable and so forth and so on.    I am already drowning in paper.  The staff will be working until mid April but that still leaves lots of work for me before and after they leave. Of course, eventually the books and the corporation will be closed and I will be unemployed retired as well.

    Piles:  In anticipation of this retirement G has been cleaning out his office and has brought about 20 years worth of various financial and other records home for me to sort through as well as various other items he has saved up in the office over the years and we have piles of stuff everywhere.  Of course I have piles too.  I have the piles that constitute our income taxes which I am very late in doing this year (but which I must finish before the accountant comes on Thursday to discuss both our personal taxes and various corporate issues).  I also have the piles of shelving materials that arrived for me to set up my sewing room closet, and the pile which consists of paint which must be put on the wall before I build the shelving unit.  And there is all the piles of fabric that will occupy the sewing room closet when I am done.  They are currently in the guest room.  I expect guests on Monday.

    The Unexpected:  This has all hit me at once because the unexpected occurred.  My darling G had his annual physical 2 weeks ago and learned he had a tumor in his lung.  The next week was filled with fear, trepidation, doctors visits, and eventually some relief, when we learned that the invader had not metastasized and there is hope for a surgical solution.  Now we are running around dealing with many tests and procedures in preparation (we hope) for surgery, for which no date has been settled.  What is settled is that something will happen, G will retire, and he can no longer keep it a secret from his family. 

    I may be in and out of this blog, depending on my sewing, my general state of mind, and the time available.

  • need a new machine doctor

    I finally took my Elna in to the shop today, although I am having qualms now that I have done so, and am wondering about the future.

    When I first got the Elna, (and later my Baby Lock)long long ago, there was no local Elna dealer so I took it in to Crown Machine Service in NYC.  Usually, if it just needed cleaning or a minor adjustment I could drop it in the morning and they would have it back to me in the afternoon, providing me with an opportunity to shop or pursue other interests in NYC. 

    Then we got  Amazing Threads, which sold yarn and  Elna Sewing Machines and they took very good care of my baby.  No more lugging the sewing machine on the train (I’m not complaining) and although I didn’t get it back the same day, it was still pretty convenient.  But Amazing Threads was sold.  I had been informed that the same people were doing the machine service out of a fabric store on the far side of Kingston, so I took the machine there this morning.  Ends up they are just servicing the Elnas as a courtesy but don’t really handle the machines.  Probably this is fine, it just needs a little cleaning and adjustment on the tension.  But I am feeling cautious — I love this machine after all, even though I use the newer one more.  Well, let’s see what happens and when I get it back, but in one mad moment of panic I almost ran back and snatched my machine.

    Perhaps I will be hauling it down to NYC again, after all it is an easy subway ride from Crown Machine down to the garment district.

  • Of wrapping and cutting

    I did finally finish cutting out the vest.  Despite my best intentions, and after announcing several times the night before that my first priority for the day was to do some cutting, I did not get started until 4:30.  I had hoped to cut before shoveling the snow, but various interruptions occurred and the day did not go as planned.

    Well, what is new in that?  Nothing, nothing at all.

    After the vest was cut and dinner was made, I was just too tired, and the back to sore to cut some more,  (that new cutting table is looking more and more attractive) and I have the vest and a sweater set cut so there is plenty to sew on right now.  Besides at the moment my sewing room is piled high with various Christmas gifts waiting to be wrapped (only a few more to ship), so sewing time may be limited to rather rare moments between holiday preparations.

    I wrapped up the gifts for my nieces and their children so they can be shipped out on Monday:

    Christmas1

    The pot in the background is filled with vegetarian vegetable stock that I had just finished making.  This one was based on winter squash and leeks, along with miscellaneous vegetable trimmings and spices.  The Christmas preparations have begun, along with some menu planning and recipe alteration to accommodate the preferences of my vegan 2-step-granddaughter, who is expected to be joining us. (step-daughter’s step-daughter).  There will be plenty of choices for the more carnivorous minded as well.  I have never been known for having a shortage of food on the table or in the pantry.