A Handmade Wedding. Day Seven; Wedding Album

Wedding AlbumEight years ago today I married the best man in the whole, wide world!! We had a wonderful, happy  day surrounded by our closest friends and family. It was a crisp, sunny day, like today has been. Although the next day it snowed, I remember because it delayed us on the runway at Manchester airport so we missed our connecting flight to  Australia!

Wedding AlbumAfter the honeymoon there was one more ‘make’, the wedding album. I was adamant I didn’t want the traditional photographers wedding album, I wanted something more personal. I found beautiful ‘Italian Wrap’ Leather photograph album by Aspinal of London. It’s gorgeous, the leather feels gorgeous, it has a leather tie to wrap round and secure it, it still has that wonderful leather smell even after all these years. The pages are tissue leaved too. Continue reading

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Monday’s Meander Around the Garden

Dwarf DaffodilsI have to confess that I’ve hardly done anything in the garden this week, we’ve had a complete mix of weather from hard frosts to mild afternoons, rainy days and dry days. Unfortunately the days which would have been good for gardening, I was engrossed in finishing a patchwork quilt!

The hard frost has nipped some of the allium shoots coming through so they’ve all got curly tops! The dwarf daffodils have started flowering, I love these as they seem a lot more robust than the taller ones, maybe because they don’t stick their heads so far above the parapet so they are less likely to be shot down by bad weather!

CamilliaThe camellia next to our conservatory is looking good, I always smile smugly when I see this shrub as I rescued it from under a privet hedge in my mothers garden when she was moving house, it was still in it’s little plant pot, dry as a bone, with two twigs and about three leaves! I repotted it and the following year planted it out. It’s now about 4′ tall, I think this year it’s going to need a good prune after flowering as it’s getting a bit leggy.

CornusThere’s a few shrubs still need pruning, a eucalyptus which is heading for the sky, a group of cornus which I grow for the winter stems and a buddleia are the most urgent at the moment, together with the rose hedge!

EucalyptusThe birds are starting to build their nests, I’ve seen a few carrying twigs off, I’m hoping they’ll use the nest boxes again. Two goldfinches visited the feeders briefly but as the sunflower feeder was empty at that point, they flew off in disgust! They are fussy eaters, only interested in sunflower or niger seeds! In amongst my pots I’ve got a water feature, a little pond made from one of the bigger ceramic pots, I’ve often watched the birds drink from it, but yesterday a blackbird and then a robin had a right good splashy bath in it, it was lovely to watch but what made me smile was that it was raining heavily at the time, you think they’d be wet enough!Philadelphus

Green shoots are starting to appear on the trees and shrubs, it always interests me how different shrubs start at very different times, the philadelphus is always one of the first adding a welcome splash of fresh green to the garden

Last year my New Year resolution was to post a photo of the garden every day on facebook, it’s the first time I’ve managed to keep a resolution going all year, ok it wasn’t every day, but I did manage most days. I started in the hope I would then appreciate the nice things in the garden, instead of just seeing weeds and work. It turned out a lot more encouraging than I could ever have imagined. I have just made the photos into a photobook, a year in the garden. I noticed a photo taken on May 1st and the garden looks so green! …that’s only six weeks away, so when I look at my garden now and think it looks uninspiring I can think ‘Yes, but in six weeks time it will look like this!!’

Gaden in May

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A Handmade Wedding. Day Five; The Cake

Wedding cake Flowers

I first started decorating cakes about 25 years ago, but I’m completely self taught, I tend to buy a book for inspiration and have a go. I like doing flowers from flower paste, and I’m happy making children’s birthday cakes, it has been a tradition since the children could hold a book that they would look through the books to decide what cake they wanted…they still do at the age of 20! However I’ve never been that confident with royal icing, what I call proper cake decorating…but I was determined to make my own wedding cake…

I baked three fruit cakes before Christmas, off the top of my head I think it was two 10″ cakes and one 8″, but the ratio might be slightly different! I baked two large cakes because we were having a party for friends at home when we returned from honeymoon. I decided to be like the Queen, a cake to cut and a cake to look nice! I effectively had two bottom tiers, so I could reconstruct the cake for the second party with the second cake! I suggested this to a friend of mine whose daughter was having about 100 guests to her 21st, she baked two spare plainly decorated cakes which could be cut up and bagged up in advance so my friend didn’t spend the party cutting up cake!

Wedding Cake FlowersHaving looked at lots of ideas I was finally inspired by a photo on the wall in the Home and Kitchen shop in Skipton (Excellent Shop!) I made lots of flowers from flower paste…and I mean LOTS of flowers!!. Flower paste dries really hard and it can be rolled out so thin you can see through it! It also lasts along time, I’ve still got the arrangements I made, the photos of close-ups were taken yesterday, a bit dusty, a bit faded, but otherwise still looking good!

Wedding Cake FlowersI made roses, frangipani (an Australian flower as I married an Australian!) filler flowers, freesias, roses were brushed with dusting powder to vary the colour. I made rose leaves and also twisted ribbon and pearls onto wire. Everything was made, ready to use by the end of February.

I made a small arrangement to go on the top of the cake and then a ring of flowers to go on the middle tier. I made it a bit like a circlet of flowers for the hair, so it could be lifted on and off. You can see from the photos how it was all wired together.

Ring of Wedding Cake FlowersIt took ages to work out how to support the top tier as I only wanted about 2 1/2″ difference, most supports you can get in the shops are not as narrow. In the end I made something from polystyrene and plastic rods. I have to admit though that when it came to our honeymoon party I used a cereal bowl and it worked perfectly!

My biggest stress was the royal icing on the side of the cake, the design I chose had an all over iced pattern! I discovered that an icing tube I had in my collection did a leaf design. I used the Christmas Cake as a practice that year!

Wedding Cke FlowersI was very relieved on the day to find out the cake looked good! My opening comment to the photographer when he came out of the reception room was ‘Does the cake look ok?’ which really meant ‘Is the cake still standing?’ I was very reassured when he looked surprised to discover I had made it myself.

Even better was when I found it tasted good too, especially when served with Wensleydale cheese, a Yorkshire tradition.

Wedding Cake

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Handmade Wedding. Day Five; Stationary

Wedding Guest Book

I’ve decided that when planning a wedding it is much easier once you decide on a theme, it doesn’t matter whether it’s a colour, an era or whatever, it gives a focus to decisions about stationary, flowers etc. I remember years ago (like over 25!) one of my friends had a themed wedding, at the time it was unusual, I think my mother found the whole idea somewhat amusing, but actually I think her mother was ahead of her time!!

Table namesOur theme was roses, particularly the roses we grew in our garden. Our tables were named after them, they adorned our stationary, we even gave Champagne Moments (a lovely rose) potted as a lasting gift instead of a bouquet of flowers. At the time there was a shop in Leeds called Confetti and Lace, they sold pressed miniature red roses, I used these for all the stationary. Continue reading

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A Handmade Wedding. Day Four; Accessories

Lace shawl Fascinator

Half way through the countdown to our handmade wedding and you are probably wondering what’s left, after all the wedding dress, the bridesmaid’s dress and the gents waistcoats were all made by late autumn…

Every bride needs her accessories and I was no exception… Continue reading

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Handmade Wedding. Day Three; Waistcoats

Wedding Waistcoats

All this week I’m writing about the different things I made for our wedding, hopefully it will inspire someone else to have a ‘handmade wedding’!

WiastcoatDay three, it’s the boys turn! I’d made my wedding dress over the summer holidays, then my daughters bridesmaid dress, my next job was to make all the boys a waistcoat each. I had four to make altogether, two fancy ones for the groom and the bestman, and two simpler ones for the ushers. Continue reading

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A Handmade Wedding; Day Two

Helen

Next week it’s our 8th Wedding Anniversary, so I’m taking this opportunity to tell you all about our handmade wedding! Yesterday (Day 1!) was, of course, THE DRESS, today it’s the bridesmaid’s dress;

I had one very special bridesmaid, my daughter Helen, she was 9 years old and desperate to be bridesmaid – in fact before he’d even proposed she was dropping very unsubtle hints as only a 9 year old can! I seem to recall that fairy outfits from feathers and petals came into it at one point!! Continue reading

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A Handmade Wedding

Back of the dress

Next week it’s our 8th wedding anniversary, it doesn’t seem like eight years since I married the best man in the whole wide world! We had a wonderful day surrounded by thirty of our closest family and friends. Our wedding was what I would describe as a handmade wedding, if I could make it, I did! It made it a very special and unique day. I thought it would be fun this week to write about a different item I made each day, the inspiration behind it and how I made it, hope you enjoy the build up to the big day… Continue reading

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Monday’s Meander Around the Garden

Impulse buys!Well, the impulse buys have begun! I popped into the supermarket for some milk and came out with 2 pints of milk, 12 bearded iris bulbs (gorgeous colour!) an astrantia root (astrantias like my soil, so I’m trying to get one in every colour!) and a stunning zantedeschia which will look great together with the iris bulbs in our Amethyst and Amber garden! I used to turn my nose up at orange flowers but I love them now, maybe it’s another sign of getting old, like wearing purple!!

David Austin Ghislaine de FeligondeA more considered purchase was a new rose from David Austin, last week I moved three roses which weren’t successful at climbing an obelisk. There was one square left where I could plant a replacement. I wanted a rambler that would fit in with the amber colour scheme without being too rampant! Ramblers have much more pliable stems for winding round objects! I googled it and found Ghislaine de Feligonde, a pretty coppery peach colour, and even better, it doesn’t have a lot of thorns! Within a couple of days of ordering, it had arrived and was planted! I planted some viola plugs round the base of the rose as some light ground cover.

CrocusWe’ve had a mild, dry weekend here in Yorkshire (cold, wet and miserable again today!!) so I spent most of Saturday pottering round, pruning more roses, weeding, dividing perennials…my sedums have been very floppy for the last couple of years which is a sign that they need dividing. I  dug each clump up and used my fork to divide it in two, replanted one and moved the other to the front garden- free plants!

Bulbs are coming up all over the garden, I spotted a couple of crocuses hidden under an obelisk and some stunning blue irises are flowering in a pot. These dwarf daffodils will hopefully flower in the next few days.

Iris Reticulata Daffodils

I’m a bit nervous about digging too much at the moment as what looks like a bare patch of soil invariably has a plant just waiting to burst through! Perennials are starting to appear in the garden, geraniums, the lovely silver leaves of the perennial cornflower, aquilegias, brunnera, crocosmia…

Perennial Cornflower Geraniums

Shoots are just starting to appear on some of the shrubs too such as philadelphus and this golden berberis.

BerberisThe bullfinches have been regular visitors to the bird feeders, together with a couple of chaffinches, for some reason the chaffinches struggle with feeders, they can’t stand on the little perches, all the other finches seem to manage though. We’ve had blue tits, great tits, coal tits and the long tailed tits, at this time of year I can watch them flitting through the trees and shrubs as they come along the back lane, round the garden perimeter, to the bird feeder. The robins were hopping nearby when I was gardening, hoping for a worm!

I enjoyed my first cup of coffee in the summerhouse too, spring is just round the corner!

 

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Drawn Thread Sampler

This weekend I decided to buckle down and finish the Jane Greenoff sampler I started on holiday. It’s drawn thread and hardanger, I’ve really enjoyed stitching it but it’s all new to me and I haven’t found the instructions particularly user friendly, so I do have to concentrate.

Hardanger SamplerLast weekend I stitched a band of drawnthread embroidery and some buttonhole bars, all that was left was the hardanger sample design at the bottom.

In hardanger connecting  blocks of satin stitch, called kloster blocks, are sewn to make an enclosed area (three diamonds in this design) Threads are then cut to leave a grid within the design. The grid lines left are filled with needle weaving, extra stitches such as dove stitch can also be used. I enjoyed the needle weaving bit, but I found it a bit nerve wracking cutting the threads- there’s no second chance if you snip the wrong one! I also found it difficult to get a neat cut, how close can you cut before you risk catching the embroidery stitches! Dove stitch is the ‘spiders web’ bit in the middle!

With the embroidery complete I then had to decide whether to stitch the drawn thread hem. I carefully read the instructions, read them again…and decided to stop whilst I was ahead! I couldn’t follow them confidently enough to try, they may have made more sense once I started, but I chose to send the sampler off to the picture framers as it is.

I have enjoyed stitching this sampler, I’ve learnt several new stitches and techniques and I’m really pleased with the result, I think it’s beautiful. However…I have also learned that this type of embroidery is not for me, we can’t enjoy everything!

I like Women’s Institute workshops for this very reason, I can try a new craft out without lots of investment, see if I like it. I think of them as taster days!  I tried goldwork once, I made a picture I was proud to frame, but it was hard work, not the relaxation I want from embroidery!

Linking up with Kathy’s Quilts for Slow Stitching Sunday

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