Lacing and Ladder-stitch

All I seem to have done for the last few evenings is lacing and ladder-stitch, but my fabric box is coming on a treat. It will soon be ready to hold our wedding album!

The actual box is now finished, it’s covered in deep red silk, embellished with a heart on top of the drop-down lid, and a heart on the inside too. It’s lined with ivory silk dupion.

Tray supportsToday it’s Slow Stitching Sunday over on Kathy’s Quilts and I’ve been lacing and ladder-stitching away! I’m now making a tray to go inside, I’ll put our guest book and other wedding momentos on it. A tray is made just like a lid, it’s just the other way up. Before embarking on the tray you have to first make the supports to go inside the box, the instructions called for thick card, which the mdf board is, but I wasn’t convinced it would be wide enough to stop the tray from slipping down to the bottom. I decided to use it double thickness on the short sides, it seems to have worked well, it’s a lot more substantial and supportive.

Tray in the makingOnce the supports were in I could measure up and make the sides of the tray. Those of you who have been following this project will know I had a lot of problems stitching in the lining of the lid, like I couldn’t, it’s just glued! I decided to change tack with the tray, I’ve stitched the lining in first, slip stitching it to the tray sides so it’s level with the edges. Tomorrow I will then hopefully stitch the bottom in place, as long as I remember to make some tabs first so I can lift the tray out easily.

Tray almost finishedMy original plan was to put dividers in the tray with possibly a lid on the smaller side, but I’m beginning to have second thoughts, I think partially because it’s gone so well so far, I don’t want to push my luck!! I’ll sleep on that one…

Linking up with Sew Darn Crafty too.

Wedding Album Box

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Catbells

I’ve just been down to the picture framers to collect a cross-stitch picture, I stitched it years ago but it resurfaced during my sort out. It’s only small and may seem a little unremarkable, but I am particularly proud of this little picture. You see, it’s the only cross-stitch picture I’ve designed from scratch myself. I’ve done samplers many times, but they are fairly simple compared to a picture I think.Catbells at dusk

Catbells is one of the smaller fells in the Lake District, it’s one of my favourite places, I first climed it under my own steam when I was four, bribed along with Kendal Mint Cake! I once went up to the top to watch the sun rise, magical, the sun rose over Blencathra and the early morning mist over the lake turned golden orange…I digress!

Catbells cross-stitchI had a plan to make a cross-stitch of each of my favourite mountains, Catbells, Great Gable, Haystacks…I only got as far as Catbells, it’s the view across Derwentwater by Friars Crag, the pine trees are on Friars Crag, another very sentimental place for me.

I seem to remember I used two threads for the fell and the foreground, but one thread for the lake.

Catbells framed

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My Fabric Box has a lid!

I started making my box a week ago, it’s for my wedding album. When I last posted about it on Sunday, I just had the basic box made. Well, I’ve been stitching away most evenings and I have now finished the main box, very excited and pleased with it so far!

Silk Dupion liningI lined the box with silk dupion which was left over from a wedding dress I made. The card is off cuts of mount board from my friendly picture framer! It is made in a similar way as the main box, lacing the base and then the four sides in a line. However, the sides hold the base in place, they don’t need stitching together. With a drop down lid, the lining sides should be level with the box sides, this certainly made it much easier to measure the card as I just cut it to the right width and then held it in place whilst I drew a line level with the box. I then just had to slip stitch the top edges together. It made such a difference to get the lining in, all of a sudden I had a box!

Sitching sides at an angleWhen making a box like this, you have to measure as you go along in a certain order, rather than calculating everything at the beginning. My next stage was the sides of the lid, I found it quite difficult to know how much ‘ease’ to allow, as I didn’t want the lid so loose it fell off, but equally I didn’t want it so snug the silks were damaged. In the end I allowed a couple of millimetres extra. The sides are covered with one piece of silk, rather than lining it separately. It was quite fiddly to stitch as you have to back stitch it whilst holding it taut at a 45 degree angle, so the line of stitches is on the inside, not the top, also allowing the lining to lie flatter inside the box. You can see this on the photo. It wasn’t until I could sit the sides over the box that I knew I’d got the size right!

Lacing lidThe sides were then measured in order to cut the top so it would sit neatly. I carefully positioned the heart in the centre, pinning into the edge of the board before lacing the centre first to ensure the heart didn’t move. It was then fairly easy to slip stitch the top to the sides.

 

I wondered about lining the lid in the ivory, the silk and lace heart for the inside did look rather nice on ivory, but my daughter pointed out that it would be easier to get a neat finish with a red background, she was right!

I cheated slightly with the inner heart, I slip-stitched it on with gold thread, couching a gold edge round at the same time. On the outside I’d slip-stitch it on first and then couched the gold edge afterwards. Stitching it in one go made it easier to get a neat start and finish, it probably won’t be as robust a seam, but I felt it would be sufficient on the inside.

 Inner Box LidThis evening I’ve just laced the heart onto mount board for the lid lining. The instructions say glue in the middle and then stitch a few securing stitches in the corner. It does say this is difficult…well I couldn’t get a stitch in. I tried a curved needle, a straight needle from the outside, my last try was to lift the lining out (very sticky!) and put some loose stitches from the outside of the box, through to the inside and then to the corners of the lining, the idea being that they could then be tightened as I lowered the lid, no that didn’t work either. So any ideas gratefully accepted, at the moment I’ve left it with a weight on it, hoping the glue will hold it firm enough!

The next stage is the ‘fittings’, a tray to sit inside the box, possibly with a divider and lid, depending on how adventurous I’m feeling!

Fabric Box and Lid

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My Sewing Room

I’ve been having a bit of a sort out in my sewing room over the last few days, trying to take stock of just how much fabric I have, or rather admit to myself just how big my hoard is!! I got inspired by a blog by Amy Smart on her Diary of a Quilter, it was about sorting and organising scraps. My scrap bag was an overflowing Ikea bag, was invariably ended up all over the floor before I managed to find the scrap I wanted! I needed to get organised!!Overflow onto the landing

I purloined a spare set of drawers and rearranged the landing to accommodate them. My sewing room is ‘small but perfectly formed’, made smaller by the fact that it’s under the eaves, so headroom is limited!…so I overflow onto the landing where I’ve already got a beautiful pine chest full of fabric. I love this pine chest, you see it used to be my grandfather’s workbench, painted dark green, with a lathe and vice screwed to the top. My mum had it restored, it’s gorgeous, you can still see where his tools went. It’s now full of fabric!My grandads chest

I sorted out my scrap bag into colours and I’ve got one drawer for each colour group. I even went through my fat quarter drawer for those pieces which are realistically nowhere near a fat quarter any more, into the scrap drawers they went!Fat quarters

I then turned my attentions to my dressmaking collection! I rearranged it into jacket, skirt and shirt lengths, although some do overlap. I noticed some quilting blogs have a tally of how much fabric they have used against the amount purchased. I thought this could be quite a useful exercise. I couldn’t face counting the yards so I just counted lengths of fabric…

OK if I write this quickly it might not seem quite so much…

8 jacket lengthsPart of my stash!

18 skirt lengths

10 shirt lengths

21 pieces of furnishing weight

134 fat quarters

18 longer lengths of quilting fabric

There, it’s out!! Hope my OH doesn’t read this particular blog!! So, my aim this year is to reduce the size of my stash, that’s not saying I won’t buy any more fabric (that would be unrealistic!!) but I want to sew more than I buy! I should have a pretty good wardrobe by the end of the year too!

My sewing room

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Monday’s meander round the garden

The sunshine arrived in our garden this week, this may not seem a big thing to those of you who live in sunnier climes, but we haven’t see sunshine in the garden since November! You see, we live in the lea of Otley Chevin, which is a big hill which forms one end of Rombolds Moor, the more famous bit being Ilkley Moor of ‘On Ilkla moor bar t’hat’. During the winter the sun just doesn’t rise high enough in the sky, we watch it gradually getting nearer…and then it arrives to signal that spring is on its way at last!hellebore in flower

daffodil bulbs

Things are starting to move in the garden, bulbs are appearing all over, flower buds are developing on the camellia and the magnolia stellate. The hellebores are starting to flower and the primroses are looking very cheerful. I even noticed a winter flowering heather looking pretty good in the front garden.

PrimrosesWinter flowering heather

The chickens are not impressed with me today, we’ve got eight and they have the run of the garden over the winter, slug and bug patrolling, but once the shoots start coming up in earnest they have to be restricted to their run or they will eat the lot! I also discovered why they kept gathering on the wall by our conservatory door, giving us the hard stare. It turns out whilst we were on holiday my daughter got into the habit of throwing corn out of the door as she couldn’t be bothered to go up to the run…

Evangeline, Dottie, Clementine, Florence and Harriet

Evangeline, Gracie, Clementine, Florence and Harriet

We’ve had a few frosty mornings this week, I love seeing the plants and ornaments outlined with frost.

Guineafowl chicksFrosted pieris

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Fabric box is taking shape

On Friday I started making a fabric box to put our wedding album in, you can read about the first stage here. Well I’ve made good progress today, lots of hand-stitching and I’ve even mastered a new skill!

Box baseI laced the sides in one long strip, checking they were abutting each other firmly. It was a long piece of lacing, particularly as I was trying to keep it flat to maintain the tension. I prefer lacing boxes to gluing, I’ve done both and gluing is certainly quicker, but inevitably with me its also messier, I used to find glue had crept round to the board edge, making it difficult to sew.

The sides were measured to allow the short sides to abut onto the long sides, so the long sides were cut to the length of the base plus the thickness of the cardboard at each side. I stitched the seams with ladder stitch, I struggled with my usual needle to get the angle. I remembered somewhere at the bottom of my needle drawer I had some curved needles, I’ve had them for years but never got the hang of using them. Well today they worked beautifully…perhaps it was the fact that it was the ideal project to use a curved needle, the hard board curved the needle round…or perhaps years of assisting doctors in operations has finally paid off…I have finally mastered the curved needle!Box corners

I was really pleased stitching the sides to the base as the base fits in beautifully. So the first stage has gone well!

...from this day forwardThis evening I finished the embroidery for the heart, yesterday I appliqued the crazy quilt heart to the silk and started embroidering part of our wedding vows around it ‘To have and to hold…’ well today I embroidered ‘…from this day forward’ I then decided to put the date on the opposite side. I found that a lot more challenging as I had to stitch it backwards, as in 7002 hcraM ht71, in order to make sure it finished at the right spot. Just creating the letter backwards was hard enough!!

Wedding dateI’ve now to decide what kind of lid to make, a drop down lid with sides on, or a hinged lid. I think a hinged lid is easier and less work, but if it’s slightly off it’s really noticeable. A drop down lid is a lot more work with sides which also need lining, but it’s probably a bit more forgiving if the size isn’t perfect..so long as it’s not too small!

I think I need to read Jane Lemons ‘Embroidered Boxes’ book this evening to help me decide…what do you think?Applique heart

Shared with Slow stitching Sunday on Kathy’s Quilts

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Fabric Box

Last night was Friday Night with Friends, a linky party hosted by Cheryll on Gone Stitching, I decided to start a new project which I’ve been mulling over in my mind for a few weeks now. I wanted to make a special box for our wedding album, as it’s been under our bed for nearly 8 years now!!

Template over lace I found some red silk in my stash which was the perfect colour as it was almost identical to the waistcoats and bridesmaid dress. It’s quite a firmly woven silk too, so ok for box making. Having been inspired by crazy patchwork hearts on Mollie Mine, I put together two sets of fabrics to try, one in quilting cottons and one in silks, satins and lace left over from my wedding dress. I don’t find it easy to do random crazy quilting, so I carefully arranged them first and laid a paper heart template over the top to check the effect. When I was happy, I then stitched the fabrics together.

Lace and silk crazy patchworkI was planning to hand embroider over the hearts, but I happened to find I had some gold machine embroidery thread and decided to have a play on a scrap of fabric. I liked the effect so I used various machine embroidery stitches along the seams. The bit I struggled with most was stitching the ribbon on neatly!!!

I wasn’t sure about how to stitch the heart onto the red silk, I’ve done very little applique. I considered bondaweb and then blanket stitch, but I wasn’t convinced it wouldn’t fray round the edges over time, especially the silk. I wasn’t convinced either of my ability to sew it on by needle-turning a narrow hem as I go! In the end I drew the heart shape with an air erasable felt tip, cut a 1cm seam, then turned it under whilst stitching round with a gold running stitch.

Lace or cotton?All I had to do then was decide which one would go on the top. Having conferred with my daughter, we decided the cotton would be better on the lid, with the more delicate lace one on the inside of the lid, so both get used!

To have and to hold...I cut a generous piece of silk for the lid, pinned the heart in place and then slip stitched round. I have just started stitching some of the words from the wedding vows round the edge in gold thread. I’m pleased with the writing as I did it ‘free-hand’ mainly because I couldn’t think of anything fine enough to mark it with! I’m still wondering about putting the date on the opposite side of the heart, I’ll see once I’ve done the vows.

Appliqued heartI started making the box this evening, I got two off-cuts of mdf board from my local picture framers, they only charged me £2, bargain! I borrowed a Stanley knife, but it took some cutting!! I then had to smooth the edges with a nail file as I couldn’t find any sandpaper…same thing really!! I’ve padded each piece with some cotton wadding left over from a quilt and so far I’ve covered the base with red silk, lacing across to keep it firm.

Lacing baseI’m sort of working it out as I go along, I’ve got a great book called ‘Embroidered boxes’ by Jane Lemon (published 1984…I’ve had it a while!!)  which is giving me general instructions, I just have to fine-tune them to my specific box…hopefully it will all come together nicely…

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BOM Quilting

I’m still very much a newbie when it comes to quilting, ok I’ve finished two quilts and I’ve another two tops waiting to be quilted, but they are pretty basic patterns, all squares or rectangles with the occasional triangle if I’m feeling brave! Until a couple of months ago I’d not even heard of a BOM quilt; BOM stands for Block of the Month. A pattern is released each month by the designer for a new block, by the end of the year you have a quilt, only the finished design is a surprise…It’s a good way of learning new techniques without having to do a whole quilt of them!

Fabric starting pointI decided to start a BOM quilt by Pat Sloan, she has a website, blog and also a facebook page. Facebook interest groups are another new experience for me, I’m on two now, Pats and also one from Caroline’s Sew Can She blog, it’s great to have a circle of contacts who will enthuse over material, suggest ideas, encourage and inspire each other…it also means my facebook page is filled with lovely photos of quilts!

A list of fabric requirements is given but I’mFabrics just using my stash, so I’ve put together a  group of fat quarters which will hopefully work. The leaf design and the amber fabric were my starting point. I’m still not sure about the two light blue fabrics, but I’d quite like to incorporate them a bit as I’d like to use them for the backing too, I’ve got rather a lot of them and I’ve had them for years!! I’m hoping to use the William Morris fabric for the sashing, as looking at the outline of the design, there’s several short sashes, so I can use different stripes of the fabric. That’s the plan anyway…

Flying geese pointsThe first block is a star design. We had the choice of either making it with flying geese or half triangles. As I’ve never done flying geese before I decided to give it a go. The instructions are really clear and easy to follow, with lots of photographs to illustrate the techniques. There’s also a video if you prefer.

Judging by comments on facebook, getting the points neat is the important thing with flying geese, mine aren’t perfect, but they’re not bad, I’m pretty pleased with my first attempt!

Block 2 was published this afternoon, it’s a heart design with flying geese again, so hopefully my points will improve with practice! Watch this space…

BOM January

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Drawn Thread Sampler

This year I decided to take an embroidery kit on holiday instead of a book, it’s much lighter to pack and it’s nice to have a bit of quiet time, even on holiday!

Jane Greenoff band samplerI chose one I bought last year at the Knitting and Stitching show, it’s designed by Jane Greenoff and I bought it as a bit of a trial; I’ve not done any counted thread embroidery before and I’ve admired the mini strawberry sampler book for a couple of years, it’s gorgeous, but for once I was sensible and decided to try one of the simpler kits first. Heather Hemstitch and Hardanger is a lovely band sampler, all in my favourite heathery colours. There’s a nice mix of stitches, cross-stitch, drawn thread, embroidery stitches and hardanger. To give you an idea of size it’s designed to be either made into a needlecase or framed as a picture.

Band samplerWhat ever the instructions say I still can’t bring myself to measure down and start at the top, so I started in the middle with the cross-stitch flower, well within my comfort zone!! I then stitched upwards towards the drawn-thread. When I first read the instructions I wasn’t sure about it, but they are the sort of instructions that make complete sense once you actually start following them. Having said that, they do presume a certain level of knowledge about embroidery stitches so I couldn’t recommend the kit for a complete beginner, for example there are no instructions about couching or buttonhole bars and only a drawing of hemstitch which is where I hesitated as I wasn’t sure if stitches had to be done in a certain order, I just did it like backstitch. That was the one time I really missed internet on holiday!!

Hardanger heartThe hardanger heart was interesting to do, the outer squares are stitched first, then threads are cut and pulled out to leave a grid, these are then stitched using needle weaving. The heart was embroidered in a lovely variegated perle thread, with a thinner version for the needle weaving.

The diagrams of the hemstitch and somerset stitch didn’t print that clearly on my copy, so I’m glad to be home with google before I start the somerset stitch band!

I’m about 2/3rds of the way through the sampler now and I’m really pleased with it, I like doing band samplers as there’s just enough to get the hang of a new stitch without getting bored!! I still haven’t decided if I’m just going to do the band or if I’m going to hem it too, it’s going to be framed whatever.

Heathe Hemstitch and HardangerI’m linking up with Slow Sunday Stitching at Kathy’s Quilts.

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Our Garden in Stitches

Last winter I went on a two day course organised by the Women’s Institute up at Alma House in Ripon, it was called something like Textile Pictures. The tutor was Janet Browne from Addingham, she suggested that we went on her website before the course to get some ideas…Wow…I booked my place that day!

Janet does amazing collages of routes, such as the walk from Addingham to Bolton Abbey, or Skipton to Cornwall. The one’s I fell for were the garden pictures, you can see them here the detail in them is phenomenal, a robin sits on a garden fork, there are rows of vegetables…Obelisk

We started with a little practise piece to get the hang of her method. The design is drawn on tissue paper, wadding is placed under calico, the design is then tacked to the back. Each piece of fabric to be appliqued on was then pinned to the front in turn. We then machine stitched the outline of the shape from the back, following the lines on the tissue paper before cutting round the stitching with little, sharp scissors.

It took some getting used to, ensuring that pieces went on in the right order, I had a fair bit of undoing when the fabric ‘missed’ the design, or creased underneath, but we got there! She was a very patient teacher!!

We were then free to draw our own design. I wanted to do a collage of our garden, I drew a design of the main part of our garden as it nicely fitted into a neat shape and didn’t have paths running straight up the middle to spoil the aesthetics!

Our garden

It took a while to get the hang of the order areas had to be stitched in, for example with the summer house the fabric for the windows was stitched first, main fabric on top, then each window was cut out to show the fabric underneath, roof went on last.  By the end of the second day I had almost done the pond area.

Pond

A lady sat next to me happened to mention Bondaweb, a new invention to me! I confess that the first thing I did after the course was to buy some Bondaweb! I don’t think I would have finished the collage without it! I could then cut out each individual piece, arrange it correctly, iron it on and then stitch round to secure it. I was also able to add a lot more detail then I would have managed with the other method. I would never have managed my golden retriever without Bondaweb!Summerhouse

It took an awful lot of different green fabrics, I tried to make the plants and shrubs identifiable if you know the garden, so there is a cottinius cogghria next to the summerhouse, hostas and crocosmia round the pond, clematis and roses on the obelisk…

Once the basic applique was done I then enhanced it with embroidery using French knots for the veronica and the perovskia, tiny lazy daisy stitch for geraniums…

Chicken and pots

I added the dogs and chickens to give it a sense of time, Florence, Clementine, Dottie, Gracie and Ginger were the chickens we had at that time, Zac is our patterdale cross, he isn’t usually let in the garden as he digs holes, hence he is pictured with just his bottom sticking up, Rosie our golden retriever is in her usual floosie position!

Once I was happy with it I stitched round the edge with a close zigzag in cream thread and then trimmed it close to the stitching. The picture framers then attached it to a backing board for framing.

Our garden in stitches

I’m really pleased with it, it gives a record of our garden at that point.

 

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