Saturday, September 17, 2011

Busy week! (Like you're totally surprised)

I went out and bought the darn Journey books.  I have been looking through them and am convinced that these are meant to create activists out of these little girls.  The Agent of Change book is all about changing the world.  Not fixing stuff that's broken, improving community safety, or reverting back to old traditions, but changing the world.  I have no idea what these 4th graders can do to "change the world" or even make a small change to their community.  Heck, most of these girls don't live in the same zip code--they're spread out all over the county.  However, one of the items in there that they discuss are powerful women in history (although all the women they use as examples are non-caucasian).  That's up my alley, so my thought was to find a few women in history (of any color) who were powerful, influential, and respected, and I may just focus on religious women (since this is a Catholic school).  I'm starting with Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII's first wife.  She moved from Spain to England as a teenager to be wed to Arthur, Henry's older brother.  Arthur died, so she was then married to Henry.  She loved needlework, in particular a form of needlework that became known as Spanishwork.  After the divorce, it became known as "blackwork".

I started working on a blackwork sampler to use as an example for the Girl Scouts meeting we have planned for Monday.  This will also count towards an Arts & Sciences project, and is actually a precursor to another project that I have planned, which is an Elizabethan coif that is covered in blackwork.  I'm going to use linen, but I will have to see if the threads are even-weave, and if not, I can get some wash-away aida cloth stuff that I can iron on and then it'll dissolve in water when I'm done.

This is what I'll have the girls make for scouts--a bookmark!  It's also got the Celtic knotwork--the school is proud of its Irish Catholic heritage, so it's totally appropriate!  Although it looks complex, it's simple counting.  I'll have to work on the handout for it to make it simple.


I am also working on these new Turkish socks.  I started these then had to rip them back to the toenails to add a few more stitches on the sides to accommodate the width of my feet.  My ingenious idea for the yarn is barely visible in this picture, but I took the two balls of yarn and tied them into a handkerchief to keep them from rolling around and unspooling or tangling.  So far it's working really well!

I also still have to do more work on the embroidery project for the 12th century tunics.  This is done with perl cotton, not embroidery floss.  I still have the wrists and hem of the dress, plus finishing all the seams.  Right now it's got rather ugly temporary hems done.

I got some good news from Donna about a quilt that I finished for her Mom--she got a 2nd place ribbon for "My First Quilt".  Her mom celebrated her 85th birthday recently and while she's done quite a lot of sewing, this is the first quilt she ever did.

I entered a quilt challenge for my guild--it said to make a quilt (with certain size parameters) with the theme "Celebrate!"  Mine is "Happy Birthday!"  It needed to have 20 of something in each quilt--mine had 20 different fabrics used in the quilt top, and the ribbons are 3-D.  Note that the hanging tabs are candles. :)  This is something we can pull out for each birthday party to hang with the rest of the decorations.

Emma is hosting her birthday this weekend, so we have three giggling girls joining her, who will likely stay up late, eat lots of pizza and junk food, and watch movies.  Thankfully she's outgrown the need for expensive themed parties with all her classmates in attendance.  I've never been good at doing those anyway...  Meanwhile, my DH has made a wise decision and has escaped the house to attend a man-fest at the Sounders game.  It's also a friend's birthday, so they went out for celebratory eats and will likely go out for celebratory beers after. 

They also had the raffle quilt on display at the quilt guild meeting--this is a stunning piece of work that won the Best of Show award at the fair this summer.  Just awesome!!  It's a "Baltimore Album" quilt using bright Kaffe Fassett fabrics that are all the rage.  This picture doesn't do the color justice--trust me, it's bright!
Gotta go order some pizza and get ready for a night of giggling.  Wish me luck.
K

1 comment:

Sorry--I'm getting a lot of junk emails, so moderation is necessary. Maybe just allowing members of the blog to comment would be easier...or those with Google accounts...let me know if that would be easier.