I ended up spending about two days this week creating the Trifold Journal that I mentioned in last week's post. One of those projects where I have all the tools, only they are spread across four floors in various craft stashes, so lots of hiking up and down stairs to retrieve paper trimmers, bone folder, bookbinding glue, quilting thread, fabric, applique punches etc. It was quite fun though, I started out only planning a basic folder around a printed journal, but then kept thinking 'I could add a pocket', 'I could add some embellishments' and printing off various things to add to the creation. I am quite pleased with how it has turned out, with all the decorative journal pages printed from the Cosy Cottage digital download, an accordion pocket inside the front cover, a flat pocket on the right hand cover, a dangling charm, a fabric spine, I added pen loops, stocked the pockets with cut out artwork etc. No idea what I am going to do with it now - my handwriting is awful and would instantly desecrate the lovely pages - so currently I am just opening it up and admiring it occasionally.
Where once I struggled to fit my crafting in around work, I am now retired.
But I still have too many hobbies.
Saturday, 20 September 2025
A papercrafting week
Sunday, 14 September 2025
Shedding about 45 pounds of burden
My big dollshouse has left the building! I'm amazed at how much lighter I feel, it was obviously a bigger burden on my mental guilt/To Do list than I had even realised. A lady bought the nearly empty house which I had marketed cheaply as a renovation project, but she loves it and isn't planning to change anything. I finally overcame my procrastination earlier this week and started floor by floor removing things I wanted to keep or sell. That turned out to be most of the contents. The more I took out, the more it became obvious that the 35-year-old decor had not aged well. Back in the 1990s it was harder to get commercial miniature supplies in the UK and also I had no money, so the house was an ode to DIY solutions that we all used to use: like printed National Trust bookmarks as fancy murals, and mixing oil and acrylic paints to marbleize floor tiles. The lights were almost all homemade, and the wiring a creative bodge. Some of the flooring was starting to lift, there were glue stains, the window acrylic had yellowed... Even though the structure itself is of high quality plywood, I couldn't in good conscience price it very highly. So now it has been collected and I got some money back, and it's gone to a new life with someone else who will hopefully love it again.
Of course, having the enormously heavy roadblock removed, I can now fully see the next glory hole that needs tackling: my collection of dollshouse books and magazines. I haven't been able to get to it for years because there was too much in the way, as I tend to use the raised floor in front of it as a staging area for tools and components when I am building houses, as well as the big dollshouse on its stand.
I finished weaving my plaid teatowel and wet finished and hemmed it. The cotton yarn bloomed beautifully in the washer/dryer and is now butter soft. It also shows evidence of interesting diagonal texture called 'tracking' which is something that can happen spontaneously due to tension in the weaving. I love it, and it adds additional interest to the weave. The towel hasn't been properly used yet as DH is terrified of ruining it with a curry stain or something.
I've warped the loom again with a random selection of my hand-knit cotton knitting yarn to make a colourful runner or hand towel, not sure which yet. Using up my knitting stash is one of the reasons I bought the loom, and it's fun to experiment with colour.
I sewed together my Double Wedding Ring blocks into a top. It looks quite nice from a distance, although the wrong side is a crime against both piecing and pressing. Luckily that all gets hidden when it is turned into a quilt :) It's not very big, after all that work, only about 64" square. I don't have any more blue fabric, but if I can get some more then I might add some plain borders to bring it up to a double size at least. A DWR has been on my bucket list for decades so I feel a sense of achievement to get this far, but it has really emphasised that accurate sewing is not my strong suite. It's also been a good project to use up more of my old Thirties repro stash, dating from the days when the Thirties repros were more pastel than they are nowadays.
With the DWR blocks off the sewing table, I've pulled out another project which has been waiting for a year or two (and which I came across when making my lists a few weeks ago), the Aida summer top. I bought some embroidered double gauze and the pattern at last year's Festival of Quilts, or possibly even the year before. I rarely sew clothing as it almost never fits comfortably, but I liked the style of this and quite coincidentally saw the double gauze almost immediately after seeing the pattern, so went back and bought both of them. So far I have traced off what I hope is my size, and have cut out a toile in old sheeting to make a test garment.
I also finished quilting the pink doiley quilt which turned out pretty well. I usually wash quilts after quilting them, to settle the stitching and pucker the quilting. But I don't want to wash this one (yet anyway), as the crochet will then all wrinkle. I may give it a light steam press to calm down the puffiness. I love the pretty pink and the soft vintage feel to the quilt. I was wondering if it might look nice to cut scallops into the side edges as well.
I've been working away on accessories for the 1:48 scale Betterley Quilt Shop. I finished folding all the fat quarters and glued a lot of them into stacks, and then made two sewing machine kits, and have started on the boxes of thread and wadding rolls. I have to wear a magnifier Optivisor for working on these.
I finished the third Gail Pan set of embroidered blocks, and have started stitching the fourth (of six).
It's suddenly autumn here, and even feeling a bit chilly in the house in the evenings. My favourite time of year. I'm off to Prague for a short city break soon, leaving DH to man the fort. I've never been to Czechnia before, so I think it will be my 40th or 41st country. Although to be fair, I remember almost zero about some of the countries I visited on my whirlwind European backpacking tour in the early 80s so not sure if I should still be counting those :) Next year I am hoping to go to Norway. Do you have any travel plans for 2026?
Saturday, 6 September 2025
Bashing things with a big hammer is therapeutic
Today we went over to visit DS to help him and his partner demolish the derelict garden shed that they inherited. I had the pleasure of taking my turn at bashing the sides of it apart with our massive sledgehammer and prizing apart plank walls with our equally massive crowbar. I also got to jump on rotten wood sheets to snap them in half so they would fit in the car. It was all quite satisfying - apart from the massive amount of insect life that we disturbed, some of which has now taken up residence in our car after we took a couple of loads of ex-shed to their dump.
In more genteel pursuits, I am almost finished assembling the final block of my Double Wedding Ring quilt then I can start sewing the blocks together. I highly doubt they are all the same size so the result could be interestingly wonky - but hopefully it will all quilt out. I don't really want to have to custom quilt every arc so I am thinking maybe a Baptist Fan design using rulers. The two popular Baptist Fan ruler sets (Michaels and Amanda Murphy) are of course American, Amanda doesn't ship to the UK and Michaels might but then I would get hit for customs duty. One sole UK shop sells the Amanda rulers at a big mark up of course, but I had a customer service issue with that shop in the past and don't really want to order from them again. Sigh.
After watching a few videos on 'organising your WIPs', I headed down to make a UFO list in my sewing room. Things I have actually started wasn't a long list, but I kept getting sidetracked into additional lists like 'Waiting projects I really want to do', 'Kits I have bought but not started', 'Fabric I want to use up', 'Quilt patterns I thought I would make (but haven't), 'Bag patterns ditto', 'Rulers and gadgets I haven't used yet'..... I gave up at that point, as the exercise was starting to feel quite pointless. And that's only one hobby.
But I did discover a Corinne Lapierre kit for a wool felt sewing roll that I had completely forgotten I had started at last year's Coventry retreat - cutting out all the pieces ready for embroidery. So I brought that upstairs and completed the embroidery and assembly this week and was able to cross it off the WIP list. It's a cute little thing, I'm not sure how useful it actually will be though. I added a bit of woven interfacing to give the felt a bit more stability. The pincushion is detachable and held on by velcro.
I finished weaving the Log Cabin Table Runner, hemstitched the ends and gave it a wet finish. It's turned out fairly well - slightly narrower at one end than the other but my edges are definitely getting better.
I've now warped up for my Red & White tea towel using the cotton yarn I bought last week on holiday. I used a free site called Plaidmaker to come up with the checked design for the towel.
Now that the knitted doll is finished, I've gone back to embroidering the Gail Pan quilt blocks. They are very cute but taking ages to do. I've got one more block to stitch on panel 3 of 6. I like how they are turning out but feel impatient to get to the quilt assembly part.
I finished going through File Cabinet Mountain and it is all organised and dispersed now. It feels like a big achievement and did take days. I sorted out the 'keep' pile into the various hobbies and put the piles (sometimes subdivided into plastic folders by topic) into bankers boxes. We now have so much paper recycling piled up that it wouldn't all fit into the recycling bin and has to wait two weeks until the bin gets collected again. So hopefully going forward, I will be much pickier about what patterns I keep from magazines (and buy) and also will continue to file them in the bankers boxes.
I've been occasionally folding more tiny fat quarters for my 1:48 scale quilt shop, having finished the 100+ tiny bolts of fabric. I think I have to make all the accessories first, and then can pick and choose what to use to fill up the shelves and cabinets artistically. I finally managed to sell my Lego halloween house so that's opened up some room on my dollshouse shelves. Still haven't tackled my big house that I want to sell but I need to stop procrastinating and get it on the market to hopefully catch someone looking for a christmas present.
Youtube has started showing me 3D printer videos, and I watched a few out of curiosity, then of course it showed me even more. It is somewhat tempting, I am a gadget girl and 3D printers have come down so much in price and become much simpler to use. But I'm not sure if I would really use it when I am not doing much dollshousing any more. DH says if I get one, then he wants to use it for his hobby of painting military miniatures. Have you got a 3D printer? what do you use it for?