It's 10 months since I got back from my last trip to Japan, and only this week did I finally install the things I had bought for my Japanese ryokan house. Talk about procrastination. Most of the time this house stays closed, I forget how incredibly detailed it is inside. And so authentic - I saw countless old properties in Japan with similar architectural elements and room furnishings. It's nice to see the house open again.
I had a little house shrine to put in one bedroom, and some food dishes, a few ornaments and I had a postcard that I trimmed to become a wall mural for the guest bedroom. While I was at it, I finally made the two futon with their duvet covers wrapped in protective sheets - just like the ones I slept under in Japan. There are still loads of items I would like to make for this house - but, procrastination :)
I've spent a bit of time this week working on the Japanese appliqued basket kit. I finished all the applique for the outer basket, lined it and turned it through. And I made the inner basket, then spent quite a while quilting it all.
Now that the quilting is finished, I am sewing the side seams to make the basket shapes.
I also made a start on the vintage linens quilt, although I have downgraded plans from a bed quilt, to a large wallhanging - given the stack of bed quilts I still have. I ironed on woven interfacing to give the vintage embroideries some body and protection, and started cutting out motifs I like. These are just pinned on the design wall, I need to rearrange the crinoline ladies. I'm just making things up as I go along.
I came across a little magazine kit for a cross stitched thread holder in a charity shop, and stitched that. Nice to do something quick.
I wet finished and trimmed the three houndstooth mats that I wove on my little loom. I am keeping one and will offer the other two to DS's partner to see if she wants them for their house.
I have loaded the Double Wedding Ring onto my longarm frame, and I was basting long lines across it in preparation for rolling to the bottom to start Baptist Fan quilting. About a foot from the end of the top, my machine suddenly started making an ominous thunking noise with every stitch. I've been back and forth to the dealer about it, I had to take some specific close up photos and a video for them to determine that the timing seems to have gone out. I'm assuming the needle hit one of the thick seam junctions in the DWR, made worse with starch, and it was too much and forced the timing out. So now I am waiting for a quote to have an engineer come and fix the timing. And it leaves me wondering if I am going to be able to quilt the DWR on the frame - it's full of bulky seam junctions and I can't afford to keep having the engineer come. I don't want to have to hand quilt it, I don't feel this quilt is worth that amount of effort because of all the wonkiness.
I did de-stash seven quilts this past week: two went to Project Linus, and the other five I sold for not very much on ebay- although I got more for a couple of them than I expected. They were all quilts that I had made up from vintage unfinished tops I bought in America on past holidays. I enjoyed them for many years but they weren't really my taste any more. I couldn't donate them because of the vintage fabrics, so I'm glad they've been bought by people who wanted them and hopefully will give them good homes.
Not that I need a new hobby, but I am becoming increasingly tempted by 3D printing, now that there are plug and play machines and I'm seeing an increasing number of attractive STL files for dollhouse miniatures popping up online. I just don't know if I would use it enough, or if it would just be another expensive gadget sitting around the house waiting for the odd time when it is needed. Do any of you have a 3D printer?


























































