High on the list of essential things I take for granted would be my decent desktop PC with lots of memory and connected to fibre broadband. I am used to quickly whizzing my way to any website, carrying out lightning searches, easily looking things up, watching videos etc. And then suddenly my PC doesn't want to do any of those things, and I realise how much I took it for granted and how much I depend on it. I don't know what's wrong, I have wasted many hours scanning for malware, cleaning the PC with CCleaner, googling for solutions (which is hard to do when your internet doesn't want to work) and trying resets on alphabet soup functions like Winsock, DNS flush, ipconfig etc etc. The other two users in the house (one on wifi, one on an ethernet cable same as me) are having no troubles at all, so it's something in my pc. The errors I am generally getting (DNS probe launched, unable to reach site, timed out, ERR something) all seem to point to an issue around DNS or ip addresses but it appears to be beyond my ability to fix. It's incredibly frustrating to have to borrow DH's laptop just to access the bank statement or to join my weekly zoom call with my bobbin lace friends. It even hesitated to let me access my own blog, so hopefully I will be able to upload this post.
Having the week in Cyprus and a few other days where I didn't do any handsewing means that I am falling behind on the Australian BOM quilt blocks. I am still trudging away on Month 9, and Month 10 arrived a few days ago. I am striving not to feel pressured. The background embroidery on Month 9 is done, and I'm now stitching the three spools of lace that will be appliqued onto the block.
Before we went away, I had been prototyping a version of a vinyl zip pouch that Facebook was trying to sell me a template kit to make. It looked intriguing and as they helpfully showed a picture of the template shape, I had a go at designing my own version. When we got back, I it sewed up using some cheap Aldi FQs (always useful for making something you aren't sure is going to work) and some free vinyl from a reclaimed duvet package. It's turned out alright, slightly wonky but now I know how to do it better next time if I want to make more.
This week I've been attempting to sew a lightweight backpack from ripstop nylon, a new fabric for me. The travel daypack I took to Cyprus was so old that its lining kept shedding red scraps onto the contents and onto me. I wasn't able to find a daypack online with a configuration I liked, and then I found this Youtube video on sewing a school backpack which made it look doable. I ordered some ripstop nylon and looked online for tips on how to sew it (during one of the intermittent periods where my PC was admitting the internet did in fact exist): #70 sharp needle, longer stitch length, polyester thread, clips or tape instead of pins. My machine is dealing with the slippery fabric better than I thought it might. So far I've completed the side/top/bottom loop (and I added water bottle pockets), a hacked pocket to make the pocket taller and with an added second zipped pocket, and I attached the pocket to the front of the bag along with a leather patch. I can't do a lot more because the webbing I ordered for the straps 10 days ago still hasn't despatched despite the website promising 24 hour despatch time, I am chasing that up with them. The bag isn't perfect but it is my first go. I think it would be easier to sew in a heavier Cordura-type bag fabric but then that would be more expensive so it's good to try out the pattern first in something cheaper.
I've been knitting away on the red cotton baby jacket that I started on the holiday, I've done the fronts, back and one sleeve and have started the second sleeve. I forgot to take a picture and my PC is being so awkward about uploading photos at all that I will have to wait for next week.
I made another card with my Brother Scan N Cut using a commercial svg file from Scrapchick. I found I had to change the blade because it wasn't cutting cleanly, after blunting it on an attempt to cut out 2mm greyboard for an upcoming cartonnage workshop I will be attending next month. I was also having problems with my mat not being sticky enough so today I have applied Pinflair Temporary Stencil Glue to make it sticky again. I got there in the end although it's not perfect.
2 comments:
Have you tried looking at the Task Manager to see what processes/app are running and taking up CPU processing? That where my husband always starts . . . https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnet.com/google-amp/news/why-is-my-computer-so-slow/
Tell DH send me the video please! I hope you’re not permanently injured.
As always to see what you’re working on. I have a tedious top on the go and will try posting it this week.
Post a Comment