Monday, August 5, 2013

A Good Day

 This week's work shifts were moved to different days, hubby's away working, no commitments and a frozen meal all added up to a completely free day to spend  in the sewing room.
Photos are lousy, too late at night to be taking decent ones.
I'm half way through quilting my nephew's very late birthday present, I put the binding on a very old UFO and  I'm prepping a pattern for a knit top.
A good day!




Oh and I won a Lucky Door Prize. No pre-unpacked photo, to eager to see what was in it. I won it last week at the Nundah Cottage Craft group's Challenge Evening. Our friend, Di is a member and she asked us along to see the results of their challenge - a small lot of mixed black  and white fabric, a size restriction, and participants could add more b&w and only one colour. Di won second prize with a wall hanging. Her added colour was lime green. First prize was a framed pictorial applique piece using red as the added colour. I wish it was for sale because I would have bought it on the spot. It was a Gothic style house with a bare winter tree and the red was the sky.  My description does not do it justice.
The bad blogger that I am, didn't take a photo. I'll have to see if one is available.
Off to bed now, happy that I actually got something done today (craftwise that is, not the housework).

Take care,
Kayly

Friday, July 26, 2013

Photo helps!



sent from my Telstra NEXTG™ handset

Nephew's Quilt

Ready for the pins if those lines are straight!
Kayly with the sore knees.

sent from my Telstra NEXTG™ handset

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Warwick Retreat

Before any more days pass and it becomes very old news, I must tell you about my very first retreat. Two weeks ago, I went with a fabulous group of ladies to Glenrose Patchwork in Warwick, about 2 hours drive away, depending on roadworks.
It was just the best!!!!
Glenis and Percy Pugliese have set up a wonderful home with a patchwork shop , 4 B&B cottages, gardens and a very well appointed retreat room. The photos below should tell you all.
 
Glenrose Patchwork home and shop

'Ivy" - One of the 4 cottages

Inside 'Ivy'
Inside 'Ivy'
The photo to the left and the 2 below are of the interior of the retreat room.


 Here we are busy at work, fuelled by chocolate.



 Now let's just say we didn't starve! Don't listen to the others - almost all of this is ours! Maree made us a wonderful baked dinner. Thank you Maree. The kale is from Aunty Al's vegie garden.

Part of the gardens.

Who won the biggest and most filled bag?
 At the start of the retreat, in the shop, we were given a bag with our name on it. You know just to fill with the pretty things that caught our eye or that we needed to help with the project we were working on. Well that was lethal!
All being well we are going again next year. Can't wait.
Thank you Maree (who organised it), Helen, Teresa, Sandy, Marilyn, De, Alison and Lynda for you company and conversation.
Back soon with what I did,
Take care,
Kayly
PS. We even had a visitor. Chookyblue popped in on her way home.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Lucky Me

I was in a cushion swap.
Look what I received from Aunty Al.

 The cushion is on my couch. My other cushions are looking very dated in comparison.

 I also got yummy chocolate and a notebook, just perfectly sized for my handbag.


Thank you Aunty Al.

Take care,
Kayly

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Recent Holiday

Warning - photo heavy post with no craft.  ;-)
Last March/April, Hubbie and I managed to have a 3 week holiday overseas, again in England. Yes , we did pick to go in what turned out to be their coldest Spring in 50 years. Many people we spoke to kept saying we should have been there last year when it was a hot 24deg C.  LOL. Trust us.
Yes we had snow. Something that amused us Queenslanders.

The lane next to our B&B

Sunday morning walk in Snailwell

 We saw.....
 Ancient villages and churches,






 and incredible museums.
(I'm no plane buff, but I was very impressed by Duxford.)
One of the hangers at Duxford
The National Train Museum in York



The Transport Museum in London - very well set out. You start at the top of the building and back in time and work your way down and to the present time.


  


 We saw dykes and windpumps. (Didn't know they had dykes in England.)

 See, we did have blue skies. It was just the wind -gale force, and the chill factor  - minus 5.







I loved this shoreline.  Rocks of all sizes and smoothed after tumbling about in the sea. Heaps of people walking, heads down, looking for the perfect one.


 Hubbie trying to hang onto everything in the wind that was coming straight off the North Sea. Look in the background...England does have sandy beaches!



 We walked the Yorkshire Moors.








We enjoyed many pretty east coast towns including Whitby.







Also castles. This is Castle Howard where both films, Brideshead and Brideshead Revisited, were filmed.
 In London, we got to go to the Agatha Christie play 'The Mousetrap' which is in its 60th year of continuous production.
 How many of you, like me, thought this was a tall sign?
When you see it in films and TV shows, it looks so big. I think the photographers/cameramen must have laid on the footpath to shot it.

Have you noticed no pink beanie or gloves?

It was warming up, 9 degrees - positively balmy.
Looking over to Greenwich from what was once the 'Call the Midwife' docklands.

 Hampton Court was on my must see list this time.


 M&M World was a surprise find. DH was in seventh heaven! We bought souvenirs from here for our son - stickers with his name on, a lanyard, plate etc. We had a winner there. He thought they were cool.



I did give some thought to my crafting while away. At Bridlington, the same place as the stony beach above, the promenade has been paved in at least 4 different patterns. It gave a 3D effect if looked at from the right angle. All just clever placement of colour and line, just like patchwork, really. You can see the other patterns if you use Google maps and zoom right in.

Talking of patchwork, I had better go and organise the baby quilt I only have to quilt. I have just got word I have my first grandnephew on my side. That makes 10 grand nieces and nephews between hubbie's and my families.

Take care everyone,
Kayly

Friday, May 3, 2013

Home Sewing.

Before we went on holidays, I decided I needed some more long sleeved t-shirts. So I dragged these out. Yes, they are circa 1977!


They don't look too flash hanging off a bedroom door, but trust me, they fitted and looked okay on.


 Inside the packet was the size 12 pattern, I traced off the master all those years ago. Let's just say I traced off another larger size this time, and leave it at that.  LOL.
After practising with the old Knitwit pattern, I allowed myself to buy this new Kwiksew one. The blue material above was out of stash. The pink and the grey below came from East Coast Fabric on one of their $5.95 a metre days, so it was not going to be a great loss if it all failed.


This fabric was very slippery and try as I might I could not get it to fold and sit neatly.  So I retraced  whole front and back pieces. That also helped work out where the pattern blotches were going to appear on me. It has a cowl neck - something I've never done before. I also tried for the first time using the tape (sort like applique paper) to do the hems - impressed with that and will definitely use it again.

 

 All in all, I was very pleased with my efforts. It looks good on, hangs nicely, and feels great.
There was also a basic pull-on skirt in a warm material, but that's nothing too exciting to look at.

On the craft front, I owe my nephew a 30th birthday quilt. I've at least started all the cutting, but he might have to wait until his 31st to get it. So many little squares and the black ones are hard to see. As he is well over 6 foot tall, I'm making it bigger than the pattern.


Off to cut more squares!
Take care,
Kayly