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Onion skins and rusty metal

I had a go at eco printing, though I didn't use a mordant - like alum - so the leaves I included in my dye pot didn't transfer on to the white cotton as I'd hoped they would.  I'll know for next time.  (It would've helped if I'd bothered to educate myself on the process before I started, but that would've been too sensible, wouldn't it?)  However, I still got some interesting results with red and brown onion skins, tea leaves, blackberries, bits of rusty metal and string!   I've a slow stitching project in mind for some of these pieces, and I'll definitely have another go at natural dyeing.  I'm hoping to go to the Harrogate Knitting & Stitching show and I know there'll be plenty of other craft stalls there, so maybe one will be selling dyes, mordants etc.   In other 'news', I gave up on 'The Lost Apothecary' as it wasn't well written enough to maintain my interest and life's too short to soldier on with a medi
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A spooky doll for (almost) Halloween

  I'll start with this gal because - be honest - if you were a kid and given this doll it'd give you nightmares, wouldn't it?  She's a scary-mary and no mistake.  I spent a few hours yesterday in Leeds city centre, and nipped into the museum where she's housed.  To be honest, it wasn't that appealing to me.  The museum I mean, not the doll.   It's one of those places that're aimed firmly at the younger demographic.  Which isn't a bad thing as kids need somewhere free to go and they have to be entertained when they're there.  But all the ' open this drawer and what can you find?', 'try on this wig!', 'oooh! look over here! ' stuff isn't for me.   I mooched around for a while, but my heart wasn't in it.   So I wandered over to the art gallery instead, and found some lovely stuff.   'Mount's Bay with St. Michael's Mount' by Alfred Wallis (1855 to 1942).  This was a man born in the Victorian age, when t

Cardboard cats & painted papers

  It's been one of those restless kind of days, beginning awkwardly when the clock radio besides my bed wouldn't tune into the radio station I wanted it to.  The radio's not broken.  It just flatly refused to do anything other than make crackling, hissing noises at me, like a thing possessed.  Very disconcerting.  Then I somehow broke a glass that'd been on my bedside table.  One of my nice Harvey Nicks tumblers too.  No idea why it shattered, but it did.  A malevolent poltergeist?  Nah, more like a still-sleepy me being clumsy.  Anyway, the restlessness has continued all day, and resulted in a lot of tea drinking and snacking.  Far too much snacking!  You know when you buy a multi-pack of chocolate bars and think I'll be sensible and ration them out, eating one a day ... yeah, well it wasn't a one-a-day kind of day.  I've eaten 'em all!  On the crafting front, I managed to get myself together enough to make some painted papers, stenciling and stamping o

Slow stitching, a skirt, a stencil & some spools ...

  Hello, and I'm happy to report that Kate Atkinson's 'Shrines of Gaiety' is a proving an excellent read, and I'm halfway through and lovin' it.  Luckily I've finished the Jude Hill inspired slow stitching, so that's not a distraction any more.  I was going to add further details to this - a couple more feathers, a stylized comet flaring through the sky, more spirals - but when I reached this stage it felt complete, as if adding more elements would make it too busy.  I didn't get the expression on the moon's 'face' completely right, but it was as good as I could manage.  In between devouring chunks of 'Shrines of Gaiety', I nipped into town, and did the obligatory rummage around the charity shop, my purchases joining those from the other day.  A pretty skirt that'll be cut up for patchwork - it's about a size 20, so there's lots of fabric to use - and that cost 99 pence.  As did the stencil of the three kings bearing g

A long walk and a good book

  I spent the morning cleaning, then stitching, so a long walk was called for.  A circuit of about an hour's brisk walking around my favourite haunt, the local RSPB reserve.   There were plenty of twitchers about, as well as people just enjoying a stroll, dodging the muddy puddles and the occasional cyclists and horseriders.   Back home I'm getting stuck into a Kate Atkinson novel.  I'm only a few chapters in, but it's already a terrific read and I'm loving the notorious Nellie Coker.  The book's called 'Shrines of Gaiety' and is set in 1926, a world of dancing girls and seemingly glamorous nightclubs, but also of a seedy criminal underworld and people traumatised by the impact of the so-called Great War.   The other thing I've done today is start experimenting with eco-printing.  I've seen various crafty types on YouTube produce lovely looking eco-printed material, so it was about time I tried the technique out.  Not 100% sure I've done it c

British Summertime is (very nearly) officially over ...

  In a few hours time the clocks will be put back an hour and that's that as far as Summer is concerned.  It's always a little disconcerting when the clocks go forward in March or back in October.  There's the feeling of being unbalanced.  Unsettled by the shifting of time in this way.   I've spent part of today finishing this book, 'A Disappearance in Fiji' by Nilima Rao, set in 1914 and concerning the lives of indentured Indians on the island of Fiji.  This was the days of Empire, of colonial rulers and sugar cane plantations where conditions were appalling for the thousands of workers bought over from India.  Not only is it a well written story, but it gave me a glimpse of a slice of history I'd not known about.  In an afterword by the author, she notes that between 1879 and 1916 over 60,000 Indians went to Fiji as indentured servants.  Basically they were contracted to work for a fixed period of several years, for fixed pay, and weren't free to just

Two angels, a matchbox and an eye

  Some odds and ends for you today.  First off, I love the work of an Instagram user by the name of ievate, and I was smitten with this crazy looking Folk Art style angel that she made.  Which meant I've collected fabric scraps & had a go at making my own version.   They're still very much W.I.P.s, and they're definitely not going to be your traditionally pretty angels!  (Once they're made I'm going to try a reindeer too .  After all, Christmas isn't that far off, is it?)  I'll remember to show you the angels once they're finished.   When I'm done with scrolling through Instagram with the first cuppa of the day, I like to scoff my morning porridge while watching crafty videos on YouTube.  Well, it beats listening to news reports full of doom 'n' disaster on the radio.  I'm enjoying Jude Hill's short pieces about her textile work.  This little video about weaving had me emptying out a matchbox in order to use it as a make-do-and-