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The irises are flowering

  Irises are the strangest looking flowers, aren't they?  These purple ones on my allotment are flowering, and they're such a beautiful colour.   There aren't many flowers on my plot at the moment.  The hyacinths have finished, the tulips are nearly over, but the Love-in-a-mist are about to emerge in their jewel-like shades of pink, purple and blue.  Also the vivid orange of Calendula.  That should keep the bees happy and well fed.   Back at home, I've been finishing a couple of crafty projects that've hung around for too long.  I stretched this fishy embroidery over a square of cardboard, then added a felt backing and a hanging loop.  (Funny, but until I took this photo I never realised the doors on the bookcase weren't hanging entirely level.  How could I not have noticed?) I also made the stripey binding for this wall hanging.   It's waiting for me to hang it on the wall, which I will get around to.  Honestly,...
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May's here and the sun's still shining

It's been glorious weather, and I really am getting used to the sun shining.  That's not always guaranteed around Easter and the May Bank Holiday.  In the garden these cowslips are starting to go over, but the flowers have been so pretty.   This peony is doing well, and it should have plenty of blooms in the coming months.  I was passing a market stall today and the chap was selling these for £2.00 each or three for a fiver.  Well, it would've been daft not to treat myself, wouldn't it?  I really like the moody colouring of the Heuchera, and I've always liked lupins, especially the way water drops settle on their leaves after rainfall.  Like little jewels.  Echinacea is a plant I've tried several times to grow from seed, but not had a lot of success, so I was pleased to find this plant.  It should hopefully result in vibrant pink flowers that'll be very attractive to bees.   I've also been doing my regular rounds of the charity...

Blossom on the trees and wild garlic in the hedgerow

  Spring has to be the prettiest of the four seasons.  The apple blossom is on the trees, pink and white and so delicate.   The wild garlic is flowering.   Even though we've had little rain lately, the country lanes and bridleways are still green and lush.  I've been occupying myself with the usual kind of things - tidying the garden and allotment, and planting seeds.  The courgettes are sprouting, as are the salvias, though the geums are stubbornly refusing to germinate.  I've been stuck into some good books too.   This P.D. James was a cracker, with a very satisfying twist in the tale.  It's set in a hospital, and the writer's clearly an expert on the subject.  Deeply knowledgeable but not showing off about that knowledge.  I also loved the cover with this striking print by Angela Harding.   I'm a few chapters into a biography of Agatha Christie, written by Lucy Worsley.  I'm a big fan of Christie's c...

I'm gloating. Sorry about that, but I am ...

  Okay, before the gloating commences I'll show you the start of the last page of my Ann Wood stitchbook.  Finally!  A use for some of the shiny green sequins I've inexplicably got loads of.  Right, after that insect based interlude, let the gloating commence.   The charity shop gods smiled on me this morning.  A whole heap of die cuts and printing stamps, some in what look like brand new condition, and all mine for the teeny-tiny sum of £5.50.  Yup, only 50 pence per item.  There was a basket full of them, and I had to rein myself in from buying twice the quantity.  I do love it when a fellow crafter has a clear-out and you time your visit to the shop just right to snap up a heap of bargains.   I've butterflies and dragonflies, birds, dandelions, travel themed printing stamp sets and musical ones, leaves and abstract designs.  Now, if you'll excuse me I have to test these out, and congratulate myself for being such a luck...

Bank Holiday Monday and it's raining

  When you're a child and there was a Bank Holiday - which means a day off school - it always seemed to pour with rain, so you were stuck indoors and bored.  I've been largely indoors today, but haven't succumbed to boredom.  Instead I've been sewing a cover for my Ann Wood inspired stitchbook.  The 100 day challenge Ann hosts is nearing an end.  I finished the 19th page this morning, and in five days time that'll be the final page completed.  Then it's simply a matter of assembling the book.   I've already decided the 20th page will feature insects.  Bugs!  Not always my favourite creatures, but I bought a fun die cut with various beetle shapes on it, and made printing stamps of them.   This was something I only learnt how to do the other day, YouTube yet again teaching me a new technique.  Hobbycraft sells A4 sized pieces of craft foam with adhesive backing.  You use your Sissix machine, a die cut and a piece of thi...

Stitchbook challenge, carving stamps and little embroideries. Oh, and tulips. Lots of tulips.

  Apologies for not posting anything for a while.  I get side-tracked.  Or lazy.  Probably a combination of them both.  It's been a lovely spring here in my part of West Yorkshire, and my tulips have bloomed like crazy.  I like the idea of having a restrained colour scheme in a garden, but in reality I got for the every-colour-under-the-sun approach.   Some of the flowers are almost ready to drop their petals.  They've got that blowsy, nearly-but-not-quite-yet look to them.  Other flowers are still getting ready to open out as they're in shadier positions in the garden.  But they're all beautiful and very welcome splashes of vivid colour.   On to other things ...  I finished reading this today, and it's a terrific spooky read.  Very enjoyable, and I could easily see it being adapted for TV or film.  Next up, I've got another of S.J. Parris' books, 'Sacrilege'.  It's set in 1584, and features the author'...