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Stitch Art and painty papers

I thought I'd better catch up on my blog posting as I've been rather tardy about it lately.  Today's been another beautifully sunny day and I'm just back from a long healthy walk, ready to crash out on the sofa for the evening.  I've got a book to read, 'The House of Whispers' by Laura Purcell.  I realised when I started it that I'd read it before, but I can't remember how the story ends so it's worth a re-read.  The book's set in Cornwall, and is a gothicky creepy read, full of unexplained noises and lights out to sea, talk of supernatural goings-on and featuring as it's central character a devious servant with an over-fondness for gin and laudanum.   This is the latest completed page of my Ann Wood stitchbook challenge.  Mainly masses of seed stitches.  It's not the most complicated of pages, but I enjoyed sewing it.  You can't really see from the photo, but I used Christmas material on the left hand side.  I turned it over, so ...
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The clocks have gone forward, we lost an hour but gained lighter evenings

Bright sunny days and light evenings, tulips and daffs flowering along with anemones, grape hyacinths and forget-me-nots.  What's not to like about this time of year?  Of course, the date the clock's go forward by an hour is strange as you feel oddly discombobulated for the entire day.  The same goes for when the clocks go back in the autumn.  Time's shifted when it's normally so dependable, and your internal body clock needs a while to adjust.   In between gardening and allotmenting I've completed another page for my Ann Wood stitchbook, and that - if my maths is correct - means I've only 6 more pages to sew before I'm all done 'n' dusted.   I also began making another fabric book, this one nothing to do with the stitchbook challenge.  I have a rectangle of sample fabric that's ideal for a cover, being a sturdier upholstery material, and sewed a scrap of Indian embroidery on to it.  Plus added a sari-silk ribbon as a closure. ...

I've been tidying up ...

Usually, if there's something to do other than cleaning & tidying I'll ditch the housework and have fun elsewhere.  But occasionally you have to accept the inevitable and drag the vacuum cleaner around.  My sitting room was looking like a bombsite, overflowing with crafty stuff, while the front bedroom wasn't much better.  That was being used as a dumping ground for the crafty overflow.  I blitzed both rooms, brushing carpets, wiping surfaces, binning what wasn't worth keeping and bagging up unwanted stuff for the charity shop.  I also rearranged my bookshelves.  Bringing together from various places all my craft books and - blimey! - I seem to have acquired rather a lot.  I didn't realise I'd amassed so many.   Well, I shouldn't run out of inspiration any time soon, should I?  Not with all those reference books to hand.  I also shouldn't buy any more books for a while ... I bundled lots of paper scraps into this pink storage tu...

Sunshine and Fishes

  The sun's shining, it's warm, the central heating's off.  Those are definitely reasons to be cheerful.  My back garden's home to glorious cobalt blue, highly scented hyacinths and lots of cheerful yellow daffodils, and the tulips will soon be in flower too.  Yesterday I tidied all the ceramic planters and gave the cold frame a wash & brush up, ready to be used once more.  The birdfeeders are constantly in demand, and I'm enjoying watching the starlings demolish the fat balls I've put out.  The robin is smart enough to take advantage of their messy eating, and it hop arounds underneath the feeders, pecking at the crumbs they scatter.   I've been carrying on with my Ann Wood stitchbook challenge, finishing a mainly yellow page, complete with green dragonflies and pink silk butterflies.  Now, I'm partway through my next page.  It's day 63 of the 100 day challenge, and I'm amazed I've got this far.  I've also decided to ditch one ...

Art Journal August in March ...

  It's Friday afternoon and I'm sat on the sofa, full of chocolate and tea, ready for another rambling blog post about what I've been up to.  Mainly eating chocolate and drinking tea, to be fair.... actually, I have been reasonably busy, in between bouts of whingeing about the cold weather.  The above page is another finished one for my Ann Wood 100 days stitchbook challenge.  This embroidery is probably the most traditional kind of design I've done so far, and reminds me of those embroidered tablecloths and tray cloths you find in charity shops.   This is my next page that's just been started.  I'm using a piece of calico that's been coloured and stenciled with acrylic paint.  The paint makes the material rather stiffer to push a needle through, but it's manageable.   Apart from that, I've been revisiting some YouTube videos I first watched several months ago.  They're by Shana who goes under the channel name of Shanouki Art - link...

It's Women's History Month. Or should that be Herstory?

  March is Women's History Month.  Not that most people are aware of it.  The event doesn't seem to have captured the public imagination outside of certain circles.  Which is a shame as there're a heck of a lot of fantastic stories about women's achievements which should be more widely known.  (Incidentally, if you're still on the binfire that is 'X' - formerly Twitter - you really need to follow @theAttagirls for the most inspiring, sometimes jaw dropping stories about women inventors, educators, campaigners & so on.  Take a look and you'll thank me for the recommendation, I promise!)  Anyway, I was at Leeds Art Gallery last Wednesday for the monthly Stitch Art group, and our crafting was tied in to Women's History Month.  The central library, which is in the same building as the gallery, holds an archive centred around women's history, including of course the fight of suffrage.  'Votes for Women'.   Textiles played their role ...