Skip to main content

Flowers, a denim bag, and a good book or two

 

I thought I'd start with these beautiful flowers.  A few, like the extravagant peony and the astrantia, are from my garden but most off the allotment.  I'll never make a flower arranger, will I?
My technique is pretty much 'shove them in a vase and make sure there's water in it'.  I admire anyone who can artfully arrange flowers, it's a real skill to get the balance right.
I've been doing a few crafty things lately, some more fulfilling than others.  
This bundle of rags is actually a tangle of zips.  The clothes were from charity shops, and I've harvested the rest of the dresses, etc for my fabric stash.  I've been saving the zips, and finally got around to unpicking the material around them.  It makes sense to save them, not that I'm a dressmaker but occasionally I get the urge to make a zip up pouch or two.  
There were several hooks & eyes too, squirrelled away for future projects.  
Another charity shop purchase was this denim dress.  I was hoping to wear it, but it's one size too small for me.  Snug rather than baggy.  A shame because I do appreciate a dress with pockets.  Anyway, I decided to make a denim tote bag from it.  I cut off the hem as it's too bulky for my moody-teenager of a sewing machine to deal with.  That hem became the bag's strap, and I added a stripy binding too.  
The denim's sturdy and handsome enough that it doesn't need lining.  I might add a pocket on the inside for keys and coins, so they don't disappear into the depths of the bag when it's filled with shopping.  
The strap's got a raw edge along one side of it, so I blanket-stitched that to stop it fraying too much, and have appliqued on a couple of patches.  I think I might try and gradually add patches along the length of the strap, but there's no rush.  The bag's perfectly usable in the meantime.  
I've a section of the denim dress left over, and will have to decide what to do with that.  Make a little denim purse perhaps?  
Moving to the subject of books, I finished this one yesterday.  It's an odd book.  Enjoyable and worth reading but it's a strange hybrid of a Regency romp - aristocratic lady meets tall, dashing aristocrat turned highwayman - and also a feminist commentary on the treatment of women and girls in 1800s England.  Their legal status, the evils of forced child prostitution, the disgusting treatment of 'mad' women in asylums.  So you get the Mills & Boon style swooning-in-his-rugged-yet-tender-arms but also serious discussion about the lack of legal rights of women to property, employment and basic safety.  I'm not sure the two strands mesh comfortably together, but there's still a lot to admire here and I'm glad I read it.  

I'm moving back to more familiar ground with the next book pulled from my overly-full To Be Read pile.  Tudor England, spring 1543 and obese, irascible King Henry VIII has his covetous eyes on Catherine Parr for wife number 6.  (Run for the hills, Catherine!  Don't do it!  Though of course she did.  The poor woman would've had no choice.)  The book's C.J. Sansom 'Revelation'.  The cover blurb tells me 'Don't expect to put the book down until you've seen it through to the apocalyptic finale'.  Let's hope it lives up to that hype.  

Okay, it's time for me to consume yet another cup of tea and make my list of chores for today.  Sadly, hoovering and cleaning and tidying will be on that list.  Who gave the maid the day off?!!!!   

Comments

  1. I'm a big fan of anything C.J. Sansom wrote - so sad that he's no longer with us. I love all his Shardlake books but I think my favourite is Dominion, an alternative reality novel set during WW", it's a real page turner.
    Love that denim bag! xxx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Haven't come across 'Dominion'. That's another for my list ...

      Delete
  2. A girl after my own heart "I do appreciate a dress with pockets". There should be more of them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, definitely love a pocket. Very handy when you're gardening, so you don't have to wander around afterwards trying to remember where in the jumble of plants and weeds you left the scissors or seed packets or ball of string.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Sari scraps, PVA, a couple of books and a necklace

  I'm typing this as snow's falling, and has been steadily all day.  It's not settling to any great extent, though I bet by tomorrow morning the paths will be slippery with ice.  Which always makes me paranoid about falling over and at the very least looking undignified, but at worst breaking a bone or twisting an ankle.  Oh well, it's ideal weather to stay inside and craft, isn't it?  I finally got around to listing packs of sari scraps on Etsy this morning.  I only made up six bundles as I've no clue whether they'll sell or if I've set a reasonable enough price point.  Time will tell.   This is a link to the listing, if you're interested.  This vaguely pink fabric isn't from one of my Etsy packs.  It's from a bit of experimenting I was doing yesterday.  I'd seen a post on Instagram showing how a DIY version of batik could be done without using hot wax.  The Instagrammer used PVA instead, and I wanted to try this out....

In praise of wool

Just a quick post today. I'm offering you a short but peaceful break from the overwhelmingness (is that a word?) of Christmas.  By now you've probably eaten your bodyweight in sweets//roast potatoes/pigs in blankets/cake/After Eights ... whatever your festive indulgences are.  You're under-exericsed, over-stimulated, feeling broke and possibly guilty about an argument with a relative or friend you've never entirely got on with.  So, here's something to take your mind off all that.   I've two videos to refresh and revive, and they both concern wool.   Interesting fact.  Well, I found it interesting.  About 1% - yup, one per cent - of the world's textiles are made of wool.  Out of curiosity, I also googled how much is made of cotton.  That's higher, but it's only about 24% and that's heading downward instead of up.  Synthetic fibres are the bulk of all textile manufacture.  Anyway, back to woolly wonders.   My firs...

Another week's flown by ...

  Saturday's rolled around again, and it's not been the most eventful of days.  Cleaning and hoovering, a walk to the shops to buy groceries, an hour on the allotment, then home to do some odd tasks in the garden.  The strawberry plants are sending out runners, so I've been dealing with those, plus deadheading the perennial sunflowers, and cutting back the gone-over flowers on the sage and marjoram.  I'm sad to see those blooms gone as the bees loved them.  This afternoon I spent a few hours finishing 'Dawnlands' by Philippa Gregory.   It's a really good book, a page turner where you care about the characters and want to be reassured everything's going to work out well for them.  Plus you become enraged about the corruption of the so-called justice system at the time of the Stuart kings and queens, about transportation of prisoners to the West Indies, and about the vile nature of the sugar trade in the 1600s and the vast profits made from it....