Thursday, March 31, 2016

Hopping Mad


So, with an adult jumper project on the go, a baby blanket to make, a smock for my granddaughter to finish off, plus several fair isle items on various needles it seemed a perfect time to get obsessed with a new project!

I'm always looking for ways to use up the scraps of yarn that gather after projects are finished and these little bunnies provided the perfect opportunity to use up bits and bobs.




I found the patterns from this website, they are a little challenging to begin with, but as I'm now on bunny no. 3 - I think I'm getting the hang of it!


Esme the Easter Bunny

Bunny No2 already for her dress
Now, back to those other projects.......

Monday, March 14, 2016

Grab a cuppa and visit to the Shetland Museum & Archives

There I was on a snowy Saturday afternoon, working on my Gudrun Johnson Craftsy Class: The Shetland Hap Shawl and watching a live broadcast of a study day on knitting at the Shetland Museum!

You gotta love the internet!!

Its now available on their website and I can catch up on the morning talks that I missed:  http://www.shetlandmuseumandarchives.org.uk/collections/museum/textiles

Put the kettle on and join me for a fascinating tour of the Shetland traditions in knitting!


Going like the clappers - and other hot tips.

Whenever the washing pile and the ironing pile create a perfect storm - I think of my grannies.  Nan O'Toole was a tiny little thing with snow white hair and sparkly blue eyes who, when her husband had left her and their 9 children for another woman, took in other people's laundry to put food on the table.


No washing machine, just a boiler and a mangle.

My other granny was widowed young and left to care for four children.  She died when I was a baby but I've heard the stories of how hard she worked to lead her family out of difficult times.

Now, each time I process the laundry I connect with the old girls and say a quiet hello to the grannies and give thanks and appreciation for their grit - and am grateful for modern appliances!

Tailor's Clapper
Organza Pressing Cloth
I think they'd been highly amused at my new toys!  Can you guess what they are?

On the left is a square of organza cloth - perfect when you want to actually see what you are pressing but need to protect the fabric from the iron.

On the right is a Tailor's Clapper - an amazing device that my grandmothers' were no doubt very familiar with.  I'm not super confident with my sewing yet, but one thing I want to be able to achieve is a handmade rather than homemade look and, I'm reliably informed by my friend who's mother worked for a couturier, the secret is in the pressing!

The clapper gives a lovely finish as the wood absorbs the moisture from the steam and flattens the seams beautifully.

So, my dear grannies, your years of hard labour doing laundry has not been wasted on me!  I am a woman who appreciates the value of good laundry skills!

To see the clapper in action, here's a really helpful video from Didyoumakethat? There's lots of great info and inspiring posts on her blog, too.

Friday, March 4, 2016

The final piece: where I satisfyingly tick something off my to-do list!

So here's a story about an impulse purchases that took a loooong time to finalise. 

About two years ago, fresh into my creative journey, I bought some lovely silk jewel coloured yarn and started making granny squares with no particular idea of an outcome.

Son no2 liked the feel of the squares - soft and silky - so I decided I'd make him a cushion.  I felt that an old jumper would be perfect for the back cover and daughter No2 pulled out one that had sat in a rather large pile in her wardrobe for a couple of years that had perfect colours to match   Sorted.
I finished the squares quite quickly and then promptly forgot about them.  

My to-do list keeps growing and I am getting almost uncontrollable yarn-purchasing urges so I decided that I needed to at least purge my stash and see what needed finishing before adding more exciting projects (and yarn) to the list!  

I found the squares and spent a few evenings crocheting them together, tidying up the ends and blocking it out to get it straight-ish.

All together now
I was ruminating on what had taken me so long to finish this project and realised it is the same old thing - fear of getting it wrong.  As I was going through the process of cutting up the jumper and sewing it all together I could hear myself worrying about the finish, about making a mistake, about how it would look. 

My goal with Fashionably Slow is to establish a hand-crafted life, making as much clothing, food, cleaning products, gifts and stuff as I can from scratch.  Keeping the process as simple and as gentle to the environment as possible. 

I've realised that means being kind to myself too - otherwise it will just become Fashionably Slow Torture!

Cuddly Jumper Side

Silky Square Side

Mood Shot!