Finishing Touches-Alastair’s Farm Suit

 

Alastair's Farm Suit, v.2

Alastair’s smocked farm suit is finally finished.  I had completed the smocking when we were in the mountains a few weeks ago, but needed to upgrade it a little.

This was a ready-to-smock outfit and I have relied heavily on them this past year.  The quality is very good, but there are improvements that can be made.

original collar and button

The shirt was a plain, serviceable and nice white broadcloth.  In order to make it more a part of a two-piece outfit, I added a whip stitch to the collar and cuffs.

upgrade: embellished collar, pearl buttons, red thread button sewing

At the collar, a 3.5 straight stitch was worked in white thread.

The edge of my presser foot was guided along the piping, making the stitching line perfectly parallel to the piping.

On the sleeve, there was ready made stitching below the piping.  On both the sleeves and collars, red 12 wt. thread was simply whipped over and under the stitching line.   Continue reading

Second Hand Roses

 

Lawnbinchefront

 

I’m really into recycling Rebecca’s dresses that have been packed away for 25+ years.  It’s amazing how timeless a smocked dress can be and how well they hold up.

Some, like Barbra Streisand,  may turn their noses up “second hand,” but neither Laurel nor I mind.

I had to drop the hem, as little girls’ skirts are longer now. Fortunately, when the dress was made, I followed the standard recommendation of putting in a 6″ hem so  I had a good 3″ to drop.

This basic yoke has a sash that ties in the back.  It is smocked to just above the waist and meets the back yoke at that same depth.  The sash snugs the dress up and feels more like a big girl dress.

The intriguing smocking plate is Chinese Chippendale by Barbie Beck, an almost ancient design.  If you blow up the photo, you will see how interesting the design is. Continue reading

Aunt Rheeta’s Bible Cover

photo from www.abc-roidery-designs.com web site

Several years ago, my mother, Aunt Rheeta (Mother’s sister) and I treated ourselves to a sewing retreat. We loaded up several machines and sewing supplies and headed to our cabin in the mountains of North Carolina. That’s when both my mother and Aunt Rheeta first tried machine embroidery.

Though she had never even sat at a sewing machine, let alone one with machine embroidery capability, she took to it like a duck to water. I might add that she was 70 at the time. And now, she not only embroiders but sews and does her own alterations!

With all due respect to my very attractive, fit and un-elderly aunt, the truth is that you CAN teach an old dog new tricks!

Since then she has gotten a fabulous Brother ULT2002D and has never looked back. An earlier post shows the communion cloth she made for her church. On a subsequent visit, she made this cover for her Bible. ABC Machine Embroidery Designs offers both a free standing lace collection, Christian Bible Lace and very detailed, excellent project directions. You can view the ABC embroidery designs here.

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Thoughts on Grandchildren~Paul Harvey

classroom bulletin boards–on the fuse box doors in the utility room. The room is mostly windows so we have very little wall space.

This week we started our homeschool year and it was just delightful. We started Latin with a terrific program for K-2 and Robert and Laurel love it. Homeschooling is very time consuming, but so worth the investment of those hours of preparation and teaching. I had hoped to make Laurel a new dress and embroider Robert another Toy Story shirt (his current favorite) but it just didn’t happen.

For this post, I would like to share some thoughts from Paul Harvey on the subject of grandchildren. I’ve had this for some time and have read it several times. Each reading gives me new inspiration and motivation for teaching them. Everything he wishes for his grandchildren, I wish for Alastair, Laurel and Robert. I want them to appreciate life. Paul says:

We tried so hard to make things better for our kids that we made them worse. For my grandchildren, I’d like better. I’d really like for them to know about hand me down clothes and homemade ice cream and leftover meat loaf sandwiches. I really would.

I hope you learn humility by being humiliated, and that you learn honesty by being cheated. I hope you learn to make your own bed and mow the lawn and wash the car. And I really hope nobody gives you a brand new car when you are sixteen. Continue reading

Harvey’s Penn Apron

My son-in-law, Harvey, is a fabulous cook. He’s a marvel at the grill and an artist in the kitchen. My daughter and grandson eat his gourmet meals at least 6 times a week. Harvey cooks like we sew–with passion and lots of education. He reads cook books like we read sewing magazines.

This apron was personalized for Harvey. While he has jumped right on board with our family’s Florida Gator-mania, he is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and feels a strong connection to his alma mater.  Continue reading

School Bags

It’s back to school time again.  Mamas and Nanas have been sewing for some time to get ready for that first day of school.  Judy and her daughter Amy spent a week together sewing and these bags are just a few of their projects.  As usual, they are darling and so NOW!

The bags and matching lunch boxes were on sale at Gymboree.  One of the girls had this identical bag (without the monogram) last fall and wanted another just like it.  This year, she and her cousin both got the matching lunch boxes.

Back packs like these are tricky.  Make sure that you can hoop up a portion of the bag to embroider.  I’ve been looking for one for Laurel and most have an inside pocket or some impediment to embroidery.

I’m way behind schedule, but I’m off to Gymboree this weekend to see if I can find anything like this.  What a great start to 1st grade for these precious little girls.

What have you sewn for back to school this year?

More Cabin Decorating

Yesterday, we drove through 8 hours of pouring rain and 3 hours of gloom to  get home. It’s always hard to leave the cabin but we’re happy to be home.

Now, I’m enjoying the cabin pictures even more than when we were there.  This post is about carrying out the rooster/chicken theme in the second bathroom.  Like every other room, it has vaulted ceilings and somehow, it seems like a much larger space, needing more “stuff” to make it look homey.

Because this bathroom serves the patriotic bedroom, and because so much chicken and Americana themed fabric was available, I went with it. Towels, of course, provide a blank canvas for themes.  The hand towels have a plump hen, roasting in the sun in her flag inspired bathing suit and the standard old lady bathing cap. This design makes me grin every time I look at it.

The wall opposite the mirror goes to the peak of the roof.  That huge expanse needed something to break it up.  This cheater quilt panel fit the bill perfectly.  Panels like this are great when you don’t want to put a lot of time into something and yet you need a little quilt.  With free motion quilting and a high loft batt, there is enough dimension that it almost looks like trapunto.  Continue reading

Americana Decorating

One bedroom in our cabin has an Americana theme.  We’re pretty patriotic folks and decided this theme suited us.

The quilts and wall decorations were readily available.  Because the cabin is rented out almost half  the time, I didn’t want to make any quilts and fret over whether or not they were being abused.  But almost without exception, our guests have been lovely and few things have been damaged in the 15 years we’ve owned the cabin.

There were no patriotic pillowcases for sale but it didn’t matter, as I prefer to make my own.  With a bolt of  pima cotton broadcloth and my Brother ULT 2003, I was in business. Continue reading

Alastair’s Farm Suit

my hardworking husband (in the Florida shirt) taking a break with the carpenter

Things have been pretty hectic here in the mountains.  The repairs to our cabin turned out to be a lot more extensive and time consuming than expected.  We’ve had workers rebuilding a side deck and the back entrance,  as well putting in a French drain to stop the flooding of our storage units.

Personally,  I think it seems unpatriotic to put in foreign drain with our economy in such dire straits.  But Bob assures me that there is nothing French about it,  all the materials came from Lowe’s and  it really is a domestic drain.  Whatever.  At any rate,  I have not gotten as much smocking done as I had expected.

The little ready-to-smock Jon-Jon suit for Alastair is as done as it’s going to be until we get home.  The smocking is finished but the suit awaits some decorative stitching on the shirt collar and cuffs as well as button replacement.  I will probably remove the machine hem and finish it by hand.

I really thought I’d have one daygown smocked by now.  Every day I fix lunch for the workers, something I have always done when work crews are underfoot.  When our swimming pool was built, when the roof was replaced, when the pavers were laid, we’ve always provided lunch.

This time, the motivation is even greater.  The people in this area, and probably throughout the mountains,  seem to have an exceedingly  high standard of honesty and hard work.  Several years ago, we couldn’t find anyone to deliver firewood all the way up Seven Devils Mountain.  Finally, Bob responded to yet another firewood ad and was told again that they don’t deliver up here.

To get in and out of the cabin, we have to "walk the plank" or hike down the steep slope to the steps to the front deck. I live on the edge and "plank" to the back to check their progress. My new knee handled it pretty well.

We had the whole family up for the week and we all love a fire.  So Bob told the man that he would pay an extra $25 or $50 or  “whatever it takes” to get firewood.  The man drove from Boone, 20 miles away and then up to our cabin, unloaded the firewood and quietly asked for an extra $10 for the long  distance delivery.  Bob rounded up the cost of the firewood to include a nice tip and then handed the man $10 for delivery.  He was happy and so were we.

About 15 minutes later the man was at the back door.  Bob had given him a $100 bill instead of a $10.  He seemed offended by our surprise that he would go to the trouble to return.  “It just wouldn’t be right to keep it,” he stated simply.  He left with a genuine $10 bill.  Note: When we got home, Bob got new glasses.

The workmen who are here now are good Christian men who  give their best effort to the job.  My dear, handy hardworking husband works right along side of them.  It’s a pleasure to cook for these men and a share their lunch hour.  It makes me feel like a farm wife.

Tomorrow, I’m serving grilled Reuben sandwiches, fresh baby carrots and apple pie ala mode.  And, of course, sweet tea.  I’ll catch up on my smocking later.

Cabin Loft Bag

Back Camera

 

Our mountain cabin has a cozy hideaway loft.  Children love it and so do I.

Often, on a cold or rainy day, I’ll climb up there to read or do hand work.  With a cup of Constant Comment orange spice tea and a smocking or shadow work project, I feel so snug.

 

Back Camera

 

And what a place for a winter’s day nap!

I wish I could get a good picture of this sweet spot.

But I don’t want to ask Bob get out that huge ladder that he uses to change the outside light bulbs, so these will have to do.

 

Back Camera

 

 

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