Any Airplane Quillow

comanche embroidery

 

I’ve always contended that anyone will enjoy the gift of a polar fleece quillow.  Finding the right gifts for guys is particularly difficult, but as usual, the quillow filled the bill nicely for my son’s birthday gift.

This one is is especially appropriate for Ryan because both the colors and the design are exactly like his own Piper Twin Comanche.  I had a difficult time finding an embroidery design of this specific plane, but finally found a site that will sell you a design of any plane.  I was thrilled.

Because he travels so much for his other business ventures, he keeps his plane in a hangar near his home.  When I decided to make a quillow for the plane, I looked unsuccessfully through all the aviation collections for an aircraft that looked like his.  Finally,  I found a wonderful embroidery digitizing site that has all models of planes in whatever size you would like.

 

Capt Ryan

Ryan flies props, jets and helicopters and is a licensed flight instructor.

 

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Linen Machine Shadow Embroidered Pillow

linenshadMadeirababypilwhole

 

 

I love projects for babies and this is one of my favorites.  From design to execution, this linen pillow has some interesting details. The open ends of the pillowcase offer the opportunity to give more balance to the overall design, with color and embroidery at both ends.

The handwork techniques used on this baby accessory look convincingly like they were stitched in the traditional manner, but they were all done entirely by machine. Thanks to the miracle advances in sewing notions and machine technology, Madeira appliqué, feather stitch, pinwheel roses and shadow embroidery are quickly, easily and quite perfectly done.

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Nana’s Nursery

Because our married children live nearby, I knew a well equipped nursery would make their frequent visits with grandbabies more enjoyable. So years before they were born, which happened in typically rapid fire succession, I began collecting items for the room I had dedicated as the grandchildren’s nursery.  The beloved, old, caneback rocker is the same one that rocked my daughter’s godmother, then my two babies.  It was just waiting to come out of retirement to rock yet again.

farmhouse light and baby w/bee picture

Many years ago, Suzanne Sawko and I went on a fabulous road trip to the midwest, ostensibly to visit old college friends.  From Florida, we drove  back roads all the way and found antique shops that were heavily stocked and rarely shopped. What treasures we found!

bluebird border, twig swag and valance

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DOW Quilting Dishtowels

My supply of Martha Stewart Days of the Week (DOW) dish towels is dwindling.   But paired with these whimsical embroidery designs, I thought they made  a perfect birthday gift for a dear friend. Catherine teaches exceptional children and has invested her own money in a few sewing machines for the use of her students. Over the years, they have created individual and class quilt projects. In her limited free time, Catherine quilts at home for herself and her family.

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Binche Elephant Doll Bib

 

Binche elephant lace

I came across this little doll bib today as I was going through some old teaching samples.  This will be included with 5 year-old Laurel’s Christmas doll, the  American Girls Molly.

Made on my Elna Diva, circa 1994,  the bib was, to me,  a miracle of machine embroidery. I know I am easily impressed, but the perfect decorative stitch of elephants was strong testimony to the quality of the sewing machine. It still is a fine  machine, but its embroidery has long been surpassed by hoop embroidery capability.

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Fingertip Towel Burp Cloths

If you were to open up a baby’s head – and I am not for a moment suggesting that you should – you would find nothing but an enormous drool gland. Dave Barry

Ferguson babies spit up and drool. A lot. Both of my children were so inclined and my grandbabies have continued the family tradition. Consequently,  I like to be prepared with about 3 dozen burp cloths when a new baby arrives. Neither my daughter-in-law nor my daughter feels that this number is excessive.

Long before my first grandchild was born, Callie, a young mother, told me that she and her friends agreed that a baby can never have too many bibs, booties or burp cloths. I’ve taken that to heart and often include a stack of burps with baby gifts.

There are many styles and patterns for these necessary items, but I prefer to begin with a fingertip towel. They launder beautifully and are quick and easy to make, requiring nothing more than a little embroidery and trim along the bottom. Of course, the embellishment is not for the amusement of the new arrival, but rather an effort to put a smile on the face of the weary clean-up crew.

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Liberty Goat Dress

 

R and L goat dress

little goat girl and grumpy little guy

Visions of  a “goat dress” had been dancing in my head for many years. In 1985, after purchasing Sarah Howard Stone’s first book, French Handsewing, I studied it with a passion. One page, in particular, spoke to me. It showed row after row of antique laces, including what I call goat lace. I had to have some of this.

goat lace

antique “goat” lace

 At that time, I was in the middle of my Mother Earth phase. Perhaps some readers  recall  the  publication, The Mother Earth News, or Carla Emery’s Old Fashioned Cook Book. These were daily reading for me.

On our 3 acres stood a 50 year old, formerly upscale, two-room chicken house, where our cocky Rhode Island Red rooster and his girls bunked. The  adjoining room  housed a  gaggle of geese and a few white Peking ducks.   Next door to the water fowl was the pony.  Her stall looked out over our 60’ x 60’ vegetable garden and adjacent to that was the goat mansion, my favorite place in the world except for my sewing room.

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Nana Fun~Halloween Gingerbread and Kiddie Aprons

halloweengingerR2brite

 

It’s long been a family tradition to make a gingerbread house at Christmas. When my children were little, it was an enormous 3 day undertaking that began with making up a huge batch of gingerbread dough, refrigerating it overnight, then baking the pieces in the morning, constructing the house after the pieces cooled in the afternoon, letting it sit overnight for the frosting to set up and then finally, decorating.

 

halloweengingerRthief-brite

 

 

Now, Wilton has kits, like prefab houses, with prebaked gingerbread pieces, frosting mix and even basic decorating pieces. With my grandchildren, we build the quick and easy Wilton way.

I have been looking forward to this year’s Christmas gingerbread decorating party since August, when 4 year old Robert began asking when we could do it again.  So I was absolutely delighted last week when I came across the new Wilton Halloween Haunted Mansion kits at Michael’s Craft store.

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Tailgating Accessories and Tips

Gators 13-LSU 3

Following a college football team offers so many opportunities for wholesome family fun. Some of our happiest family memories are set on Norman Field, in Gainesville, tailgating before a Florida Gator football game. For away games, we all crowd together in our living room, cheering, moaning, eating and chasing the babies away from in front of the TV. As was often said in our small town local newspaper coverage of each neighborhood, “A good time was had by all.”

There are also creative opportunities to pursue in the sewing room. The pictured embroidered terry cloth is actually a Martha Stewart dish cloth, repurposed as a tailgating napkin. When I see items in our team colors, I usually buy up everything on the shelf. So our tailgating box has a huge stack of these napkins, embroidered with a free “hungry gator” design offered many, many years ago, and text that names all SEC opponents and various other teams against whom our team has played. The opponent’s name on the napkin instigates a lot of  “Remember LSU 2008? 51-21 Gators! Wasn’t that a great game?”

 

note wash station on left, at tree

When we have messy food, such as barbecued ribs, a paper napkin just won’t do the job. Wet, these napkins, are much more effective against sticky foods. There is some distance to the bathrooms and running water, so we always take several jugs of water, some with liquid detergent added. I wrap a piece of elastic around a tree, tuck in several Gator hand towels and hang a bar of soap from a ribbon.   This gives everyone, most importantly the cooks, easy opportunity to wash hands before preparing food.

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Homeschooler Sews

Five year old Laurel declares that she LOVES sewing! Since we began last week, she can hardly wait for reading and math to be finished so she can sew. Initially, I insisted that the entire day’s academic work be completed before we brought out the  machine.

But she was so antsy that we were not accomplishing as much as we had before she was introduced to her new best friend, her favorite little Brother.    So now, after the first two subjects of the day,  she gets to sew and then the remaining academic assignments are tackled without complaint.

Her first project is a set of polar fleece puppets for a show her mother is arranging.   I have embroidered the faces and hands and Laurel is doing the construction of three pigs and a  farmer who make up the cast.   The audience will be a small group of homeschoolers. The story, Pigs in a Rig from Laurel’s first grade reader, is entertaining and brief enough for the 4-6 year old audience.

The value estimate runs something like this:

  • time to edit designs and embroider 4 two-sided puppets (by Nana)—4 hours
  • time spent sewing 4 puppets (by Laurel)—40 minutes
  • time spent constructing props and puppet theater as well as  supervising show rehearsal (by Laurel’s mother) –3-4 hours
  • time for puppet show, start to finish–4 minutes
  • cost of live, off-Broadway theatrical experience and budding enthusiasm for sewing–PRICELESS

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