- In the background my husband has the TV on
- Impeachment hearings take me back to ironing
- When it was Nixon's turn we used to go home to my friend's house after school
- We watched her mom, an ashtray on the ironing board, doing her ironing and watching
- Like many Eastern Canadian families they had family in the States
- Including the famous Auntie sister who was such a drinker she set her alarm to get started
- There was also a person called Uncle Brother who retired early. Real early.
- So when I hear the TV voices I am thinking I should get out the ironing board
- But am not likely to do the sheets
- Or the underwear
- Like my friend's mother did
- I am also thinking about craft
- My youngest son's girlfriend takes picture but uses film
- She waits for them to be developed
- Waits
- These pictures are gorgeous
- This girl knows craft
- No digital
- No editing
- No filters
- No tricks
- No instant Instagram fame
- I gave away my top-of-the-line machine
- And now sew on old machines that rely on my hands
- Not a circuit boards
- This month I put the knits on hold for a bit
- And made bound buttonholes
- French seams
- And careful binding
- It was stress less not stressful
- Like yoga breathing
- Or ironing
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Thursday, November 21, 2019
Dark November flypaper thoughts
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Red boiled wool coat
Before you all fall over when you see a blog post from me let me show you a red boiled wool coat I made.
Despite my vacancy from the blogosphere I have been family event busy and sewing my brains out. So much of what I have made is off to the recipients, unphotographed. Sometimes real life makes it to the front of the line before recorded life.
Not shown here are the yellow wool socks I made for a new girlfriend up from Texas. We didn't want her to go into cold weather shock and write off Nova Scotia just because it was November, a fairly miserable month outdone only by February, you know that time of the year I personally will be thawing out in Texas. I figured if her feet were warm she would feel at home here. This is something we want.
There are few issues in life I do not think have a wardrobe solution.
Also not shown are mended snow suits, a cross back apron for my florist sister's nice co-worker at the home and garden store, a birthday dress for the now one-year-old in San Francisco, and two warm velour pullovers for my daughter.
If you come to this blog I am sure you have given up a long time ago that you would find beautifully coordinated outfits photographed on a regular basis and more likely to find flypaper thoughts from a life dressed for those kind of thoughts.
So here we go.
I had some neat patterned boiled wool from the local Fabricville. I decided to make a cozy sweater coat thing out of the stand collar version of this pattern:
In recognition of the loft and texture of this fabric (essentially this jacket is a high grade polar fleece jacket) I decided to make bound buttonholes. I have a no brainer method for these that makes them easy - got to get instructions done).
For the same fabric reasons I also sewed the pockets on by hand (backstitch on the wrong side, slip stitch on the right side).
Also because the fabric was thick I put in a false hem and a chain to weigh the hem down.
Really a nice cozy coat and this time of year that's essential.
Now I am up for a breather watch this space for more posts. They will be coming!