Emilie Barnes

I am enjoying rereading Emilies Barnes books these days.  I am a big fan of digestible bits of information and she is master of that.  There is a good amount on her website as I recently discovered. Here is a sample:

"But whatever you do to your walls and your windows, don’t forget that the most wonderful adornment to your home is your spirit of hospitality, your willingness to share your home and your lives with others. Love what you have and invite others to share the bounty. Your gracious welcome will fill the gaps and make the problems seem to disappear."

and

"You don’t always need money to create memories. You just need the desire to turn the ordinary into extraordinary."  : )

Scrapbooking Primer

I promised Donna Marie  this post some months ago now.  I hope she wasn’t holding her breath! : / Please accept my apologies for such a belated response!

The question was, "What book or two do I need to begin?"  That is such a difficult question to answer! I am a visual person and I had to begin with magazines and images to sort through in my head what it was I was envisioning. Once I had that I could proceed. My favorite magazine is Simple Scrapbooks.  I wouldn’t be without that one!  Creating Keepsakes is a great magazine but focuses more on cutting edge techniques and pages very full of materials and high tech techniques. Those are nice if you are particularly skilled at looking at such a page and picking out one or two parts thereof you might want to incorporate into your work.  Not so good if you want grab and go ideas.

Simple Scrapbooks, the book is a great beginning title.  Stacy Julian shows several different types of scrapbooks. Her new book The Big Picture is even more fun.  Cathy Zielske’s Clean and Simple Scrapbooking and the sequel to it banish even more misconceptions about how you "ought" to scrapbook and provide easy directions for quick pages.  For instance, you do not need to scrapbook ALL your pictures, nor even all your events. Choose the photos that speak to you and tell the story behind them. You do not need to lots of accents (stickers, die cuts, patterned pattern) and in fact too much of a good thing is not so good in this case. You don’t need to mat all or even any of your photos. You don’t need to even crop the pics. A new CK bk Easier Than Ever Scrapbooking will provide more layouts for standard sized photos. for that matter, you don’t even need photos! check out the alternatives here: Scrapbooking without photos and here  and here. And my favorite – you don’t need to be "caught up".

Becky Higgins’ series of Creative Sketches bks – Vol 1 and Vol 2 – are titles I pull out EVERY time I scrap. In fact many of my pages are based on BH sketches. She lays out a blueprint which you can begin with and then incorporate your own papers and accents. Her approach is also very clean and uncluttered and easy to copy. All good things! Not ready to buy before you try? I never am! You can check out her sketches at the CK website. Here are a few other sketch sites, though some may not be as well designed as Becky’s:

Scraps Ahoy

Littlebit.com

creative scrapbook sketches

If you are looking for very basic how-to instructions here are a few websites to get you started:

Your first page
Learn2Scrapbook

If you aren’t sure you want to dive in yourself but would like to introduce the craft to your children then try these:

Scrapbooking with Kids

Starting with Kids

kids pages at makingfriends.com

You will need some "stuff" to begin:

basic toolkit  In the end you really only need scissors, paper, black pen, and adhesive. These should be acid free since regular paper/pens/etc will fade anddamage your photos. Paper can be easily stored in a magazine holder with a cupholder for the rest. I would likely place those next to the computer because I am more apt to print any journaling and titles than to hand write. I would also not be without a personal trimmer – cheap, fast, straight lines. Need I say more? <g>

If you want your "stuff" even more portable you might check into the storage options at Cropper Hopper  In particular visit the organization tips link. Making Memories has very nice upscale storage aids. Fwiw, Target stores often carry similar items so you might want to surf for ideas here and then visit your local Target.

If this develops into a dearly loved hobby you may want to have a dedicated *space*.  I have had such a space in several homes. Initially it was a converted hall closet. We outfitted it with a remnant of countertop slab from Home Depot for next to nothing. I rolled Sterilite storage drawers and stool underneath the counter, nailed baskets to the side walls to contain the misc supplies and then had magazine holders and albums and idea books along the wall in front of me. (countertop is pretty deep) Here are some other options:

Armoire

Scrapjazz Organization – your room

Becky Higgins tips

Lisa Bearnson scrap space

My favorite scrapbooking internet site (after Simple Scrapbooks mag) is Twopeasinabucket   Ahhhh, 2Peas! Source of delightful fonts (storefront), theme album ideas(creating garden), poetry and quote search (peasoup) , a message board and a vast gallery of pages to browse. They have an awesome search engine at their gallery.

I will begin uploading a new album to the sidebar this week full of our family scrapbook pages fwiw.  I hope this helps encourage you. Scrapbooking doesn’t have to be complicated, time-consuming, or messy. Then again, it can develop into a true art form and source of reflection and self-expression. Take it as far as you wish. Now go grab a photo y’all! And don’t forget to share your pages with me when you finish!

Thinking outside the (craft) box

Coloring_fairmount_small Been busy this week.  We weren’t really thinking through the logistics of Asher and Alannah going along to AZ with Allen.  That left just Aidan and Moira and the baby most of the time, which would be fine in the suburbs.  It meant some creative arrangements for barn chores though since the baby had to be watched and none of us can lift a full 5gal water bucket at the moment. I have decided that there was no need to schedule separate aerobics classes in agrarian societies however!  Whew! What a challenge! 

Anyway, got several notes about the redwork this week and wanted to get you thinking about the possibilities. As usual I would not recommend buying much.  And don’t limit yourself to the traditional stitchery patterns.  Any outline illustrations can conceivably be used. For you children’s illustration lovers consider these resources:

Tomie de Paola coloring pages

mary engelbreit coloring (the simple drawings work best)

patricia polacco

Beatrix Potter

How much nicer to fill a child’s room with these images than with cartoons and marketing images. Many coloring books will yield good patterns for stitching as well.  Look around your home.  I bet you have more options than you think!

More on Redwork

Redwork I recieved a note today commenting on the redwork. I am sending along a few more links in case you would like to learn more. The dye used originally came from Turkey.  If you are an antique buff you might recall the term "turkey work" to refer to the embroidered pillow shams with catchy slogans such as "I slept and dreamt that life was beauty." and then on the next, "I woke to find that life was duty." Growing up with a lover of old things I saw lots of those shams and tea towels in magazines displayed on old iron beds with patchwork quilts. My twin bed sported a blue redwork (yes they really call it that ; )) sham with a cherub all the years I lived at home.

The pieces are worked much like cross stitch. You use an embroidery needle, plain 100% cotton, and a two strand floss for regular work and 1strand for details. The basic stitches are backstitch, stemstitch, and french knots. The first link shows how to do them all. We transferred our first pattern today and Moira (9) is moving through it with ease. This is a keeper craft! : )

Redwork Primer

history of redwork

redwork boys and girls

colonial redwork downloads

freebies

Free Patterns

Links

Thumb   Friends have shared some lovely links this week. The first is from Small Meadow Press which carries vintage style stationary products. The owner has uploaded her home learning notes as free pdf files. Click on the store link and then scroll down. These are so pretty you won’t want to miss them. Thanks to Louise for this catch!

Dog1_1_3_   Next is a vintage embroidery pattern company, Pattern Bee, which was featured at Sparrows Nest this week. They sell iron-on transfers to make oh-so-cute kitchen towels, hot pads, aprons, you name it. There is a sizeable freebie section included. Just print and begin! We stopped by Walmart to gather some needles and transfer pens to begin the nursery rhyme quilt blocks. They lend themselves to redwork and seem much easier than the redwork pattern book I bought for us at Joann’s. 

   Finally Baker Lane is a pattern company which Jen found. They apparently sold made to wear clothing at one time but now are releasing their designs as patterns. I am hopeful more will be published soon. Right now there is a maternity dress that looks like it would be adaptable to varied sizes.

Semi-Homemade: skirts

I must tell you right off that I am not a skilled seamstress. “Jimmy-rig” is my middle name however (or is that “cheapskate”?) and I take a certain delight in the whole “repurposing” process. We have had ample opportunity of late to practice our repurposing skills on our wardrobes. We wear lots of skirts and they are just getting harder and harder to find at a decent price, especially in our daughters’ sizes. Dear friend Jen remarked the other day, after a trip to a large chain store, that the outfits they had in those sizes were more of a spoof on the schoolgirl image than supportive of it. Maternity clothes seem to have that same edginess to them these days. So what is a girl to do? For us, it means the same thing it means with our school materials, find uncommon uses for common materials.

(disclaimer: My sewing skills are pretty much limited to straight and zigzag stitch, casings, and hems. You will not likely find more complicated instructions on this site any time soon! So put your mind at ease before we begin!)

Pant_leg The first project was actually the most complex. We attempted to convert a pair of jeans into an A-line skirt. You can find directions here and here. They basically go as follows: First you rip the inseams of the legs. You literally take the seams out as opposed to cutting into the fabric. This is important. It is also rather tedious. I had flashbacks to the old Sears and Roebuck tv ads with the robot challenging the knees and rumps of the jeans…….   Don’t date myself, I know!  Anyway you tear those bad boys out and continue seam ripping until you are Overlap_and_pinabout 8in below the waist band, or an inch or so below the zipper, (my pics show maternity panel) front and back. Next you overlap the inseams and move the panels that were previously pant legs together until you have the angle desired for the finished skirt.

    Take note, here is a HANDY HINT: if this is the first time you have tried on said jeans in a good while you may experience no small amount of distress at this point upon discovering that the width of your new skirt no longer matches the width of your old body.  Don’t ask me how I know this.  

                                                      

Insert  Assuming you were more forward thinking, and the new angle both fits and pleases you – versus, say, compelling you to drown your disappointment in something chocolate- then go ahead and pin those panels in place. You pin coordinating fabric – either from a second pair of jeans or from a remnant of another fabric, as shown in the other links, into the triangular space between the leg panels.  Sew along the seams with the old seams turned under. Hem the bottom. That is all there is to it! If you have not tried on your jeans prior to that aforementioned pinning point you may find yourself unable to produce end photos for this project. Don’t ask me how I know that either.  Just follow the links if you would!

   A far simpler project has been altering existing skirts and this we have been wildly successful in doing. As my disclaimer stated my sewing skills are rudimentary. Fitted waistlines and zippers tax my both my attention span and my abilities. There are usually expletives involved.  I have tended to avoid both as a result. There are times however when elastic waists are just less than desirable. Apparently when you are entering 7th grade is such a time. This is a challenge however when the available skirts are just a smidge longer than a hankie. We solved that problem by taking attractive A-line fitted women’s skirts and taking them in on the sides. Simply have your model try on the piece, pin the waistline to a comfortable spot and sew a new side seam, taking care to follow exactly the contour already in place. If you have a side zipper then you need to either take it in along the back seam or reassess. We have stuck with traditional zipper-in-back skirts for this one.

   This works just as well for a pregnant mom. I have found some lovely material in thrift store skirts that would normally be too large for me. It is often cheaper to find a gorgeous extra large skirt and take it in, than to buy fabric outright. It is also easier if much of the work is done for you. So don’t limit yourself to your own size when shopping.  If it is too large for you, take it in.  If it is too narrow, can you fit it to a daughter?

Pink_skirt  Another very simple project involving repurposed jeans is this pink skirt we actually bought new at that large chain store. To make this at home you would carefully cut off the legs of the jeans below the zipper and back pockets. (try to leave the pockets inside intact) Then add a rectangle of gauzy fabric for a skirt. If you snagged a cheap skirt in an off size at the thrift store this would be perfect to make the flouncy part. Just remove the elastic waistband and however many inches necessary to give you the correct length and sew the rest to the bottom of the jean portion.

Tiered   The next skirt was a tiered women’s skirt.  The waist fit both of us – at one time anyway – but I looked alarmingly like a birthday cake inside of it. Alannah looked darling, however it was far too long. We cut the bottom tiers off with a pinking shears.  No hemming necessary because the next tiers up covered the cuts. 

   Take a good look at hand-me-down clothing as well. We’ve received some rather dated, gathered, and front pleated skirts. There were some good quality corduroy and denim pieces in the bag. While we would not likely find the finished skirts very flattering, all those gathers made for yards of usable rectangular fabric for new projects. We are currently removing the waistbands and starting our new project – gored and maternity skirts.  I hope to upload the directions and pictures as we finish. By the looks of my midsection we have not a moment to spare!