Tuesday 25 October 2022

October...ing

 October in our house has been a fine mix of indoor and outdoor activity. Foraging, putting the garden to bed, sewing and making of course and general small holding pursuits.


Foraging - these parasol mushrooms for a tasty soup.


Matching - our salad to the weekly vase of flowers. There are carnations I grew from cuttings, scabious, dahlias and a few more choice stems.



Arranging - home grown flowers for Harvest Supper. I do love a bit of flower arranging.



Curating - some of my fabric scraps into ready cut garments. There becomes a stage where there are more scraps than I can mentally deal with. A good old cutting out session matching pieces with like-minded companions, committing to cutting them out and bagging them up ready to sew feels like a big step forward.


Watching - the changing view during October. It is the best time to look out of our kitchen window and appreciate where we live.




Celebrating - My youngest becoming a teenager with a death by chocolate cake decorated in mint aero. It was requested. I delivered. 


Catching - a few rainbows this month. Some of them were absolute screamers.


Collecting - conkers. I don't know why. Meg does it every year. She marvels at the texture and colour and then I find them all mouldy in her room about two months later. That is how it has worked here for 13 years.


Scooping - up tonnes of crab apples. It was a full on family job. We all had aching backs afterwards but they are in the sheep field. Now, sheep can eat the odd apple or two but too many is not good for them and you just can't trust sheep not to gorge themselves on something that is right there under their noses.


Putting - the greenhouse to bed. I picked the last few tomatoes this week and have swept through. The pots, troughs and sinks have all been emptiedI started off two years ago with the three geraniums at the back, took four successful cuttings last year and this year I have taken 24 more. Hopefully these can then go back into the Belfast sinks at the front of the house next summer.


Finishing - off with my two latest Autumn makes. A cosy Paige Hoodie by Chalk and Notch and a refashioned skirt made from a rather unsuccessful dress attempt.


A very brown and orange post today but a reflection of the Autumnal season I feel. Thanks for stopping by. Jo xxx

Monday 17 October 2022

Sewing with a purpose

Even though my job is to sew samples and make clothes for myself, sometimes I am commissioned to make things I am not sure about. If I think of someone in mind when I make an item of clothing, it helps me to feel focused on the project.

 

This is the Tilly and the Buttons Lyra dress which I made for my friend Hannah. I already had one and I didn't want to video myself making another one which I knew I would not wear. The colour looks amazing on her. The fabric is called pop cheetah.

I have also made an unusual top for myself which I was not sure about. The sleeves, although beautiful are completely impractical. Who wants a top that would impinge access to a buffet? It would be fine for some people's lifestyles but for me, I am too messy. After making the video to show its construction, I altered the sleeves and it has a really wearable shape now. This fabric is called Shingle path but when I wear it, I like to think I am a really tall giraffe -in my dreams - I am 5"3!

I made a wrap skirt for my mum which was fun in a large print fabric called Herbal Halo.

Sometimes I make clothes just for myself, no work or pay required. This is a Tee from my favourite quick sew pattern Newlook 6217. I also did a tutorial on how to make the headband and I love wearing this little combo.

Now, a dress I do like is the Stevie dress again from Tilly and the Buttons. So easy to sew and wear, it is one of my favourite styles at the moment especially as I knock on a bit and wonder where my waist has gone!

  

Thanks for checking out my little round up. I wonder who will be my next victim/recipient?!
 

Jo xxxxxx

Wednesday 12 October 2022

Nevertheless she persisted

 After eight months of struggling with tennis elbow, my arm is easing up a bit and it has allowed me to knit again in very short bursts. I have been setting the timer on my phone and trying a few rows a night. It has in fact helped me to get my dexterity back in my right hand which had really gone to pot. 


I have been using my left hand so much over the last year that I kept dropping things when I used my right hand because the muscles had not been receiving signals from my brain to use it in a fine motor capacity.

Aaannnyywayyy, the punchline is that I have completed my One and Done shawl which is a free pattern from ravelry for using up a single skein of sock yarn. I can't say that I would recommend the layout of the instructions but it is interchangeable and you can mash up the sections however you like which is what I have done here.


The yarn was purchased at Wonderwool in April. It was hard to buy yarn when I knew that I could not get stuck into it straight away but I really loved the green colourway.



This shawl needs an essential blocking to reveal the dropped stitch ladders. It is not perfect, there are a few knobbly stitches here and there but it served a purpose to get me gently back on the needles just in time for the nights drawing in. 

Unheard of for me but this year I have only finished one started shawl and crocheted a necklace. That's it. I have an unfinished tank top left now which I started in May. That is next on my 'gentle' list.

Hope you like it. Jo xxxx

Thursday 6 October 2022

A teeny ray of hope

 After not being able to crochet with a painful elbow for eight months I have tried my hand at a little crochet just to get me started again. I have made many of these necklaces with buttons, beads or a combination of both which have been gifted as birthday presents in the past. 

This one was for me. The pattern is free from ravelry and is super easy. They are never quite the same as the pattern but it is a good starting point.


Hopefully this teeny project will mean I can start yarning again for Autumn. 


Fingers crossed. Jo xxxxx