The Almanda had been doing well, beginning to spill over the pot. Right is a photo of what it had looked like seven weeks ago.
England2020
An account of my travels in Stratford-on-Avon and Hampton Court March 2020 continued back in Adelaide as we live in a Covid19 -adapting world.
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Tuesday, 19 November 2024
Post 560 Bird battles, books, 'broidery and bottle tops
The Almanda had been doing well, beginning to spill over the pot. Right is a photo of what it had looked like seven weeks ago.
Tuesday, 12 November 2024
Post 559 When in doubt, stitch and plant
On Thursday morning I made it into a bag and today added a minor embellishment. It will be a gift bag for someone who, will, I hope, continue to use it.
I launched straightaway into a vegetable shopping bag, which I had bought as a kit from the Royal School of Needlework shop.The RSN is the retailer, not the designer of the project. It has proved difficult. The stitches themselves are easy and, made of sturdy canvas with faux leather pockets, it will be a really useful bag.
The canvas, of course, makes it difficult to embroider. It is hard on hands: I need to wear my left-hand brace and use my long nails to push the needle through above, and a thimble on my right-hand ring finger below. It’s going to take a while.
I did not try to work on it at our Sit'nStitch on Friday, instead knitting the Rowan shawl. It was a busy day. Panayoula and I caught up over morning coffee for the first time in months, since her trip to Greece earlier in the year. I then did the shopping for Monday's lunch at Frewville. It is my go-to place for pork roast but they appear to have changed their butcher or butchering. I usually buy a 3kg slab but the largest I could get was 2kg, trussed differently.
Tuesday, 5 November 2024
Post 558 Floe and Flow(n).
On Wednesday morning I caught a glimpse of the two blackbird chicks waiting eagerly for their food delivery which my presence at the window had delayed. The father had arrived but flew off as soon as I moved to take a photo.
It seems I captured his/her flying the nest. They have not been back and the nest appears empty. There seems to be some expert disagreement about whether or not they will use the nest again, or come back to the same area. Guess I'll find out.
After successfully swivelling the mattress on my new bed as recommended, I spent most of Wednesday (in between checking the balcony for any activity in the nest) completing the gift project I began last week. Now it is in the hands of the intended recipient I can reveal it is Floe, the penguin doorstop from the cover of Inspirations No 123. It's been a great project to work on. Details, of course, in my embroidery blog.
On a 'complete-a-project' roll, I finished the embroidered flowers I began several months ago on Ink and Spindle linen for yet another tote bag (bottom left in composite photo). On Thursday I ironed several lengths of linen, and cut out lining for 3 bags that I had in pieces. Over Friday and Saturday I stitched them. The Flannel Flower one in the lower right is embroidered a little on both sides, the other two, only on one side. The blue bird is a Nicola Jarvis design repurposed from a worn out bag. I experimented with this one, creating a bag with a zipped top and a shoulder strap. Again, details in my embroidery blog.
A completely different 'complete-a-project' involved recycling plastic bottle lids I have been collecting for 3-4 years. I had intended to take them to an Adelaide City Council recycling station, but when I checked, they no longer had a specific collection box for plastic lids. Further investigation revealed instructions to place the lids inside a plastic milk container and put the full container into the regular recycle rubbish collection. Sorters can see the lids in the milk container and easily direct them appropriately. This seems an ingenious solution for the smaller soft drink lids, but I couldn't see it working for the milk bottle lids. It didn't take me long, however, to work out that if I used my faithful Stanley knife to cut a triangular flap in an empty soft drink bottle, I could fill it with the larger lids (which are used by several charities to make a variety of recycled plastic products). I was hoping I'd found a solution that is convenient to the recycling depot as well as me. A friend, however, assures me the larger lids can be forced into a milk bottle, so I'll try that next time I have an empty milk bottle.
The 'replant the empty pots' project continues.