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Saturday 11 April 2020

Post 45


Several good things happened this morning. My son-in-law sent me a text message to say the hot cross buns were outside my door. In addition to the hot cross buns there were two bunches of stock. Such fabulous colours and such a lovely perfume.


The buns were really delicious, moist and full of fruit.




I had them with coffee after a phone call from my friend Lorraine. We had a bit to catch up on.


The succulents I checked on the other day have progressed further. The new plants seem to be well established. Even though Easter is in Autumn in our part of the world, there is still new growth.






The zygote has still more flowers and is looking splendid.


Today I planned to go for a walk in the Hameji Gardens, in the parklands a couple of blocks away. Even though it is close by, I originally planned to drive there and only walk in the gardens themselves. At the last minute I changed my mind and walked, not along the main road, but through back streets. Just before I reached the gardens, I tripped on an uneven footpath and fell hard, blocking my fall with my knees and hand.

A young man came along and, from a distance, asked if I was OK. He said "I just want to come over and help you". I said "Please don't!".  He asked questions from a distance and I showed him that I could stand and put weight on my knee, which is where it hurt. I promised him I would go straight home and put an icepack on my knee.  Which I did.

It was a remarkable encounter.  Two strangers, decades apart in age, adjusting to connection and kindness in this world of infection. I was very touched.

I am OK. I have a bruised knee, and it will be sore for a day or two. I will, for the foreseeable future, stick to main roads and parkland pathways. And my knitting.



My Woolworths delivery arrived just after 4.15pm - efficiently narrowed in time by a text message to let me know it was the next delivery.

With fresh bread, I had egg sandwiches for dinner - nothing like it.


Because this is my Easter delivery, I did include some chocolate. On reflection, I think it will get me through until next Easter!

With the delivery put away, I was in time to watch the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra broadcast of the Messiah on YouTube, with my score in hand to join in every now and then. Thank you Deirdre for the information and Katherine for the score. 




On the Western balcony, in the sun, I knit, rather than embroidery, because it is easier than moving my Lowery frame. For the most part, however, I worked inside on the firescreen.


I finished the leaves to the right of the parrots and above the branch on which they sit.




So it looks as if I will be able to start on the parrots tomorrow.

It will be an appropriate treat to be adding colour!



Friday 10 April 2020

Post 44: If you have no daughters, give them to your sons

A very quiet and relaxed day today. The temperature reached about 20C.  Although the sun broke through for a while, it was predominantly overcast.  I had a few phone calls and messages,  and a friend who is beginning a knitting project called in to collect a pair of knitting needles from outside my apartment door.


My daughters and I shared hot cross bun rituals around 11 am. My Canberra daughter was lucky enough to have hers delivered fresh this morning.

My daughter in Adelaide made hers





and mine were courtesy of my Coles deliver last Tuesday. I'm not rigid about it, but fundamentally I try to restrict hot cross bun eating to Good Friday. I will certainly, however, be eating the two saved for me from the batch above and to be delivered to my door tomorrow!








It is interesting to watch the way the Square is being used for exercise. There are not many people about, and those that are seem to be keeping their distance quite well.


It's a good time of the year for my balcony plants. This photo is for Jennifer, in isolation in Perth. It is a begonia she gave me and advised me to cut back the last time she was here. I did as she suggested and it has put out new leaves as she predicted it would.



This is the new plant emerging from one of the pieces I cut off.





The geranium cutting I bought from Peter Sanderson at the Guild's Christmas sale is doing brilliantly in the casserole dish I ruined by burning the bottom.











I worked steadily on the Mellerstain firescreen today. I have realised that I should not have been working the vine and oak leaves with double thread on the edges. I'm going to continue doing so, however, because I really like the plumpness.


I am surprised how much I am enjoying working this limited palette of colours. It is hugely varied.









A bit like tonight's sky.

Fionn, my grandson, phoned tonight for a chat. He had run 18km today and is planning to extend that to a half-marathon.









On the Crewel work front, I  finished the vine leaves between the parrots, having decided to work horizontally across the linen. 








I'm hoping to work the leaves on the right hand side tomorrow.


Easter Sunday seems like a good time to treat myself to starting the parrots.

Tomorrow, with a bit of luck, I will have a couple of hot cross buns and another Woolworths delivery to look forward to.


Thursday 9 April 2020

Post 43 In the Square

Very pleased this morning to get an email from a friend in the Blue Mountains who was prompted by reading my review of Embroidery on Knitting to recall that she had, some time ago,  bought a copy of  a Splendid Apparel by Ann Zilboorg  along with a knitted cardigan from Vinnies, with a view to creating something beautiful. I do believe we discussed it at the time. She is now back on the project! Happy to be the prompt!
I was organised for the ABC Classic FM Dance Class at 10.30 this morning. I enjoy this 10 minute interlude. 

Romeo's Foodland at North Adelaide has now got its delivery system up and running, so I put in an order. This will give me, along with other things, what I need to make my meusli. The first delivery window in next Wednesday - a good timeline for me.

It was another pleasant day in Adelaide. so I went for a walk around the Square.

This is a view of our apartment block from the NE quadrant of the Square. My apartment is in the top right hand corner of the building.

Adelaide is a planned city. William Light, a British-Malayan Naval and Army officer was the first Surveyor-General of South Australia. In 1837 he chose the site for Adelaide and drew up a plan for the city, to include six squares, a figure eight of parklands surrounding it and the layout of streets and gardens. That plan has continued to guide city development and is still much respected.

Hurtle Square is one of the original six. For the first twenty years, the square was left with its native vegetation. In 1854 mass planting of 1500 trees was undertaken in the Square - a mixture of native acacia and eucalypts and imported poplar, cypress, almond and olive. In 1874 Morton Bay fig trees, Norfolk Island pines Kurrajongs and Cassia trees were added.

In 1909 tram tracks were laid through the Square, and in 1924 landscaping and road works undertaken to better accommodate the trams and traffic. Two roads intersect in the centre of the Square,  creating the four quadrants still evident in the Square today.

A steel installation by Anton Hart in 2003 identifies the Square as The Forest of Dreams, with one of those words in each of the four quadrants at the intersection.


Our apartments are in the Forest quadrant. Today I only walked around Forest.

While there is now lawn and open space,  specimen of the early planting survive, particularly a couple of splendid Moreton Bay figs. This is the one in which the bats roost at night. The guano is evident.













There are plenty of cavities to house other animals as well.





I find it interesting to see the way pruned branches heal in layers.









Am I the only one to see the face of the gargoyle hidden below the lopped branch?





There is also a crop of mushrooms of various kinds. No, I wasn't tempted.

Autumn seems to have arrived in Carrington Street along the side of our building.





My Inspirations magazine arrived in the mail today. While I enjoy the magazine, it is a while since I've wanted to make any of the projects. I could be tempted, however, by both the Anna Scott bag and the Elisabetta Sforza one.

A neighbour sent me a suggestion to watch What We Did on Our Holiday  on SBS On Demand before it expires on 11 April. I took the advice and was engrossed, while stitching the firescreen,  until, about 20 minutes from the end, my phone rang. I turned off the television. When I returned to it, there was no 'continue' option. I don't think I was enjoying it enough to go back to the beginning!


I'm happy with my stitching progress. I'm confident I'll be working on the parrots by Sunday.




I'm really liking the overall look of this.It has real dimension and harmony.

















It's quite a contrast to the colours from my window this evening!





















Wednesday 8 April 2020

Post 42: Booze and Balcony

This is a photo this afternoon from Jennifer, isolated as Covid19 positive in a hotel room in Perth. I'm not sure where the chocolate cake came from, but I'm delighted that she is up for it - and that the threads from the Thread Studio have made an appearance. Here's hoping for recovery on  every front!
Settling down to answer emails after my dance session with ABC Classic FM Radio this morning,  a phone call took me by surprise. It was a delivery from Lambrook Winery. I ordered yesterday, but had been given no delivery date. The deliverer had pressed my buzzer, but I was at the back of the apartment with my radio going.

Within a few minutes I he was on his way and I had retrieved two boxes from outside my door. Delivery seems to be performed by young men. Students or apprentices maybe.

Lambrook is offering a 'Four to the Door' package. I have not tried their wine but thought I'd give it a go. I am out of bubbles, and felt there are milestones that call for it. I'm also low on white wine. I opened a bottle of the pinot gris with my dinner and really enjoyed it.


I did a FaceTime catch up with a Guild friend, hung out the washing, then settled myself in the sun on the Western balcony with my Fair Isle. The light was better today for photographing the web. I love the pattern and shimmer. One day I will embroider it.

I turned the frangipani around so I look into the front of the leaves. I just love the colour and the clarity of the markings in the sun.




Even though there is traffic in the street, it is peaceful sitting out there in the sun. Michael Constantinou's Spanish Mackerel shines in the sun

and there are long-held treasures amongst the pots.





I had an email from Sandra, a fellow retreater in the UK. She has made her Ort pot, and is also making wash bags for Health workers.  These bags mean Health workers can take off their clothes at the end of a shift, bag them, take them home and wash them in the bag before touching them. Great idea.


I added about 6 rows to my Fair Isle scarf in the afternoon and this evening have worked another section of the Mellerstain Firescreen. With a bit of luck I will be able to celebrate Easter by beginning the parrots!



This is a very low-key Easter ambition. My Guild friend is trying to finish embroidering an altar fall for  use on Friday!










This mosaic wall plate hangs on my balcony. It sparkled in the sun this afternoon. I'm enjoying having time and weather to admire it.

Tuesday 7 April 2020

Post41: Lost and found

This afternoon my friend Jennifer, in isolation in Perth, got a positive test result for Covid19 on her second test. She had not been feeling well for a couple of days. It is very distressing news. It does, however, mean that she can move back into the room she was sharing with Susan, who also has the virus. They feel stronger and more able to fight it off together. Deo volente.


The day had begun with a treat , an email from my friend Christine in Watford. She is doing OK.  Though struggling with hay fever, she is walking every day, queuing for access to shops and watching Phillipa Turnbull's videos. So good to get her news.

I checked in on my balcony spider who has now extended her web in both horizontal and vertical directions to completely block off the base of the frangipani. I couldn't get a decent photo, because I couldn't get the light behind the web.

I spent some time looking, unsuccessfully for my reading glasses. I had them yesterday.  I hadn't taken them on my walk yesterday. They had to be in the apartment, but the spectacle fairies seemed to have visited. I almost rang my optometrist and ordered a new pair. While my multifocals work well, I couldn't imagine getting through the next 3-6 months without them. I gave myself 24 hours.




My first Coles delivery arrived. South Australia has had charges for plastic bags for many years, and I have been taking my own bags for at least 10 years. I am now accumulating a huge supply of plastic supermarket bags. Although there was parking outside the doors of our apartment block, the driver parked down the road. He will get it right next time. I have a good supply of fruit and veg for Easter.

It's a new way of shopping. The trick is to predict what I will need well in advance. I was skilled at doing this when cooking for a family of four. Since being on my own I have cultivated just-in-time cooking. I now need to predict for around 10 days, including items like milk. I think I'm heading for a routine of a food shop about every 5 days. I put in another order today, because when I added some items to my list on the Woolworths site, the next available delivery time was Saturday afternoon. I figured by then I would need more fruit and veg, so closed off another order. I am in no way complaining. I am very fortunate to have this service. It will just take a little while to hone my routine.


I spent time this morning looking more closely at the book that arrived yesterday.  I am very impressed. It is, firstly, a very beautiful production, with page after page of full page close-up colour illustrations of stitches on knitted fabric. Secondly, the text is clear, simple and explicit.



It is organised by stitches. While these are recognisable, standard embroidery stitches, here they are adapted to embroidering on knitted, particularly hand-knitted, fabric. The needle works with the individual knitted background stitch.

Once my delivery was unpacked and put away, I decided to try some out on a top I had set aside at the end of last winter to darn. It had suffered from the holes I wrote about in Day 8 of self-isolation. I had darned the holes with leaves, then embroidered the outline of a tree across the whole front. The outline was waiting to be filled in.

I couldn't find the top. I knew it was here somewhere. It had been on my sewing machine for weeks. I had tidied it away. But where? Eventually I found it under a pile of projects awaiting my attention!

Still no glasses though.
 Christoffersson uses 2 ply wool for her embroideries on wool, so I dug out some Bendigo 2 ply I have had for decades.She uses an interesting variation on couching.


 I am working, in all these examples, within the boundaries of a tree trunk I had previously outlined in stem stitch.

 Instead of laying the thread and couching it down, you first create large, fairly loose couching stitches ( the stem stitch outline was already there as the trunk of a tree),


then you put several thicknesses of wool in a needle and thread then though the stitches you have laid out.


It forms a very heavy, braided look.This works better on small, geometrically bounded areas rather  than long freely stitched designs. I suspect it is too loose for longer freehand designs. It would not react to washing in the same way as the background.






Next I tried what Christoffersonn calls Alternating (or double) stem stitch. By alternating the side on which one holds the thread for each individual stem-stitch. you create what looks like a double row of stitches. Again, a braided effect.


The final stitch I tried was a variation on Roumanian couching, where the couching stitches are in form of a cross/


The shape is a bit small, but it does give an idea of the texture required. I can see that geometric designs would be a powerful way to work a sampler, or cover a section of wear. I also think there is great potential for running classes on embroidering on knitting. We could begin with a knitting class to knit a square, or, say, a baby jacket . Once finished, we could run classes in embroidering the knitted items. There are endless possibilities. Even darning classes. My top was machine knitted, so does not lend itself to some of the stitches. I'm not rushing to finish this particular project, but it has been useful to try out some of the stitches.












I was bringing my washing in as the sun went down. Again a huge flock of birds screeched their way East, stopping briefly on the large tree on the left.  They were too quick for me to grab the camera, but the sky was worth the effort.









For dinner I used duck-stock in my freezer to create duck soup, with the additions of carrot, fresh spring onions, asparagus and noodles.

My granddaughter Veronica rang me for a chat about 9pm. The family had just finished eating the Shepherd's Pie she and Fionn had made for dinner!


I finished another section of the Parrots.


The whole piece is coming along nicely.




Oh, and on my fourth search for my reading glasses I tipped out my project bag for the Fair Isle scarf and found the glasses underneath all the skeins of wool.