Thursday 29 September 2011

Granny square love...

Get me, two posts in one day!

This one is just a quicky - Jenni at Baa-me Kniits kindly pointed her readers to Sarah London's giveaway - she is offering a signed copy of her new book and 7 skeins of gorgeous looking yarn. Pop by if you fancy a 'flutter'!!

Fingers crossed!
Sx

tentative steps into quilting...

Finally, I get to post some crafty stuff! There seem to have been so many weeks when there has been precious little time to devote to a bit of craft 'therapy' but I do have some things to show you now!

Before I do though, I just want to say thanks for the lovely comments on my last post and welcome along to some new 'faces' - very nice to meet you! I will try to answer in person when I can but thought I'd try to answer some of the questions on here in the hope that you will see them! Hope that's ok...

Regarding the sloes... its not the sloes so much that are so good but 'pickled' in gin for 3 months or more they are seriously worth talking about! At least, in my opinion... And last new year the boys came up with a particularly good cocktail which meant I had to share it!!! I think it's most unfair that foraging is such a no go thing in Australia - it's such a treat to make delicious, nearly free goodies (I count it as free as the gin was already in the cupboard...we'll gloss over the fact that if I'm going to manage more than 1 G&T between now and Christmas it has to be replaced...).

In answer to Rachelle - well, you may well do! We are just about 30 mins from Blundeston, not far from Bungay...

Penny, no I haven't ever used rowan berries - I don't think I knew you could; would be intrigued to know if anyone does as there are loads near me at the moment!

Jenni (at Baa-me Kniits) - I'm about 15 miles or so from work and main city shopping but there are lots of nice small town shops not so far. And really 15 miles is only 20 minutes unless the traffic's awful - Norfolk is still a pretty rural region, you don't have to go far before you are out 'in the sticks'!

And thanks so much Lisa - Lisa takes such beautiful photos, quite inspirational - do have a look at her blog...

So on to things I've been making!

Finally, I finished the Noro socks...



I bought this ball of Noro Kureyon yarn in mid July!!! I think this is the longest a pair of socks has taken! I'd like to say I'm really pleased with them...and I sort of am...but in spite of me trying really hard to get matching socks this time...


What is going on here?!!! It was all going so well (and I was feeling quite smug) 'til I got to the heel then the colours didn't follow in the same order! How on earth do people do it?! Alice makes such beautifully matched socks and although I am trying to convince myself it's fine that they look a bit 'rustic' I also know that when I have them on with jeans the only bit you can see is the foot and it looks like I've forgotten how to dress properly! I'll bet money I will get asked if I know I've got odd socks on!!! On the plus side - these do fit the best out of the socks I've made so far and are lovely and comfy to wear, so I may just have to wear these with shoes and a skirt so the bit that's showing is the matched bit!?! 

Another question for you expert sock knitters out there - whilst my homemade socks are very comfy and definitely not loose at the top (thanks to Penny of Baa-me Kniits for her tip about long-tail cast on - hoping the next pair will be suitable for my Mum without cutting her circulation off!) they do have a bit of a tendency to go 'baggy' by the end of the day. Any tips for snug socks?

The crochet has taken a bit of a back burner for a while - I treated myself to a book of crochet squares with the idea of learning some new stitches and patterns but I can't quite get my enthusiasm for it going. I think it's because I haven't got any really nice yarn on the go. I have some of the cheap (and bright but pretty nasty to use) Rialto cotton and lots of quite nice to use Stylecraft acrylic but that is meant to be for my big ripple blanket and I am trying not to be tempted to pinch it for other projects. I'm a bit out of love with the ripple right now - the rows are soooo long (why oh why did I think such a wide blanket was essential?!!!) so progress is very slow! I will finish it eventually...

In the meantime, and rather inspired by Karen, I am having a go at machine quilting. Years and years ago (I'm talking almost 40 years ago...!) I was completely captivated at a craft fair, as a 7 year old, by a lady who was hand piecing small hexagons into beautiful quilts and I went home and started one - which I still have, but never finished! Part of me really wants to complete it but my 7 year old stitching has, shall we say, 'character'! I still love the idea and have been gathering bits of fabric for some time with the thought of some sort of quilt making.


I spent a couple of contented hours cutting these squares and rearranging them into piles...


and stacks...


...before finally starting to put them together. I had rather underestimated the trickiness of getting squares to line up exactly - particularly with my slightly slapdash approach to seam allowances (by eye!!!) so this is far from perfect (there is a quilting lesson to be learned here methinks...when all those clever folk out there say the measuring bit is crucial, they mean it!!!).

But, all in all, I'm quite pleased with the end result...


This is the finished top piece washed through and drying on the line. I thought I'd be really good and wash it in case of any unwelcome shrinkage but this was a case of lesson no 2 in quilting! I'm definitely not going to show you the back as it is one tangled mess of frayed edges! No harm done because I had left pretty generous seam allowances but I did have to spend some tedious time trimming all the strands of frayed thread off the back!

I'm going to bind it with another strip of the red checked fabric which I hope will finish it off nicely. This is going to be for a friend of mine who is having a pretty horrible time at the moment. Circumstances are forcing her to move away from a long marriage and into an empty place which she is desperately trying to turn into a home. I thought she could do with something pretty and cheerful and made with a bit of love, so imperfections or no, this will be for her new home.

I just have the final stages to do - currently it is sitting there staring at me with the backing, batting and top all basted together. Only I have to confess to a certain amount of anxiety about the actual quilting bit... am I best to start in the centre of the quilt and work out to each side? Or start at one end and work my way across the whole thing? It might be ok when I get going but I don't want to wreck it now!! Any tips, gratefully received!

One last thing to show you - I have been trying to help this friend source furniture on the cheap and there are a couple of great sites out there with all sorts of stuff that people are trying to get rid of; gumtree and freecycle - how I could have done with these when I was trying to set up home on a shoestring 25 years ago! But very easy to get side-tracked and when I was looking for practical kids beds and cupboards I found this...


This little bureau was practically being given away and I just love it! The boys think I've gone completely barkingly old fashioned and retro (son 1 was very rude about its fat body and spindly legs!!) but I think it is quite charming and solidly made in proper wood, in the way that things just aren't now. Of course, it does mean that the room needs a serious overhaul - at the moment it is a hotch potch of a modern office like desk, piles of unsorted stuff and a bookcase overloaded with files and general toot. The plastic crates you can just see are full of photos and slides retrieved from my Nanny's house when she died which I really must go through and make sense of at some point and out of shot (believe me I had to shove a few things out of the way to get this photo!) there is a load more, mostly unused 'stuff'. I have visions of a complete sort out - perhaps a sofa bed so we can use this as a spare room, more crochet cushions and a place to read quietly... I have already made the bureau look more at home with a few bits and bobs on it and I think it will fit right in soon enough.

Apparently this had been a family possession for years and at the back of one of the little cupboards inside I found this...


This bottle of ink marked with a pre-Decimal currency price must be almost as old as I am and I presume had sat forgotten at the back of the cupboard for years! 

Will let you know when the room has had its makeover...

Til next time then, 
Sx

Monday 26 September 2011

autumn in the early morning...

R left for work early yesterday and it was such a beautiful morning I decided to get up too and take the camera out for a walk.
It was one of those cool, misty mornings and as I left the house at about 6.45 the sun was just coming up...


The hedgerows are full of colourful seeds and fruits at the moment; berries reddening on the holly...


,,,juicy black elderberries...


The leaves are definitely beginning to change colour...


I'm always amazed at how quickly the sun rises - within just a few minutes of leaving home it had cleared the horizon and was beginning to feel warmer on my face.


I wandered down the country lanes; love the name of this one - do you ever wonder about how these little roads get their names?


The dew was sparkling in the sunshine...


Acorns and chestnuts on the trees...



(we used to say these were the fairies' bowls when I was little...)



I was keeping half an eye out for sloes - sloe gin has been on my 'must do' list; partly because I've finished the last of the bottle in the cupboard (!) and partly because I thought I might do some small bottles for pressies this year.

I walked out of one end of the village and round between the fields. At that time in the morning it was so quiet and peaceful - I didn't see a single car and only a couple of early cyclists and dog walkers. What was really noticeable was that as the sun rose the sounds of the birds came to life too.

Back in the hedgerows, no sloes! But bright red rosehips...

...and lots of blackberries...


...some a bit past their best already. Then finally...


...purply, black sloes! Only, if I'm honest, I was a tadge disappointed with these. You don't really get a sense of scale in this photo but these were teeny! About the size of a fat raisin! And some already a bit wrinkly looking. I picked a few but found myself thinking I'd need a lot to fill a bottle of gin! And pricking the skins of loads of tiny sloes is tedious in the extreme. Resigned to having to forage elsewhere I carried on with my walk.

Some of the leaf colour is already fabulous...



The photos don't do it justice, but the fields and verges were kind of shimmering in the low sunlight...




Then as I walked back into the village, I spotted these bad boys...!!





Huge juicy sloes, perfect!

In the same short strip of hedgerow, I also came across these...


We've always called these mirabelles or bullaces, but I've just been looking them up and the description of bullaces sounds more like the fat 'sloes' in the last photos! I'm pretty sure they were sloes, because the juice was enough to give you a face like you'd been sucking lemons! Usually these little plums are sweet fresh off the tree but they are obviously not quite ripe enough yet because one of these made me screw my face up! Bit tart yet!!

Pleased with my haul, I wandered back through the village; funny how you take things for granted - I don't usually notice how pretty it is...



Back past the little church and the allotments...



Back home, the sun was fully on the front of the house by this time and the virginia creeper was looking lovely...




I know this is a bit of a photo heavy post but it was so heavenly to have an hour or so just to absorb all the lovely things around me and wanted to keep them to remind me; hope you enjoyed joining me on my walk!

One last peep at my 'food for free'...


My next post will definitely be more of a crafty one - I finally finished the Noro socks and I'm well on the way with the quilt, so lots to show...

Til then, take care

Sx

Monday 19 September 2011

farm, food and festival...

We have done well for festivals this year! Last weekend saw our last festival of the year (at least, as far as I know at the moment!) when we spent the day at 'Harvest at Jimmy's' - a really family friendly, small festival at Jimmy Doherty's farm near Ipswich. 

This is not just your average music festival, but has another stage for chefs to demonstrate their thing, a whole area dedicated to the small people (even without little people, I love to see them just having fun here) and all the things that are usually on the farm - a butterfly house, rare breed pigs, goats etc and beautiful woods to wander through. 

The weather had been a bit hit and miss all week but Sunday looked more promising and when we arrived at the site this was what met us...


Cloudy, but enough blue sky and sunshine to throw shadows, a huge helter skelter and a field of teepees!

Doesn't take much to get me excited, I was ready to jump up and down by this point! When exactly are you too old for helter skelters...?!

Jimmy's has fab food - so much of it you spend ages just wandering around trying to make a decision but definitely a cut above your average burger van!

Take a look at these...


How cute is this caravan?! And this van I saw earlier in the year at the VW festival...


I so love everything about this stall - it was really windy but they still had their table cloths and teapots; fab! 

Flags just typify festivals for me...


Bright colours, flying freely in the blue sky - I couldn't stop taking photos of them! (its ok, I'll spare you the torture of my flag-thing!)

I have to confess, I had never heard of Mr Tumble...if you have little people you may well know of him, but mine pre-date teletubbies even so this guy on the main stage was a new experience for me! He must have had several hundred families singing and bouncing up and down in unison! Probably not my choice for an evening's entertainment but great fun to watch people watching him, if you know what I mean, and definitely got the happy feeling going!

Infectious enough for these three unlikely blokes to join in with the hokey cokey...


Sons 1 & 3 and hubby, getting into the swing - with only a minimum amount of alcoholic inducement!

The farm is a really lovely setting - in a pretty rolling bit of countryside and with enough space to not feel overcrowded even with several thousand people milling around. Jimmy's is famous for its pork (cover your ears piggies!) and there are lots of very happy looking pigs around...


I know exactly how this Mummy feels! (there were lots more babies running around!). The boys were awful - no qualms about talking hog roast in front of these young ears!!!

There were little demonstration areas around the place - this was outside the 'food safari' tent...




I just loved these collections of quirky things artfully placed!

There was a chance to follow the rainbow to find the fairy queen...!


I resisted the temptation to join the queue of little people (some of whom were dressed as mini-fairies) to see the fairy queen but I enjoyed the walk through the woods!

And I couldn't resist the butterfly house...




This one never stopped flapping its wings - so fast that they were just a blur!

And these two really got into the festival mood with the help of some girls and some face paint!


My lovely boys!

Just a couple more things to show you...


Remember the plum harvest? I had forgotten all about the jar of plums in brandy which the boys fished out of the cupboard to be bottled. Its pretty clear already and delicious! Just need to leave it to mature now!

And this is completely unconnected to anything in this post but fell in love with this cup and saucer in a charity shop on Saturday...


Much to R's disgust...he thinks we have more than enough cups and mugs as it is! I actually got it thinking it might make the basis of a present but it's so right for peppermint tea!!!

And finally, another snippet of my current WIP (well one of...)...


I'm loving this project!

More next time!!!

Sx