A creative visit

Thanksgiving weekend was grand.  Our oldest son came to town and stayed for a nice long visit. So nice to have him home!

While here, he engaged me in a designing and creating session. He is a bicycle messenger/deliveryman in Cleveland. His most awkward delivery seems to be the sheet sized pizzas that get ordered regularly. At 2′ x 3′, not easy to carry on a bike!  So, we sewed!

Forgot to get any pictures of the finished product, but the ripstop nylon bag was big enough to put a small body in it with drawstring, handle, strap and clips to hold extra bags of foodstuffs. Said he would let me know how it works.

In the meantime, he left me with another project: a banner for his bicycle polo team!  Pretty nifty logo, but also lots of detail. I need to get it blown up before I start, but I’m all ‘geared’ to do it!

Just a note to say Hi!

Not much going on here other than healing. Every day is a bit better in lots of little ways. Thanks so much for all the prayers, etc. – I know they are making a big difference in my recovery.

My fiber involvement has been limited to my diet and a bit of hand sewing and knitting. Just don’t have any powers of concentration to keep me on any one project for very long.  But I do have some ideas popping up and that is fun.

I keep looking at the Hollander beater.  Someday….soon….

In and Out

I’m feeling a bit like a revolving door right now. Just got home late this afternoon from a lovely weekend in Pittsburgh (lecturing and teaching the Fiber Arts Guild about mudcloth) and tomorrow morning I hop a plane for NC.

Heading out for five days of fun in the sun with a couple friends. Timing for the friend being visited in her new home is perfect; timing for me isn’t so perfect but it’s the best it will be in a while.

So, I’ve pulled some fabrics, cut some pellon and will work on journal covers while there. Deadlines are looming for a couple of too-good-to-pass-up sales opportunities and blank journals are my current love.

We WILL take time for walking the beach.

And then back in time to teach a group of teens how to make a basket for their moms. I will certainly need the anticipated relaxation this week before coming home for that!

Twofer

I managed to make it through all last week’s activities not totally unscathed, but not in too bad of shape. Just some funny throat stuff trying to force its way in – which I am refusing.

Finished a twofer project. I wanted to support my SIL by having a quilt project to display using some technique or idea from Kaye Wood (nationally known quilter coming in to speak at the Community Quilt Connection next Sunday). I also needed to make a journal for the week 2 class in the online journal making for fiber artists class that I’m taking.

Soooo, I used Kaye’s 6-hour quilt technique and made the journal cover. The quilting isn’t too bad. Not sure a quilted cover is appropriate for the type of journal we were doing, but… it is done and posted. I didn’t even get started on it before some of the class folks were finished with their week 3 projects already! Overachievers!

Working with the Art Club kids tomorrow. We should finish up our orbs/spheres. Next week we’ll start on grids.

Journal Making Class

I mentioned in an earlier post that Sue Bleiweiss’s (see her blog in the sidebar under Fiber Art) journals have been an inspiration for me to try some different things. She is offering an online journal making class (5 weeks/5 lessons) so I joined and this week we started with the first project.

I was sewing machine-less until late yesterday (it was in the shop getting checked out for a really obnoxious noise). Today I worked on the project – a larger size of journal than I’ve been making lately. I figured that I knew the basics of bookmaking, so I used this as a means of pushing some concepts that I’ve been meaning to try. Getting people used to the materials and including pockets was the main push in this lesson.

For the outside of the cover,I laid down paper strips (leftovers from a paper folding project last year) on the double-sided fusible Peltex then fused a layer of organza on top of that to soften the colors and protect the papers. The inside lining came from an old silk shirt – and I used the pocket from the shirt as a pocket in the journal. The button for the closure was an old one from Grandma – and I figured a way to have it ‘caught’ without making a loop or hole.

Overall, I’m pretty happy with it. I’m thinking it is a bit bigger than I like, but that can be easily remedied in future work. There have been a variety of pockets devised in the class, which is nice.

Seems to be a growing group – from all over the world – and I’m not sure how many are actually in the class. Sue set up a Yahoo! group to accommodate questions and comments and pictures of finished projects – it is a very chatty group so far! 🙂 And the great part about it being online is that the work can be done any time – at home – without having to drag materials and supplies all over the place.