Spooky Hallowe'en Blog Hop

Hello there, blog hoppers and minions!  It's that magical time of year for Jo's Hallowe'en (look I put the apostrophe in) Blog Hop.  I've scheduled this post to appear in the wee hours of the morning here as many readers are from the future... Or at least from over the puddle.  If you're stumbling onto the game from my blog, please head on over to Jo's blog to start!

Google-y Oogley

This year I have a Shiny New Finish, full of firsts!  It is my first time stitching on black fabric (I've done black perforated plastic), my first flatfold finishing, and my first Frosted Pumpkin Stitchery (finally)!  So much YAY!

not a whole lot of border fabric -- whoops

Technical Details
  • "All Hallows Eve" pattern by Frosted Pumpkin Stitchery, found here.
  • 2-over-1 on a 14-count black Aida.
  • Backing material: Holiday Showcase™ Halloween Cotton Fabric 43" - Candy Corn Dot, remnant purchased at JoAnn Fabrics, and stash black felt.
  • Finished stitching size: ~3" (7,6cm) square.
  • Started October 4, 2017, finished October 15, 2017, unknown hours.

๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘ป๐ŸŽƒ

small kine goodies

Because I stitched on black, I made a few adjustments to some of the charted colors.  Ms. Witch is in a fabulous navy dress, and Sir Mittens, her trusty familiar, is a dark grey gentlecat with dainty white paws.  The stars were stitched with E940 which is the wonderful glow-in-the-dark DMC.  I was surprised how... fluffy? this floss is.  It's in the light effects line so I guess I was expecting something more stiff.  But the coverage is great, even for 14-count!  Other than that, there were a few other tweaks, mostly involving the charted black floss.  I was not overly enthusiastic about stitching black on black and then not having it show up!

cell phone didn't like pretty glowing things

The tutorial I used can be found here on Meari's blog!  I am also big on recycling and using what stash I've accumulated/inherited.  I do not have any batting so I used some of my ample felt stash, in black.  This doubled to provide a dark background so nothing shows through the 14-count fabric holes!  Of course, since it was my first attempt, it's not quite perfect.  Mostly because my "flat" fold is not very flat at almost an inch thick lol.  Lesson learned, use pasteboard thickness!  What I used was not corrugated cardboard but more like two pasteboards pasted together... Still too thick apparently!

help yourself to healthy(?) snacks

I found the finishing fabric on sale in the remnant bin. It is partly responsible for the choice of black Aida.  I was waffling between it or a navy.  Can't say I much like to eat candy corn (says the sweet tooth) but they do look cute~  I left one back piece as exposed felt because it wouldn't really be seen at any point.  The "cording" is three pieces of yarn twisted together.  Orange, black, and some really strange hairy black stuff (like eyelash yarn but... hairy) that is rather creepy all on its own haha.

And here's what you've all been waiting breathlessly for: The letter!

the letter B - more Google-y Oogley

Your next stop is Le Coeur Celtique so keep on hopping (ghosting?  zombie-ing? witching?) your way along!

HAPPY HALLOWE'EN!

Great American Eclipse 2017

Hello again~

You may or may not have heard of the eclipse that happened in North America, specifically coast to coast of the USA.  If you were anywhere near the path of shadow, it's all you've been hearing about for about six months!  We live in the path of totality so we had a great show to look forward to... without having to deal with traffic (and thank goodness for that -- 30 minutes after was nuts).  My husband took off because he knew how excited I was for this.

We ordered a solar filter for my little telescope early because I knew there'd be issues the closer to the date.  It safely arrived with plenty of time but ONE WEEK before the eclipse, I got an email from the shipper saying it couldn't be verified to meet the safety standards!  At that point, there weren't any verified items in stock, even assuming they could ship quickly.  So that meant we wouldn't be able to (safely) watch the eclipse through the 'scope after all.  I was so disappointed.  At least we were fully refunded for it and allowed to keep it.  We set it up with the telescope anyway so we could get pictures with our cell phones with no risk of blinding ourselves.

Our local libraries were giving away proper solar glasses like candy so I picked up two pairs of those so we could watch safely.  I modified them slightly by punching holes in the temples and stringing a piece of elastic through.  This made it so the darn things actually stayed on our heads!  For future reference, the solar glasses are very annoying if you have to wear regular glasses to get through life.

find the sunspots!

How exciting to see sunspots!  We were lucky to have a beautiful, though hot, day for viewing.  There were some concerns about incoming clouds, but they behaved themselves until after the eclipse.  Just a few stray cirrus once in a while.

so close

I loved watching the sun get eaten away by the moon! 

the diamond ring

Totality was so amazing!  It was my first time but my husband's second (he was a small fry on the Big Island in Hawaii for the eclipse in 1991).  We had a good two+ minutes of it (2 minutes, 28 seconds) and it was worth every moment.  It was so dark and the temperature dropped rapidly at that point.  We didn't have any birds freak out but the "evening bugs" started to sing.  My mother told me her cats gathered at the door and stared at her thinking it was time to be fed!  Since it's safe to look at the sun without the filters during totality, we took our glasses off and the one off the telescope and got to see solar flares and the ring of fire and everything; it was wonderful!

receding

The clouds held off for the end too though we had to hurry and get our grill ready before they moved in with rain in the evening!  I mean, what's an eclipse without some grilled ribeye?  According to my husband, a wasted eclipse ahaha.

edible sol and luna

And of course I had to make my sugar cookies!  The icing was a little weird for these; a bit too runny.  They still taste like a million calories each though. :D

This was such a fantastic experience and shall be going down as one of my favorite memories ever!  We are also close to where the 2024 eclipse will happen so assuming nothing changes in the next seven years, maybe I'll get to see another totality!  For further fun, NOAA has some great images and videos of the shadow crossing the US here (I am not sure how long this link will stay active).

I will be fixing the images on my blog shortly.  Photobucket went off the deep end and has decided to charge FOUR HUNDRED DOLLARS for 3rd party hosting.  Lol, no thank you.  Please forgive the mess until I can get the images moved!

I Picked Up a Small Needle!

Hallo, world!

After the ceaseless whispering from my project bag, I finally succumbed to fishing out a cross stitch piece. I have not stitched since October of last year, before all The Happenings happened.  Getting a flower out let me make the "2017" folder in my cross stitching photo album... halfway through the year!

before
after

Yay, a finish! (I've omitted the bees.) Of course, there wasn't much left on this piece so it was fairly easy to achieve victory. But a finish is a finish and always a morale boost.  I even braved washing it (held my breath as it submerged) to remove the fabric ink and hoop marks and to give it a bit of freshening up.  I probably should have ironed it!

Technical Details
  • "August: Gladiolus" freebie pattern by Ellen Maurer-Stroh, found here.
  • 2-over-1 on a 14-count ecru huck towel.
  • Finished size: 4.5" x 4.5" (11,50cm x 11,50cm).
  • Started September 2016, finished June 25, 2017, unknown hours.

Next up will be September's Aster.  I feel a little unenthusiastic about this one and I'm not sure why.  Perhaps I just prefer fluffy flowers.  Most of the colors are kitted up, minus one that is frustrating the heck out of me.  My inventory says I have not one, not two, but THREE skeins of this color.  Where are any of them?!  They must have become victim to the move and will pop up in some really obscure place a year from now.


aroooo

I also kitted up the next MH3U side after setting my husband loose with my floss collection.  He has a much better eye for color than he gives himself credit for!  Plus, if no colors are acceptable, we go "string shopping". What a terrible travesty that is. ;)  I started stitching at the last meeting with the local "yarn & yak" group.  They're more of a craft whatever you want group instead of strictly knitting or crochet.  This picture is about two hours worth of work, with plenty of yakking in between!

weird angle

I've also managed to squeeze in a knit washcloth with the Little Cowboy Afghan. It felt weird not having anything else to send with it and washcloths are fast and hopefully useful. I went up a size on the needles since I'm SuperTight. It gave it a slightly more loose gauge which should allow water to actually soak into it (yes, I've had water run off my cloths).  I did not like the three-stitch seed/moss border.  I think if I make another of these, I will adjust the border to be slightly wider.  It wanted to curl whereas the dolphin one did not and I think that will help.

Technical Details
  • "Rubber Ducky Cloth", freebie pattern by Jessica Worthig, found here.
  • #4 needles (3.5mm).
  • Yarn: Peaches & Creme Solids in gold.
  • Finished size: ~8" x 8" (~20cm x 20cm).
  • Started July 17, 2017, finished July 21, 2017, unknown hours.

That's all!  It's been super hot lately so crafting and fangirling over new anime has been A Good Time.

Flowers and Afghans, Oh My

Hello again! Poking my head back into the blogging world for a quick(?) ramble.

We are mostly settled in our new place.  There was a terrible lot of rain over a few days and while the basement didn't flood, it certainly oozed.  Last weekend my husband and I ripped out the drywall in one room to see just what the extent of damage was -- luckily, not too bad!  And we got the pleasant surprise that the wiring down there is actually grounded, but the outlets had not been updated.  That is an easy fix; I am comfortable swapping outlets and it means less than half the house will need updated.  We will tear out one more wall, and probably a closet, to see if there are any more suspicious spots and to remove moldy drywall.  Renovations are kind of fun but I am so tired of being surrounded by boxes that had to be hastily moved and spread out to dry.

I have no vegetable garden this year, and the flowers already planted have been mostly disappointing.  I was hopeful the iris blossoms would be lovely... they were black.  A washed-out deep purple black.  Yuck.  They will be finding new homes with people who can appreciate them.  The daylilies turned out to be yellow and sort of scraggly due to lack of light.  No daffodils. This will be remedied next year.  I cannot live in a world without daffodils.  There are also clumps of what I suspect are going to be "naked ladies" (surprise lilies, or whatever you know those goofy things as).  The leaves have died back and I expect the flowers to pop out of the ground overnight within the next month or so.

almost worth it
 
We also have a small "water feature" that has some beautiful water lily blossoms.  I really love the flowers but I do not want to take care of a water garden, nor invite mosquitoes to take care of it for me! It is also in pretty rough shape; the liner is torn in places so it's not as full of water as it should be and there are weeds everywhere around it.

pink "evening" primroses

These guys are taking over the backyard.  I rather like them but they can be very voracious spreaders. They are native wildflowers here and I am contemplating getting them started in the ditch in front of the house. There they can spread to their little blossomy heart's content and I won't have to mow that (very difficult) area.

Then the lone rose bush bloomed.  It was in sad shape when we moved in.  I gave it some fertilizer and a haircut and it had a few blooms.  At first I thought it was going to be yellow, which was okay with me.  Then they blushed!  I think these are actually Peace roses (or possibly Garden Party) and I am gonna try my hardest to spread them all over the flower gardens as they are truly beautiful (even after a rough life) and have a wonderful aroma.

Corelle salt shaker vase

¸ . · * / ` \ * · . ¸ . · * / ` \ * · . ¸ . · * / ` \ * · . ¸¸ . · * / ` \ * · . ¸ . · * / ` \ * · . ¸ . · * / ` \ * · . ¸

Well, enough about my gardening woes.  I have been a bit slow on the crafting front.  I have an item on the knitting needles, but no picture of it, and it's, like, way over there, far too far for me to move and snap one.  Instead, here is a crocheted small baby afghan for a family member who is expecting their first.  The father is a Dallas Cowboy's fan so this was a fairly easy choice to make.  The star afghan is quite popular on ravelry and I scoured the projects page(s) for notes and ideas for color placement.

little cowboy afghan
 
Technical Details
  • "Little Cowboy Afghan" pattern by Beth Parsons, found here on ravelry (free).
  • G hook
  • Yarn: Caron Simply Soft, dark country blue, grey heather, and white.
  • Started March 17, 2017; finished June 14, 2017; unknown hours.

I have no idea how big or small a baby blanket should be!  A friend suggested I wrap up my largest cat and then make it a bit bigger, so that is what I did, to much amusement of my husband and much confusion of my cat.  It wound up being 39" from point to point, unblocked.  I suppose this is a little small.  Babies are a little small too, right?

a very confused purrito

It's done in (US) double crochet with a crab stitched edge for a bit extra strength.  I would love to make another one of these in rainbow colors, or all blues, or a Mario Star, just for us.  I was happy to make this one as a gift, but the colors are very drab for me to work on for long stretches of time.  It's not entirely mindless because it required counting or the points would spiral.

The yarn itself was nice to work with too, so very soft, until the second skein of blue.  What a yarn barf mess that was!  I don't mind untangling yarn but that was the closest I've ever come to snipping off the offensive part.  Yeesh.

Still no cross-stitch, though while I was crocheting the blanket, I was sitting next to the bag containing my few WIPs.  It was whispering to me.  :)  When projects start talking to you, that's a good sign, right?

    2016 Recap: Craftiness

    Hello there.  Thank you to the lovely ladies who messaged me over my long absence, and especially those who ferreted out my email after my last post.  Your kindness and concern was really, really appreciated though I couldn't bring myself to reply to you.  Things are starting to fall back into place again.  Routines are a good thing for me even if a bit "boring."

    Though 2016 didn't end on a particularly high note, I still wanted to do a crafty recap post for it because it wound up being one of my most productive crafting years to date.  Rather than a large assortment of pictures, I will put the list from my finishes pages here and a collage of each craft.
    1. February - Uno - knit fingerless mitts, pattern found here (ravelry)
    2. February - June Wild Roses - 14-count ecru huck towel, freebie pattern found here
    3. February - Lemon-Lime Potholder - thermal crochet, freebie pattern found here  
    4. March - Speaker Cozy #2 - crochet, pattern from Star Book No. 78: Television and Radio Scarfs
    5. March - Shamrock Dishcloth - knit, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    6. June - Dolphin Washcloth - knit, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    7. July - Rathian - 20-count light tan jobelan, pattern by me
    8. August - KitKat Hat - knit, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    9. August - House Slippers - crochet, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    10. August - July Delphinium - 14-count ecru huck towel, freebie pattern found here
    11. September - Brachydios - 20-count light tan jobelan, pattern by me 
    12. September - Mittens - knit, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    13. October - Kitty Prints Scarf - knit, freebie pattern found here (ravelry), modified by me 
    14. October - Fan Bookmarks - crochet, freebie pattern found here (ravelry)
    15. October - Jack-o-Lantern Bookmark - crochet, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    16. October - Haunted House Dishcloth - knit, freebie pattern found here (ravelry) 
    17. November - Yellow Potholder - thermal crochet, freebie pattern found here
    18. November - Green Potholder - thermal crochet, freebie pattern found here
    Totals:  7 knit items, 7 crochet items, 4 cross-stitch

    the knits
    I'm glad I completed the "kitty set".  They came in handy this winter and the hat especially got a lot of smiles and comments.  The fingerless mitts taught me how to do cables which, at the time, was very exciting.  And then never again for the remainder of the year.  And the washcloths are plain ol' fun.  I like themed items obviously.

    the hooks
    Lots of thread crochet this year, which is good, I am very fond of it.  After finishing the two thermal crochet potholders in November, I started a third, very large potholder (think 9x13 casserole dish) in a combination of the yellow and green and a couple skeins of white.  This is the only project I had out as all my yarn/floss/notions/life/sanity was packed away.  I finished it February 3rd (though as it's 2017 it's not a 2016 recap but more of a catch-up).  Of course, I still had a small bit of yarn left over so I made one more smaller potholder, again with the white/yellow/green combo.  I finished it February 10th. It felt nice to have some new things to unpack for the kitchen and it made me feel good to make space for new yarn use up stash.  The collection is the (small, I know) picture on  the far right.

    the stitches
    A fairly dismal year for cross stitch though.  I finished two of the lovely huck towels and two more sides to the husband cube.  I still love how Brachydios turned out.  I have yet to fish out my cross stitch stuff.  The mojo just hasn't been there.

    I also managed a lot of progress on FFIII but it wasn't a finish like I had hoped.  It went from here...

    before

    ...to here.

    after
    So it's getting there, slowly but surely.

    ๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š๐Ÿ“š

    Also, I read a few books.  I had originally intended this to be its own separate post but for reasons, it's getting tacked on here.  I like to read but am not a very avid reader (gee, I wonder if all the other hobbies take up too much time). I tend to stick with old favorites, rereading them as many times as I please.  I did not include any manga I have read although several series were sprinkled in throughout the year.

    Italicized is a book I have never read before.   
    Italicized and bolded is never read and a new-to-me author.
    1. The Diamond Throne (David Eddings)
    2. The Ruby Knight (Eddings)
    3. The Sapphire Rose (Eddings)
    4. Domes of Fire (Eddings)
    5. The Shining Ones (Eddings)
    6. The Hidden City (Eddings) 
    7. The Redemption of Althalus (Eddings)
    8. Hyperion (Dan Simmons)
    9. The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)
    10. The Fellowship of the Ring (Tolkien)
    11. The Two Towers (Tolkien)
    12. The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents (Terry Pratchett)
    13. The 5 Love Languages (Gary Chapman)
    14. The Return of the King (Tolkien) 
    15. Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (Rowling et al.)
    16. Anne of Green Gables (L. M. Montgomery)
    17. Anne of Avonlea (Montgomery)
    18. Anne of the Island (Montgomery)
    19. Anne of Windy Poplars (Montgomery)
    20. Anne's House of Dreams (Montgomery)
    21. Anne of Ingleside (Montgomery)
    22. Rainbow Valley (Montgomery)
    23. Rilla of Ingleside (Montgomery)
    I received both the Elenium and the Tamuli series by Eddings for Christmas 2015, and then just felt like rereading Althalus because he's fun.  Yes, I had never read a Terry Pratchett book before!  It was in our library's book sale for 25¢ and I took a liking to the ridiculous title. 5 Love Languages was interesting.  I found both my husband and I "speak" the same language: Acts of Service.  I hated Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.  It was like a horrible fanfic with none of the magic of the original books.  I put it in bold because surely Rowling did not write such a jaded view of the adult magical world.  I was fully intending to purchase this book but after reading it through the library it will never find a home with me!  strong feelings  One cannot just read one Anne book.  I can never pick a favorite of the series.  Maybe 1-3 and 5.

    And then all my books were packed away for the move that felt like it was never-ending.

    Okay, I think that is enough for this recap / catch-up post.  All of those items seem so far away, from a different life.  I'm not even going to do goals this year and just take things as they come and enjoy life outside of boxes.  Eventually.  The boxes are never-ending as well.