September Smalls ~ The Return of the Microkit

Howdy, y'all~ A timely and actually stitched Smalls piece from me this month! Whatever is the world coming to?  Better weather, that's for sure.  Right now it's a beautiful 54°F (12°C) and some fog rolling in the valleys and on the rivers.  It finally feels like fall!

I've ended the giveaway a little bit early due to picking such a popular design that several people have already haha~  So, Leonore, you are the winner and I already have your address.  It has been sent on its merry way across the puddle~  :D

click for info!

Halloween stitching is quite fun and I decided to stitch another of the little microkits I found on carand88's blog (search by tag: cat) years ago.  Today's featurette is the spooky(?) ghost microkit with bonus glow-in-the-dark thread.  A year is apparently long enough to forget how "fuzzy" glow-in-the-dark floss is!  Such a weird one to work with.   Ghostie joins Witchy Kitty and Mr and Mrs Frankenstein in the completion pile, woo!

to you


Technical Details
  • "Ghost Microkit" freebie pattern by Carolyn at carand88.
  • 2-over-1 on 14 count black perforated plastic..
  • Started: September 21, 2018; Finished: September 25, 2018; unknown hours.

So what's up with that bit of floss still attached if it's finished? Well, I'm not sure if I like the "boo" placement/existence. It felt like there was a large amount of empty space in the upper right.   Maybe I need to shift it up a little more?  I don't want it extending out past the stitching though.  Any opinions on the matter?

witchy kitty is with the Halloween stuff!


This was also the first experience I can recall where I've broken a (brand new!) needle while stitching (#22... I think).  Perhaps the perforated plastic was just too thick for it and I switched to a fatter #18.

Kind of sparse post!  There's still time before Halloween to stitch another of these little guys but I dunno if I will or not.  I'm feeling kind of whimsical about stitching since it got cooler.  I keep having the urge to bury myself in yarn!  This is becoming a regular autumn feeling.....

September GG ~ Stash Enhancements, Hats, and a Just Jo SAL!

Hello, world~  It's time for our monthly installment of Gifted Gorgeousness!  Are you curious about the Just Jo SAL?  I'll get there eventually~  There hasn't been any progress on the last side of the MH3U husband cube as I've been a bit busy with other things that can't yet be shown to the public eye.

click for more info

I got an awesome package in the mail last week -- a nice pile of new-to-me knitting and crochet magazines!  A friend was clearing out some of her stash and asked if I needed wanted any.  Of course!  I took all she offered and anything that doesn't entirely tickle my fancy, I'll take with me to our local "yarn and yak" group.  Thank you, Awesome Friend! :D

yay!

I adore the Jane Austen Knits magazine!  I'll eventually update my ravelry patterns page with the ones I'll be keeping.  I'm getting quite the collection on there but it makes it so much easier to not wind up with duplicates~

In the spirit of giving instead of hoarding receiving, I made another "flowering hat", this time for my husband's grandmother's birthday. She's in the Red Hat Society and I thought this might work for some of her gatherings. The flower is again removable and she's already mentioned using it as a pin on a dress! How nice to hear a gift is already being used. :D

best hat pattern

I actually had a rather difficult time trying to get this color to show properly! It's actually a deep wine red.  There's also a small button at the center of the white flower holding everything together but that got washed out trying to bring out the red.  I went up a hook size for this hat and am much happier with the result.  It's so soft!  The flower might be a bit too big with that hook though...

Technical Details
  • "Ridge Hat with Brim" freebie pattern by Kool Stitch on ravelry.
  • Hook: 4.5mm.
  • Yarn: Caron Simply Soft; Colorway: autumn red, purple, and white.
  • My ravelry project page here.
  • Started: ??  Finished: August 24, 2018, unknown hours.

With this finish, I have finally surpassed last year's crafting finishes (this is #16) and am on my way to surpass my most productive year (2016: 18 finishes).  I'm not a very fast or prolific crafter so this is really exciting for me.

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winner, winner, chicken dinner (?)

Here are the results to the poll from the last post regarding y'all's preferences over comment settings.  Embedded seems to be the most preferred setting!  I would guess this is because it allows people to easily reference the post they're commenting on.

I have no idea how long this poll will last, or even if it's still open to vote!  The site says they eventually clear out inactive polls but didn't specify a time.

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Now it's time to contribute in a different way to GG!  Surely by now y'all know I love thrift shopping and can often spot fun things I don't desperately need. I also watch for potential giveaways for pretty charts I know I'll never stitch but think will make someone else happy.

Just Nan - Morning Meadow band sampler

This time the giveaway is for a Just Nan chart: Morning Meadow.  I had originally offered it to our GG hostess as she sure seems to stitch a lot of Just Nans, to the point where I started calling them Just Jos!  Jo already has this particular chart but hasn't stitched it yet.  So, win this chart and have a SAL with Jo and get to count it for all sorts of Gifted Gorgeousness!  :D

what's a meadow without grasshoppers?

This giveaway is just the chart; unfortunately no fancy beads that sometimes came with them.  It's a nice, clean chart with no markings though there is a thrift store price sticker (it's a bonus? :D).  Since shipping is open worldwide, this will just be the chart, no little extras tossed in.

Gifted Gorgeousness Giveaway Guidelines
  1. Be a minion follower (upper right corner of my blog)!  Feedly, bloglovin', etc. do not count as there is no way to show it!  I am sorry; blame blogger for this one.
  2. Comment and tell me you would like to win!
  3. Open worldwide! 
  4. Closing date: September 30, 2018, 23:59 CST.  Closed a little early on September 27 and will ship to the one entrant!  A popular name means a lot of people have it already haha :)
Thanks for reading this edition of Iskabibble Babble and good luck to anyone entering! \:D/

August Smalls ~ A Mystery Solved

Howdy to you all~ I'm a little late this post due to me not paying attention this week whatsoever!  The weather was all weird and threw me off my regularly scheduled life.  Looking forward to this nice, long weekend though.  I've not done much actual stitching lately but it's times for the Smalls SAL update where a mystery(?) has been solved!

click for info!

I had a number of amusing guesses as to what the mysterious little brown things were. Everything from finger/toe warmers to kitten mittens (kitten mittens were tried by my husband ahaha). Only one person guessed correctly -- chair boots! The reason why the opening is so small is because I crocheted over elastic.

suddenly the correct amount

I can never get the little felt sticky things to actually stick to our dining room chairs as they come down at a strange angle and aren't flat on the bottom.  After going through my collection of older craft magazines, this pattern looked easy and functional!  And they certainly are easy; each one takes around 20-30 minutes to hook up, including making the elastic loop.

weird legs

Unfortunately, they wound up being a tad too small for the chairs (you'd think I'd test this after making one)!  But, we have wood floors everywhere in our house and ample other things to put them on.  Plus, they were hugely attractive to a certain small-item-stealing kitty so it's safe knowing that even if they fail as chair boots, they make a fantastic cat toy.

Technical Details
  • "Chair Boots" pattern Crochet World Omnibook, Fall 1981
  • Hook: 5.5mm
  • Yarn: Peaches & Creme Solids; Colorway: dark taupe.
  • My ravelry project page here.
  • Unknown start/end as I didn't make a note in my crafty calendar!

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unknown variety -- 'peace' or 'garden party' maybe?

I've been working on this rose bush a bit more this year.  I gave it a very drastic haircut in February and have been giving it some fish fertilizer once a month.  Basically just trying to love on it after its obvious neglect.  I think it appreciates the attention because it rewarded me with a few more very stellar blooms this year.  It's like it was glowing!  I hope that next year I can achieve even more from it. It's planted in a spot that receives wonderful morning sun but after about 10-11am it's shaded for the rest of the day. I'm thinking of trying to get a cutting started so I can move it to somewhere with a lot more sunshine.

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Lastly, I have a poll for you all regarding your preference for leaving comments on blogs.  I am not asking what setting you use on your own blog!  Just wondering which you like best when you visit another blog.

Which comment setting do you prefer to use when visiting another blog?
 
pollcode.com free polls

Thanks for taking the time to answer! There's no real point other than curiosity on my part. You can ramble about your choice in the comment section if you want to expound or possibly rant. :D

Happy September!  Let the Autumn festivities begin~

August GG ~ The Different Stitches

Greetings, world~ Thank you for the interest in my last post! It was so exciting to me to fix up the sewing machine and I know the post might've been a bit technical.  I've been playing around it; more on that later.

click for more info

For GG this month, the final side of the Husband Cube has had a good start!  And by good, I mean rough.  I picked out many, many stitches over and over (and there's still a couple left) before I finally got things rolling in the correct direction.  And I really goofed up making the pattern for this guy. Who would have thought the characters of v and ^ could cause so much trouble!  I should not have them next to each other, that's for sure!
 
Ceadus

Otherwise, this monster has a very pretty(?) interesting(?) weird(?) glyph.  Despite having 500+ hours in this particular game, I am not sure what that eye-like thing is supposed to be.  Best guess is that it's where his mismatched horns meet...?  He's also using two of the brand-new DMC colors - 02 and 03.  I had thought my husband would choose all four when he saw them but, nope, two of the older greys still won.   The new ones are the ones in his horns.

Side note: I think DMC is quite ornery for numbering the new colors 01-35!  That requires significant rearranging of floss boxes don'tchaknow!   Couldn't some be in the 3000s?!  I don't have them all yet but they are available individually at Hobby Lobby stores which is nice.

I'm also working on another gift (actually two others!) which can't yet be shown here on the blog because I'm being a sneaky hobbitses.  You'll just have to leave things up to your imagination for a while.  Don't get too wild, though.

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Not really for GG unless you count it as the gift of learning!  As mentioned above, I've been trying to figure things out with the sewing machine.  I have a nice assortment of different feet and attachments but little knowledge of what it is they do exactly!

tension control makes happy stitches

Firstly, I had to play with the tension or it wasn't going to matter what attachment I used.  So I adjusted it.  And then I adjusted it more.  And took apart the tension assembly, again.  And took the bobbin case out, again.  And adjusted even more. It wound up worth it as the pretty stitch is there!  I used white thread for the top and black for the bobbin thread so I could see what was messing up where.

zigzags and buttonhole!

Since my sewing machine is quite old, all it can do natively is a straight line of stitches so I have to add stuff to it to make it do all the fancy things machines now do straight out of the box.  The first things I tried once were the zigzag and the buttonhole attachments.   They're really neat little gizmos that do exactly what they say they do!

I'm really in love with the buttonholer.  I have three of them!  The first one I bought I'm fairly certain goes with my exact machine due to the circumstances surrounding its find.  One I bought because it had the extra set of templates and the price was right.  One I bought solely because it contained the eyelet template which is insanely hard to find and as a result, expensive!  On eBay, the eyelet alone can go for around $30 and I bought all three buttonholer sets for under $20.

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mysterious

Lastly, I've been busy making these little things. Any guesses as to what they are?  They're not particularly exciting but they are a bit amusing, so come back for the Smalls Edition of Ishkabibble Babble to find out~  :D/

Serendipity, Redone

Hello to you all!  I haven't anything in particular for the Smalls SAL this month due to something else distracting me entirely.  I suppose I could shoehorn it in because it certainly had a lot of small and fiddly bits!


This is about Miss Serendipity, the Singer 201-2 I found in the trash in 2015.  She hasn't been seen nor heard of since February 2016, when I last tackled the tension assembly and front face plate.  This year I was determined would be The Year I finally got around to ordering and making use of the motor rewiring kit available through The Project Lady's eBay page.  Other people sell similar kits but she does enough work on Singers and posts helpful info about them so I figured I'd stay loyal.

Kit acquired, I dove into the disassembly using this tutorial.  I really wish that blog was still active!  It's a phenomenal resource about the older machines.  First up was removing the hand wheel (the thingy that turns on the machine allowing the needle bar to go up and down) and seeing about the state of things in there.

shiny little worm

Not too bad!  There was quite a bit of old grease spattered everywhere but I tackled it with my army of Q-tips and careful application of isopropyl alcohol and had it looking reasonably shiny in there.  The after image is actually after I started to put things back together as it would've been impossible to properly clean that worm (the spiral gear-looking thing at the bottom of the large circle).  Then I moved on taking apart the actual motor housing...

motor housing - before

Eek. This is the sign of someone doing naughty things to a sewing machine. :( This is supposed to be clean and oil free! A bit of carbon dust is okay and to be expected, but not this sticky black mess. I almost cried when I saw the state of this and thought I would never be able to fix her because it would meant the commutator could be too damaged to save.  I scouted around for "worst-case" Singer scenarios and found that the housing at least could be cleaned up okay and the carbon brushes could be removed from the inside.

motor housing - after

It only took about five million Q-tips!  And my hands were completely black afterwards.  Don't even think about under my nails, yuck~  But, so far so good.  The next part was not so good.  In fact, it was terrible and I'm impressed the machine ran at all.

copper is very important

I am still not 100% sure this is even "acceptable" but it was the best I could do.  There is no way to disassemble this thing entirely and give it the cleaning it really needed and I couldn't just dunk the whole thing in alcohol due to the wiring.  It's also one of the single most expensive parts to replace on these machines as it is absolutely vital to an electric motor!  But to make that bottom part shiny copper again was a really neat and satisfying experience -- I simply stuck the end in our drill, tightened down the chuck, and held a thin strip of VERY fine sandpaper over that part.  It just polished right up!  (This was not my idea; it was detailed in the rewiring post mentioned up top. Told you it was a very handy resource!)  Next up was doing the actual rewiring which it needed, badly.

soldering and heat shrinking!

My soldering skills need a bit of work but they are tightly bound together with not a whole lot of solder.   And covered with heat shrink tubing which I just love to work with hah.  I got to make a fancy underwriter's knot to take pressure off the motor if the wiring gets pulled.  I also replaced the little rubber grommet as this is what the original looked like after poking around:

this is supposed to be a circle

Not really anything left of that little rubber thing!  The rewiring kit comes with this little doodad as apparently it's expected to crumble into oblivion after 60+ years of life.  Drama done!

nice and tidy

Everything tucked neatly into place while I reassembled the motor housing.  Once I put that commutator back in and got the spiral worm held back in (a process I don't look to repeat hah), I started tackling the old bits that just... get old.  And then it's time to reassemble and squish grease everywhere it's supposed to go.

new vs old, ewww!

The rewiring kit also came with new grease wicks and she most certainly needed new ones, yuck!  They weren't even soft anymore.  Just dirty and crusty little things that luckily came off the springs with no drama whatsoever.  I got them back into their little hole with their clip and then stuffed that hole with a goodly amount of plain petroleum jelly.  The greasing done, I then turned my attention to reinserting the carbon brushes which required another order, this time from Sew-Classic, a popular place for (new) vintage sewing machine replacement parts!

new vs old, part two

This was the problem and while I don't know the story behind the life of this sewing machine, I am going to guess someone didn't realize the tubes for these little bricks of carbon should never have anything other than those little bricks in them.  Ever.  The screws themselves are made of bakelite, which was an early edition of plastic.  They are incredibly delicate.  One of the two original screws was chipped down to that little nub and by some miracle, I was able to put a teeny tiny screwdriver in the hole (which was not a slot, it was actually a hole!) and verrrry carefully unscrew it.  The replacement screw fit perfectly in the cleaned tube to cover that little brush with the spring attached.  Whew.  Now what?

little black tire for a winding bobbins

Because I had needed to order the replacement screw from Sew-Classic, I also ordered a few more little things to make her Even Better.  This included a new spool pin (the machine was found with only one), an LED bulb upgrade (so I don't burn my hand off; the original bulbs get hot), the pre-made rewiring cord that runs from the machine to the foot controller, and a new bobbin winder tire.  I don't have a specific "before" picture of the old bobbin tire but it's just visible on the first images of this post as the little grey rubber thing on the left side of the big circle.  What a fiddly little part!  I adjusted the winder so it actually engages with the hand wheel to actually do what it's supposed to do -- wind bobbins, what a novel idea!

I kind of wish I also had pictures of rewiring the foot controller but I was so overwhelmingly relieved to get the dang thing off the table I just dove right in and rewired it.  At one point I was fully hanging on the controller trying to get it off the little clamp on the underside of the table!  After what felt like infinite wiggling, it finally just slid off, easy as you please.  At least I don't have to worry about it falling off.  Ever.  My goodness.  But now, everything is done.  Done!  DONE!!



YAAAAAAAAY! :D :D :D :D  I cannot express my absolute excitement when she first turned on and did what she was supposed to do!

new plug!

I had to do one more order from Sew-Classic.  When I was playing around with things, I found that the light would still occasionally flicker and the motor would cut out.  This isn't good for motors at all and at first, I thought it was due to the commutator being in such bad shape.  But I found it's actually the cord that plugs into the machine and connects to an outlet!  Where the cord enters the part that you attach to the machine, it is very loose and you can actually hear a little crackling noise if you wiggle it (while not plugged in; it's not sparking thank goodness).  Unfortunately, there is no way to open up that end on my particular cord and repair the connection.  I wish I had known this before the original order as I had to pay for shipping again, alas!  The new cord has a polarized plug which will make things better for everything.  But I cannot be done...

a purrfect cat trap

Because I will not be standing nor kneeling at the machine, I needed something to sit on!  The thrift store angels seem to like me a little bit and I found this box for $5.  It's a sewing bench... Or rather, sewing ottoman!  I have no information on it at all, no maker, no hint whatsoever of what it was used with.  The seat part itself was cracked and no longer functioned as a seat.  I bought a small piece of quarter inch MDF board and my husband cut it to size and added the rounded corners.

all fixed

This was done quite a long time ago, while we were still at our previous home.  I don't have very many pictures of the process but the MDF worked wonderfully!  It doesn't have the original print but it doesn't look terrible without it, especially being the seat part.  I may at some point attach a means of storing spools of thread.

the original vinyl print
I had to brighten up the picture to get the pattern to show but the seat is a pretty cranberry color best shown in the first picture.  There is a small tear near one of the corners at the bottom but I'm not sure how to go about repairing that.  It doesn't hamper the function!  I don't know that I will recover this because I like the vinyl print quite a bit!

I hope I didn't bore you with this really long, non-stitchy post.  I'm so, so happy to have accomplished this task and that everything I did actually made a difference!  I have a few pieces of cotton to play with so that I can relearn how to sew (it has been around 20 years) and I get to have fun learning how all the attachments I've acquired work their magic! After that, I'm not sure what my first project will be!  I have a few heavy curtains I've had forever and have always been waaay too long at any house I've ever lived in... they sound like a good start!

YAY \:D/