glorious sewing machine


Jul 18
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

I missed sewing; the machine, the room and materials in it, the time focussed on making things.

I didn’t manage to make one single postcard while we were gone, although I did try to sketch and keep an ongoing scrapbook. I was hoping to make paper things and mail them back to myself, but I had a vacation instead.

Oh well. I am resigned to it. It was a great vacation.

I am working on the May journal page (all about Alice), and trying (desperately) to catch a clue for June and July and August pages.

home


Jul 17
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

I realized I was deeply grateful to be home.

I missed my own bed and pillow while we were gone.

I think the rest of July is dedicated to the things I missed.

I got a package of completely gorgeous silk scraps from Shibori Girl. I’ll try to photograph those tomorrow. They are delicious.

further notes, less far abroad

After three curiously unsatisfying days in London, we head for Iceland tomorrow, starting the long trek homewards.

Mostly I am feeling thwarted.

I just erased a bunch of whining.

The Globe theater smells wonderful, of fresh oak and rushes. The Golden Hinde, a replica of Drake’s round the world in the 1600’s ship, also smells wonderful, of tar and marlin and the memories of sea voyages.

It is odd what I will remember from this trip.

continuing notes from abroad

hallejulah, the sun doth shine!

After two weeks with daily rain we had concluded all the photographs taken of  English Country Life were in fact taken on the one day a year the sun did shine. But we’ve taken that back. Mostly.

We made it to the Lakes District, and had a fine time, in spite of the weather. As ardent Swallows and Amazons fans we had some places we needed to pay our respects to. We didn’t manage to climb the mountain, mostly because the weather would not lift enough to make the view worth the effort, however we managed to see some of Ransome’s various houses, spend several nights in Holly Howe (called Bank Ground Farm in real life), cruise Coniston Water in an electric launch as tourists and finally (a real coup) sail to the island called Wildcat in the books, beach ourselves in the Secret Harbor and picnic on the island.

The weather ranged from gloomy to vile to pelting rain. I lie – we had some patchy sun on a day we managed a small hike into the hills, but aside from that the weather was uniformly damp. People kept telling us it was atypical weather. Sure. We acquired waterproof pants in order to undertake our sailing expedition. We did get rained on, but it was deeply gratifying to be out, and to be sailing in Swallows territory. Alice and Aerin both wanted to call ourselves Swallows, but I demurred and allowed as how we were real, unlike the Swallows, and required our own name to have adventures with. We have tentatively agreed on the Elephant’s Children, for reasons I will explain the next time I get tagged for baring personal oddities on the web.

We also paid our respects to Beatrix Potter, a writer who makes me think of both my grandmothers. It is odd to have two such dissimilar people in my backgound, but they both read all the little books to me when I was young, and so I have simultaneous voices in my head, one from South Carolina and one profoundly from Boston, when I read the stories to my kids. They are less captivated than I was as a child, possibly because there are more different things they can read when they visit their grandmother. I clearly remember having a choice of Beatrix Potter, again, or fistfuls of abridged Reader’s Digest Collections. Ms. Potter won routinely. I was pleased to see pictures of her aging well. She got such a slow start on life, it was important to me to see her buying farms with the money from her books, and taking pride in her land, farming and livestock. My favorite picture of her was with her shepherd and a prizewinning sheep at a local fair. She looked as pleased as punch with everyone involved, and I thought anyone could do worse than work to grow up so cheerful and sturdy.

Following the Lakes District we headed for York. Our favorite parts were the Wall and the undercroft of the cathedral. Lacking religion, the Minster was large and imposing but not worth paying to get into. If you really need to see inside and a few minutes will hold you, go use the bathrooms. They’ll let you in, and you get to peek into things without guides droning on and on at you.

The Viking museum was a funny combo of really bad animitronics (with smells!) with a well researched and carefully written museum tacked on the back. They hyped the tech, when they should have hyped the stuff they’d found.

From there we tore down to the south of London, and found Poohsticks bridge (and played Pooh Sticks, of course), Stonehenge, Avebury, West Kennet Long Barrow and (in a nice turn of events) a crop circle. I have to admit that I believe these guys here, when they say they’ve made the crop circles, so I associate no particular energy or spirituality to them, it’s just fun to see. And it fit in nicely with the day’s theme of "Mysteries, Ancient and Modern". Aerin was hugely amused, and she and Al stomped off to admire it while Alice and I minded the kite and worried the swallows nesting in the Long Barrow.

Moving our focus forward in time, we toured the Roman Baths at Bath yesterday, and then started towards London. I write now from the Edward Lear Hotel, where we are sleeping on the 4th floor and require to go up to the toilet on the landing. I am wavering between thinking it is hysterical, and feeling like a nice souless chain motel would be just fine thankyouverymuch.

I haven’t made a postcard. I have knitted about two rows on the sock I brought. I have managed to finish off 3 or 4 or 5 of the New Yorkers I brought as disposable reading matter. I think I am having a vacation. It feels pretty good.

notes from abroad

heh. Who knew I could post from the hotel? Raise your hands…

So – trans-Atlantic travel sucks completely, and the time change always feels like it is killing me, but the next day is better. Indeed, today is much better.

What we found out:

  • travel on the top deck of a double decker bus, even if it IS a tourist bus and fleecing us, is quite a nice way to see the city of London, but
  • a boat trip on the Thames is a much better way, and in fact
  • the boat trip is so much better than the bus that it is strongly advised to just get the hop-on hop-off ticket for the boat instead.

We went all the way to Greenwich, and patted the exterior of the enclosure where they are renovating the Cutty Sark (Alice calls her the Cutty Snark), then went on to the Naval Observatory where we sttod on either side of 0 degrees longitude, paid our respects to Mr Harrison’s clocks (which have much better care and describing than 30 years ago says Al) and then splurged on cream scones and tea for the boat trip back.

We keep finding completely mediocre food for supper, but that is as much a limitation of what the kids can and will eat as it is our restaurant finding skills. We have navigated the Tube a couple times. I have more and more respect for the subways of NYC, and how clean and completely lovely all they all were. At least all the ones I saw. The London Tube is pretty ugly – more on par with Boston in many places, and I guess fairly contemporaneous. 

I have to go to sleep again. Tomorrow we trek to Coniston Water and Lake Windermere to stay in the real life Holly Howe, only it is called Bank Ground Farm. Al drives, I navigate and shotgun. We’ll conquer this side of the road yet…

patchy holes


Jun 23
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

I knew that these ideas would overlap at some point. The same patchy idea, with holes in the patches. It makes it slightly harder because there has to be something under the holes, but only one piece, the very first I put down, doesn’t have a hole in it.

We’re leaving tomorrow, but not until afternoon (the plane doesn’t go until 9:30 pm – eeek, an entire day to fret). I may have time for a yoga class and a last postcard. I know what I want to do, and it shouldn’t take too long.

According to TSA I ought to be able to bring my knitting. I think I’ll bring the first Socks that Rock and attempt to finish them. Then I may pack the silk pink/orange yarn that will become another pair of socks.

I’m saddened to realize that I find the Sock of the month club uncomfortable. I signed up hoping for new techniques and fabulous yarn. I have certainly gotten both, but learning the new techniques is not making me happy, or more proficient. Instead I feel like I am on the edge of flunking an important class, and it is making me grumpy. I had a minor epiphany when I realized I could make the heel and toe the way I knew I liked them. It goes against the idea I had to make the patterns as written, to better learn other ways of doing things. But, and it is a Big But, I knit for pleasure. I’m not trying to extend myself here, I have my hands full extending myself with the fabric postcards.

I might let the socks marinate until I feel the need to learn more or fancier knitting techniques. That would leave me free to knit on things that relax me. It won’t go bad. Although I do have to worry about moths and mice.

We’ll see.

spiderweb


Jun 22
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

Those of you familiar with spiders in literature will understand the effort required to keep from writing "Some Pig" in the web. Not only is the web in a hole, there are holes in the web too.

Yup, it is in a hole cut in the postcard. The miracle of wash away stabilizers for machine embroidery means many concepts such as this become completely possible.

Nope, this is one that definitely is not allowed through the mails alone – dudes – there’s a big ‘ol hole where the address part goes.

silk covered holes


Jun 21
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

Are they still holes if  they are covered? These are sandwiched between the batik covered postcard back and the chiffon overlay. I tried calling it done without stitching, but it needed thread to make the holes pop.

I realized a couple weeks ago that not all these postcards could, in fact, go through the mail without some covering. I loved the fringe along the edges, putting this one firmly in the envelope camp. Some require envelopes, some truly lumpy ones require padded envelopes.

The pre-trip scrimmage continues apace. We have hamster care, extra keys to hand out, a ride to the airport and several eyes on the house. We’re still missing some lawn mowing, and a rental car. Sometime on Saturday my head will pop right off.

My loyal readers do please remember that I will be on vacation, as will the postcards, until I get back in mid-July. All 5 of you!