layers

dec 10

via www.flickr.com

There is a very sheer circle in the center. I had to mess with the photo so it was almost visible.

I am recuperating from two days on my feet at the craft fair. I managed laundry and shopping today, but mostly I want to sit down and be stupid in a corner.

Yesterday's circle is on Flickr, as are better photos of Dec 7 and 8. I took their portraits with my cell phone because I'd left my real phone at the show…

folding

dec 7

via www.flickr.com

dec 8

I talked to more nice people today than I did all week – craft fairs are good for that. I'm lucky in my neighbors, and lucky with my customers.

I will be there again tomorrow too, all day. I hope my voice holds out.

The circles for yesterday and today are stitched using pleating patterns and techniques I found in a beautiful book called Shadowfolds. I got it out of the library, but I might have to own a copy. I like it a lot.

wheels within wheels

dec 4

via www.flickr.com

Worked on this one while at Aerin's Concert Band Concert. There was also a percussion ensemble, the members of which played everything from vibraphone to tom-toms, including tin cans and the jawbone of an ass. It was quite wonderful.

My current camera is having lens fault issues (whatever that means) so I'm back to the older camera. I think the pictures are fuzzier, but I can't decide if that is tiredness talking or actual difference.

circulate

dec 3

via www.flickr.com

I'm still enjoying making my circle lounging on the end of the couch. There are advantages of hand work. I like working with fabric that help me stitch neatly, and I am pleased with the little extra circle on perched on the curve there.

Al says generally he can get a grip on what I am trying to do with my work, but this month's circles are mystifying him. Alice just smiles.

not the death star

dec 2

via www.flickr.com

Somebody commented yesterday's circle looked like the Death Star, which made me turn this one around until it was unmistakably NOT the Death Star. It is the extra gray circles with stitching around the edges that provoke this illusion, I think.

Today was a craft fair at a friend's house. Al was trying to figure out how this worked. The answer is that this is a connected and community aware woman with a ton of friends and a commitment to living locally. So she invites a bunch of friends who make things into her house (an enormous and fabulous Victorian era house) and invites friends and neighbors in to see what would make good presents for the season. I have more great conversations about everything there than I do in any other month of regular living!

But I have been standing and talking all afternoon. I realized one of the nice things about handwork for this month is that I can sit on the couch with my feet up and work with a meditative slowness that the sewing machine doesn't allow.

prescience and handwork

nov 30

via www.flickr.com

dec 1

Friday's circle, the last of November, cannot properly show the absurd joy I get from snow falling from the sky.

However I will cheerfully admit that snow has a downside. It hadn't even started snowing when I made it, it started over night, and produced a thin fine glaze of ice and packed snow on the roads between me and Ipswich. I worked on getting to the craft fair at the Ipswich Museum for an hour and a half, miserable and tense, and not even half way, and finally turned around and went home. The combination of nasty driving, and ominous forecasts convinced me I'd done the right thing. I still have craft fairs to go, one right in town tomorrow, and one in Pittsfield next weekend for two days. I hope the weather is easier for those.

And then there is the first circle for December and the last set for the year. I knew I wanted to use a lot of texture and a lot of white and overlapping pieces. I am working on hating handwork less. So I combined those ideas into hand stitched layers of white fabrics.

the hunter

nov 29

via www.flickr.com

For years I thought the name of this constellation was O'Brien, courtesy of my father's puckish sense of humor. But then he also told me the names of the stars that mattered: Rigel, Betelgeuse and Sirius at Orion's heel, the brightest star in the sky.

One of my favorite parts of the late fall is that Orion is up before I go to bed. Coming home in the dark and the cold it is nice to see him striding across the sky over the garage, Sirius at heel.

stompy crow?

nov 28

via www.flickr.com

I'm sure I've said before I feel lucky to see a crow, and then slightly foolish because it is easy to see a crow, and then pleased with myself for being easy to please. It is nice to have a feeling of friendship with an incredibly common bird, especially if they keep improving their reputation for intelligence.

I want to take space to wish my beloved friend Kate a happy birthday. She's known me since I was young and stupid, and she was merely young, and we've watched (and helped and sympathized and baked for) each other for decades now and each other's children too, and I am very much looking forward to celebrating many, many more birthdays of hers.