Updates

I took some time yesterday to update my totally shameful and totally public WIP List. Feel free to look if you want to have a laugh. It will probably make you feel better about your own WIP lists. πŸ˜€ The sad thing is that this list still isn’t complete. I haven’t bothered to take a full inventory of every project that is laying around either fully kitted, nearly fully kitted or with stitches even in it. So embarrassing…

Anyway, I have only managed one finish so far this month and I’m not thinking that I will fit any more in unless I manage to get in some really solid stitching time this week. Considering the fact that I have my powder room ripped apart so that I can paint it but I haven’t finished the prep work yet, I really need to realign my priorities and I think that stitching will be further down the list.

Last night’s finish is a tiny Winnie the Pooh, stitched from a Janlynn kit:

He’ll go with the Dreaming Piglet that I did last month, plus the Bouncing Tigger I started last night and the Eeyore that I will stitch after that.

And then there’s my last finish for the month of June, which I neglected to blog about weeks ago. This is Summer Breeze by Brittercup Designs:

There’s supposed to be an American flag button at the top of the mast, but it was horribly oversized, so I left it off. I also changed the sail color from the pale pink and purple stripes that were charted to a white. It’s actually Snowball by Crescent Colours, I believe, but there’s little (if any) actual variegation to it, unfortunately. And the color didn’t stand out nicely from the fabric, so I had to add the backstitching around the sail to make it more visible.

That’s it for me today, so TTFN! (That’s “Ta-ta for now” for those of you who don’t know your Tigger speak.)

Posted in Stitching | 3 Comments

Yes, I am Still Alive

I thought that maybe I should clarify that fact, since I haven’t posted in well over a month. I can hardly believe that time has gone by that quickly, to be honest.

It’s been miserably hot here on the east coast, with heat indexes soaring well into the triple digits and even raw temperatures up there, as well. Today is particularly bad, as there is absolutely no air flow and the humidity is oppressive. I haven’t left the house since we returned from Maine. Which is a whole other topic, but I’ll allow myself to digress.

We went to Terry’s dad’s house in Maine for a week for a supposed vacation. Epic fail. Terry and I both had to log in at least once a day for the first several days that we were there to deal with work issues. Add to that temperatures in the high 80s with no air conditioning and you get misery. We couldn’t even get to sleep one night, it was so bad. Windows open, ceiling fan on high and barely any clothes on and we still couldn’t get even remotely comfortable. There were a couple of highlights, though. On Friday, we drove up to Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada (only about 1.5 hours away) to see Cirque du Soleil’s Quidam. It was truly excellent and I really enjoyed it. Next time I’ll splurge for better seats so that we can see more of the details, but since we were buying 5 tickets as birthday gifts, it was already a little bit pricey and would have been exorbitant for better seats. We then spent most of Sunday in Machias with my good friend Barbara. I really was able to relax and enjoy myself, which was wonderful. Her menagerie is really impressive and I had a lot of fun meeting everyone. It’s hard to believe that when I was last there in August of last year she only had about a dozen chickens. πŸ˜† What a difference 11 months makes! I think my favorites are the spunky small goat, Eve, and Rowen’s adorable little rooster, Mr. Doodles. He reminded me so much of Lily in personality, it’s not even funny. He’s tiny, but he struts around like he is the king of all that he surveys and the best thing since sliced bread. He’s quite handsome, too.

Here’s a photo of Eve:

And one of Mr. Doodles:

Barbara is just such an amazing woman. She is a truly wonderful mother, a fabulous baker and a great designer, to boot! I got to see her latest design that she’s stitching up right now and it’s quite lovely. She made fresh baguettes for us to indulge in for lunch and they were delicious. She always makes me feel so welcome and relaxed in her home and I truly appreciate that. Thanks so much, Barbara!

I was testing out my new DSLR camera (a Sony NEX-7) for the first time while we were in Maine and I really gave it a thorough workout. I took over 1000 pictures, with over 700 of those on the first night we were there. You can see them in my July 2011 – Maine album, if you feel up to perusing through so many. I’ll give you the highlights, though.

July 12th was the day of our 12-hour drive up and I took a few pictures of the clouds once we hit Maine because they were so amazing. These were taken on my BlackBerry, so they aren’t as nice as they could be, but it’s easier to take pictures on the fly with something easily accessible. Here’s one of my favorites from that day:

July 13th was the evening that I took over 700 pictures as the sun was starting to set. We were down on the dock (Terry’s dad lives on a beautiful lake) and a small family of ducks (a mama and two babies) came in for a visit. My favorite photo is one that I took when one of the little babies came in for a closeup:

The next day I went out to take some pictures near the dock in the daytime.

The day after that was our trip up to Saint John and I snapped a couple of cloud pictures with my BlackBerry:

The night after that, we made s’mores over a campfire, but the mosquitoes are brutal once the sun goes down, so I didn’t last long. The darned things were biting through my jeans! There was a full moon, so I set my camera on a window sill in the one bedroom and snapped some photos. This one is using a special time lapse night time setting. It looks like it’s blurry, but it’s just the effect of the clouds moving through the sky.

Then, our last night there, I braved the mosquitoes in order to snap a couple shots of a really beautifully colored sunset:

well, I think that’s enough for one post. I think I’ve only completed one stitched piece since I last posted, so that can wait. With any luck, I will have another tiny finish to show in the next couple of days anyway, if I take some time to work on it.

I hope that you are all surviving the extreme heat (or cold, depending on what hemisphere you live in) wherever you are. Be safe, happy and healthy!

Posted in Life in General | 2 Comments

More Stitching

I know, I go from not posting at all to posting twice in one day? Well, it is after midnight, so it’s technically not the same day. πŸ˜‰

I finished up the small project that I started last night, which was Dreaming Piglet, a tiny kit from Janlynn:

While I was at it, I also started and finished another version of Strawberries & Cream from Janie Hubble Designs. This time, I stitched it over one and did french knots instead of beads:

That will have to be enough from me for now, though, as I have completely neglected my other duties. I’m off to bed soon.

Posted in Stitching | 2 Comments

Catching Up

It’s seems like I’ve barely had time to breathe over the past couple of weeks. I have been burning the candle at both ends, working on a website for a good friend on my personal time and working hard at work. I’ve barely had time for anything else and was not getting a full night of sleep for several days at a time. It turns out that my body will only put up with inadequate sleep for 3 days in a row before it forces me to take downtime. It’s good to find out exactly what I can get away with, I guess.

My career has suddenly decided to take off and I’m uncertain of how I’m going to keep all of the balls in the air. I’m really hoping that I don’t drop one and if I do, I hope it’s not a really important one. So I do my very best and cram my work hours with planning projects; planning, scheduling and facilitating meetings; doing actual work on said projects; and guiding my first new hire. It’s challenging. A good kind of challenging, but challenging nonetheless. I’m finding it hard to keep my brain from flipping over from multi-tasking mode to complete spaz mode. It gets a little fritzed sometimes.

In addition to that, I have personal things that I need or at least want to do. I wanted to get some stitching done; I’m craving quick finishes. I’m working through an upgrade of my online store, after which I need to load it up with all of the products that I’ve bought in the past year and a half and never found time to get listed. Then I need to start driving business to said store. There are, of course, other tasks on the personal to do list after that, but the upgrade will be my main focus for this weekend.

I do have some stitching finishes to show for the past couple of weeks.

First is Assisi Winter Bookmark, a freebie from Tor Rhuann Designs.

This has been in my WIP pile for years and I finally decided on an approach for the backstitching colors that worked reasonably well. The bulk of the stitching was done with a DMC overdyed floss. The border is silver Kreinik braid, the center outlining is done with white DMC floss plus silver Kreinik blending filament and the rest of the outlining is done with DMC floss. I have the backing fabric picked out already, I just need to create a tassel and then put it all together.

Next up is a finish-finish. The is my first attempt at the Pine Mountain My Dad pillow that I had done on my own fabric and realized too late that I had chosen the wrong count. So, I made it up into a pillow for my biological dad’s 60th birthday.

He loves it, which is always a bonus. πŸ™‚

Next up is another that has been languishing in my WIP pile for years, mostly because I discovered that I absolutely abhor working with DMC satin floss and had to decide whether to bite the bullet and complete it or toss it. This is the Peace on Earth Dragon by Dragon Dreams. It’s from one of the older Just Cross Stitching ornament magazines. Maybe 2002? I didn’t have the recommended colors of satin floss, due to my aforementioned aversion to said floss, but I did just happen to have two acceptable substitutes.

And finally, it doesn’t look like much, but this is Strawberries & Cream from Janie Hubble Designs. It’s from her latest free newsletter and will be made up into a strawberry pincushion. I actually have grandiose plans of stitching up 4 of these total. We’ll see if that actually happens. πŸ˜‰

This picture was taken with my new digital SLR camera, a Sony NEX-5. It’s a hybrid model, with a lighter, smaller body, but full sized lenses. It’s exactly what I was looking for, a good quality first DSLR for a person used to, but outgrowing, a point and shoot camera. It has a lot of features that will guide me through learning how to use manual settings, which is perfect. It has gotten good reviews and so far I am quite pleased with it, though I haven’t had a lot of time to work with it.

That’s it for me for now. This is my quiet time on a weekend morning, so it’s time for me to go downstairs, finish up a little stitching project I started last night and catch up on Game of Thrones before Terry wakes up. TTFN!

Posted in Life in General, Stitching | 2 Comments

The Reality of Me

Apparently, today is Mental Health Blog Day. Given my own (continuing) ride on the mental health roller coaster, I figured I really should take advantage of the opportunity.

I don’t think I’ve talked about my mental health on this blog in a long time. I think that I’ve been generally sticking with some sort of rule of thumb that if I don’t have anything stitchy to say, then I won’t bother blogging about it. Because who wants to read about my personal trials and tribulations all of the time, right? Well, maybe and maybe not. Those of you who are friends with me on Facebook have the unfortunate distinction of seeing my whining status updates on a regular basis. You see, on Facebook, I seem to do the opposite of what I do here. I write pithy little synopses of what my days are like and, most of the time, I don’t have many good things to say. Which must make being my friend on Facebook a whole lot of fun. NOT!

Anyway, I’ve recently been keeping up with someone on Facebook who used to be a stitching blogger (which is how we originally “met,” although we have never met in person, even though she lives an hour away) who has become quite open and honest about her own mental health issues. I find it quite refreshing, honestly, so when I found out from her blog post today that it was Mental Health Blog Day, I decided to take the challenge to write a post of my own.

Longer-term readers of my blog will know that I used to talk about this subject, particularly when I fell into a serious depression years ago. Let’s pretend, though, that I haven’t really talked about it lately, shall we?

My struggle started when I was a teenager. I was first diagnosed with depression at the age of 14 by a general physician who gave me what I now believe was likely a Burns depression assessment. I was placed on Wellbutrin and took that for about 15 years or so. The strange thing is that I didn’t realize for a long time that I was taking it for depression. I thought that I was taking it for my chronic migraines, which I’ve also had since I was a teen or pre-teen. Or maybe I did know what it was for, but I had tricked myself into believing that it was for my migraines. Either way, I guess my mood was relatively in check for many years.

Then 2005 happened. In August of 2005, my maternal grandmother died; in early October, my mother-in-law died; and then in late November, my step-grandfather died. That was the straw that broke the camel’s back. I tumbled into a bout of what I now know was major depression and couldn’t climb my way out without help. I didn’t want to get out of bed in the morning. I didn’t want to eat. I didn’t want to stitch. I didn’t want to do anything other than sleep and be left alone. I went to see the therapist at work, who spent either 30 or 60 minutes with me and was able to find and poke into several major areas of vulnerability without having to even blink. I spent the session sobbing, sobbed almost the entire ride home and then continued to sob as hard and continuously as possible for a couple of hours after I got home. Yes, that was fun. After the second session, he told me that he was going to need to refer me out for longer-term treatment (we only get 5 sessions through work).

I started seeing Dr. Steve in February of 2006. At first, he thought that I had dysthymia, which is a chronic, low level depression. Then the diagnosis changed to major depression. Eventually, we figured out that I suffer from Bipolar Disorder Type II. My manic episodes are mild, fairly brief and typically very few and far between, which would put me into the category of cyclothymia (the bipolar equivalent of dysthymia; very low level) except for my episodes of major depression. That is what puts me into the category of bipolar type ii. At this point, Dr. Steve determined that I would likely need prescription assistance and I found my first psychiatrist. Fortunately for me (and others), he left the area and I was forced to find someone else a couple of years ago. He had changed my meds all around without much finesse and put me on a combo of medications that didn’t work; one of which messed up my cholesterol levels (from which I still haven’t fully recovered). I am happy to say that my new psychiatrist had me pretty much sorted out less than a year after I started with her.

I am taking an anti-depressant and a mood stabilizer and am now stable, for the most part. Or at least I had been until recently. I have a very strong seasonal component to my depressive episodes. As the fall and winter months come on and my exposure to daylight becomes less and less, my mood degrades and the now-familiar symptoms start to return. My psychiatrist has only gone through two seasonal cycles with me now and we are still assessing what, if anything, needs to change as far as dosages when the seasons change. This spring has brought with it a bit of an upswing in my mood that we didn’t see last year. I have become very attuned to my moods and energy level, so I am usually the first one to know when something is going awry and I don’t hesitate to call my shrink. I love that she trusts my own assessment of how I’m doing and asks for my thoughts on what I think needs to be tweaked. My mental health care is very much a collaborative effort. My doctors talk to me and they talk to each other. In fact, my psychiatrist is the most plugged-in psychiatrist any of my other doctors have ever heard of. She has requested to be copied on any tests I have done and is getting reports from the pain management specialist that I have started seeing for my migraines. She is extremely interested in my migraines and in my overall health, not just my mental health. I love that! I just wish that I had gone to her from the beginning. She came with the highest recommendation, but she doesn’t accept any forms of insurance and her receptionist is VERY off-putting, so I went in another direction initially.

Umm, so where was I going with all of this? I’m not sure. I guess I was just opening the floodgates and not really paying attention to what came out. πŸ˜† There is one important thing that I want to say regarding mental health disorders, though. The stigma attached to any mental health disorder SUCKS. Yes, depression has become (disturbingly?) common enough of a diagnosis that it seems to get less of a raised eyebrow from others when they find out that you suffer from it. Bipolar disorder, though? Or other disorders, like schizophrenia or suicidal depression? They all still seem to draw untoward attention, along with that look like there is something seriously wrong with you that might be contagious. The reality of the situation is that these disorders are like any other. A malformed or missing chromosome here or there that, in this case, causes things like the improper production or reception of a brain chemical. Why, oh why, are these disorders treated any differently than those like diabetes or hypothyroidism?

Genetics plays a huge part in my own disorder. My mother’s side of the family is rife with mental health disorders. My uncle suffers from schizophrenia, one of my aunts suffers from severe anxiety, another of my aunts suffers from depression and my own mother suffers from suicidal depression and anxiety. That leaves one lone aunt who only admits to suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome. You could say that the odds were against me from the start.

So, is it fair that I feel that I have to bury my head in the sand and pretend that I don’t suffer from bipolar disorder? Is it fair that I feel that I can’t talk to anyone about it because I don’t want to be judged? Perhaps it truly is only my perception, but I feel like most people will look at me like I have 2 heads and treat me differently if I reveal to them what I consider to be my “secret.” I mean, I had a good friend say to me a couple of years ago when I told him that I was depressed, “Well, stop being depressed.” Really? That’s the magic bullet? Oh, how silly of me. Grrr…

Okay, I will step off of my soapbox now. That’s my public service announcement for today. The bottom line? People with mental health disorders are just like everyone else. We are HUMAN. Please don’t fail to treat us as such.

Posted in Journey to Self-Discovery, Life in General | 9 Comments

Happy (Belated) Mother’s Day!

This is going to be a drive-by post as I have a good bit of work to do today.

First of all, I want to wish a belated Happy Mother’s Day to all of my friends and family out there. I know that some of you are new mothers and some are not. Whether you were experiencing the wonder of one of your first Mother’s Days or the lovely familiarity of many more, I hope that you all had a wonderful day!

And now for a stitching finish. This one stitched up quickly, as I had this odd fixation to just get it stitched up and out of the to-do pile. It is from Just Nan’s (very old) Filagree Fancies line. Yes, she spelled filigree wrong and it bugs me to no end, but the designs were still lovely little treasures that stitch up quickly and usually have very nice charms to go with them. This one is named Magic Wings and was one that I had a strong desire to obtain. I bought it off of eBay years ago when these kits still popped up from time to time.

I know that the picture is small, but I’m trying to be more conscientious about trimming down the pictures that I post so that you can’t easily stitch the design from them. That said, I do have the kit remnants available to anyone who is interested. Obviously, you won’t have the charm, but I am sure that a suitable replacement can be found. Plus, the threads are DMC, so you augment the leftovers with floss from your own stash. I think that there are enough beads to complete another instance of the design, but there is probably not enough of the Kreinik braid. I have some in my stash, so I could probably cut another couple of lengths and include it if someone is interested who doesn’t have the standard Kreinik gold #4 braid in their own stash.

Leave a comment if you are interested.

Other than that, I don’t have much to report. I’ve been working on getting my yard back under control after a year of neglect. There’s a lot of work to be done and I’ve been making a list and will slowly chip away at it as I am able. I hurt myself with the mowing and trimming yesterday, but fortunately a long round with the TENS unit and some heat seems to have gotten in under control whereas ibuprofen could not. I’m also working on a website for a friend of mine. We only met a year and a half ago (maybe even longer) to go over what she wanted. It was just one of those “I’ll get to it one of these days” kind of personal commitments that I never got around to until now. There is a new impetus to finish it with a deadline attached, so I have to keep moving on it. I’m not stitching as much as I was, but I ordered a scroll frame from the UK when I bought Yumezakura (did I mention that on here, or just Facebook?) and have finally been able to mount the fabric for the Chatelaine Micro Mandala series and get a start on Micro 01. Since Micro 03 just started and Martina released the preview of Micro 04 (available in PURPLE; it’s FANTASTIC!), I really need to get my rear in gear. Of course, with my limited time and energy to work on things, I’m more focused on small projects that I can pick up and put down easily, not something on a lap stand that I have to wrangle with. And I feel guilty when I stitch because there are truly so many other things to do. I think I need to create a schedule for myself to help effectively manage my personal time. How terrible is that?

And with that though, I will leave you. Until my next post, I bid you adieu. Have a great week!

Posted in Life in General, Stitching | 3 Comments

Happy Easter!

I want to wish all of my friends and family a Happy Easter!

I have two stitching finishes to share. The design is called Krazy Kitty’s Easter by Janie Hubble Designs and can be obtained by signing up for her free newsletter. I stitched it using the recommended DMC cotton floss on fabric hand-dyed by me. I made a mistake in the stitching, so they are not quite stitched “by the book.” Since I had cut the fabric in half, I decided to stitch the design again, but I reversed it. I have no idea what I will do with these pieces, of course. I just stitched them because I felt like it, so they may sit in my to-be-finished pile for quite some time. Perhaps I could attach them to a basket and give it away to someone.

Anyway, here there are:

And the reverse image:

I made sure that I made the same “mistake” on the reversed image so that they truly matched.

Also, I have to share a lovely surprise that I received in the mail on Friday from Dianne. She had a chart sent to me as a thank you for re-stringing her necklace and she fit my tastes exactly! It’s called Dragonfly Dreams and it’s by The Sweetheart Tree, one of my all-time favorite designers!

Thank you again, Dianne! You are such a sweetheart to gift this to me and I will try to start it soon!

Finally, here is another picture of my weeping cherry tree, taken on the 22nd:

What a different 5 days makes! If you compare it to the last photo I took, it has totally filled out and the blossoms have taken on their final color. As a reminder, here’s the photo I took on the 17th:

With that, I will leave you for now. It’s a beautiful day outside, so I have to decide if I’m going to go do some yardwork or hose off a lawn chair and sit and enjoy a book (or work on the stash software specs) or make some banana bread and stitch while it’s baking. Decisions, decisions…

Posted in Life in General, Stitching | 2 Comments

Stitching Finishes and Cherry Tree Blossoms

I missed going to stitching on Friday night because I completely forgot about it until I was sitting down to eat my dinner at 6:30 PM. As a result, I missed Anna and her Wisper fluffer gadget. So, this morning, I did a quick Google search and found that you can use the hook side of Velcro (otherwise known as hook and loop fastener) to fluff Wisper thread. It didn’t hide the fact that stitching with Wisper over 1 doesn’t work well and so made my piece a mess, but there’s nothing that I can do about that now.

So, here is a picture of the ornament I stitched up recently. It’s Britty Christmas Puppy by Brittercup Designs, as published in the 2006 issue of Just Cross Stitch’s Christmas Ornaments magazine. This one has Phoebe’s name on the stocking. I have two more lined up, for Abby and Lily.

The next two photos are finish-finishes of pieces that I stitched years ago. They are the two parts of the Celtic Mission to Assisi design by Tor Rhuann Designs. I love her designs because they are small, usually done in the Assisi style and free!

My final picture for the night is my annual photo of my weeping cherry tree in bloom:

She gets bigger and more beautiful every year. I just need to remember to fertilize her this year, as I skipped it last year and I found that it makes a big difference in her annual growth. I also need to trim any branches that have died off, as that seems to have a positive impact, as well.

Well, that’s it for me tonight. I had a very emotional day and I’m tired. I will blog more sometime in the next couple of days. Have a great week, everyone!

P.S. I forgot one thing. Dianne recently posted on Facebook about a necklace that she’s had for a long time breaking on her. I offered to take a look and see if I could do anything with it, since I’ve been on this jewelry kick lately. As it turns out, it was a strung piece that had been strung with cotton that had finally given up the ghost and snapped. I was able to pull it apart, clean all of the pieces and restring it on the standard braided metal wire that I use for most of my beaded projects. Since it was all sterling silver, it cleaned up so nicely that I swear it must look like it’s brand new!

It will go into the mail tomorrow morning and should be home at Dianne’s the day after. I hope she’ll be happy with how it turned out!

P.P.S. I forgot another stitching picture. I reached the halfway mark on Picasso’s Rooster (by Ladybug Designs) last night. It’s a project I started sometime in January, but hadn’t spent much meaningful time on in a while. He’s coming along nicely!

Posted in Life in General, Stitching | 1 Comment

Recent Jewelry Creations

I’ve done some more jewelry work recently, although most of it was just stringing pre-made pendants onto pre-made chains, or cutting chain to length, fitting it with clasps and then stringing on pre-made pendants. πŸ˜†

First up is a tiny silver fairy pendant that my friend Richard bought for me while on holiday in Rome a couple of months ago. I strung it onto a pre-made silver box chain:

Next is a pendant that I found at Michaels and just couldn’t walk away from. It has a design done in silver overlaid onto a very thin slice of green shell. I know that I will snap it into pieces at some point, but I’m trying to be very careful with it. I strung this one onto a pre-made silver serpentine (I think?) chain:

And then, there is the last of the pre-made items. And this one is partially pre-made. I strung my Clover cutter pendant onto a chain so that I could wear it as jewelry and see if it would pass through airport security on my way to San Francisco last month. This one I actually had to cut the chain to length, attach a lobster clasp and add a jump ring to serve as a bail for the cutter to attach to the chain:

And now for the pièce de résistance. May I have a drumroll, please?

This set I made completely from scratch to wear in San Francisco. I am pretty sure I finished it the night before and I remember that my fingertips were so sore from manipulating all of the jump rings that I wasn’t sure if I was going to be able to stitch the next day. I got the idea from a project on the Fire Mountain Gems and Beads website.

I think that I found the charms first and then saw that project and decided to pair them with Swarovski crystals in a series of drops:

I’m pretty pleased with how everything turned out. I actually put three different attachment points on the end of the necklace (you can see one jump ring standing up just on the edge of the middle of the shoulder of the form) and then added a couple of crystal drops at the very end of the necklace for some pizzazz at the back that can be seen when my hair is pulled up. You can’t really see some of the little details that I added, but if you look closely at the earring on the left, you will see that the longest length of chain actually has a star head pin at the end of the purple drop. I did the same thing on the other earring and the necklace, but I obviously didn’t spend enough time fiddling with how they were laying before I took the photo. If you look closely at the moon charm on the necklace, you will see that it has a Swarovski crystal embedded near the bottom tip. I used yellow, blue and purple Swarovski bicones for the drops and the components are a mix of base metal and silver plated metal, I believe. This set was a proof-of-concept of sorts, as I want to see how the pieces hold up before I do a more expensive version. There are things that I would do better and/or differently if I do this sort of design again, but overall I like the look.

Posted in Crafting | 2 Comments

Peacock Feathers Finish-Finish

My blogging has been very sporadic lately, I know. I don’t expect it to get better any time soon, either. I’ve just been really, really scatterbrained lately. I can’t seem to focus on any other thing for more than a few minutes and then I flit off to something else. I’m starting to wonder if I suffer from ADD. I think it’s more than that, though. I get jittery, like I’ve had caffeine (which affects me very strongly – just a single soda, a cup of tea or some Excedrin will do it), my body kinda quivers on the inside and my brain just goes nuts, like it’s on complete overload.

Despite all of the strangeness, though, I have been stitching. I’ve also been compiling all of your comments on the stash organization software that I’m going to write. I just need to organize my thoughts (which should be fun, given the way that my brain is currently functioning), write up the technical specifications, write some pseudo-code, setup the back-end database and then I’ll be ready to start writing the code in earnest. All in my spare time, of course. πŸ˜‰

Back to the stitching, I finished Janie Hubble Designs’ Peacock Feathers design into another bookmark, like The Flower Juggler’s Bookmark:


Front

Back

It turned out okay, though the tail and tassel are a bit anemic. I was trying to use some leftover threads and conserve the overdyeds, so they are sparse, but should do the job just fine.

I’ve also stitched up a Christmas ornament, which will be one of a set of three, but I haven’t fluffed the Wisper thread yet, so I didn’t take a picture of it. Anna, if you happen to see this and are going to stitching on Friday, could you bring your fluffer gadget dohickey thing?

I also mounted Lizzie Kate’s Dog Lessons for People onto scroll bars, but the fabric doesn’t quite fit the bars I’m using. I’ll limp along for now while I wait for another set to come in. It’s coming from the UK, so probably won’t show up until sometime next week, I expect. Even then, I will probably end up using that frame for starting the Chatelaine micro mandalas. I have the charts for Micro 01 and Micro 02 and the supplies for Micro 01. The specialty kit for Micro 02 will ship this week and I have signed up for Micro 03, which starts in May. There are going to be a total of 4 of the designs, so I purchased enough fabric to do then in a square formation, which is why I need some wide scroll bars. I could have taken off one of the large projects that is hogging my current sets of bars, but I’m afraid that if I take one off, I will be even less likely to rotate around to it any time in the near future. Not that I’m actually working on anything other than smalls that I’m working in hand right now, but that’s a whole other topic.

I’ll be lining up another 2 posts or so for the next couple of days, so this blog will have a sudden flurry of activity and then probably go quiet again for a little while. I hope that you have subscribed to my feed via a blog reader so that you catch my posts as they come out, whenever I get around to posting!

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