Category Archives: embroidery blanks

Ooh la la Dress

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The dress is badly wrinkled, I know, I know.  But it was finished just this afternoon, popped over dgd Laurel’s sweet head in the church parking lot, worn to the pot luck supper for VBS and then worn home–lots of good reasons to be wrinkled. When I asked her to let me take a few pictures, she replied, “Please hurry, Nana!  We’re going for a night swim!”   So there you have it–this was the best I could do.  Please imagine it freshly pressed, as it was before the church supper.

 

 

 

All About Blanks carries these 60% ramie/40% cotton dresses ($24) and they are wonderful.  There is a double row of drawn thread work at the hemline while the neck and armscyses are bound with self bias.  They come in white and pink sizes 12M to 6, though currently many sizes are temporarily out of stock.  It also comes in yellow dotted Swiss ($28) but only up to size 4.   Note that they run almost a size large. Eight year old Laurel is on the small side of average and wears this 6 quite comfortably.  I made up a white one last year (size 5) that she can still wear.

 

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Now about the embroidery, about which I am pretty pleased.  Continue reading

Readers’ Creative Projects

The past week has been a blur!  We had our precious 3 yo grandson Alastair with us for 5 days, that big estate sale that I couldn’t keep myself away from (more on that in another post), and a family cold that clobbered me.

 

Alastair just gave out, clutching his beloved E=MC2 (squared) blanket.  His mama calls it his nerd blankie.

 

Six year old grandson Robert,victim #1, had it first and shared it with  #2 Cousin Alastair  who spent two of his 5 days with us in abject misery.  Then a day later, my number (#3) was up and Bad Bug morphed into bronchitis and Black Plague.  Well, it felt like what I imagine Black Plague did.

Now, hale and hearty Granddad (#4) is sneezing.  Even Alastair’s father Harvey (#5), an aged-out Eagle Scout (motto Be Prepared),  keeps his handkerchief handy. We’ve gone through A LOT of orange juice, Kleenex and vitamin C.

The really good news is that my PREGNANT (hurrah!!!) daughter has nary a sniffle.

But I am eager to get back to blogging.  One of the best things about this blogging activity is viewing the photos of projects made by you dear readers.  I love getting these pictures!

Today, I’d like to share a few with you.

 

Shirley made the doll dress with designs from a Custom Keepsakes collection. The sweet doll was rescued from a thrift shop.

Continue reading

Christmas ’11~First Celebration

I hope you all had a happy, merry Christmas day, filled with family, friends and love.  We’ve just had another joyous celebration with our daughter, Rebecca, Harvey and 2-1/2 year old Alastair.    Regrettably,  I took very few pictures the entire two days.

Christmas Eve was spent with Harvey’s family, who seem like our very own.  At Carol and Alan’s absolutely gorgeous, huge, decorated-to-the-nines country home, we enjoyed a delicious supper of gumbo, homemade slaw, special bakery bread, fresh strawberry pie and bread pudding.  Our son-in-law Harvey grew up just outside New Orleans so it’s no surprise that his mother has significant expertise in Cajun cuisine, not to mention everything else edible.  The company was as good as the food.

 

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Alastair wore his Christmas suit and was, of course, the star of the evening, shining for his adoring grandparents,  89 year-old great-grandmother Ruby, aunts and uncles.   Why didn’t I snap a shot of him charming Ruby or showing everyone how high he can jump?  Why didn’t I take a picture of him alone in the music room playing (well, hitting the keys) on his grandmother’s baby grand piano? Or pulling back the curtains to examine the electric candles and the outdoor lights?  I missed so many photo ops. Continue reading

Last Minute Flights and Late Night Projects

UPDATE: Alastair was precious in his Christmas suit and loved the design! None my fears were realized.   I shouldn’t have worried about him not liking it.

burgundy velveteen shorts, ivory linen shirt

I knew I was cutting it very close this year.  One thing and another kept coming up, thwarting my plans to finish up Christmas gifts.  Yesterday, I had the entire day free to finish up.  But then…

 

My pilot son invited us to join him on a shake down flight on his new jet.  Well, it’s not his to own, but his as the captain to fly and schedule. So we were off to Ft. Lauderdale for lunch, except that there were some technical glitches and we had a late supper there.  It really was delightful, but the whole day was used up.

my handsome pilot son and his family

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Too Cute to Spook

UPDATE: Picture of Alastair in his Halloween bat shirt added.

There are so many darling Halloween designs for machine embroidery that I had a hard time picking out just a few for my grandchildren.  Since these shirts can be worn for such a short time, I didn’t put a lot of work into them.  But the embroidery is so well designed that are plenty cute for this short season of tackiness. Continue reading

Florida Fall ~Stitching and Decorating

Everyone, it seems, loves fall. The stores are chock full of home dec items, the embroidery sites are brimming with new autumn designs and the department store displays show garments in brilliant golds, browns and orange.

In central Florida, fall brings cooler temperatures, ripening citrus, and the county fair.  I love them all, but my favorite is the show put on by the romantic Golden Rain Trees.  As a child, I watched Elizabeth Taylor in the movie, Raintree County, and fantasized about someday seeing such a tree.

All these years, I’ve remembered the theme song, sung by Nat King Cole.  I find myself humming it  when the golden showers begin.  The petals and pollen  cover the grass like a yellow carpet and are followed by vibrant rust colored seed pods in huge clusters. Continue reading

My Back Porch

“People in, say, Georgia aren’t sitting on the front porch singing anymore.  They’re inside in the air-conditioning, watching cable like everybody else.”  Charles Reagan Wilson

 

Hummmph!   I don’t know who this guy is or if he has done a statistically accurate survey on this topic,  but I do know that here in central Florida, my family spends a lot of time on our back porch.  We don’t often sing, but that’s out of consideration for the wildlife and any neighbors within hearing distance.   However, that’s not to say we never escape to the air conditioned house to watch cable like his folks in Georgia.

 

We spend a great deal of time out there enjoying a variety of pleasant activities.   I often smock or do handwork while my dear husband and I watch college football game re-runs, each of us in our personal rocking chair.  We are regular American Gothic grandparents.

Here, the grandchildren have tea parties, play with the doll house, build with blocks or do art work on a table in place for that purpose.  Being on the porch together is good family time.  It gives me a nice,  cozy feeling.

What a shame that every home does not have a big porch.  The very word  evokes any number of pleasant images.  I’ve searched the thesaurus but the suggested synonyms, i.e. balcony, deck, portico, stoop, veranda, are architecturally inaccurate.   Nor can they conjure up warm visions of  family and friends enjoying one another’s company, children playing while adults relax with glasses of sweet tea,  grandmother smocking a baby dress…. list goes on and on.  Nothing BAD is supposed to happen on the porch. But who knows what might happen on a balcony or stoop.  I don’t want to think about it.

Of course, there was that unfortunate incident when our black Lab puppies, Jacob and Esau, ate my antique wicker love seat, but that was an isolated fluke/catastrophe that I have chosen to forget.  Mostly.

This is not a great picture. Why did I center the exercise bike?

 I don’t know who Charles Holley is either, but his statement I like:   My vision is to see a nice neighborhood with children playing on the street and people on porches, with smiles on their faces.”  Charles Holley

Our back porch looks over the swimming pool and we do smile as we watch our children and grandchildren splashing there in the Florida sunshine. Well, I smile–Bob is usually in the water in the midst of  the action.

At one end of our back porch is this sitting area and a work table for the grandchildren’s  arts and crafts.

At the other end, near the kitchen, are porch toys, the little tea party table and a doll house.  Also, an old picnic table that Bob put together when he was 12 is our preferred dining spot for cookouts.   We eat there because everyone can be seated on the wooden benches in their wet bathing suits.

I’ve neglected this busy center of family activity for some time now.  The start of my mini makeover is this  quick machine embroidered sunflower pillow. It began its life as a tea towel from one of my favorite sites, www.allaboutblanks.com and was easily re-purposed as a pillow cover.

In February, when I taught at Sewing at the Beach in Myrtle Beach, All About Blanks had a market there.  Their display of products and the samples they had made up were a wealth of inspiration.  Several of these checkered hem towels  in a variety of colors came home with me.

The sunflower embroidery design is from Babylock’s Jacket Backs collection.  The jumbo buttons at the bottom  begged to be included.  The large designs in this Babylock collection are  great for pillows. I plan to make one for Independence Day using a whimsical flag  made up of lady bugs, strawberries, flowers and other patterns.

A dishtowel pillow would make a quick and easy little gift for anyone. My Aunt Aileen lives in a nursing home and might enjoy a seasonal decorative pillow for her bed or the chair in her room.

I might make one each for Laurel and Robert to put on their beds here at our house. On their beds at home, there are so many stuffed animals that making the bed is akin to moving a herd of cattle from one pasture to another. In fact, there are so many that for more than a month Laurel chose to sleep on a quilt on the floor, because there was not room in the bed for her, all of the animals and her almost life size Minnie Mouse!   I’m certain that my darling DIL wouldn’t want more bed decor.  Alastair is too young for decorative bed pillows but his day will come.

This also would be a good beginner sewing project for children—a little measuring, straight stitching, hand sewing on the buttons. Hummmmmm….

I have a lot of ideas for these versatile, stylish towels. What I don’t have is a lot of time. I wonder how many will end up as pillows and how many will end up in my kitchen towel drawer.

Fish Dress

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Two year old Alastair has been with us for 3 days now and was joined yesterday by Robert and Laurel.  Our home has been like a combination circus/amusement park.  There are happenings in all three rings and someone always waiting in line for fun or food.  It all ends tomorrow afternoon when Alastair’s parents return from their trip to New England.

Bob and I will be wistfully sorry to see the children go, but at the same time welcome the standard quiet and serenity of our home.  One of the first things I will do is sew, which is like my reset button.

Often, the quickest way to reset is to embroider a “blank.”  I like to keep some on hand for times like this when I need a quick sewing fix.  Tee shirts are handy, useful and always appreciated by my sweet grandsons, but girlie projects suit me best.  Amid last week’s hustle and bustle I stole a few moments to customize this little knit popover frock.  It was  just enough for me to get over my hump and back on track for other things I needed to do, but really didn’t want to do.  Continue reading

Latin Shirts

 

Translation: I am fine. How are you?

Though sometimes called a dead language, Latin is very much alive in our homeschool classroom. Five year old Robert and 6 year old Laurel are literally singing their way through Song School Latin, a simple,  entertaining, age-appropriate curriculum, and loving every minute of it. In fact, it is Robert’s favorite subject and very close to the top of Laurel’s list.

Robert's shirt. Translation: Hello. What is your name?

Some people have commented that Latin is too difficult for children.  But it is a foreign language, much like Spanish which is taught routinely in Florida schools.  Roman children mastered Latin.  Why shouldn’t my grandchildren?

Recently, the children had to make a presentation at the weekly gathering of homeschoolers which they attend. They chose to report on their study of Latin. Of course, I wanted them to have something wear other than a toga so I made these shirts for that event.

The children wore their show-and-tell clothing proudly.  The Latin shirts were a big hit with the other students, most of whom were older.

The text for the shirt designs was created in PE-Design using the Gothic looking font #9. At Embroidery Library, one of my favorite sites, I found a design of the coliseum.

Making a volcano.

It included a tourist riding a bike which I deleted in order to make room for the text. The stepping stones had to be rearranged in BuzzEdit2 www.buzztools.com for the same reason.

I know, I know—I have gone on ad nauseum (see? You probably know Latin already!) about my love affair with machine embroidery, most especially about the ability to personalize items so specifically. Where, I ask, could you find Latin text children’s shirts in sizes 5 and 6 except in your own sewing room? Continue reading

Coming soon: St. Patrick’s Day!

St. Patrick’s Day is an enchanted time-a day to begin transforming winter’s dreams into summer’s magic.”  Adrienne Cook

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Though March 21st is the official first day of spring, March 17th is truly the harbinger of sunny days to come.

St. Patrick’s Day is just plain fun.  Snakes are said to have been driven away by this popular saint and yet parades “snake” through town in celebration of all that is Irish.

 

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The holiday implies no responsibility for candy or roses or gifts or greeting cards.  A celebrant’s only duty is to wear green, The Great Equalizer that enables people of all nationalities to share a single ancestry for a day.  Of course, there are always those who take advantage of a situation and sport shirts or hats demanding “Kiss me.  I’m Irish!”

On this day, everyone of good humor is Irish.   Though the smallest dab of green on one’s clothing implies participation in the day’s festivities, it is more fun for children to dress for the occasion. Continue reading