06 July 2025

Without prompting.

An artist who started popping into my fees mentioned that it is World Watercolor Month, and since I have been playing with art, I decided to try to do something in watercolor each day.  I am not counting the form I was completing for the library's Summer Reading Challenge, although I did do the first one in watercolor and completed it on July 2nd:
I forgot to take a photo of the completed form
before I turned it on on July 2nd, when I went to
the library's science fiction book club meeting.

Since I didn't hear about this until a couple days into the month, I needed to do some catching-up, so my first couple of images are just trying the paints I have, on dry and wet paper:

Then I did one that was just making lines, to get into the feel of paintings.  And one limited to red and blue for the holiday:
I probably could have studied and done something
that resembles fireworks more accurately, but no.

Starting with Day 5, I wanted to try something that actually looks like a picture.  I'd seen a tutorial of hers, and it looked easy enough - and it was!

I decided to look up the official prompts for the month, and quickly decided that I am not able to follow all of them.  I may do a few, if I think it's something I can manage, or if the prompt inspires me.  Speaking of which, today's was "Hat" and I decided to try:
I need to make lighter pencil outlines.  And the proportions
are not quite right - but it does resemble a sunhat!

As for the reading challenge, we're supposed to mark every ten minutes we read.  That's too fiddly for me, so mostly a mark each time I read at least ten minutes, although if I read for an hour or so I'll count multiple ten-minute increments.  Nobody should be surprised that I've read well over the number of spots times ten minutes and am well into my second form.

As for my personal reading challenge, I've read fourteen books (fifteen if you count re-reading one) for the year, of the eighteen I proposed.  Being in a book club does help!

For an unofficial challenge I wanted to finish an item each day of the long weekend, and I did:
The "Americana" scarf was my 'car scarf', mostly worked on while waiting, so it took a while.  (I immediately cast on another.)  The two hats and other scarf were pretty much done in the last week.  Hats don't take much time and I wanted to do the crocheted scarf to have something quickly done.  Back to the scarf of linked diamonds shown at the top left.

03 July 2025

Cool Licks for Hot Days.

Not of the frozen treat variety, but the musical variety, while the temperatures are triple-digiting:

Too Darn Hot  (Cole Porter)

Summer in the City  (Lovin' Spoonful)

Summertime from "Porgy and Bess", and Joplin's version.

I planned to post more songs, but it's hot and I didn't.  😁   Also, I went to Dallas for some plays, and back again.  It's also really hot there - but surprisingly, not as hot as the east coast is suffering.
"Slave Letters" at MBS Productions

"Cry Havoc" at Lakeside Community Theater

"Curtains", a musical, at Allen Contemporary Theater

And of course, masks with quotes and facts:
  

  

23 June 2025

Done and Done.

I finished the scarf I mentioned last week, and a hat from an oddball of Big Twist Lollipop Twistie in a colour called "Clownfish Coral".  I didn't like the Lollipop Twistie (so I am not sad that it is discontinued) and decided to use it all up, hence the little topknot on the hat:
I started another scarf of chunky, and very soft, chenille yarn that a neighbor gave me when she decided her hands were too arthritic for knitting.

I also finished a book, which was fine, and turns out to be part of a series, but I don't know if I need to read any of the others.  I do need to read the book for the library's Science Fiction Book Club.  I picked up a form for their summer reading program - fill in a space for every ten minutes you read, turn in the filled sheet, and get a token item (last year it was a choice of some cool bookmarks) plus entry into a prize draw.  I decided that given how much I read, I would just record every session where I read for at least ten minutes.  That way I don't have to keep adding together reading sessions.
From June 14th to morning of June 23rd.
More art: I decided to try different media to complete each chart.  This one is watercolours.  I have not used those in a very long time, many years, except a token bit as part of a book art piece.  I wanted to practice a bit and this is a very low-pressure way to do it.

I went to the gallery for another round of putting things together to fuse, adding to one of the pieces I did two weeks ago and creating another for this four-panel light box I'm creating:

I've done some more practice pieces for the DFW Fiber Fest class.  I may be doing a variation of it at the gallery.  One of the owners is really interested; she's the one who encouraged me to try fabric also, because she thinks it will be more useful to people.  Since cellulose fibers need a more toxic mordant (soda ash) to prepare, which means people may not be able to do it at home, I searched and found a lightweight 100% wool in a light enough colour to dye, but it turns out to be a deeper beige than I thought it would be from the online photos.  Well, that happens.

First, I did some testing of single-serving beverage powders:


Light blue ReVive and the three options I chose.

Not too much water because I wanted the dye to stay put
and not float all through the pot.

I sprinkled half of each tube, then flipped the yarn and 
sprinkled the other half of the tube.

Simmering.  I wasn't sure how much the dye would spread.

Final result, after drying. You can still see some of the
original colour.  The grape is unimpressive.

Then I did a quick test of the fabric, one piece tied and one loose, with two different dyes in the pot:


I need to remember to photograph the final results.  I showed it to the owner and she liked the effect, so that may be what I offer to the students at the gallery.  Now, what to do with the pieces?

16 June 2025

Four more.

 When I packed for last week's conference, I included three balls of Wool-Ease Thick & Quick, and appropriate needles.  I ended up, as planned/hoped, knitting one hat per day:

All three are the same basic pattern, with the pink one turned inside out just for difference.  I think the stitch pattern is reversible.  Basic pattern is CO 48 on US#10 or US#10.5 needles and K3P3 ribbing for about eight rows.  Then switch to US#11 needle, in a two-row pattern:  K 1 row, then K1P1 the next row.  Eventually decrease every other row by six stitches until you have six left.

After returning home, I made the fourth, using bits of leftover yarn given to me by a friend for such purposes.  Given the colourful yarns I did a plain knit hat, with the solid ribbing at the bottom.

My current charity item is a garter-stitch scarf of some very thick and bright yarn that is without label.

The conference was in New Orleans, and despite the weather I was able to lead walks both mornings that we were there.  I wanted time to visit museums but weather and schedule conspired against it.  We (the walkers and our mascot) did see a couple from the outside:



Also Harmony Circle, featuring sculpture celebrating Carnival and the first all-female krewe:

 
And some other bits of history in Lafayette Square:


Fun fact:  There are two statues in Lafayette Square, one of Henry Clay and one of Benjamin Franklin, but none of the Marquis de Lafayette, the American Revolutionary War hero for whom it is named.

We also saw the Piazza d'Italia:

And a few other things:



I attended many sessions, made contacts, caught up with some people, led a roundtable and presented a program, ate some good food, and have plans to return on a weekend when I can visit the museums.

Yesterday being Father's Day, we gathered at my parents' house for barbeque and to help them clean out their attic.  It was hot and dusty, and many things are awaiting shredding or were picked up in this morning's recycling pickup.
Love you, Dad!

08 June 2025

Following up.

I don't know where my yarn winder is; I have one, but don't use it because I like hand-winding.  However, I thought the gradient blank from last week would show better when wound in a cake.  So I used some Michaels vouchers and a coupon to buy a new one, and after a few minutes of work, wound from the blank into a cake:
Also shown, the notebook I am using to record the processes.
I think of it as my lab notebook for dyeing.

I haven't started anything with it yet; I am debating between a dragon egg bag and a Bohus-inspired hat.  In the meantime, I took some leftovers with me on a quick overnight conference trip, and made mitts:

I finished a mindless scarf (no photo) and started another, and I've packed some balls of yarn and needles for this week's trip.  Three days, three hats?

I had to frog and restart my next shawl, of the handspun I bought in Paris and an unrelated pattern (it was created for a commercial yarn) from the same shop.  I put it down just after starting a pattern section, and couldn't get started again, and it was easier to frog back into the first section and restart.

I made the stitch marker from a couple bits I picked up near the Louvre in the early morning where hawkers would set up later in the day.  These must have fallen off some of the tchotchkes they sold.

I've been back to the fused glass studio, making jewelry and picking up the items I did a couple weeks ago.  The jewelry uses a small kiln you can set in a microwave oven, which is much too tempting.

  
Above are the before and after of my original pieces.  The long one, which will be a pendant, started from a leftover piece in the bin to which I added more bits.  The other two are a pair of earrings.  One of the instructors noted that my compulsion to design pieces that are mirrored, so they will look the same on each ear, is a sign that I am a jewelry designer.

Here are the other pieces I made, two pendants or pins, and another pair of earrings:
    
I'm a bit sad that the coloured stringers disappeared in the pendant, so it doesn't match the earrings as well as intended.  But they all look rather pretty.

This week I was back to more traditional fused glass:



In two weeks I'll pick up those pieces, and maybe make some more jewelry.  And possibly add some to the piece at the top, depending upon how it ends up looking.  I am in the "open studio" phase where I pay for time and we weigh my pieces and I pay for glass.  Upside is that if there is a cool piece I didn't use, I can add it to the weighing and take it home for later use.  😊