Hello, everyone.
Yesterday, about 0730, DH came in and said, "you have to see this cloud." He was right.
It was so beautiful, I ran inside to get the cell phone and snap a photo to share with y'all.
Hello, everyone.
Yesterday, about 0730, DH came in and said, "you have to see this cloud." He was right.
It was so beautiful, I ran inside to get the cell phone and snap a photo to share with y'all.
Hello, everyone.
Even though this year we have not been able to walk the Camino--not even a short route--there are things that stay with us.
We have been watching Camino videos on Youtube. (Sarah Dhooma's videos give a pretty good idea of path surfaces.)
Occasionally we make tapas for dinner. We use a baguette recipe to make the barra bread. Sometimes we make garlic soup, too.
And we drink the Spanish and Portuguese wines.
These are three we have tried recently. The first is a lovely white, the other two are reds. We liked the bad rabbits a little better than the other red. (All found at Spec's.)
Hello, everyone.
"Morning walk sights" is the title of this post, but there is actually only one walk picture for this one.
It is from yesterday's walk, I looked up and saw a great cloud of birds flying in a line. By the time I got the phone out and awakened, the organized line had turned into a sort of blob. Is it migrating hawks?
This was not as early as the last morning sky photo, we left the house about 0700 yesterday.
On the sewing front, I bought some fabric from mail order and thought I was getting a knit. Oops. And oddly enough the penny didn't drop for me until *after* I had cut out a top in it. Now I am going to try putting a zipper in on the side...it goes over the head fine, but the semi-fitted waist area doesn't go over the bust well at all. So I will try adding an invisible zip on the side seam.
On the plus side, I did have enough off-cut to make a gift bag.
This bag has French seams (there is a tiny "decorative element" at the sides where the serging to remove raveled threads sticks out), boxed corners, and a casing with two openings at the top. I ran one ribbon all the way around from the left opening and the second ribbon all the way around from the right opening, and knotted the ends to keep the ribbons from getting lost. It is a reusable bag! With a cheerful, non thematic print that can be for almost any kind of gift.
The fabric was bought from Fabric.com, and I think it's a rayon or rayon-poly blend. Very light weight, but opaque.
Hello, everyone.
As it's August in South Texas, projects that can be done inside, in the air conditioning, appeal more than others.
Besides, Christmas is coming. (All y'all that think I am making things for you, close your eyes.)
And a pair of "Woopsies"--The top stuffy was embroidered onto the reverse side of the minky-style fabric. (He doesn't look too bad, but all the lovely cuddly fuzz on this one is on the back side.) I may give the birdie away to someone...well, as I'm too old for lots of toys, all the toys are give-away items. And if you don't know that his front is on the wrong side of the fabric, he's fine. Perhaps some folks prefer him the way he came out!
The bottom stuffy was an experiment with a free design. The directions called for felt, which I used. The photo with the directions online didn't show felt as having been used, it showed something in the linen or cotton woven zone. There is a reason for that. The felt fabric doesn't have a lot of strength to resist pulling, such as the pulling involved in turning a tiny pillow right-side-out through a 3/4" wide hole. In the event, I widened the hole some, and used needle-nosed pliers to *carefully* pull out as much as possible. The pointy bottom of the heart was not going to come out at all, as it's just too narrow at the bottom. Then I stuffed it and closed the opening with red thread and ladder stitches.
I guess the heart is good for a bowl filler piece. It's about palm-size.
Hello, everyone.
As things go, one of the plastic legs on my keyboard broke. (I loved that keyboard!)
As y'all can see, the little plastic pin that holds the leg out gave out, and tape was required just to use the keyboard. (I used some of my sewing tape as it was not too wide for the job.)
Sigh. I loved the feel of the old keyboard, and I was used to the amber backlight that told me the keys were powered up even if nothing was going on elsewise.
After reading about keyboards in the internet and hunting about for a mechanical keyboard to replace the broken one, I settled on a Logitech one at Best Buy. I had it delivered because it's a headache to deal with curbside pickup for small things.
The new keyboard doesn't have the row of game oriented keys that were on the left edge of the old one--which I never used--and so it's an inch or two shorter across the front. As a bonus it also has a plug where the mouse can be attached and then a unified cable bundle carries the signals down to where the cable splits and each half goes into its own USB plug. I figure that it will keep down the amount of potential back-of-desk tangling that goes on.
The picture may not make it completely obvious, but the new keyboard has a white backlight thing going on. It came set so bright that I had to turn it down a couple of levels! Who wants a keyboard light so bright that they can practically read a paperback book by it?
A program note: sewing projects and embroidery projects are going on around here and I intend to describe them over the next few posts.
Hello, everyone.
This morning I got going early and while walking Da Pooch saw this sky.
Fortunately the cell phone had come along for the ride.
I had been sleeping late recently and had forgotten how lovely the early morning skies look.