It's been a good week. I brought order once again to the room where I store craft materials. And I have settled on yarn in my stash for a new Dahlia blanket to begin when the mood strikes.
Feeling a desire to bring a little discipline to my crafting, and wanting to finish some languishing cross stich and embroidery projects, I decided it was time to do just that.
Being the perfect temperatures lately to spend time in the sunroom, I set up a little corner to work in.
I may end up moving to the other end of the room as it cools off because the three large windows at the far end of the room are south-facing and that spot warms up some on sunny cool days.
But for at least another week or so, this spot I've set up overlooking the backyard, and pretty changing colors is where I'll park myself to work on this on-going cross stitch sampler.
If you've been a reader here for more than a couple of years, this project is the infamous mystery sal that I decided to jump into in 2020. It was a free offering by Linen and Threads, and it was to be my "covid piece". As we're approaching the end of 2024, I'm happy to say I'm about half-way finished with it. I might just finish this before the decade is over!
Last week, I set myself a goal of working on this project for at least 30 minutes every day that I could. I managed to stitch three - maybe four - days, and, of course, once I started, I kept stitching beyond 30 minutes.
Progress
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Another project I pulled out is a slow stitching scrappy thing I started last autumn.
After a few hours of stitching, I concluded that I really don't like it. At all. I'm not even going to sew on the buttons. Before you tell me it's not that bad, let me assure you, it looks better in the picture than it does in real life.
That said, I'm deciding it wasn't a waste of time. It may be the first time I've embroidered something based on an idea and a sketch I've made.
So that was kind of satisfying - even if my embroidered rendition looks more like house centipedes than wheat stalks. If you're unfamiliar with house centipedes, look it up.
And I think I've concluded I'm not all that into frayed edges on stitched pieces - even if they look cute when others do them. I loved stitching up a small kawandi a few months ago, and I enjoyed the scrappy nature of that, so maybe I'm just happier with finished edges. And prettier colors.
I'll try my hand at scrappy slow stitching some other time, but I think the next stalled WIP I'll turn to is something more predictable - like cross stitch, or embroidering a printed design. It sounds a little boring perhaps, but my brain will appreciate the break from second guessing the multitude of choices that are involved in a scrappy project.
Until next time...