Showing posts with label buttons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buttons. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2025

A Stitch in Time....

I've reached the sleeve/body divide on the Field Cardigan.



I've actually worked past the 6th buttonhole now (photo was right at the 5th), but Sunday was gloomy, and the natural light wasn't good enough for a photo, so you will just have to imagine it just a couple of inches longer now. Meanwhile, I ordered these buttons from a seller in the UK on Etsy, Pink Button Studio. They should be here before I finish the sweater. The shipping cost more than the buttons. I think the design is reminiscent of the grain pattern in the sweater, even though they're just leaves on a stem.



The doggies had a spa day on Tuesday and came home looking spiffy. Sandy's hair grows much faster than Dusty's, so he will be looking shaggy again in a few days.



We took a walk after the boys came home from the groomer. Here the boys are in the woods, trying to live up to their names.


We even walked on Thursday, in the wind and rain, but we stayed on the sidewalk and out of the mud.


We uncovered the r-pod while the dogs were gone on Tuesday. 


We moved her to the front part of the driveway. She was a little dusty (not like Dusty the dog, but close), but then it rained several times, so she may not need a spa day herself.

I will have to clean the inside, though, even if I have to go out there with an umbrella. We will be leaving next Sunday to drive to Florence for a camping trip with Jim, Charlie's brother, who also has an r-pod. I'll have to do some cooking, too, so we have plenty of things to eat during our trip. We're concerned about the weather, though. On Sunday afternoon we had a hail storm and overnight it snowed again.


I drove myself to choir practice on Wednesday, because my ride wanted to be there early for a special event. It was dark when I came out to go home, and my headlights wouldn't turn on. I could get my high beams on, but not the low beams, so I had to drive home with the high beams on. It seems to be the bulbs, although I don't know how they could both burn out at the same time. It worked to replace them, at least. It took Charlie several hours to change one bulb, and he needed my help a few times. The next day he changed the other. He used a dental mirror I had, and two flashlights. I think we're good.


One other thing I worked on this week was a new story, another featuring Olivia. It will come out on Friday, at the usual time.



I have stories scheduled through the first Friday in May, but they're all reedited stories from earlier.


Stay tuned!

I have a lot of difficulty responding to comments to my blog posts because of technical issues beyond my control (my lack of understanding of how things work). Message me on Facebook, Ravelry or Spoutible if you need information.


If you have a few minutes and are willing, please go to Amazon and B&N and search for More Classic Tales Retold or Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook by Peggy Stuart". Every click on the page for the book makes it more likely they will keep a good supply in their warehouse and stores. If you are outside the US, you may have a separate website for these retailers. If you have a copy of any of our books, including Emil, Mariah, Classic Tales RetoldOur Favorite Verses or More Classic Tales Retold, please leave an honest review on the websites, especially if you bought from them.


Where's my blog: If you want to follow my blog, go here and sign up to follow.

What's on my needles: Still working on the Field Cardigan.

What's on my iPhone: Still listening to Jan Karon's These High, Green Hills, which is the third book in her The Mitford Years series..

What's on my sewing machine: Still waiting to do some repairs.

What's in The Doll's Storybook: In Going Hungry, Jolena finds out why Mariah doesn't need to take her water bottle when they go for a bike ride.



What's my tip of the week: We usually have a Zoom call with family at 12:30 PM on Sunday. I like to be prompt, so I watch my computer to see when the time switches to 12:30, but I've learned that the clock on the home screen of my iPhone has a second hand, so I can use that to see how much time is left.



Where are my books: The stories in each book first appeared in the blog and they are reproduced with a few changes. 


The stories in More Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Welcoming a StrangerThe RescueUnmaskedFuzzy Town––A Play and Sky Blue.

Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook. Poems included are Valentine's DayKeeping PetsBack to School, Victor the VultureThe Week Before Christmas, Insomnia and Veronika's Vocabulary Verses.

The stories in Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Little Green GreatcoatThe Boy Doll Who Cried Wolf and Lost in the Woods.

The stories in Emil: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Best BudsGetting What You Want, and The Boys Cook Dinner.

The stories in Mariah are Being LittleBesties, and Distraction.

If you don't get free shipping from Amazon or B&N, buy from the BookBabyBookshop, because 50% of the price goes to St. Jude. Other booksellers pay much less, because the publisher gets a cut. 

Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.

<a class="blsdk-follow" href="https://www.bloglovin.com/blogs/highfiber-7365001" target="_blank" data-blsdk-type="button" data-blsdk-counter="false">Follow</a><script>(function(d, s, id) {var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];if (d.getElementById(id)) return;js = d.createElement(s);js.id = id;js.src = "https://www.bloglovin.com/widget/js/loader.js?v=1";fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, "script", "bloglovin-sdk"))</script>

<a href="https://www.bloglovin.com/blog/7365001/?claim=kkvctsdtf4n">Follow my blog with Bloglovin</a>    

Monday, May 15, 2023

Growing Up

Spring is here, as evidenced by the beautiful flowers! We have thousands of these lovelies in our yard!




We may have to use them to make wine. Or "coffee." Or salad! Some people consider dandelions to be weeds, because they grow so fast.

Something else that grows fast. These were our pups on April 8th. Sandy was somewhere between 7-8 lbs. (We didn't get him weighed the day this was taken, but he was 8 lbs a week later.)



This is what we had on Thursday. We visited the vet the next day, and he was 11.22 lbs.




That was a very important visit to the vet! Sandy got the final dose of the vaccine in the series that should make him immune to Parvo (after a week or so for it to take effect). That means we will soon be able to go out on the trails with him. It means he can take a puppy training class. It means we won't have to take our shoes off at the door and sanitize the pups' paws anymore! We have an appointment to see the vet again when Sandy is six months old to evaluate the location of his potential dangly bits that will need to be surgically removed. It would be nice if our vet didn't have to dig around in there to find them. Our other males have been neutered at five months with no problem, but this line of dogs likes to hold them back much longer. 

We haven't had any more "accidents" since we put up Dusty's old wire puppy play yard in front of the stairs. Sandy got the message quickly that it was against our cultural traditions to potty in the living area of the house, but he didn't seem to realize that the upstairs hall was living area. This is working well.




One thing I really like about this pup is that he prefers to leave his poopies around the very edges of the backyard, instead of out in the middle. I pick them up if I'm with him, because it's easier to find them. While I have a bag open, I look around for any others I might have missed. It's getting harder to see them, now that the grass is finally growing again.

Sandy has become quite comfortable with letting himself out through the dog door to potty, to play or just to check things out. Sometimes he takes a a toy or a friend with him. His friends need help getting through the door.



Snowball has been through the dog door (with help, of course), but it's a struggle. Snowball is pretty big. It's easy to help him out of the playpen, though.



Sandy hasn't figured out how to get Dusty through the dog door. That problem falls to me to solve. I have to either hold the flap up for him or open the door. They have a lot of fun playing in the backyard, once they're both out there. I prefer they not play with sticks, so I've been removing them and substituting a rope tug, but Sandy doesn't seem to be eating the vegetation, other than a little grass. When he chews things, he spits out any pieces that come loose, so I don't worry too much. 




Dusty seems to have let up a bit on his obsession with having a ball thrown. He's happy to chase the ball or a toy if we throw it, but he really seems to enjoy Sandy's games of tug, chase, roll around on the ground and try to rip the other dog's throat out, etc.




When the play moves indoors, it sometimes changes the feel of our decor. This is a little more casual than we intended. (The bits of mud from the backyard on the quilt are a nice touch.)



He has a bit of a rebel in him. He took a chew toy out to the backyard the other day. I went, got it away from him and brought it inside, leaving my backyard shoes by the back door. I left the chew toy in the playpen and came back to find this.




It's good this one is here, but I needed two. He had the other one outside. I got the message. He thinks I took something of his, so he took something of mine. You don't get something back by chasing him, though. That's how his game is played. You have to pretend you don't care and start playing with something else. Dusty is very useful at helping with this. When Sandy took the dog comb out into the backyard, Dusty and I played alternately with the Frisbee and a toy, throwing and chasing, and totally ignoring Sandy. Soon Sandy dropped the comb and went after the toy. I snatched up the comb but kept up the game, so maybe Sandy doesn't catch on to my ploy.

Sandy is beginning to behave a bit like an older dog. He spends less time in the playpen now. I don't have to enforce "quiet time" after breakfast anymore. The other day, he sat for nearly a half hour, just watching the birds.




He has begun to "mark" our route when we go for walks. When I come home from being out, he wants to jump on me, of course, and bite me, but I praise Dusty for "good down" and "good no bites" and ignore Sandy. When he starts behaving the way I want, I praise him, too. Sometimes he challenges Dusty for the right to have a toy or a chewy, or Dusty gets after him for doing something he isn't supposed to do. They have an altercation. If it gets too serious (in my opinion), I tell them to knock it off. They do, usually within a few seconds. Sometimes they make up by kissing each other.

Sandy is getting very shaggy. Dusty needs a haircut, too. That's happening today. Sandy won't look like this anymore.



One of my online friends likes to color. She made this for me in honor of Sandy.



It has been a busy week, but Sandy doesn't need constant watching anymore. I was finally able to get more done on my Talvinen sweater. I decided to make the buttonhole and button bands before cutting the steek and use crochet reinforcement instead of sewing on the sewing machine, because this yarn is fairly sticky/clingy.



After I cut the steek down the middle, I had to trim the facing next to the crocheted row. If I had made the steek only five stitches wide, I could have saved this step.




I used the main color yarn to sew down the facings on the inside with an overcast stitch. The blue vertical line is the only part of the original steek left exposed.



I used lace-blocking wires to help with the blocking. My wooly board is really useful when the sweater has a drop shoulder, making it T-shaped, but this one has a round yoke, so that doesn't work as well. It took less than two days to dry.




I used stitch markers to decide where to put the buttons when they come, today or tomorrow, I hope. 



These are the buttons I picked out, the 15mm ones. They are made of abalone shell.



Daphne's birthday was Sunday. She has had a lot of dancing and music in the past few days. I can't believe how much she has grown up!





I have a lot of difficulty responding to comments to my blog posts because of technical issues beyond my control (my lack of understanding of how things work). Message me on Facebook, Ravelry or Spoutible if you need information.

If you have a few minutes and are willing, please go to Amazon and B&N and search for "Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook by Peggy Stuart" in Children's. Every click on the page for the book makes it more likely they will keep a good supply in their warehouse and stores. If you are outside the US, you may have a separate website for these retailers. If you have a copy of any of our books, including Emil and Mariah, please leave an honest review on the websites, especially if you bought from them.


Where's my blog: If you want to follow my blog, go here and sign up to follow.

What's on my needles: Ready to sew the buttons on Talvinen cardigan. On Saturday I swatched for the Kultainen käki sweater from Knitted Kalevala, which I ordered during the Rose City Yarn Crawl. And of course the EmPower People Kerchief (hibernating).

What's on my loom: Dust, but I still plan to make some placemats.

What's on my sewing machine: Still ready for back of T-shirt quilt and quilts for Soren and Johan.

What's in The Doll's Storybook: A Picnic by the Lake. Charlotte and Jolena make some sandwiches and then go to an imaginary lake for a picnic. We don't see Jolena eat her sandwich. Find out why not when you read the story.

What's on my iPad/iPhone: Still listening to White Silence by Jodi Taylor. Didn't get very far. Crazy week.

What's in my wine glass: Colossal Reserva 2018 from Lisbon. We've had this one before. It's very nice.

What's my tip of the week: I've discovered that I only need to use the sourdough starter from one jar (of my two), so I've been putting the newly fed jar behind the one already in the fridge, so when I need to use the starter again, I can just grab the one in the front.

Where are my books: The stories in each book first appeared in the blog and they are reproduced with a few changes. 
Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook is available from BookBabyBookshop and other booksellers worldwide. The stories are Little Green GreatcoatThe Boy Doll Who Cried Wolf and Lost in the Woods.
Emil: Stories from The Doll's Storybook and Mariah: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are also still available from booksellers. The link for Book Baby is hereThe three stories in Emil are Best BudsGetting What You Want, and The Boys Cook Dinner.
The three stories in Mariah are Being LittleBesties, and Distraction.
If you don't get free shipping from Amazon or B&N, buy from the BookBabyBookshop, because 50% of the price goes to St. Jude. Other booksellers pay much less. 



Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.

<a class="blsdk-follow" href="https://www.bloglovin.com/blogs/highfiber-7365001" target="_blank" data-blsdk-type="button" data-blsdk-counter="false">Follow</a><script>(function(d, s, id) {var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];if (d.getElementById(id)) return;js = d.createElement(s);js.id = id;js.src = "https://www.bloglovin.com/widget/js/loader.js?v=1";fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, "script", "bloglovin-sdk"))</script>

<a href="https://www.bloglovin.com/blog/7365001/?claim=kkvctsdtf4n">Follow my blog with Bloglovin</a> 

Monday, July 30, 2018

Goodbyes and Hellos

Life is...


Well, we didn't get a bowl of cherries, but we did get more than this. These, however, lasted long enough to get their photos taken together on a piece of fabric I had on the ironing board. After that they promptly followed their comrades into the afterlife. Actually, I did get one other photo of the cherries, because Jolena, in her innocence, thought they were little apples.



Mandy has been out of her box almost exactly a year longer than Jolena, so she was able to explain how we planted the trees when we moved into this home 15 years ago, and every year, there have only been a few cherries, but that those cherries were eaten before they were ripe by the local birds. Either the trees decided to produce more (and they did) because it was our last summer here or the birdies decided to leave us some for the same reason or because there were finally enough for everyone.

Lots of things were going on this week. Monday we met with our former veterinarian and his wife for lunch, which lasted three hours, a long goodbye. I wish we were taking these people with us, because we never run out of things to talk about.

Then on Tuesday, the local pet psychic came to communicate with our dogs. We found out a lot of interesting things. For one thing, we learned that Dusty is our late Sunny in a new body. I'm not sure how that works, but we had suspected for a long time that Sunny was influencing Dusty somehow. Dusty has so many quirks and personality traits that Sunny had, and many of them are unusual for dogs. I could write pages about the things we learned, but I have other things to write about this week. 

We had our house inspection on Wednesday. We're still waiting to hear the report. Thursday, we had a visit with the moving company to talk about our move. We will finish the packing ourselves, and they will come and take everything and put it into storage until we have a house.

Thursday was also my BIL's birthday. He turned 80. He is DH's brother. It was a sad birthday, because he lost his companion dog, Onslow, who was 15 and had been failing for some time. Onslow was a red heeler/Jack Russel mix. Here's Onslow in a photo taken in 2010 during a camping trip to the Uinta Mountains. 





That's Rocky and Sunny, sharing a stick, as they came out of the water. Rocky will be 14 the end of August. I dread losing him, but that's how life is.

 Friday the latest story in The Doll's Storybook came out. It's called Insomnia. It's about a doll who can't sleep because her eyes don't close. I'm starting to get new readers, some of them children, based on people who have reported back to be through Facebook, Ravelry or by sending me an email or leaving a message on the blog. I was delighted that three different readers, all in the UK, have asked to give to a different charity for childhood cancer. Of course that's OK! It's the only way I know that anyone is giving, as it's totally voluntary and anonymous. I do hope people donate, though, because I like to think of my little hobby as volunteering.

Speaking of the girls...a delivery from Lovvbugg brought Lotte a violin. There's a future story where Lotte and her violin will be required. (She also has a case for it.)





The same delivery brought Jolena some ballet slippers. They are very tight, but I can get them onto her bare feet. If they stretch, she will be able to wear them with tights.



I made the leotard out of a sock. It was much harder than the bathing suits. I think I'll have to scrap my original plan of using a sock and make the next one out of regular knit fabric. I was hoping to avoid the underarm seams, but sewing the fold-over-elastic into the tiny armholes was a chore, and then I didn't get the fit right and had to cut the shoulders off and put in a new shoulder seam. I'm still learning to work with stretchy fabrics, and there are so many different kinds, all slightly different.

For instance, I made Mandy some lace leggings to go with her new checkered shirt. Stretched lace was a new experience. I have published the free pattern for the shirt in a blog post here.  I cut of a piece of a bandana and hemmed the cut edge. This is so much better than the full-size version she wore when she hiked in the woods.


The skirt pattern is Liberty Jane's Denim Mini Skirt pattern, but with simplified topstitching and made from the same fabric (oxford cloth, I think) I used for Jolena's shorts. I added a doubled over strip of the gingham cut on the bias, just as easy as making a hem, and Mandy has long legs. I added a little detail that doesn't show in the photo above, but will show up if Mandy wears a crop top blouse. On her left side, there's a button with a little faux drawstring bow.


I've been working on a dress for Jolena to wear. The Götz Doll Lovers' group on Ravelry is have a "Sweetgrass Style" JAL (join along, so not just knitting, but also crochet, weaving, sewing, etc.) with the inspiration being "a ‘little bit country’, a ‘little bit vintage’ and a lot of sweet cuteness." Suggestions to include were any of these: gingham, linen, denim, lace, embroidery, patchwork, braids, frills, flowers and bows. I find these activities help get my mind going for "The Doll's Storybook." The outfits I work on for this JAL will show up in future stories.

You can see that I made a lot of buttonholes over the last two weeks. I'm finding them easy to do with my Sparrow 15 machine. The button fits into the buttonhole foot, so it can gauge how big to make the buttonhole. Isn't that clever?


The feet on this machine are very easy to take off and on. It's like magic. There's a lever behind the shank you push, and the presser foot falls off. Like this:



Well, that's good design and gravity, but not magic. The magic comes when you put on the buttonhole (or any other) foot. You put the attachment into position, lower the shank the way you do when you're lowering the presser foot, and when you raise it again, the foot is attached.



Buttonholes are easy after you get to this point, assuming you've marked where you want them to go. You put your project in position, keeping in mind that the machine will start the buttonhole with the end that's closest to you and work away from you before returning to where it started. After you lower the buttonhole foot, you locate the lever you can see in this photo. It has an icon that looks like a buttonhole on it. It also has a down arrow and the command "push." You do them in that order: pull down on it, then push away from you. 


I've found that you need to push it away after each buttonhole, because it goes back into place when you raise the shank with buttonhole attachment to reposition your project. If you forget, it will just sew all in one place, and you will have to get out your seam ripper. (Voice of experience.) 

Sewing buttons on is easy, too. There's another special foot for that, but first you put down the darning plate, which goes on quickly if you have it facing the right direction. First you thread the bobbin thread up through the hole in the darning plate. Then you just put it in place. It has two little prongs that hold it in position. No screwdriver is needed.



This is the button foot:


It goes on the same way as the other feet. The blue rubber (I think) prongs hold the button in place. In the back is sort of a foot that holds the button foot up, making vertical space for the button. (Again, I think that's what's happening.) Here's the button foot attached:

Again, you mark where you want your button to be attached, put your project in position with the button in that position, lower the button foot so that the needle will go through one of the eyes with the stitch width set to "0". You make a few stitches to lock the stitches, then raise the needle, reset the stitch width to what you think you might need and adjust the position of the button so the needle will go into one hole and then the other without hitting the button when you turn the handwheel. Then you can let her rip! When you've had enough fun sewing the button on, you end the way you started, raising the needle, adjusting the stitch width to "0" and, making sure the needle goes through the second hole, make a few stitches to lock the stitches. 

My only complaint is the handwheel is a bit hard to turn with my lovely rebuilt thumbs, but not impossible. I think if I were even less able, I would keep a piece of rubberized shelf liner handy to grab it with. (I have to do this for unscrewing my interchangeable knitting needles, too.) I haven't had a new machine in many years, so I'm not sure if this is something all newer machines have. The plastic seems more difficult to grip than the metal handwheel.

I have to say, I am very happy I received that copy of Connecting Threads catalog with the Eversewn Sparrow on the back cover. 


What's on my needles: Still the Kisu Cardigan for Jolena. At the BO for the neck. Also the Coastal Skies shawl for me, no progress on either.

What's on my Sparrow 15: More doll clothes. Buttonholes are a snap. Ha-ha!

What's in my hoop: Still the Spring Flowers quilt, no progress this week.

What's on my wheel: Stanzi is set up but waiting patiently. 

What's on my iPad/iPhone: Still listening to The Secret Book & Scone Society by Ellery Adams. Very little time to listen for a bit this week.

What's in my wine glass: Corbett Canyon Merlot. I don't know the vintage. I couldn't find it on the bottle. (Maybe I should look for it before I finish my second glass of wine!) It's very nice.

What's my tip of the week: Coffee filters (new, not used) make great foundation paper or stabilizer for sewing and machine embroidery. You can also use them for that little fabric scrap you start and end your seams with when you aren't chain-piecing. If you're giving up coffee, don't throw out your old filters!


Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.