I don't know where the time goes to but if I spent less time on the computer I might be more productive! Since my last post, the house in North Wales has been emptied and cleaned, the japanese knotweed dealt with (that was a nasty surprise) and even better, SOLD! and I didn't even have to put it on the market through an estate agent. A lovely neighbour (she actually lives at the bottom of the garden where the dreaded knotweed is) contacted me and asked if I was going to sell it as she was very interested. So after she had a survey done we had a chat and she made me an offer which I accepted. SO fingers crossed that it all goes through smoothly!
I was back up in London on the Bank Holiday Monday as it was Catrin's birthday on the Sunday. It poured with rain all day long, a really miserable day. But we went out for lunch, at the same mexican place we went to last year which gave me tummy ache, and then we set off to see Churchill's war rooms which are just off Whitehall. I thought they might be a bit on the dry and boring side but in fact they were anything but and there was tons to see there.
The first Saturday in September saw me and Lorraine head off for the very first Bristol Woolfair. This was held on the Downs so easy to get to from Thornbury, though we did go by bus. I wasn't sure what to expect but boy what a surprise! Such gorgeous yarn in fantastic colours, and all different sorts of yarn and thickness. I could have bought something from every stall but didn't. Here are one or two of the things that had to come home with me
This was described as a pot stand but is far too nice for that so it will have pride of place on the oak chest. I love the muted colours of the felted wools - and I just happen to be starting a felt making class this coming Friday.
This was a kit to knit a reindeer which I have done but just need to sew and stuff it. I even learnt something new which was how to make an i-cord for the antlers.
This was just lovely, it has lots of flecks in it and the colours are fantastic. I hope to make myself a cowl with it but it nearly ended up in the bin! I decided to wind it into a ball on the Monday morning and put the hank over the back of a dining chair and started winding. All went well until about half way when it started to get tangled and then ended up in the most amazing mess of a birds nest that I have ever seen. It took me all day to get it untangled. I've since been told to use all four legs on an upended chair and that does work!
I am hoping that there will be another woolfair in Bristol in 2015 - start saving Carys!
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
Sunday, 13 July 2014
I keep thinking I am going to have a quiet week and then it turns into the exact opposite! Last week saw me driving back from Harlech on Monday which just about finished me off. I shall be very glad when the house is finally cleared and on the market for sale but it is taking a lot of time. I actually had quite a good visit last weekend and ended up socialising more than clearing which made for a very pleasant change!
The last U3A church visits group outings have been lovely. In June we went to Northleach and Burford, both in the Cotswolds so very pretty villages and towns and last Thursday we went to Bibury and Cirencester. As these were all wool towns in the 15th and 16th centuries, the churches were very well off with rich patrons. I loved the wool sack gravestones
What is even more amazing is that a lot of these churches still have traces of the Saxon buildings which dates their foundations back to pre Norman conquest.
Cirencester is having a march hare trail this summer but they were fairly difficult to find - the hare is based on a roman mosaic in the Corinium museum. There were two in the church, and one at the trout farm in Bibury
the top one was designed by Lawrence Llewellyn-Bowen, the interior designer, and the second was a pharoah done by some primary school children. The bottom picture was taken in Bibury and was too far away to find out who had decorated it.
Saturday saw me going up to London and meeting up with Catrin and Paul. The original plan was to go to Kew Gardens and have a picnic but Catrin thought it was going to rain (it didn't) so we went and had lunch at a Portugese restaurant by Vauxhall Bridge and then we walked over the bridge to Millbank and went to see the Folk Art Britain exhibition at Tate Britain. Wow, I got very excited when I saw that they had the Wrexham tailor's quilt there! Nearly set the alarm off, oops! This quilt is made of wool and has all sorts of things on it, from the Menai Suspension Bridge to a chinese pagoda and a viaduct, all built while the quilt was being made. The quilt has quite a sad history. It was passed on through the Williams family until the depression hit and they were short of funds. They offered the quilt to the Museum of Wales for the benefit of the Welsh people and asked £75.00 for it. The Museum refused and offered £25. The quilt is now the jewel in the crown of the collection held at St Fagans and obviously worth an awful lot more than £25. There were other quilts there, including a lovely red and white strippy quilt with gorgeous hand quilting, and lots of quirky objects such as god-in-a-bottle, pub signs, shop signs and a fabulous cockerel made of bone. Worth another visit I think. But I was glad to get back to the peace and calm of Thornbury, London was manic with lots and lots of tourists but then I suppose it is tourist season there!
The last U3A church visits group outings have been lovely. In June we went to Northleach and Burford, both in the Cotswolds so very pretty villages and towns and last Thursday we went to Bibury and Cirencester. As these were all wool towns in the 15th and 16th centuries, the churches were very well off with rich patrons. I loved the wool sack gravestones
What is even more amazing is that a lot of these churches still have traces of the Saxon buildings which dates their foundations back to pre Norman conquest.
Cirencester is having a march hare trail this summer but they were fairly difficult to find - the hare is based on a roman mosaic in the Corinium museum. There were two in the church, and one at the trout farm in Bibury
the top one was designed by Lawrence Llewellyn-Bowen, the interior designer, and the second was a pharoah done by some primary school children. The bottom picture was taken in Bibury and was too far away to find out who had decorated it.
Saturday saw me going up to London and meeting up with Catrin and Paul. The original plan was to go to Kew Gardens and have a picnic but Catrin thought it was going to rain (it didn't) so we went and had lunch at a Portugese restaurant by Vauxhall Bridge and then we walked over the bridge to Millbank and went to see the Folk Art Britain exhibition at Tate Britain. Wow, I got very excited when I saw that they had the Wrexham tailor's quilt there! Nearly set the alarm off, oops! This quilt is made of wool and has all sorts of things on it, from the Menai Suspension Bridge to a chinese pagoda and a viaduct, all built while the quilt was being made. The quilt has quite a sad history. It was passed on through the Williams family until the depression hit and they were short of funds. They offered the quilt to the Museum of Wales for the benefit of the Welsh people and asked £75.00 for it. The Museum refused and offered £25. The quilt is now the jewel in the crown of the collection held at St Fagans and obviously worth an awful lot more than £25. There were other quilts there, including a lovely red and white strippy quilt with gorgeous hand quilting, and lots of quirky objects such as god-in-a-bottle, pub signs, shop signs and a fabulous cockerel made of bone. Worth another visit I think. But I was glad to get back to the peace and calm of Thornbury, London was manic with lots and lots of tourists but then I suppose it is tourist season there!
Monday, 26 May 2014
I forgot to mention yesterday that I lost my lovely old puss Smudge back in February but she was nearly 19 and a half so she had a good long life.
Now I'm down to one cat, Tigger (or Tigger the Terrible). I did think of getting another kitten when Smudge had gone but I decided to wait and see how Tiggywinks and I got on on our own, and we are OK. We get on fairly well, she can be a demanding little so and so, especially where food is concerned and it can be a battle of wills to see who gives in first - no need to say that it's usually me!
Now I'm down to one cat, Tigger (or Tigger the Terrible). I did think of getting another kitten when Smudge had gone but I decided to wait and see how Tiggywinks and I got on on our own, and we are OK. We get on fairly well, she can be a demanding little so and so, especially where food is concerned and it can be a battle of wills to see who gives in first - no need to say that it's usually me!
Sunday, 25 May 2014
Well after Lorraine said she had been blogging, I thought oops I have not been anywhere near my blog for ages! What have I been up to since the last time? Lots, biggest thing was going to the US at the beginning of March for a two week holiday. I went with Sheila on a P&Q Tour to Washington DC, Philadelphia and the AQS show in Lancaster. It was pouring with rain when we arrived in Washington and the weather forecasted for the next day was snow. It won't snow after all this rain I thought to myself - how wrong could I be? It snowed non stop all morning, at one point you could hardly see a thing. What surprised me was that Washington DC ground to a halt. So we had a day in the hotel which actually worked out OK as it allowed the group to get to know one another. Sheila and I put our thermals and boots on in the afternoon and went out for a walk, talk about cold! We found a Safeway supermarket and went in to get some fruit and yogurt and rushed back to the warmth of the hotel. Of course this put the itinerary up the creek but we managed to get to the Virginia Quilt Museum in Harrisonburg and then Jinny Beyer's shop the next day. The day after that we had a tour of Washington and also went to see a quilt exhibition at the women's art museum Workt by hand or something it was called, and very good too. But the service in the museum cafe was not so hot!
After Washington we went to Philadelphia where we went to the flower show, went to see the Liberty Bell,
also went to see the Harlem Globetrotters which was an experience! Then on to Lancaster but unfortunately I came down with a lovely virus infection which had me in bed for the first day there. I wasn't the only one in the group that got it so poor Judi was backwards and forwards to Walmart to get various medicines to keep us all going. We had a conducted tour around the area which was good and I got to see the Amish farms plus some Amish quilt shops!
Recently I have been to the American Museum in Bath. When the museum is open during the summer, local quilt groups are invited to go to there for a sewing bee and we sit in the textile room doing some hand sewing. It was very busy there, probably because of the Kaffe Fassett exhibition that is one - definitely worth a visit. It is very colourful with his quilts, tapestries and knitting
After Washington we went to Philadelphia where we went to the flower show, went to see the Liberty Bell,
Liberty Bell, Philadelphia |
Recently I have been to the American Museum in Bath. When the museum is open during the summer, local quilt groups are invited to go to there for a sewing bee and we sit in the textile room doing some hand sewing. It was very busy there, probably because of the Kaffe Fassett exhibition that is one - definitely worth a visit. It is very colourful with his quilts, tapestries and knitting
yarn bombed light |
Wednesday, 22 January 2014
It's amazing what you see! I was really surprised to see this car on my way to the High Street on Monday. How on earth did it get there? It is more or less right in the centre of a small clump of trees but was it pushed there to keep it off the road or what? The police have cordoned it off with tape. It is still there today so I decided, as it was a reasonably sunny day, to walk over and take a photo.
The sad thing is that it is crushing all the beautiful snowdrops that open there at this time of year. But for the first time ever I have snowdrops flowering in my front garden, a sure sign spring is on the way.
I have managed to piece all the blocks for the Hunter's Star quilt, so now it just needs borders. I hope I have enough fabric!! The sashiko class last Saturday was good and I now have a large noshi design to stitch. My class at Busy Bees will go ahead on the 1st Feb, many thanks to Sue and Sandra for sorting things out through what must have been an incredibly difficult time for both of them. Just very sorry and sad that I won't be able to get my class supplies from them so a trip to Creativity in Bristol is on the cards for tomorrow.
The sad thing is that it is crushing all the beautiful snowdrops that open there at this time of year. But for the first time ever I have snowdrops flowering in my front garden, a sure sign spring is on the way.
I have managed to piece all the blocks for the Hunter's Star quilt, so now it just needs borders. I hope I have enough fabric!! The sashiko class last Saturday was good and I now have a large noshi design to stitch. My class at Busy Bees will go ahead on the 1st Feb, many thanks to Sue and Sandra for sorting things out through what must have been an incredibly difficult time for both of them. Just very sorry and sad that I won't be able to get my class supplies from them so a trip to Creativity in Bristol is on the cards for tomorrow.
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