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Oh Happy Day!

I know that old gospel standard is now playing in your, and I’m not even sorry about it. Today was a great day for me, on several fronts.

After substitute teaching half the day and then grocery shopping yesterday, I sat myself down in front of my computer, determined to update my website with all the scarves I’ve woven recently. This is a task that I put off, generally finding it rewarding only when it’s done.

When I started shooting the photos of the ‘missing’ scarves, OMG, they just kept coming. I ended up with 14 pictures to shoot, each of which had to be cropped, formatted, and optimized in two different sizes. Plus there were an additional 4 shots already taken that had to have that same formatting and sizing work done.

Then each of those pictures (18×2=36) had to be uploaded to my website. I know I shouldn’t be whining. After all, the only way I could have accomplished this prior to August was driving into town and going to the library to use their high speed wireless. Now with my little dish, I could stay home, but trust me when I tell you this was not a speedy process. I know I’m repeating myself when I say that rural high speed isn’t all that high.

Anyway, I got the photos all uploaded, and then had to start working on the web pages. I had several new handwoven rayon scarves and a few new handwoven bamboo scarves, so I had to work on both pages. The bamboo page also had to be redesigned. (I’m updating the pages one at a time as I get to them. No point putting the new scarves on the old page.)

So the tedious part is simply adding to the structure of the page to add the new pictures. Then comes the really time consuming part – describe each scarf so that a potential customer would like to buy it. Make the description accurate and written in a way that the search engines will like, but also fun to read. Think the J Peterman catalog vs. a scientific manual.

I started writing in late afternoon, and got on a roll. The muse was with me and my creative juices were flowing. Until 10PM. I still had 4 more scarves to describe, but I’d hit the mental wall. Close up the mac and go to bed.

I got up this morning, wrote those 4 descriptions, tested everything, and uploaded the new pages. YAY!! Another HUGE task crossed off my list.

The sun came out, so I went out for my daily walk. It was a lovely spring morning. I came back home, pruned my raspberries, and got to use my sledgehammer to pound their supports back into the ground.

The fun didn’t stop yet!

Most of my sales are at shows, and since the beginning I’ve had an EZUp tent. If you’ve never put one up, let me assure you that the name is a lie. In addition, they tend to leak when it rains, blow over when it’s windy, and fall apart after a few years. At least that’s been my experience. So I wanted a real tent, a professional tent, but I really didn’t want to shell out many hundreds of dollars for one.

About a month ago, I stumbled on a very gently used Trimline on Craig’s List, and jumped on it. Since then, it’s been snowing, raining, or quite muddy at my house, so I couldn’t set it up to see how that process went, or even make sure that all the parts were there. It was making me anxious.

Today I had a 10×10 flat spot at the top of my driveway that was dry enough to do it. I followed the directions step by step.
trimline

Joy! It’s all there, I can do it, it wasn’t too hard. Definitely not harder than an EZUp, in some ways easier. The only thing I didn’t do was extend the legs to their full height – I just didn’t see the need for my trial run.

It took me about an hour to set it up, vs. the 18 minutes it took the woman in the video, but I didn’t think that was too bad for a first time. It took me another hour to take it down and put it away — the hardest part was actually folding the fabric.

But wait, the good news isn’t over yet!

Someone had asked me to make them a healing gemstone talisman. I won’t reveal any details of who, or why I chose these particular stones, but I will tell you that I really enjoyed every part of the process, from the research to the creation. Based on this person’s specific situation, I couldn’t stop myself with one piece.
healing gemstone talismans
Each of these can be used in a slightly different way, and for a slightly different purpose. All I have to do now is write up the insert and package them.

So today was a great day, with lots of happiness.

I’m going to go take a bath now to head off the aches and pains from the unaccustomed manual labor after a long winter.

Your turn: what’s made you happy lately?

Handwoven Rayon Scarves-Copper

It’s been eons since I’ve posted about my weaving. Ok, not really, but since I’ve been posting in between about everything from interesting photos to uninteresting thighs, it’s been way too long.

After I took all those handwoven napkins off my counterbalance loom, I set it up to weave scarves. It had been far too long since I’d made items for sale, and the show season is getting closer by the day, so I had to get cracking.

I had purchased 32 skeins of handpainted yarn from my favorite, Yarntopia Treasures. I decided to start with rayon in a great colorway that Tammy calls Copper – a mixture of several oranges and some greens.

I planned out a moderately complex twill pattern, threaded the loom, and set off weaving with a solid rust color Tammy dyed for me.

Hmmm. That’s odd, I can’t see the weaving pattern at all. I use all my usual tricks – I tilt my head, I move the light, I squint – but I’ve got nothing for pattern.

handwoven rayon scarves in copper & rust

Oh, well, the colors of rayon are great, so I keep weaving. As I near the end of the first scarf, I decide I’ll weave the second in the coordinating solid green – that’ll show up that twill pattern!
handwoven rayon scarf in copper & verdigris

Wow, even weirder – I STILL can’t see that twill pattern. But I keep weaving.

As I near the end of the second scarf, I get a big Homer Simpson “DOH” moment. When I wove those summer & winter pattern napkins, I had to change the tie up for my treadles, and I never changed it back, but I was treadling as if the loom had my standard tie up (1-2, 2-3, 3-4, 4-1). Pay attention, Peg!

So I finished weaving the scarf with the green weft, tied the treadles up correctly, and set out for weaving rayon scarf #3. This one would again have the solid rust weft, AND the interlocking diamond weaving pattern I’d planned.

Can you see which scarf in the first photo has the diamond pattern? No? Imagine that! It is definitely there, but that scarf has to be held in just the right light to see it. When I realized that, all I could do was laugh.

I really like the mostly orange scarves; the green weft doesn’t go with my skin tone.

Your turn: are you able to laugh at yourself when you do goofy things?

Concrete

My second entry in the V7N photographic scavenger hunt is concrete.
mossy concrete

I usually think of concrete as a cold, hard, man-made, unattractive substance. So when I saw this concrete block that was on its way to returning to nature, I thought it was perfect. The moss that almost completely obliterates the grayness makes the block look soft and inviting. I’d think little animals would like those square openings — I would like to sit in them if I was tiny.

Your turn: do you look for things that define a term, or defy it?

V7N scavenger hunt image

Raindrops

splashing raindrop
The April blog challenge from the V7N network is my favorite yet, by far. It’s a photographic scavenger hunt, with 15 words we each need to interpret and represent with a digital image.

Today’s image is representative of weather for me. It’s spring and the rains are here. This is where the roof drips its load into a trough in my back yard.

I’ve tried to capture a raindrop hitting water before, always unsuccessfully. It took many shots today to get this one. If I knew which settings I used, I might be able to replicate it sometime! 😉

Your turn: when things turn out well, do you usually know what you did or consider it pure luck?
V7N scavenger hunt image

Wasps Must Die

Trust me, I don’t bare my thighs. They are decidedly NOT attractive. But I can’t help myself in this case.

Last night I was simultaneously talking on the phone with Margaret and winding a warp on my loom. I bent over to align my separating paper, and BAM, I was stung. Apparently a wasp had landed on my pants leg, and when I bent over I threatened it. Again, I never saw the wasp, before or after the sting. (Margaret had informed me that these were wasps, not hornets as I’d previously claimed.)

I immediately dropped the phone on the floor and went into the medicine cabinet. Since nothing I’d used on my hand had made a significant difference in reducing swelling, I figured I might as well try alternate treatments this time. So I grabbed the ichthammol, thinking it might draw out whatever toxin the wasp had injected. I slapped on a big glob, which felt fine, so I put a bandaid over it to keep it in place and away from my pants.

There was little pain, unlike my hand, so I kept working. Later I went to bed, forgetting I’d been stung till I changed into my pjs. Woke up and immediately was itching badly. Applied cortisone cream, which didn’t feel good, so I knew I wouldn’t do that again.

I’ve applied an arnica/st. john’s wort oil 3 or 4 times today to reduce swelling and inflammation. It feels good every time. But this is what my thigh looks like 24 hours after the sting. It’s not painful, but it is warm to the touch.
wasp sting on thigh

Obviously, this can’t go on. So I had no choice but to declare war on the wasps in my house. Today we got 22 – a much larger number than I would have guessed. Some were squished, some put outside to live or die as nature saw fit.

I’ve not had this dramatic reaction to bee stings before, so I’m a bit curious as to whether my current physical responses are because these are wasps instead of bees, this particular species of wasps, or if I’ve developed a sensitivity to all types of stings. Not curious enough to do an experiment with stings, mind you, 😉 but curious nonetheless.

Your turn: Does taking bee pollen orally help reduce sensitivity? Is there something else that does?