Wishing everyone stateside a Thanksgiving with family, friends and good food. I am not cooking for the first time in nearly 40 years! OMGosh that sounds unbelievable but I did the math. We will be heading to my son’s for a great meal and day. My D-in-L is a fabulous cook and she will not disappoint. I am taking the green bean casserole and Pecan Pie Bars - first time I tried the recipe and maybe we will like better than plain old Pecan Pie.
Thanksgiving done and that means like everyone else, I will be pulling out all those holiday decorations. It will be a couple or three days of fixing and fussing. I have a friend spending the weekend in the beginning of December so that is incentive.
Eleven months down and one to go for WIPGO. I accept I will not be crossing everything off my WIPGO list for this year. But I do not despair, it is still a win my book. Maybe I will be able to cross off one more on the list before I share it.
Part of my stitching success has been sticking to my word of the year - monogamous. Only a couple of new starts but I will get into that and my tally at the end of December. For now, I am doing better with staying with a project until it is completed rather than being enticed to start something newI. Oh, I have wanted to start several things but that little good angel on my shoulder pulls me back with a whisper of ‘stay the course’.
My stitching since my last post includes Bitter Sweet from last fall from Summer House Stitche Workes. My plan is to finish it as a drum. I actually think I need to add “drum finishing” as a WIPGO assignment since I think I now have three in the queue. This was a new start and a finish as well. I was in the fall mood.
I finished Harvest Time from Lila’s Studio. Another piece that I was gung-ho to start and then left it to more onto something else. I have a lot of Halloween decorations but not so much fall. I really just fell in love with her plaid skirt. No plans right now on how I will fully finish it. It really is aggravating when I pickup a piece and it really doesn’t take that lone to finish and then I think why could I just have had the patience to finish than start and leave it……Anyway, I changed her hair color, it was supposed to be the color of the leaf in the upper right corner. Stitched it, frogged it, restitched it in a soft brown.
Another finish is the class piece from my Jeannette Douglas Cruise. This is her “East Coast Sampler”. Either I am becoming a faster/better stitcher or this was quick and easy. I vote for the later. I did change the wording in the center from East Coast Sampler to New England/Canada 2024. Not my design. A class mate did it and many of us copied her recharted version. This will eventually be framed.
I caught up on my Temperature Tree. I fell two months behind with my being occupied otherwise - AKA being on the road!. But all caught up now and in the home stretch for sure. This has been enjoyable to work on and it will be fun to compare with my friends as to what theirs look like. I am debating on how to finish it. I have a couple of ideas but I know myself. Often what is in my head, doens’t come out as planned. First where I was
And where I am now
I have busied myself with Christmas exchange pieces - which I cannot share as well as a Retreat exchange piece, that I can share. I usually don’t like to participate in Retreat exchanges because, well…..I don’t think my work is the quality of others, or their ideas are cuter than what I think of and because all these extra little projects take from my stitching project time. But I caved this time. Really, a day to stitch and an evening to finish. Alison from Canada pulled my package and was thrilled. The strawberry really wasn’t as wrinkled as it looks in the photo.
I received this adorable little wool appliqué pillow. Such a sweet memory of the retreat. Just the perfect backing fabric too.
I put in time on Cornwall Cottage from Rosewood Manor; enough to satisfy two different WIPGO assignments. I probably started this in 2016 and put it away because something shinier came along. I am stitching it on the called for count of 32. I saw a version a friend was doing on 40 count and I loved it and it had me loose interest. WIPGO kicked my butt into gear to get it done. I am determined to get it finished in 2025.
The central basket is not as fussy as i thought it would be. I stitched three little Jeannette Douglas pin pillows which I turned into scissor fobs for my traveling in companions on my cruise.
I have been trying to get all the fussy little EGA projects done. We have a pin keep we did in Septmeber. We also made a wool cardinal. And I have two more ornaments from CHristmas in July. I need to make a pledge that I do not need to sign up for each monthly project. The ladies running our EGA do such a fine job. I think I felt obligated to sign up when our group was so small. Our numbers have doubled in the last couple of years so maybe I will back off on some of these. Right, like that is really going to happen.
I spent a day in Washington DC last week. We hopped on the Metro in North Carolton and rode the rest of the way in unemcumbered style! For real. The train was quick, clean and a great way to avoid the traffic and parking. We visited the Daughters of the American Revolution Museum, “DAR”. Surprisingly enough, the museum is not about DAR. It used to be the national headquarters for DAR. Now, DAR groups from each state have a ‘room’ which they design and fund as a room to represent their state. Each room represents a different era. I think there are 39 states represented.
We were drawn to visit because of the Sewn in America exhibition.
Look at this quilt
And here is a close up. Each square is less than 1-inch
Period dress
Close up of stitching
This is a Wheeler and Wilson sewing machine from 1871.
Pre-treadle machine. I love the foot straps. Like on bike pedals.
This is sampler I’ve always wanted to try. It is out of print.
Don’t get confused and think you are looking at a road map. This is sewing pattern from Harper’s Bazaar. Each pattern has a specific kind of line: one with dashes, one with dots, etc. You follow the lines that correspond to the pattern you want and either trace or cut the pattern.
Clothing showing the markings made by the daughters of the home. Textiles were some of the more valuable items in a home and why girls practiced stitching alphabets.
Frock coat in pieces on the left. Circa 1790’s
Mantle scarf
Perforated paper work
Marian Anderson. In 1939, the DAR refused to let Marian Anderson perform at their site because of her race. Their refusal had Eleanor Roosevelt, First Lady at the time, resigned her membership in protest. The DAR was criticized and faced repercussions. Marian Anderson instead held her famous performance at the base of the Lincoln Memorial. Years later, Marian was invited to perform before a mixed race audience at the DAR’s Constitution Hall.
This is a dress and shoes from Marian Anderson.
We took a guided tour of some of the rooms. The architecture of the building is amazing.
I was fascinated by the floors. One inch marble tiles.
The Library was stunning. When it was an active DAR headquarters, this was a theatre.
These chairs sit in the room sponsored by the Tennessee DAR. The chairs from from the White House. After the White House burned down during the War of 1812, President Monroe ordered gold covered chairs from France. Congress was horrified at the expense and that he wasn’t buying American made furniture. A law was passed that American goods should be purchased whenever possible. A local cabinet maker made these to replace the fancy gold ones Monroe had ordered.
In the Maryland room, this is a glass harmonica. Literally the glasses are ‘played’
The New Jersey sponsored room is paneled in the wood recovered from a ship that ran aground, caught fire and partially sank during the American Revolution. The British warship, Augusta, sank in the Delaware River in 1777 during the Battle of Red Bank. The wood was reclaimed and the room was paneled with it.
The California sponsored room pays tribute to Chinese New Year
This is the Pennsylvania Room. It is still used for meetings. If some of the rooms and hallways look familiar they have been the setting for movies and TV shows, as an example, The West Wing.
A quilt with squares designed by each state as well as France, Mexico and overseas. Current members of the DAR live outside of the country and are represented by France, Mexico and the overseas panels.
And then we walked to the Renick Display at one of the Smithsonian sites.
Some items were beautiful
Some were clever - this is Mexican Gothic
From the beautiful to the…….
To this necklace made from Barbie Doll arms………why?
This room was so peaceful and we were actually encouraged to lay on the floor and watch the color changes.
The backyard of the White House was right behind me. There was fencing and scaffolding and the road was barricaded for construction. Nothing to see but a hot mess of scaffolds and jersey barriers.
Blair House
Executive Offices
Headquarters of the American Red Cross
We finally got rain. It has been three months since we have had any measurable rain and have been on restricted water usage. I feel so bad for the people that have been threatened and in fear of the wildfires. We only had about an inch over night last week and I welcomed the sounded of the rain on the roof. I just hope Mother Nature is not saving all the moisture for winter snow. Well I do like a good couple of snowfalls especially if I have no where to go. Time will tell.
I gave my husband my list of trips for 2025 and he looked looked at me. He said, really, November, you have something for November 2025 on the list. Well yes, I explained you need to sign up for these things when first made available or you get edged out. So nice to look forward to events. I feel like I am moving towards not so much interested in Retreats with Classes as I am in just plain old stitching retreats. More so because it is so nice to see fellow stitchers in person. To put a face with the name on Zoom. We stitchers are lucky to have such a community to share your passion with.
A friend at my Tuesday night group showed us how she was labeling Christmas ornaments for her grand children. I started making the labels to attach to my stitched ornaments once I get the decorations out. I’ve got quite a few more to do but at least I have made a start.
I am already thinking about WIPGO for next year and have drafted of my board. It is going to be a mix of WIP’s and a couple of small samplers I want to start. As of right now anyway. I recognize my thoughts on stitching change like the wind blows I have learned over the years of doing WIPGO to not set the task at an insurmountable level. I might move things around and set some kind of goal that I need to finish “x” WIP’s before starting a new one. That worked for last year. Like many of you there are so many things I want to start but I am finding a new Zen with focusing on finishing my starts/not increasing my WIPs. It does feel good to have to have fewer WIPS. An unconscious weight off my shoulders. I will give you all a tally next month.
I haven’t touched my FrenchAlphabet Sampler since August. I hope after the first of the year I can dedicate one week a month to it. Sounds good on paper. I need to get some of these SAL’s and challenges off my plate. My Round RObin should be wrapped up in the first quarter. My temperature tree will be done December 31st. And the French Alphabet is a 4-year SAL.
Bless you if you have managed not to be put to sleep. This post just kept getting longer and longer. So that is a stitching wrap and trip from me. I need to send out the biggest thanks you for all the wonderful comments I receive from you guys. I love them. I promise to get better on replying.
Thanks for stopping by and keep on stitching.
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