Friday, December 30, 2011

Princess Dress

I was so disappointed not to finish the dress on time to give to my granddaughter on the 24th.  I did have other gifts for her such as glitter pink nail polish,  a sequined belt, the pearl necklace, and some soft bamboo socks.  I brought the partially finished dress.

My sister thought I could sew the dress up in 3 hours after I had cut it out.  HAH!  We're talking a gathered cap sleeve with band,  gathered skirt to attach to the top of the dress and a gathered overskirt.  The bodice is lined and a zipper through the top and bottom.  The fabric is extremely ravelly.

I have been sick with a cold and sometimes sore throat for 2 weeks.  I kept thinking that the next day I'd wake up full of energy.   I just had to let myself sleep.

After putting in one sleeve wrong,  I decided to give up on finishing on time and take my time.  I  really felt if I rushed it I'd make more mistakes.  I wanted the gathers to be even.

So tonight I've been handstitching the  gathered skirt to the bodice, and then closed the back seam and hand basted in the zipper.   I've decided to make the overskirt optional and either attach it to clear elestic or a ribbon of some kind.   I felt two layers of gathered fabric would be bulky in the waist. 
I haven't figured out what to do about the ravelling.  I don't want the threads to catch in the zipper.  Fray check is stiff and I don't want the fabric stained.

Tomorrow I see my granddaughter again to babysit for New Year's Eve.  I'm glad I have worked on it today as I sure didn't want to take the chance it wasn't done tomorrow!

I'm excited to see the new kitten the kids got on Christmas!  My granddaughter had been campaigning for awhile.  She brought home a beautiful painting of a kitten with "possible names" listed on the back, as only a beginning kindergartner can write!  She told her parents "it was like a dream come true!".   I really got  a kick out of how excited my daughter and son in law were about it!

The dress was completed and delivered 12/31/11.  I brought a camera over to their house and forgot to take a photo of the completed dress.  I made a separate elasticized belt type thing with the over skirt but it was a little too big in the waist.  I did a ton of handstitching on the dress and I must say it looks beautiful.
I have the second one to make by the end of January for her birthday!


Microsoft Windows 7 Online Spades Game

I find it relaxing to play cards online.  It sort of shuts out other worries from your head before bed.  Solitaire is about as boring as it gets.  The Microsoft Spades game matches you up with players around the world to play.  It is "family friendly" I guess as all ages can play.  This  is a huge problem!  I want the kids ferretted out  and sent to their own games. 

In Spades,  you each bid on how many tricks you think you personally will take.  Your partner does the same as well as your opponents.  There are 13 tricks total.  You can also bid "Nil" to take no tricks at all.  If you take one,  there is a 100 point penalty whereas if you successfully make it,  you gain 100 points.  Then there is "double nil" where you bid before seeing your hand.  If you have more than 5 spades, which are trump,  an A of spades,  you cannot make a nil bid.  So it is a bid you should make only in desperation because you are about to lose.  This is how it goes however.

You start out and bid 3,  and to the left,  no response.  No one else can bid til this person responds.  Can't they take care of their needs before the game starts?  As you're about to "nudge" them after a full 90 seconds,  they bid.  Finally we can continue!  But the opponent bids double nil for a first bid!  Foolish indeed.  Your partner then bids and then the other opponent.  So the person to your left then will start with an A!  Why when they just put 200 points at stake not to take a bid?  And the family friendly responses are limited to "your turn",  "Nice try",  Nice Nil",  "good hand"  etc.  No "what the hell are you doing? " No "how rude to now leave after you ruined the game for me?"

I call these people the saboteurs. They will have their partner bid 5 and then bid 13!!   Their partner bid first and of course it's impossible to take 18 tricks out of 13.  Of course when you play online,  you may have to let the dog out,  go potty yourself,  or open the door for someone.  You have a choice of saying "I'll be right back" and also to put it on automatic play.  But over and over,  you sit there 90 seconds until you can "nudge" or kick the player off.  Then often the next person does the same!  You want to say "How Rude of you! Why the hell don't you use the automatic play feature?"  But you cannot.  You can only say "It's your turn". 

Supposedly there are three levels of players" beginners,  intermediate and expert.  However every time you leave a game because of one long delay after the other,  it counts as a loss.  There is no information anywhere on what you need to do to move to the intermediate level.  There seems to be no penalty for those who start games only to immediately leave you hanging.  They don't even click off,  they leave the game open and other players waiting until they can boot the person off.

When a person is booted off or leaves,  they are replaced by a robot.  The game can continue even if you're playing 3 robots.  However the robots vary in ability.  Don't ask me why!  Some will bid way too much.  They don't overbid you like the kids do, but don't seem to get the knack to go after the nil bidders.  They keep laying down high cards, making it easy for the Nil bidder.

Why do I continue to go there?  When you get good players,  it is fun.  I went to the World Gaming group once and was confused by where I was supposed to go since I wasn't "ranked".  I'd go into these rooms waiting for a 4th player to be booted off without explanation.  There was nothing friendly about them.  They are not limited to a drop down menu of what to say.  I was told off once after I roundly trounced them,  because I took 1 or 2 minutes to decide how much to bid.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A Favorite Sewing Blog

I find Peter Lappin's review at patternreview inspiring and entertaining.   Here is a link to his blog.  When I have time to read about the settings here I will figure out how to list my favorite blogs.

http://malepatternboldness.blogspot.com/
I see about 6 shirts he made with this Robert Green shirt from a 70's pattern.  I had that pattern!  I fear I threw it out,  something I seldom do.

I remember seeing a link to Threads magazine with Peter's note he was in it!  So I had to go back and see which issue.  Unfortunately it is the Jan 2012 issue that is not in my archive CD.   He wrote an article about having lots of vintage sewing machines he loves.  I once spent a lot of time trying to get rugged,  easy to use great machines for teaching sewing classes to groups. 

I didn't finish the dress for my granddaughter.  I was very upset.   However several days of sore throats and dragging energy didn't help.   It was complicated enough,  with an overskirt,  slippery and ravelly fabric that I didn't want to ruin it and rush.  I had already put one sleeve in wrong and had to rip it out. 
I rested today and my sore throat is gone.  Tomorrow is my first day of volunteer tutoring.  On the 28th I will finish the dress. 

I did finish that "cookbook" for my daughter and son in law.  He seemed excited!  He was going through and saw the German oven pancake recipe in her printing from when she was 8 or 9, and various family members' favorite recipes.  He could see the ones I had used because of the stains on them.  I revised it this last week after thinking over some things. 

Friday, December 23, 2011

Progress on the Sewing:. Princess Dress

This was putsy to figure out.   I have patterns and plans to make two separate dresses and found I had mixed some of the pattern pieces after cutting them out. There are so many different views that it is rather confusing.  I'm not following view B exactly but that one is the closest.   I'm not sure how I'm going to do the skirt. Either use the silver or teal color or some of each.  However D day is tomorrow!  I am getting together with my daughters and son in law and grandkids tomorrow and doing the gift exchange before meeting with the large extended family.   The dress is for my granddaughter Maria who is going to be 6 years old at the end of January.



I got the medallion and the sequin piece from S R Harris Fabric Warehouse in Brooklyn Park.  The overskirt is from there also.  The silver and teal fabrics  are from Joann Fabrics.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Merry Christmas to me! Threads Magazine Archive

I get a fair number of emails from various companies with specials.  I got one from Taunton Press with a holiday offer of DVD's , magazines and various books for 25% off.  I confess I love sewing books and videos so I had to look. I saw that there was a DVD of all 158 issues of Threads magazines, on sale,  free shipping and with a free fitting book by Sandra Betzina.  $99 instead of $149!  I ordered right away.  It came late today so I haven't started looking at the DVD yet,  but I'm excited. I love the idea of being able to look at numerous articles on a single subject.  Often there are different methods for fitting by different authors.

I'm not sure how long this special lasts.

http://www.tauntonstore.com/catalog/product/view/id/2733/s/2011-threads-magazine-archive-03a019/category/9/

Santa's Workshop - Toys for Tots

I noticed that the warehouse for Toys for Tots in my area was in Eagan,  very close to the Feed My Starving Children warehouse and the U Line packaging warehouse where I buy my ebay supplies. I  was curious to see the warehouse.  I wondered how donations were coming in this year.   I had some gifts for school age kids and teens that I had gotten various places.  

So my daughter and I drove out there.  There were lots of cute Marines there, for sure.  I asked to see the warehouse area and saw maybe 30 people evidently sorting toys.  It looked like there were toys that had lots of duplicates.  I offered that we could help,  but he said they had run out of toys to sort.  It seemed that there were also groups of people there to pick up toys for their organizations.

Not long ago the Minneapolis area had "Santa Anonymous"  and there was a column in the Star Tribune that gave a daily update on their dire needs,  how long you had to bring gifts in,  where the drop offs were etc.  Then it was just Toys for Tots which is national.  I kind of miss the updates!  We all know it's a real tough time for families and I just wonder if it is all coming together.

Monday, December 12, 2011

My Favorite Sewing Website: Pattern Review

I stumbled upon this web site about three years ago.  It is quite amazing.  Members post reviews , usually with photos, to patterns they have tried.  There are contests to "repurpose" a garment,  online classes,  chat,  message boards and things for sale.  This last year was their 10th anniversary and the site put together a wonderful book on sewing tips.  I bought 4! 

When I'm buying patterns for $1 or $2 each at Joann's or Hancocks I sometimes ask people,  "psst... do you know about patternreview.com?"  Most do not!

It is an inspiration to see people using up fabric from their stash.  When you enter a contest on using up the stash,  you have to post a photo,  how much yardage you used, the pattern number,  etc. One woman last year made about 50 simple dresses for Haiti.

It's interesting to me to see all the different styles of sewers.  Peter in NYC is a class by himself.  His reviews are very entertaining.  He's a fairly small gay man who just started sewing in 2009.   He won an award for something like "best beginner" in 2009.  I bring up his size for a reason.  He loves vintage patterns for men and women.  And he wears the women's creations as well.  Since he has a 36 chest he can wear average sized women's patterns.  He posts photos of his "identical cousin Cathy" hopping a puddle in her new creation in mid jump. He sews for his mother, partner and his dog that has a polka dot on her forehead.  Maybe others as well now.

It amazes me the time he'll put into making a 40's pattern for boxer shorts. Most recently he used an old wool blanket to make a topper coat.  There he is,  having only started sewing two years prior,  doing pad stitching on a collar.  The construction is amazing.  I wouldn't dream of using anything other than brand new wool to merit me making a jacket or coat.  He figured it all out and it looks amazing.  He has a sewing blog called Male Pattern Boldness.  He's inspiring! 

Sewing Projects and Proscrastination.. What to do?

Alas a slight cold, family get togethers,  Christmas shopping and inertia has  taken precedence over the sewing.  Then there was needing to get a new computer and get it set up.  I'm just disappointed that time is slipping by.  I will not be able to make dolls until after Christmas.  I need to make a few cards and send them out. Twice I have taken my patterns to the sewing group at church, to use the tables there afterwards, to cut them out.  Then I decided to get home.

It is good that I have gotten myself out of the house more.  I live alone and then work out of my home.  In the last two weeks I went out quite a few times, including the training for tutoring in the men's jail.

I have so many unfinished sewing projects.  It's a waste of money! How to keep me in the dining room/ sewing room which is also filled with ebay storage?   I'd hate to think I needed a TV in there to keep me motivated.  Putting the baseboard heaters on does help in winter.  It's easy enough to put music in the little boombox.  I think I also need to bring in a different chair.  The dining room chair and table are just not comfortable to sew at for any length of time.  I have a somewhat broken but adjustable chair in the office I will try out.  I need to be fully awake with a clear head to cut out these princess dresses with their contrasting panels and overlays.

Once I get started on projects that are easy for me,  I can chug along and finish them.  When I'm afraid it won't fit or turn out the way I want it to,  I think I put off finishing it. It's harder to sew for people you don't live with because you can't check the fit.

I wrote out a list and prioritized.  The princess dress for my granddaughter is priority for the Christmas sewing.  I won't need the second dress for her until a month later. 

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Predictions for the Future

Do you wonder how life will be in 50 years?    I've wondered and given thought to this. I think cultural differences will begin to blur because with internet communication we don't accept some kind of ideas spoon fed to us, but experience cultures ourselves.  I think Cuba will be free and people will be visiting and vacationing there again.  I believe Saudi Arabia will no longer be the conservative nation it is,  with no liquor and women not allowed to drive or even go out alone.  I can't imagine China would still have the stronghold on exporting that is does now. 

I believe fewer people will be overweight.  Between foods that are altered and supplements, and societal pressure,  I believe most people will be normal weight.  I think there will be very little surgery where bodies are cut open.  I think there will be many alternatives such as laser.  I think there will be a cure for alzeimers and many diseases.  I also feel that people will no longer be warehoused in nursing homes in their elderly years and kept alive at all costs.  We can't afford that and who would want to live when they are senile and locked in a nursing home?

 I hope our country comes to it's senses and that we support families more,  with tax relief.  We cannot afford to have so many families on public relief with a few working families supporting them! I doubt that we'll let a young woman have one baby after the other and support her family.  There needs to be accountability.  If you can't afford to support and take care of your children,  don't have them!

I hope that our country takes quicker and more decisive action for children who are abused and neglected.  Children are terribly damaged for a lifetime now. We give parents chance after chance and let them be terribly damaged now. That has to stop!

I think there will be cures for AIDS,  and many of the genetic diseases.  I think there will be a cure for people who are paralized.  They will be able to  fix the broken pathways.

I think Palestinians will have their own land.  They have suffered too long.  No one wants to look at this and the link to terrorism. 

I  think many world languages will no longer have people speaking them. 

Friday, December 2, 2011

Putting Recipes Together for Daughter

 While my computers were not working,  I went through my slow cooker cookbooks and file folders to try to find some that my older daughter's family might like. She and her husband work very long hours and often get home at 6 pm with two tired and hungry kids. I have a stack of these cookbooks.  It takes time to go through them.   I found that the Betty Crocker Cookbook of Slow Cooking had very usable recipes.  I don't want "weird" recipes with weird ingredients.  No mackerel please. I want inexpensive ingredients that are easy to find.  I didn't want recipes that are just emptying a whole lot of cans into the crockpot.    How is that different from just heating them up?  Ok maybe the flavors mix more but that surely is a more expensive way of doing it.  I don't want ones where you have to be home to change the heat settings.  It has to be FAST and EASY.  Other cookbooks had hardly a recipe that I would want to try.  I guess those should go to Goodwill.

I printed off copies of recipes I liked and trimmed them and glued them to cardstock.  I even rubber stamped some food still life images onto them.  I slipped them into these clear plastic folders for a 3 ring notebook.  I went through some of the recipes I had saved in file folders. I hope that some of the skillet recipes might work for them.  I made some separate index cards with just a list of ingredients that you can take out of the plastic and put in your purse for shopping.  I numbered them to make it easy to put back in the right place. I also put in other pages and cut out recipes in the clear folders.  So I started out with beautiful looking pages and then pretty soon I was squeezing cut out recipes into the pages!  I put a few "company" type dishes in there but most are for quick family dinners.

My mother said she'd be interested in good slow cooker recipes also  so I will be copying some and putting them together for her.

I checked out the slow cookers at Target today.  I like it that some you can lock down the cover so it doesn't slip or leak when you take a dish with you.  I wasn't sure about the electronics for setting the heat and time.  I worry that if that isn't working you won't be able to use it.  I guess that is what you worried about with sewing machines.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

The Big House

I surely am a nut.  I admit it.  I was cutting out recipes from women's magazines in high school.  My high school didn't offer Home Ec to college prep students.  Even music or art had to be additional electives.  I already worked 20 hours a week in a hospital kitchen and took 6 classes so I couldn't handle more classes.   So what did I do for college?  I started out majoring in Home Economics. I remember being almost in a swoon looking at giant crocheted sculptures and all kinds of craft arts on display in the buildings.  I took interior design, color, clothing design, anatomy, communicable diseases, design in every day objects, and much more.   I had one summer class in sewing once in high school.  Other than that I was somewhat self taught.  I struggled to get a C in Sewing.  These girls had been in 4 H all their lives! It was more of a mostly female environment though,  after a family with 7 sisters and no brothers and an all girls high school.

I actually walked past a bull in his pen on the St. Paul campus.  When I was taking jewelry making,  young men were learning how to judge livestock below us.  It was commonly referred to as the Farm Campus.

When I was about half way through my sophomore year at the St. Paul University of Mn campus,  I moved from my parents' home into an apartment with 4 strangers.  It was a very small 2 bedroom apartment.  As a matter of fact I had to crawl over someone's bed to get into mine.  This was Jan 1968.  I walked a lot.  I walked to the laundromat ,  to work, to campus and then wandered out to explore.  The coffee houses then were very different from now.  They were dark and had old sofas in them.  A chain didn't decorate them.  You could walk in alone and not feel weird.  You could ask someone if they wanted to play checkers or another game,  or just begin a conversation.  You could get dishes with brown rice and veggies.   People came in to sing and play guitar on a sort of stage.

I won't go into all the crazy things that happened to me, but let's say it was life changing.   It wasn't the same old same old.  I could think for myself. I had not learned to be assertive though nor to  read men.  I could question religion, politics or anything else without condemnation.  It was like at 19 I finally was making up for the stages of adolescence where you move towards independence. I experimented,  I went to concerts,  I partied,  I protested the Vietnam War.

After an illness with mono I dropped out of school and just worked for 18 months. As much as I loved most of the classes in Home Ec,  I was worried I wouldn't like teaching it.  When I was ready to return to school I decided to change majors to Social Welfare which was in the Liberal Arts College on the Minneapolis Campus. This is where all the action was.  The counselor told me that the language requirements had changed and I needed to either take up where I left off years before with Latin or French.  I stared at him in horror.  I had 2 years of each. Then he said,  well there is a special deal if you've had Latin.  You can choose to start out in a new language.  I had a Saudi Arab boyfriend 8 years my senior at this point.  I had started learning some Arabic from him and was fascinated.  I said " How about Arabic?"   He gave me a long look and said " I understand it's a very difficult language".   I signed up for Arabic.

I loved the small classes.  Liberal Arts classes had as many as 2000 in a lecture hall.  We'd even have dinner at the prof's house! I continued to learn about the Arab cultures and the Middle East politics and war.
My boyfriend returned to Riyadh in Saudi Arabia after my first year back to school.  He was here on a student visa studying diesel mechanics and we had been together a year.  I had moved home to be able to have enough money for tuition.  I studied for a program test for the Center for Arabic Study Abroad and got in.  The summer of 1971 I spent in Cairo studying Colloquial Egyptian.  It was my first time on a plane! It was a series of amazing adventures.

Later my older daughter moved in with her Dad and a year later I wanted to move very close by so that there was less disruption go her life.  I hated driving from South Minneapolis to Saint Anthony Park in St. Paul all the time and the rush hour traffice.  She never wanted to miss anything,  including being with her new friends. I looked for a house.  I bought the old Home Ec sorority house!  I had such good memories of being on the St. Paul Campus. It was one block from campus.  It had 6 huge bedrooms,  several extra rooms, a huge kitchen, large double oven stainless steel stove, and three bathrooms. I felt I could easily rent out rooms to make a little money.  I had rented out a single room at a time before.  It was much more difficult than I had planned on.  After a year I got licensed for foster care.  I had mostly teen girls,  one at a time since I worked full time as an insurance agent.

 We could walk to the Wildlife Rehabilitation center , Raptor Center and later the Horticulture garden on campus. There were animal barns.  You would see new born calves alone in their little shelters.  There were horses that had been used to develop some kind of antibody medication.  You could go feed them grass or apples we brought.  On the other side of the alley from our house,  there were two Frat houses and two frat/ sorority related apartment buildings of students.  We saw them partying,  dressed up for proms,  chopping wood and loving life.  Most came from small towns and went home on weekends,  sometimes to help farm. Sometimes I traded a parking spot for help shovelling or painting.  Once a frat brother rescued a cat stuck in a bathroom when a shower door fell over wedged against the door.  I would rent out other spots.  I didn't have a garage.  I had a parking lot.

Sometimes I would step back and think of how this big 3 story dark gray house reminded me of the gray 3 story home I grew up in!  However my parents' home had beautiful woodwork and classic details and the sorority house had been changed a lot and added to,  with most of the original woodwork removed.

We moved 4 years ago and my younger daughter still misses it a lot.  She dreams about our old house all the time.  I used to have more like nightmares that I would find out this huge new area of the house,  all falling apart.  It was an enormous amount of expense and upkeep. I loved it though.

Between renters and foster kids I think we had about 50 different people live with us during the 18 years.  Then there were about 150 animals I fostered for the Ramsey County Humane Society.  Most of those were sick cats.  Life was exciting!

The love of social work issues,  and things such as sewing, related art and cooking,  stayed with me.