Saturday, March 7, 2015

Well.....................DARN It!

"Don't audit life....Show up and make the most of it now" Life Lessons According to Regina
 
 
 
Well, Darn It!
 

I chose to wear this pair of socks on one cold  day, 

But, holy moly, there was a small hole!  Well, darn it!   Yes, I think I will fix it by darning that hole!

I have this 'egg' darner that a good friend gave me years ago--it's the perfect tool for this job.

On close examination, I see how the knit stitches have fizzed away--why?  I don't have the foggiest idea--hopefully, not a moth in my sock drawer

Since I don't have this yarn anymore, I find a thread that is closest in color and begin to DARN. 

I try to do a knit stitch as close as possible.  It's not the greatest, but it will hold and I can wear my socks again!

Friday, March 6, 2015

Marching on..........................................

"Don't take yourself so seriously. No one else does"  Life Lessons According to Regina


So, I'm working away on my February lace section and have about half of the pattern completed--when I discover--I began the right side of the next pattern on the WRONG side of January's lace section!!  Horrors!  Stupid mistake for sure--I did the frog thing "rip-it, rip-it, rip-it" back to the beginning!  and let's begin again......................
and now we have this



We March onto the third lace pattern: With beads or without beads! 

GERMAINE STITCH PATTERN
#3. Germaine Stitch Pattern (multiple of 11 + 7)

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Listen Up--Great Books For Your Ears!

"However good or bad a situation is, it will change"  Life Lessons According to Regina

Oh yes!  My favorite spot to get books with great information!
Craft-Lit! is the Best!  At the present time we are learning about "Herland" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (free!)  On the prime side ($5 monthly fee) we are listening to "Portrait of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde.  Below are just a few of the books we have completed!
Come join in on the listening pleasure!

Book List


Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Museum Day With Peter Paul Rubens

"However good or bad a situation is, it will change" Life Lessons According to Regina


As a weaver, spinner and natural dyer, it was with pleasure I viewed this fabulous exhibit presented by Houston Museum of Fine Arts 

In the early 1620s, Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens completed one of his greatest achievements: designing the Triumph of the Eucharist tapestries. The most elaborate and expensive tapestries made in Europe in the 17th century, the 20 monumental works in this series celebrated the principles of the Roman Catholic Church.
Rubens (1577–1640) was commissioned to create the tapestries by the Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia, governor-general of the Netherlands, as a gift to her favorite convent, the Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales (Convent of the Barefoot Royals) in Madrid. Raised at the Spanish court, the infanta was the daughter of Habsburg monarchs Philip II and Isabel of Valois. Spectacular Rubens reunites Rubens’s exuberant oil sketches painted for this commission with the original tapestries, the largest number of works for the Eucharist series assembled in more than half a century. The exhibition offers an unrivaled opportunity for visitors to experience the Baroque master’s extraordinary impact, on both an intimate and a broad scale.
Spectacular Rubens features six painted modelli, or large-scale oil-on-panel studies, from the collection of the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid. Also on view are four of the original silk and wool tapestries, among the most renowned treasures of the Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales; several paintings by Rubens related to the Eucharist series; and a series of preparatory sketches for three of the four tapestries. The modelli have recently undergone conservation, rendering the pictorial surfaces once again lively and forceful, offering a record of Rubens’s impressive and beautiful brushwork.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Let's Rodeo!

"Time heals almost everything....Give it time"  Life Lessons According to Regina




Rodeo Houston Livestock Show And Rodeo is HERE!!  We are ready with our scootin' boots, tight cowboy jeans, gaudy jewelry, big hair up-dos, flashy shirts, Stetson Hats--Yes, bring it on!  Tonight we are celebrating the start of 21 days of sheer fun and adventure--We are venturing though the music of Eric Church, whom we first saw on the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville many years ago!

Yee-haw Y'all!  


Monday, March 2, 2015

Texas Independence Day


"What other people think of you is none of your business"  Life Lessons According to Regina




Texas Independence Day commemorates the adoption of the Texas Declaration of Independence on March 2, 1836. This event marked Texas’ independence from Mexico. Sixty delegates from all over Texas signed the declaration. Its language in many ways parallels the 1776 Declaration of Independence of the United States, which is observed on Independence Day, also known as “the fourth of July”.
The Republic of Texas was annexed to the US by joint resolution of the US Congress nine years after the Texas Declaration of Independence was signed. The US Congress then admitted Texas as a constituent state of the Union on December 29, 1845. Texas Independence Day is an official holiday in Texas. Sam Houston Day is also observed on March 2, marking the birthday of the man who led the Texans to victory over Mexican troops at the battle of San Jacinto

Symbols

Texas’ Lone Star flag became the state’s official flag on January 24, 1839. It consists of a rectangle with a width to length ratio of two to three featuring:
  • A blue vertical stripe one-third the entire length of the flag wide, and two equal horizontal stripes, the upper stripe white, the lower red, each two-thirds the entire length of the flag long.
  • A white, regular five-pointed star in the center of the blue stripe, oriented so that one point faces upward, and of such a size that the diameter of a circle passing through the five points of the star is equal to three-fourths the width of the blue stripe.
Texas has various symbols such as the Bluebonnet (state flower), the Northern Mockingbird (state bird), and the horned lizard (state reptile).
State historic sites include the Casa Navarro in San Antonio, Texas. It was the home of Tejano patriot Jose Antonio Navarro, who was influential in the fight for Texas’ independence. Another important site is the San Jacinto Monument in La Porte, Texas, which is built on the actual battleground where Texas won its independence from Mexico.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Quilting--For My Quilters--

"Forgive everyone everything"  Life Lessons According to Regina



Okay--Listen up all my quilters!  Here is a sample of what can be done.............................
I loved this quilt!  It was a use of negative space.........look closely...........

What do you think?!  Awesome, huh?


Okay, how about this on my next negative space top, Sandy?

And this striking quilt..... up close and personal.

I do believe that is hand stitching!


another negative space technique

 looks as though they meandered around the top............I could do that--NOT!

Repeat of one from yesterday's blog--love the colors but look at the quilting

Hand or machine?

This pastel quilt won an award for its design factor

I give it award for it's straight line quilting

Oh, okay, another one for the books--

Are you taking notes Jessica and Sandy?

Minimalist design for sure, but very effective in statement

and the quilting..............ahhhh!

Have to show this one again--applique and quilting style


Oh Boy!

And now, for something totally different--ekes!

Soft straight lines work with these horizontal and vertical lines.  These are just a few of the quilts that showed off their quilting--now to convince my quilters to try a few. 

Road trip continues

 Crossing over into Tennessee, we are now on interstate highways: lots of 18 wheelers, less green nice scenery, some dogwood trees and redbu...