Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Setting up
Tuesday, February 7, 2023
Chugging along
I've been doing a lot of organizing and cleaning, and also a little decorating.
The plastic blinds in the kitchen were very bad when we moved in, and I just took them down and bagged them up--I hate mini-blinds too much to spend money on buying new ones.
I finally got around to washing them in the bathtub. Hot water, dish soap, and spray cleaner had little effect on the thick, tenacious goo that was on them except to soften it a little. What did work was to scrub with a drippy mixture of baking soda and water. They came out looking almost new.
To dry the blinds before storing them again, I figured out a way to suspend them from the shower curtain rod by hanging two clothes hangers on it first, and then slipping each end of the top of the blinds into a hanger.
I came out only a little ahead in the end, though, because some little child decided to break one slat, and then another, of the bathroom blinds. I will splint them back together.
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I did a quick decorating project of covering a half-painted canvas--that my husband picked up from some curbside a while back--with fabric, and hanging it on the wall. I used tacks salvaged from one of my de-upholstery projects. I put the nail into the wall a little too low, and then compensated by putting a small wooden spool onto the nail before hanging the panel back up.
I used to cover pieces of plywood with fabric, stapled on, and lean them against the wall to hide electrical outlets from the baby, or put them under crates that would otherwise scratch the floor.
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I looked through the mending bag, and found that I have an even dozen pairs of children's pants waiting to be mended. I'm going to have to switch thread on the sewing machine. The thread in it now is very prone to jumping free of the thread guides and creating slack that then tangles down inside the machine. I was making a quick pillowcase for a seat cushion, and had to pause every few stitches to make sure the thread was behaving itself decently.
The seat cushion was for the deconstructed chair in the library. I also added one piece of the wood to the back, with short drywall screws, and worked out a way to semi-attach the chunks of redwood beam that it is sitting on to each other, so they're not shifting and letting the chair fall over.
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In other tinkering, we replaced the light bulbs in a bedroom with ones of a warm color temperature, and found out why the glass shade was on upside-down--it is too small to accommodate full-size light bulbs. I worked out a way of suspending it a little lower using a bolt, a nut, and a couple of washers, with the bolt running up through the center of the original hanger, and being secured from falling back out with the nut. It was a three-handed job, and I might go back and add a short tube as a spacer to steady the shade.
Thursday, February 2, 2023
Shrunk wool
I have been saving any and all woolen items that shrunk in the wash, for mittens and maybe for a rug. I did need new mittens, my old ones were from a shrunken lambswool sweater and were wearing right out.
The sweater I used this time had been shrunk three times, two when I first got it to de-oversize it, and then the one unintentional time. I did the usual--tracing my hand, adding width for seams and for the thickness of my hand and wrist, sewing a zigzag stitch on the line with extra reinforcement at the thumb joint, and then cutting them out.
I found out that they were a little too thick to sew together on the sewing machine, and had to be sewed by hand. There was about a week where I was wearing mismatched mittens because I hadn't yet sewn the second one.
I also found that it would be better and much easier to leave the seam edges on the outside, and just wear the mittens inside out.
So, as usual, they came out looking odd, but they are very warm.
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I also went through my smaller and less usable odds and ends of wool, and made a quick mat for boots and shoes.
My idea, based on an entry rug in the store that I almost bought some time ago, was to attach wool "rocks" to a backing. For the backing, I used some synthetic felt that I had. It was black, so I was looking for something to go over it.
Having my fabrics sorted by size turned out to be a good idea. I quickly found several in my medium-size drawer that could be used for a sort of shoreline, and quilted them over the backing.
Since it was to be a mat, I allowed some of the cut "raw" edges of the fabrics to show, and only made the mat's edges neat. I also allowed the fabrics to not always lie flat on the backing, to simulate shallow water.
Cutting out the "rocks" from the different wools was fun. Many of them looked a lot like rocks that I've collected.
For attaching them, I used some old craft glue I had. It is water-based, but also fairly water-resistant when dry. If it is not enough, I can sew things together later.
It seemed best to brush a layer of glue over the back of each "rock", and then add a few more dabs of glue to engage with the backing.
It turned out well enough, aside from me not noticing until it was finished that I had forgotten to cut the backing to the width I wanted--!! The glue stiffened the mat a lot, but it bends enough to fit on the shelf I made it for.
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I have a running question in my head about how long I can go before my household starts to be afflicted with wool-eating moths, as seems to have been usual before synthetic fibers.
Tuesday, January 31, 2023
Sunday, January 22, 2023
Thread goes fast
I used up half a dozen spools of thread in making the coat, and almost three more since then in other sewing.
I cut fabric for two corduroy skirts, one of which is ready to assemble, once I finish doing some embroidery along the hem. The handwork is delaying the skirt by only two days, and is visually striking.
I also turned a pile of old clothes into kitchen wipes and baby wipes and a pair of fitted leg warmers for me. The leg warmers would have been easier if I had sewed the seams first, and then cut the fabric, because the edges of the knit fabric curled up a lot. I use a zigzag stitch with knits.
I've been transitioning sock styles recently, from homemade knee-high tights with ankle sock feet, to wool blend hiking socks, because I'm not happy with the ankle socks. The leg warmers are working well in conjunction with the hiking socks, and I will probably make more. They are just tapered tubes with casings for elastic around the top.
I've also been transitioning my sleepwear toward clothes that resemble my daytime clothes, and I altered a few of my older skirts so they have just elastic at the waist, and not ties that are knotted, and they can be used for either purpose.
A few weeks ago we had a big snowfall of fluffy snow, just what I was waiting for for cleaning my old living room rug, since I never quite had the energy in the warm weather to haul it out and scrub it on a tarp.
Supposedly fluffy snow is best for rug cleaning. I've read that if you spread a cold rug over the snow, and sweep snow across it, and perhaps dance on it, that the snow will melt slightly and release just enough water and ammonia into the rug to loosen soil.
In practice, I've found that the rug will not get clean, but it will get a little less dirty. In this case, the rug started out fully dirty, because I didn't clean it at all before I put it in the garage. Lots of sand came off, and the snow underneath it definitely got dirty. I moved the rug to fresh snow to do the other side.
We made two large bowls of clean snow into snow ice cream, by adding sugar, cream, and vanilla, and they didn't last long. I noticed just a slight ammonia taste, so it seems the source of my rug cleaning information was correct.
Monday, January 16, 2023
Tying up loose ends
I finished the coat. The recipient reports that it feels like a life jacket. I tried it on myself, and it's not quite that bad.
After that, I moved on to getting a number of things around the house into better order, and getting some deep cleaning done.
That was interrupted by a domestic crisis, which the landlord promptly dealt with. He mentioned that the first floor layout was different when he bought the house, which explains some of its quirks around the dining area.
Now I'm back to getting things done. Today I mended an old kitchen towel, and then boiled it in water and baking soda to see what would come off it.
The water turned brown, I couldn't see the bottom of the saucepan, and I only boiled it a couple of minutes.
A few years ago I tried something similar with washed bath towels in the bathtub, and the results were the same.
I think I need a laundry stove.
Sunday, January 8, 2023
Continuing with the coat
There was a library book I read once by a popular maker of Western shirts, who said that she always made the shirts quite large, and then altered them in the direction of smaller to fit her client.
It would have helped if I would have remembered that book earlier in this process. I had to add width in several places, which was time-consuming as the material was too thick for my sewing machine, and each insertion required two long seams.
Now I am in the finishing stages of the coat...zipper, collar, cuffs, bottom edge, and pockets. It is amazing how much labor and materials go into such a thing. The outer shell and lining took almost an entire flat bedsheet.
I've been using my homemade leather thimble very heavily, and I thought I should describe it. It's a strip of medium-weight leather almost one inch wide and long enough to wrap in a band--shiny side in--around my thumb with about an inch of overlap. Three stitches of dental floss at the exposed end hold the shape.
The overlapped area is the part I use for pushing a needle. Having the suede side on the outside helps the end of the needle not slip off. Wearing it on my thumb lets me use my other fingers for steadying the needle even more.
The thimble is one of my essential tools. I misplaced it at one point, and then had a miserable time trying to use a steel thimble that was among the sewing supplies I picked up on vacation. Then I took a couple minutes to make a new leather thimble, until I found the original one again. It needs new dental floss, but it is still usable as long as at least one stitch holds.
I've also been using one of the mannequins as a handy coat form. That helped a lot with the layout of the outer and inner layers. I cut the pieces large, laid them on, and then I could see where I needed to cut and sew them.