I put together some exciting little packages for blogistas, to mail out on Monday. No pictures. Classified.
Then, since I'm going to the post office anyway with them, I finished off the second glove for the Sock and Glove Ministry, to send at the same time.
Two pairs of gloves, one of socks. I think my next socks will be spiral ones for a change.
Then Gary came over with a request, which we'd talked about a few days ago.
This is a Japanese silk window sail I made for him, he tells me ten years ago, which hangs in his loft skylight window and moves gently when there's a breeze. It's held in place by tension rods. He'd seen this one I made for my own similar window,
and admired it until I took the hint and made one for him.
His is wearing out a bit at the rod, so I'm going to do a repair on it. It's a lovely piece of fabric. My own is just an upcycled pillow case.
So that will happen. And, speaking of critter deterrents, I'm trying yet another approach to fighting the ants on the kitchen counters. None at the baseboards, so they must be in the wall. Everyone has them. These are so small they can get into screw cap jars, just climbing in the threads.
The latest WMD is equal parts borax, baking soda and confectioners sugar, in a shallow container, some artfully spilled, to attract them. I notice a lot fewer ants on the counter this morning, so I'm hopeful. I'm certainly tired of sharing my own food with them.
On a cheerier subject, in response to various messages I've had about the construction of the slot and tab fabric book, I deconstructed mine to show you
Here's the constructed book with the pages temporarily numbered with masking tape and marker, showing you the usual page sequence.
Then I took the book apart, and now you see how the numbers work before you construct it.
One side
Done this way you can slide the pages together into the right sequence. It's a kind of Chinese puzzle of a project. This is why I referred you to Ann Wood's website, where she gives you number diagrams and a step by step of the construction sequence.
You need them if there's a sequence to your stitched pages, such as seasons, or some such progression. Mine didn't have that kind of logical progression, aside from deciding which pages I wanted for front and back covers.
And yes, I did get it reassembled after the pictures! Some people try this out with blank fabric pages before getting into all the stitching it entails.
My current stitched book might become a tab and slot, or maybe an accordion. We'll see.
When Elizabeth of York gets a bit heavy -- oh, Weir doesn't accept the Josephine Tey version of Richard III's innocence of the Princes in the Tower disappearance. As laid out in Daughter of Time, which is worth reading if you haven't yet.
Tey discounts Thomas More as using third hand gossip to accuse Richard. Weir clearly accepts More, and has staked her credibility on Richard's guilt. A lot of writers and academics have. They have a lot to lose by backing down. And Weir gets very defensive on the subject, aha!
Where was I? Oh yes, when it gets heavy going, I've started on this, another Dinner Ladies adventure.
Happy day, everyone, no need to do all the things. Some is fine. None is okay too.
