Thursday, July 29, 2010

Check out my Bobbin Lace!




I've been working diligently for the last few days on this bobbin lace yoke that I started a couple of years ago, and just finished it a few minutes ago, so I wanted to share it with you, along with this picture of what it looked like on the bolster. This is one of those projects that I just picked up every now and then, abandoning it for months at a time, but it's my summer to finish projects, and I'm on a roll. Reading "The Happiness Project" by Gretchen Rubin reinforced my desire to finish my current projects and release my imagination for new ones.

The next step is to buy some fabric to make a blouse for this lace to decorate. I love this color blue. The thread, by the way, is Aunt Lydia's. It was part of my friend Stephen Bowman's stash that he let me have when I was enrolled in his bobbin lace class. I ran out of the dark turquoise at one point and he was nice enough to lend me a ball of each color. Thanks, Stephen!

DH is also working hard to finish something--the last bedroom on the second floor of the sheriff's house, along with a tiny, but complete, bathroom and closet. I'll show you pictures when there's something to see. This is the room that used to be my sewing room, so I'm thinking hard about how to make a sewing space that won't look cluttered.

Summer is winding down for our son, and I still haven't figured out what shots he needs to get before school starts. The school system came up with some new requirements, and since our kids got their shots all over the place, it's hard to sort out what they had and didn't have. We're looking forward to getting our daughter back from Texas next week, along with her sweetheart, for some quality family time as the long days of summer come to an end. I hope you are all making the most of the bounty of this wonderful season.

2 comments:

  1. I love the teal blue colors you chose. You executed it really well. Nice that you have Stephen for a teacher. Not to many people who learn BLace can say they had a teacher. Most now learn from the internet or books. I was lucky to find a teacher near me as well. Thanks for sharing :)

    Mark, aka Tatman

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  2. Tatman, thanks so much for stopping by. You might be interested in visiting Stephen's website: www.bedfordcollegeoflacemaking.com. There's a link at the bottom of this page. Stephen is THE go-to guy for lacemaking instruction in southern Indiana, and you are right, we are lucky to have him.

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