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Date Joined: June 10, 2009
Last Online: November 12, 2009 Birthday: January 22, 1982 Country: United States My Website My Flickr Photos |
I've been sewing since I was 7. When I was 23, my mother gave me the sewing machine her mother had given her 30 years before, an after three decades of sitting in the closet, it still worked like a charm. I promptly set out to see what I could do with it, and the result was Belladonna Dolls, the dollmaking enterprise I ran for a year until I got a slightly more dependable job. I left dolls behind for quilting over the last year, but now I'm back for both of them.
The very first thing I ever tried to make, at age 7, was a doll. The second thing I tried to make was an embroidered sampler.
And then I tried making a little quilt for a neighbor's baby.
I've got rather better at all these things over the years.
I'm also trying my hand at container gardening for the first time, and drying the herbs I grow for potpourris and teas.
Tori Amos, Regina Spektor, Vienna Teng, Orenda Fink, John Tavener--think girls with pianos and sweeping voices and eccentric lyrics, and classical composers with an eerie modern twist.
I was an English major so this is an impossible question, but off the top of my head:
Gaudy Night, Dorothy L. Sayers The Language of Bees, Laurie R. King Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte Emma, Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen Atonement, Ian McEwan A Hat Full of Sky, Thud, Terry Pratchett Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, JK Rowling Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell, Susanna Clarke Shakespeare
The Seventh Seal, Lady Jane, Elizabeth & Elizabeth: The Golden Age, Austen and Shakespeare adaptations and mystery and detective shows, like Jeremy Brett's Sherlock Holmes and Edward Petherbridge's Lord Peter Wimsey series.
I always go a little bit up and over the call of duty in swaps. If the swap calls for 5 kinds of yarn, I'll throw in 7, etc.
I love, love, love fat quarters, especially of bright or unusual patterns--the one thing I find distressing about traditional quilting tends to be the dull and unimaginative color combinations.
I almost never use patterns for anything I make, but the one exception is doll heads---I find it impossible to craft spherical objects from cloth without a little guidance, and I'm always looking for new doll-head patterns.
Comments
To the Nuts for Sewing Group
I will be tickled pink to be rating you for the first time after receving your swap to me. Talented you are. If you like to write please join in some of the journal swaps and writing swaps.