Frame Purses

In my quest to clear some space in my office, I have set myself a challenge to work my way through my WIPs (work in progress).   I’ve mentioned Anthea Willis’ #WIPslinky party in a previous post which is an additional incentive to get things done (come and join me!).

One of the WIPs for this month was to turn this pile of fabric…

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…into these frame purses.

frame pursesTa-dah!

I have had the frames for months and the fabric (in most cases) for even longer.   You know the ones.   You bought them because you loved them but the right project never comes along.   I bit the bullet, cut the fabric, and they are made.

What WIPs do you have lurking in the back of the cupboard?

Linking to Handmade Harbour’s Handmade Monday.   Pop over and see what fabulous things everyone else has created.

 

Who gets your cards?

As someone who makes cards to sell, I should use this post to try and persuade you to buy everyone you have ever known a card for each wedding, birthday, anniversary, thank you, RSVP, new school, exam good luck, exam congratulations etc. etc. etc.   It would generate a good income for my Guide unit and I could happily craft away all day and all night.

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However, I am having a dilemma.   As I make cards, people expect handmade cards from me.   I can just imagine family members thinking “This is a shop bought card.   Why don’t I deserve one of her handmade cards?   Couldn’t she be bothered to make me one?”   However, I know so many people through school, university, work, family, friends, their kids, their grandchildren…   I was there when they got married.   Each date gets religiously entered on my fruit phone and set up to remind me every year of the date.   Can I really keep coming up with original cards for every occasion (and also remember which ones I sent them last year)?

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Where do I stop?   How many anniversaries do I send cards for?   Do I keep sending cards to a friend I haven’t spoken to in years, who never sends me cards and whose kids I’ve never met?   “Mummy, who is Louise on this card?”

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I’ve made a decision over the last few months to stop sending cards to most friends’ kids once they’ve had a couple of birthdays.   My friends don’t send them to my kids so I’m sure they won’t notice.   Equally, I think I’ll cut back on the anniversary cards.   We just got cards from our parents, one relative and a friend this year.   We’ve been married 8 years now so it’s not a big anniversary.

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I’m sorry dear friends and family.   I do still think of you on your birthdays.  Hopefully you’ll all get a handmade Christmas card this year (or at least one of those school fundraising cards drawn by the Craftyguidelets and printed), but perhaps I won’t be sending a card for your second cousin twice removed’s decree nisi.

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Having said all of that, please do support crafters who hand make cards.   They can usually create personalised cards to a specified theme in a few days for around the same cost as the celestial hog lot, and to a higher standard.   And you know that there will not be another card like it on their mantelpiece for their special day.

And obviously I would like to put in a special word for my Craftyguider online shop.   100% of the profit goes to my local Guide unit to contribute to running costs, and the postage cost is a flat fee so no matter what you order, you only pay £1.50.

How many cards do you send out each year?

Craftyguidelet Dresses #WIPslinky

Last month I joined the Tales from Mount Pleasant #WIPslinky party.   The idea is to confess to your work in progress projects and then actually get round to making them.   The link opens near the end of the month, and you have a month to finally get round to finishing those projects that you have been getting round to ‘one day’.

buttonholeI shared just part of my WIP collection and chose to finish my daughters’ summer dresses.   After a packed summer, they are finally finished.

dress 1 and 2It is probably the last warm day of the year but they have worn them.   I also made them in the next size up so they get to wear them next year.

dress 2My 4 year old loves pink, so I chose these gorgeous fabrics from Sew La La with rose shaped buttons.

dress 1My 6 year old really suits this red colour.   It looks like Kath at Sew La La has just got some more of this Gypsy Rose Red fabric so I might stop by for some more.

Being more aware of my WIPs has led me to finish more this month.

I’ve wanted to make a case for my tablet for some time, and I used some of these gorgeous fabrics to make a patchwork padded case.

tablet caseI’d promised my friend that I’d make her a draught excluder.   I managed to finish it in time for a visit and even managed to blog about it.

doorstop3I have also cut out fabric for a collection of frame purses that have been sitting in my cupboard for months.   They will either be given as presents or put on sale in my shop.

pursesAnd for next month’s entry?   I’ll be revisiting my quest to make all the bags in Lisa Lam’s Bag for all Reasons book and aiming to complete the ‘too cool for school satchel’.

satchelI’m using a gorgeous Cath Kidston upholstery fabric and all the bits are cut out and stashed in a bag ready.

Along the way I really should finish making the new uniform for our Rainbow Guide mascot, Olivia, a banner for the Rainbows to use at Remembrance Sunday parade, and also transforming that pile of fabric pieces above into frame purses.

Come on everyone.   Join the WIP busting crusade and post your WIPs on the linky tool and let’s cut fabric, use papers, grab that pattern or kit you’ve saved for a rainy day and do what we all love to do – CRAFT!

Ay up me draught excluder

I have a very good friend from Nottingham.   We met when we worked together in London, and a mutual friend introduced her to her (southerner) husband.   They had a son together and settled in Hertfordshire.   One Christmas I saw a remote controlled duck that you use in the bath.   As we frequently ribbed each other about the differences in my Highgate accent versus her East Midlands one, I thought a bath duck (barth duck vs bath dook) would be a little joke, as well as being a great present for a little boy.   He loved it, the joke was appreciated and it began a long saga of duck related presents.

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Mother and son moved back up north and the little boy became a fluent East Midlands speaker.   Ay up me duck and all that.   We have carried on exchanging presents for years now, and each birthday and Christmas we increase the duck related merchandise.   Duck tape anyone?   Yes, I have done that!

She moved house last year and her new front door is very draughty.   I said I’d make her a draught excluder, but events overtook me and she had a draughty winter.

She is coming to stay with me at the weekend, so I made up my mind to get it made.   I can’t believe I didn’t do it sooner.   It was so quick to make.   In fact the thing that took the longest amount of time was chasing rogue polystyrene balls around the carpet.

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I bought the fabric at the Knitting and Stitching show at Ally Pally specifically because it had ducks (dooks) on it.   I still have more so she may get something else made from it at Christmas.

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As well as the polystyrene balls, I added some lavender.   The front door is where the footie trainers are kept, so a bit of lavender may help matters.

I still have some polystyrene balls left so I may make some more for my Christmas craft fairs.

Linking up with the Handmade Harbour Handmade Monday blog.

Handmade Harbour

 

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Because you said yes…

Because you said yes…

A young girl will feel the pride of being someone special as she carefully puts on her uniform for the very first time.

A girl can move to a new town and have “instant friendships” with girls she might never have met.

Parents will experience that special pride when they listen to their daughter say the Guide Promise for the first time.

Bright eyes will become a little brighter with excitement as the kindling finally catches on the first camp fire.

Nervous giggles will emit from tents as girls try to fall asleep their first night of camp.

The community, and yes, the world will be richer because a girl has learned the importance of caring for her environment and the warm feeling that comes from giving service to someone less fortunate than herself.

A parent will find a Promise Badge carefully tucked away in a drawer as their daughter packs to leave home for her first adventures as a young adult.

A young woman will contact the Guides one day and say, “I had so much fun when I was a Guide, I’d like to try being a Leader.”

…and the circle will continue – because you said yes!

source and author unknown

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When I was about 8 or 9, I moved from Highgate to Enfield, changed school and just started to make friends.   I used to play outside with my siblings, and my sister and I were spotted by one of the neighbours.  Mrs Cockaday lived a few doors down and was just about to open a new Brownie and Guide unit.   My mum was happy for us to make new friends and try something new so we were amongst the first batch of girls to join.   Because of my age, I was only a Brownie for about a year and gained my Agility and Road badges.   I then flew up to Guides and my Guidey swottiness began.

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I loved being a Guide.   I went to all the camps, got all the collective badge emblems, over 50 interest badges, my service flash, patrol pennants, patrol purpose patches, Queens Guide award, Baden Powell Trefoil award – and then I was old enough to be a Ranger Guide.   Captain retired and I moved on.

I joined Rangers with a friend.   We went to a Youth Hostel, painted the hut, did our swimming trial for kayaking, and I made plans to do the new Queens Guide award.   But then it all went wrong.   The Venture Scouts were going to close, probably due to lack of leaders or members, so the Rangers were going to convert to Venture Scouts to combine the two units.   This would have been OK if the boys in the Venture Unit hadn’t have been my little brother’s mates.   No way was I giving up my evening to spend time with boys, especially them.   Unfortunately I hadn’t been told about becoming a Young Leader so I left Guiding.

A few years later, after I’d been to University (oblivious to SSAGO too as I commuted in 2 hours each way every day so couldn’t be in any of the clubs), I spotted an article in the local paper.   “Guide unit to close unless they find a new leader” sort of thing.   Much to the surprise of the District Commissioner, I answered the ad saying I’d help.   I ended up becoming leader, much to my surprise as I imagined Guide leaders all being older women.

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I’ve done most of the volunteer jobs in Guiding – leader of Rainbows, Brownies, Guides, Rangers, Young Leaders, District and Division Commissioner, I hold my camp, holiday, first aid and music licences, I can still tie my knots and I can light a fire using just one Cub Scout and some kindling.   Almost 19 years later and I am still here.   I tell people I had two daughters so they can take over my unit when I’m too doddery to carry on.   My blood is Guiding blue.

But the most important thing is that I’ve been part of the lives of hundreds of girls and young women because Mrs Cockaday, my Guide Captain, said yes.

If you want to say yes, just click here to find out more.   You don’t have to have been a Guidey swot, women who were “kicked out of the Brownies” as a child can still apply, men can help out in various ways.   Even if you have never been in Guiding at all, you can be trained up.   It looks great on a CV and a UCAS form, and as I sit here blurry eyed thinking of all those circles I’ve been part of, there are girls all over the UK who won’t get the chance to join in due to lack of leaders.

Unless you say yes.