Forum Discussion

JenD's avatar
JenD
Member
2 years ago

Slow Down Project

Hiya, I am starting a new creative project, thought it might be good place to show my efforts.

With a lot of wait time coming up with appointments and treatments I was looking at a portable time fill option - so hand embroidery it is! I just wanted a small, achievable, positive to not need to think too much but focus on.

Starting with straight lines (oops maybe will not do it all in 24hrs...remember the slow down being the aim 😉). Then a cross stitch, then a bigger challenge. Three simple kits to start while I learn some needlework.   If I am happy with my efforts, I then have a bigger free hand in mind, using some quilting project fabric I keep not having time for.... but now do for a bit.  Watch this space 🙂🩷.  

26 Replies

  • Ive used some crotchet doileys dying them or tea staining and on frames they make great dream catchers.
  • Great ideas in creative corner. I have all these embroidery projects that I inherited from my grandmother and mother. After mum passed in 2001 i was given her unfinished tapestry. It was great for the soul finishing it (the sky). After 23 years i still haven’t had it framed. 
    The others are doily sets and 2 table cloths an
    d like  iserbrown I still have most my school certificate work. I have great memories of my needlework/sewing classes (4 years worth.). Only part that held my pass marks down was the history in costume could never match the years with the period costumes. 
    My retirement plan is to get at least one of the inherited projects done a year, of course thats in-between my crochet and machine sewing crafting for the various fundraising stalls. 
    Before i broke my wrist i had cut out a stack of bowl cosies, hanging tea towels with matching pot holders. And paper cup folders. 
    I got asked on the weekend to join our local CWA group. I have a feeling Im not going to be lacking things to do when i eventually get to retire. 
  • Onya!  A project is a good distraction from treatment.   I still have my sewing books from school with the stitch samplers, some have good marks as in 9/10 and others are average!  Never appreciated it at the time but now I quite enjoy some embroidery and knowing how to tack something or back stitch, blanket stitch is handy occasionally!
  • The "modern" kits are bright and colourful.  It will humour me for a bit, the distraction is good.   I messaged a friend saying that all the jigsaws and embroidery is exhausting and it is now naptime 🤣  - she replied that I sounds a scene from Bridgeton!  (Yah, I will take that).
  • Well done you, @JenD!!  I don't have the patience for needlework ..... I took a small cross stitch project with me on the plane to the UK in 1977 .... it was in the bin before I left the plane!  LOL. I've never been good at sewing anything!!
  • When I was at art school (Glasgow) a year of embroidery studies was required if you intended to teach (long dropped - both me and my art school!) but you know, you just might have kicked something off - small, easy to stop and start. Now, whatever happened to my stitch book??