Saturday, 9 March 2013

I have visited you, Blog, over the last 14months, but with little activity or interest due to work constraints. I am back in the hope of new and exciting things. Something has happened to change my world and I am hoping it will begin right here.

Tomorrow, I will join my family at a my uncle's graveside. Sadly,  he finally succumbed to liver cancer. I thank God that his suffering, and the pain endured by his wife and surviving son, are now over. We will miss him terribly but are comforted in the belief of the hereafter. He is reunited now with his parents, and beloved son, taken from us too early at the tender age of 16. God speed uncle Bob. x Here's a little something for you, written by me.



Loss
 
Though angels lie in silent wait
Another soul to the Lord to take,
Mourn their loss and grant them wings
For now they are cradled in the arms of our King.

Free from earthly bonds of pain
We toll the loss like silent rain
Earth angels alight, reach out a hand
To comfort and quell the grief of man.

Know that you are truly blessed
That the Lord will grant you peaceful rest
Sweetest dreams will come your way
We will all be together again…......
some day.


Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Wheel Of Fortune for 2012 and Sewing Projects 2222 and 6799

SO, worked on my new wheel for this year in the last days of 2012 with a friend. We cut pictures of everything we wanted to manifest in the new year from magazines and voila!....within 2 days, two had already manifested!!! BRAVA!

Hubby chatted to a mate who's a Cabinetmaker about what he could do to re-vamp our kitchen doors and Rob immediately offered to let Pete use his workshop to do the job! SO EXCITED!!! I will finally get a quality but inexpensive makeover for our kitchen. It's presently left me with open cupboards but I don't care as I know it's a project started at least. The second 'eureka' moment was scoring a pattern at the fabric shop for a shorts style jumpsuit. I had a picture of Jennifer Hawkins in one on my wheel. Can't wait to whip that one up now!  Looks pretty simple but I have to get another project done first...





 A couple of years ago I bought some stretch cotton for this Vogue dress. Once I read the reviews on Deepika Pattern Review though, I had second thoughts. Comments gave the indication that there was 'bagging' around the waist gathers and one lady had decided to stitch the gathers flat. As I am short waisted AND have a little pot belly, I opted out of making that one. Bugger. I really now want to get stuck into using the fabric that I have already bought and stashed. Now that the fabric shop down the road has closed, its counterpart in Balcatta is far more expensive and I can't seem to jag any fabrics I like for $7-$15 per m any more. Disappointing. I don't want the hassle and expense of silk chiffon OR silk satins but there's little available other than these in prints. Also, the bengay stretch I used to get at Greenwood is not stocked at Balcatta....rats! All in all, my choice of fabrics is now limited. I rarely find any  fabrics I like at Textile Traders so I shall have to check out the much lauded fabric shop in Vic Park....though I'll have to pack a picnic lunch to get there lol.

ANYWAY, back to the pattern..........I've opted to make a few outfits in preparation for my return to work in a few weeks after a near 3yr hiatus. My body is not the same shape as it was and I absolutely refuse to pay $150 for a lined dress I could whip up in a few hours for a quarter of the price. Same with some GORGEOUS chiffon tops I saw in Forever New......again $150 as the neckline is sequinned.  I CAN DO THAT!!! Again, I have STASH of 3 chiffon fabrics!!! So, here's what I'm getting started with... I'm using my stash of mocca stretch cotton on New Look 6799, the fitted dress bottom right. I've bought white topstitching cotton to give the dress a nice trim. Think it'll look FLASH!

After this one, I'm keen to make one of those obscenely expensive chiffon tops using Simplicity 4659. I'll shorten it a couple of inches, again due to me being shortwaisted, otherwise I look cut off at the legs lol. Debating whether to make a cami top to wear underneath or line it ...just hate that look where the chiffon dulls when the lining finishes and you can see the colour of trousers or a skirt at the bottom of the shirt.....but that project and its details will have to wait lol. ONE AT A TIME!

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

Report Time

Well, the end of the school year in Australia brings report time!
Both my boys have achieved some great results this year thanks to some hard work at home, some consistent effort on their part, and some bloody good teachers. There has been some significant achievement in areas where grades have gone from C or D to As, and we are SO proud of both our boys.

Wish the report card for my birthday was as good. Afraid it was one of the worst days of my life, filled with stress and tears brought about by people and factors outside our control. THANKS BE TO GOD, that influence is now behind us and we can move on, but seriously, as friends and family have already acknowledged,  we HAVE  already had more than our fair share of pain and stress in the past. BLAahh. Anyway, we look forward to a quiet Christmas with loved ones, friends AND family, who've yet again proven, that we are loved and valued by them all. So blessed we are to have such an awesome group of people around us. I've always borne witness to the phrase "It could be worse," but in the last week, each day seemed to have found a new low. Still, we have come out the other end of a difficult situation so we move on! AND, yes, there is always someone else out there who has it worse than us, this I know.

SO, we head into Xmas with very few gifts organised for our kids. What do they NEED? Little. What would they like...a few things, but what to choose for them? Ugh. Too hard a question lol. Might make myself a cuppa and go finish Bec's capecho. At least then one more garment can go on the 'Finished' section of the Craft Report Card for 2011 ahahhaa.
K

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Remembering Pop Ben

Well, it may be Thanksgiving in America tomorrow, but it WOULD have been my grandfather's birthday. Benjamin Cecil Barbour Hodder was born Nov 25th 1905 in Perth, WA. He and his sister were the only two to survive of four, born to his parents. Alas, his father William, had previously lost his first wife and their son, and after moving state and re-marrying, he and his wife Zoe, lost their first two children at 7 weeks and 5months of age. Losing his parents early, Ben spent his formative years at an Anglican care facility. He never spoke of his childhood and it wasn't until YEARS after his death that my genealogy research revealed the sad truth of his life before we knew him as 'Pop'.


He's pictured above with my grandmother. Their life was full of turmoil. It wasn't until years after they both passed away that the truth of their relationship came to light. Victims of circumstance and an era in time, I don't ever remember them sharing a happy moment together. I do love this shot though....it's a real 'Bonnie and Clyde' style shot taken mid 1940s. Pop served in the Australian Army at home and nan worked in a munitions factory. Due to deafness in one ear, pop was turned down for active service.



And here's a photo of me as a child in the kitchen of my grandparent's home. Both sets of my grandparents were like surrogate parents to my sister, brother and I. We went to school up the road from dad's parents and would usually eat our meals with them, even coming 'home' for lunch from school. It was literally only 8 houses up the road. Both my parents worked full time, so much of my life was spent around my grandparents. I loved them to bits.

 When I think of Ben, I remember his room in the sleepout, the trips of Mundaring Weir he would take my sister and I on, the jelly tot lollies and his glorious gardens, front and back. With great gardeners in my gene pool on both sides of the family, I don't quite know how I missed the green thumb...guess you can't be good at everything though. He had more sheds out the back than we could poke a stick at lol, and we would always be plaing in one of them. Sadly, he left us aged 82 after suffering terribly with angina for many years, in 1986. Miss him terribly still. Love you always Poppy. mwa xxx

Thursday, 17 November 2011

Diagonal Cables Cardigan

Well, here we go....another horrid pattern lol. Seems like everything I turn my hand to with needles lately ends up vexed. This is a Patons pattern and it's gorgeous, but SO verbose with the instructions.



The cabling section is listed in rows 1-26, then the stocking stitch instructions, then the beginning of the actual pattern to get it started. Unfortunately,  once the cabling pattern is started, the increasing instructions become confusing and you lose track of the increases through the cabling. Also doesn't help that the cabling and increase instructions are on different pages! Suffice to say I've unpicked it 9 times so far! GRRRRRRR. There has GOT to be a better way to write this pattern as it's so verbose. I ended up writing it up as a table for ease of use. I've yet to work out how to save it as a PDF so if you'd like a copy, email me and I can forward the text document to you.

So, this is a Xmas gift.....we'll see how we go as I now have the beige capecho to finish and the sleeves to re-stitch on Em's cream capecho...I know...why do I do it? It wasn't intentional, but with my back and shoulder giving me grief inconsistently for a month, it's been hard to sit and knit. The right front is done, so while the pattern's fresh in my mind, I'll get the left front done, then knock up the back. That'll be pretty easy as it's straight stocking stitch. I'm aiming to have these pieces done within the next week! The sleeves are HEAVY cabling, but I think I might shortcut these and just do the cable section up the middle front of the sleeve. It's a very dark purple so that will feature the pattern, which may get lost in the darker colour anyway...well, I've convinced myself that's for the best hahaha.


Here's the actual cabling section. The increases are made BETWEEN the stocking stitch and cabling sections. I've used Red Heart Super Saver Solids on this which cost me about $20 AUD. It was purchased about 6 months ago from supermart.com.
 Although the patter says to use 4.5mm and 4mm needles, I found the tension too taut so upped them to 5.5mm and 5mm. They're perfect. This is an XL which I'm making for a friend for Xmas. She is not a very large girl, but I've allowed for her 'ample bosom', wide shoulders and she likes to wear skivvies underneath her jackets. The large looked a little on the small side. Let you know how I go for sizing when she puts it on!



Here's the finished front. I have to say that I thought I'd done something wrong with the shoulder being so high as it doesn't look like that in the pattern picture, but I've looked at anothe of these jackets on ravelry.com and found Britt's looks the same SO.....mine is all good too!

May be my tension but I've also found the cabling a little tighter than the stocking stitch. When I wash and block it, I'll straighten it up.


Onward ho!

Friday, 11 November 2011

Remembrance Day


Today is Remembrance Day, when we commemorate the guns falling silent at 11am on the 11th day of the 11th month at the Western front, after four years of fighting. The two minutes silence, now one, was suggested by Australian journalist, Edward Honey, who was working in Fleet St at the time, and was supported in England and Africa as an appropriate and fitting tribute to the fallen soldiers. King George V asked everyone in the British Empire to observe a two minute silence in memory of those who served, in recognition of their fight for freedom and victory.

My beloved great grandmother, Alexandrina, lost her first husband at the Ypres in 1917, and like so many war wives, had to bring up her 8 children alone. She is pictured here 3rd from the left, with one of her daughters, first left.

Alexandrina, or Alice as she was called,  went on to marry a wonderful man, Alfred Ernest Cardinal, and together they had another 3 children, one of whom was my maternal grandmother. As a keen Genealogist, I am often reminded what a remarkable man Alfred must have been, not only to take on 8 children, but to be a father to them, and three more. My grandmother never wanted for food in the great depression as they lived on an orchard in Armadale...she was indeed, quite lucky. Any reserves of food such as fruit, vegetables and eggs they had were bartered for meat, such was the system of trade in those days!

Even in her dotage I remember visiting my great grandmother's home, where we would hunt for eggs in the garden and I once told my nan that Nanna Cardinal would be cross because someone had taken the eggs out of the carton and put them in the garden! lol. We would pick mini potatoes and she'd boil them up on her cast iron wood stove,  eating them with lashings of butter. She was such an extraordinary woman...even had to kill the chooks for one of her sons who just couldn't bring himself to do it lol!!! She also won the best garden in Gosnells 10yrs running. I remember her with great fondness.




So today, not only do I give thanks and prayers to Frederick Metcalf and all those he served with, but the women who kept the country running while the men went off to fight for King and country...the grand adventure, so they thought. May time never weary them and may they always find grace in the Lord's embrace. Karen Cosson  (C)

Sadly, the only picture I had of Frederick has been lost.  Lest we forget.

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Adriana's Scarf

Not overly happy with the end product in cotton...note to self: use acrylic or wool next time. This is the 4th Irish Lace Scarf I've made and they're certainly getting quicker to whip up. This one is for Kyle's teacher, Adriana, for her end of year gift. A quick couple of days work and not even $10. Jolly good I say! OH, and by the way, remember the pattern is free at  ravelry.com