Elliott, my husband for nearly four decades, died at the end of October 2017.
He was a good man in every sense of the word. He was patient, caring,
fun-loving, generous, and always smiling. He never stopped looking at
the world with wonder. He loved making music, getting his hands
dirty, and being a pilot. He told me time and time again it was
important to be loved, but it was more important to love someone. Toward the end of his life, he said he regretted leaving me
without someone to love. As I told him, he didn't need to worry
because I will always love him and if he sends me someone new to love, I will know it and I will love the person he sends just as fiercely as I love him. Blue skies forever and ever.
Sunday, November 5, 2017
Sunday, June 4, 2017
Sewing Softies
Lately, I’ve been sewing soft toys for the pediatric ward of a hospital and for two groups which assist foster children. These were a lot of fun
to make and a good way to use some of my accumulated fabric. (Not to worry. I have plenty of fabric left.)
The chickens were made from either flannel or bubble fleece.
I used cotton for the mice. The photos show them before and after they were stuffed.
My 90-year old mom, who taught me to sew, stuffed these and sewed them closed.
The fish were cotton on one side and
light blue bubble fleece on the reverse.
There were cotton and fleece snakes,
flannel dogs and cats, and more flannel chickens.
If you would like to sew softies for a
charity, you can find patterns here:
Chickens - RedTedArt.com
Mice - SewCanDo.com
Fish - Lauri-NanaNews.blogspot.com
Elephants -
MadeByEnginerds.blogspot.com
Snakes - MakeIt-LoveIt.com
Dogs - JenniCanKnit.blogspot.com (No
pattern. She made a stuffed ornament)
Cats - TheCraftedSparrow.com (I omitted
the tail)
Sunday, April 9, 2017
Singer Built-In Retractable Foot Controller
The controller was installed under the bottom drawer and this is what it looked like when it was in place:
There's a notch carved into the side wall of the cabinet and there's an arm which sticks out of the notch. Keep in mind, you're looking at this with the cabinet turned upside down. The arm is where your right foot would be if you were seated at the machine.
Here's a closer view which shows you the part number on the controller:
Viewed from the top (after I removed it from the cabinet), you can see how this worked. There's a little rounded nub on the end of the arm (it's at the lower edge of the next two photos) and that's what you would have pressed to engage the controller. Pressing down on the arm also allowed you to slide the entire arm into and out of the cabinet so it would retract when you wanted it out of the way. The top photo shows the arm extended and the second one shows it retracted.
I kept the controller because one of these days, repairing it might float to the top of my "to do" list. If anyone knows where the wiring should run in the cabinet, please let me know. It was wadded up next to the controller when I bought the machine so I'm not sure what route it ought to take to get from the controller to the machine head.
Happy Sewing Everyone!
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
700 Dogs and Counting
Most of E’s flying in the past few years has been for an organization we’ve blogged about before – Pilots ‘n Paws. On January 29, 2017, he flew his 700th dog. He flew to North Carolina, picked up a mom and her four puppies, and flew them to Maryland, where he met Natalie and Steve, who flew them to their rescue group in New Jersey. These dogs were rescued and fostered by our friend Pam, who has saved many hundreds of dogs.
Natalie, Steve and E
For the flight, E wore a new zippered
fleece pullover I made for him. The dog bones on the
front yoke made it appropriate for this flight, I think.
Happy Flying and Happy Sewing Everyone!
Sunday, January 22, 2017
E's New Pants
A couple of years ago, E emerged from
surgery with a medical device which sits almost exactly at his
natural waist, sticks out about an inch, and needs to be protected
from scrapes and bumps. If it were located a little bit lower or a
little bit higher, he could wear all of the pants he wore before the
surgery. But, it isn’t and he can’t, so we began looking for
pants with a rise high enough to cover the device. (The rise is the
distance from the middle of the crotch to the top of the waist band.)
Unfortunately, the commercially available pants we found weren’t
nearly high rise enough. Nothing to do but make a pair, right?
A few years ago, a blog I like
(MalePatternBoldness) had a jeans sew-along using Kwik Sew pattern
3504 and I remembered it seemed fairly easy to follow. The pattern
contains several sizes and I copied the one closest to E’s size
onto pieces of tracing paper and used the tracing paper pattern to
make a pair of trial pants from an old flat sheet. The photo above
shows this pair as a work in progress.
The trial pair needed a lot of
adjustments, mostly because I was adding so many inches to the rise.
When you lengthen the rise as much as I did, the waist no longer sits
anywhere near where the pattern intends it to sit and this affects
the size of the waist, the size and placement of the front and rear
pockets, the taper from the hips to the waist, etc. I incorporated
the adjustments into the tracing paper pattern and made a second
trial pair of pants. The second pair needed some adjustments, too, so
I made more revisions to the tracing paper pattern. The next pair of
trial pants fit reasonably well and I used the revised, re-drawn,
amended, adjusted, much abused tracing paper pattern to make a pair
of pants from a medium-weight cotton twill. (I also re-drew the
adjusted pattern onto a clean sheet of tracing paper, to make my life
a little easier the next time I use the pattern.)
Here’s a view of the front at the
waist.
The pockets are a snazzy snake skin
patterned fabric.
The yoke in the back came in handy because it
allowed me to fine tune
the fit in the back around the waist and
hips.
And here’s how they look with E
inside. (They really don’t pull at the crotch. Honest! I didn’t
notice they looked like this when I took the photo and I don’t want to wait for E to get home so I can take another photo. Trust me:
They look fine.)
By and large, I’m happy with these
and so is E. I would recommend KS 3504 regardless of how much sewing
experience you have. The pattern instructions were easy to follow and
the jeans sew-along on the MalePatternBoldness blog has lots of good
photos which show how to use this pattern, too.
Happy sewing everyone!
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