Showing posts with label cleaning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cleaning. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

2018 Finish It Up Challenge



Well, this has helped me the last couple of years, so I'm going to do this again!

Here's my list for 2018:
  • Stitch a design for the candlescreen that I have
  • Finish hand-quilting the Bullseye Quilt
  • Finish the log cabin star wall hanging
  • Start hand-quilting my grand aunt's grandmother's flower garden quilt top
  • Clean up the nook area in my sewing room
  • Finish the mystery quilt top I've started (all clues haven't been posted yet)
  • Clean and re-frame my hummingbirds cross stitch
  • Post all the stuff I have waiting to be listed in my Etsy shop
  • Clean up my scrapbooking area
  • Make a start on archival scanning of all my family photographs
  • Get my printed recipes put into my recipe software (Living Cookbook)

I might "find" a few more items to put on this list but I think I'll leave it here for now.

Happy Stitching!

Stacy

Monday, February 1, 2016

FIU Challenge Update and Scrapbooking


Well, here is my list with the ones I have gotten crossed off.
  1. Bind my 4-patch quilt (poor thing's been waiting for over 2years)
  2. Remove last of carpet in sewing room (it's really in the way and is hampering my crafts)
  3. Finish my "Merry Christmas" framed set
  4. Tidy up all my quilting scraps
  5. Frame my Mother's Tree.
  6. Clean off my scrapbooking desk so I can actually scrapbook!  clean enough to work on 1-15-2016
  7. Finish the Disneyland scrapbook for my sister
  8.  List the rest of the items I have set aside to sell on Etsy.  finished on 1-7-2016
  9. Re-starch/shape the rest of my crocheted snowflakes.
#6 has created its own side effect.  My desk is for traditional scrapbooking.  I enjoy doing it and it is a necessity do to the enormous number of photographs I've inherited (1,001 from one side alone).  However, I do have a bunch of digital photos that I need to take care of.  Now I'm getting into digital scrapbooking!

I started doing digital scrapbooking this past week.  Thankfully, I've always been a bit of a computer nerd so the software, My Memories, was easy enough to learn.  I'm currently working on the 9th page of the album I'm doing for me and my sisters.  There was only one copy of each photo from my youth.  Most of them were Polaroids (the kind where you pulled the paper off after a couple of minutes).   Before my Dad passed, my middle sister helped him take digitals of all our family albums.  She has the originals and she and I both have digitals.  That currently leaves my youngest sister without any photos from her youth.

Here's the cover of the album:


I've already figured out that the digital scrapbook, fully printed and bound, is going to cost me a lot less than the supplies would for a traditional scrapbook!  Making copies is also going to be sooooo easy!  I'd be jumping for joy, but I'd probably fall and hurt myself.  ;-)

I may get #7 off the list by going digital for it...we'll see.

Happy Stitching!

Stacy

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Framing Needlework Tutorial, part two - Washing and Ironing the Piece

Welcome to Part Two!

Washing your Needlework

You only need 2 items:
  • Lukewarm water
  • Dawn or Ivory dish soap; baby shampoo; Orvus
 I run lukewarm to warm water into my laundry tub.  It's got the surface area to allow my pieces to lay in the water without being bunched up or folded.

For this tutorial, the two pieces I finished had red and black in them.  I went with lukewarm water (about 95°F / 35°C) just in case either color decided to run.  In the 35+ years I've been stitching, I've only had black run and only once.  By using the cooler end of the warm range, any color that might bleed would be less likely to set in the fabric.

If your floss does bleed, rinse the piece under cold water as long as it takes to remove the bleed.

I filled the tub with about 2" (5cm) of water, adding Dawn dish soap as it was filling.  I'd guess that I used about 2T (29cc) of Dawn.  The bottle was already low, no, I didn't dump all of that in!



Here it is all bubbly, you can just see one of the Santas peeking through:


There are two reasons I use Dawn:  I always have it available 'cause that's what DH uses to wash the dishes and here's the second reason:


The "no phosphate" is the important part of the equation. Ivory dish soap, baby shampoo, and Orvus are also acceptable.   

Do NOT use a product like Woolite!  Woolite is made for wool.  Most threads that we use in our cross stitch are cotton, silk, rayon.  Even the DMC website says:  "DO NOT use specially formulated wool wash, harsh detergents, or chlorine bleach..."

If you do want to use Orvus, here's a tip to save money:  buy Orvus horse shampoo!  It's the same thing as Orvus Quilt Soap but significantly less expensive.  I have used Orvus in the past but just never get to feed stores any more to buy it.  Oh, it works great on people hair too!

Anyway, once I'd gotten my soapy water in the sink, I laid in both Santas.  I did a little swishing by hand - maybe 30 seconds.  Then I just let them soak for about 20 minutes.

Rinsing

This part is important.  I mean it.  Rinse using cold water.

I pulled the drain to let the water out and picked up one of the pieces.  With cold (hand-numbing) water, I rinsed the first Santa.  I hang it over my hands so it's loosely doubled-over without being creased.  It's just physically easier to handle.

I held it under the cold water face up and moved it back and forth to make sure it was getting completely covered.  I then flipped it over and rinsed it from the back.  Finally, there were no signs of any soap bubbles coming off of it so I flipped it to the front and rinsed some more.  Yes, I flipped it to the back again and rinsed.

I then laid it flat on a towel and rinsed the other Santa just like the first.  Then the second Santa joined the first on the towel.


Now most tutorials will tell you to use a white towel.  That's not a bad suggestion but my towel is yellow.  I have no problem using a lightly colored towel because I've had it for a while and I know it's been washed multiple times and is not going to bleed any yellow onto my cross stitch.

Since these are skinny Santas (is that an oxymoron?), I only used the one towel 'cause they fit easily.

Now you roll your project up inside the towel...loosely!  You don't want to create any creases that you'll just have to iron out.


Nighty-night Santa!

Now, you are going to just hand-squeeze the rolled up towel.  Again, you don't want to be rough - that would lead to (gasp) creases.

Here's my Santa burrito:



Next stop:  the ironing board!

Ironing

I know that my floss is cotton and the fabric was linen (flax).  Cotton and linen can handle 'most anything except a flame-thrower.  Avoid flame-throwers.

You can see that I chose COTT / 6 on my iron.  That's the cotton setting.  Why they didn't use smaller letters to spell out cotton is beyond me.  It's a nice iron though, so I'm not really complaining.



I unrolled the towel and set one Santa aside.  Using the dry end of the towel, I laid one Santa out for his close-up...with the iron.  Santa is face down to start.



I iron from the back until it no longer feels damp.  Especially on something this narrow, it is easy to avoid catching any threads with the iron.  Go sideways with the iron and there is nothing on the iron to catch the threads.


Once it feels dry from the back, I flip it over and iron from the front.  These particular projects didn't have any embellishments so I didn't have to worry about beads or anything.  If it was something with beads, I would still iron from the front but I'd put a piece of muslin over it and iron through that.  I then ironed his buddy.

Now to make sure that they're completely dry before I frame them, I hung them up overnight.



This is a small section of my quilt design wall.  By hanging them here, they stay flat and any remaining moisture will either just evaporate or be soaked up by the flannel behind them (which will evaporate once they're off the wall).

Now they are ready for their frames!

Happy Stitching!

Stacy