Tuesday 20 December 2016

Tuesday Talent - More Mice with Witty Dawn

 Witty Dawn is Dawn Witts and you can find her on Folksy.  Dawn is about everything vintage but particularly fabric.  She has been featured in House Beautiful magazine as her home is also all about vintage.

Her eclectic taste runs to fabric from the fifties to the seventies and she both sells her fabric but better yet she makes the most adorable home gifts from cushions to children's dresses.  I, however, like the mice.  Dawn's retro mice are the cutest with the best range of fabrics and fabric colours.  They are not expensive and are very well made, with a good finish.  Have a peep at her shop on Folksy and enjoy the very best vintage fabric around.

Well I would like to take this opportunity to wish everyone the very best of the season.  Have a Happy Christmas and a Joyful New Year.  Thank you for all your lovely comments and queries, will see you in 2017.



Friday 16 December 2016

Cora, A Crow Lady in Liberty Lawn

This is Becca's Christmas present, well one of Becca's Christmas presents.  She initially wanted a seagull but is studying crows for her MA and she decided on a crow. Cora is a much smaller pattern than my usual crows, only nine inches. She has a variety of stitches to her embroidered head to give a moving run of textures which is worked on an Oakshott plain cotton in a slate grey.

Her dress is a Liberty Lawn called Wildflower which is based on a series of bookplates from a Victorian book of wild flowers. This colourway is a deep blue and I think it sits well against the black of the crow.  Her underskirt is an antique silk from France which I have had for a absolute age and finished with a pretty modern lace.

Her sachet had to have ribbonwork on it as eveything else was so Victorian and I like the way it looks. Becca chose everything, they are not colours I would have chosen but I really like her choice. So happy Christmas Becca and thank you for letting me share.





Tuesday 13 December 2016

Tuesday Talent - Beverly Peach of PeachPlot

 I first discovered Beverly at The Little Northern Craft Fair in Manchester and fell in love with her mouse collection.  Each little darling is hand stitched using antique and  vintage lace, ribbons, trims and buttons. Each mouse has a hand written name label so you can identify each individual.  They come in their own little box with a hand stitched linen cushion for your mouse to sit on all filled with lovely aromatic scented herbs.

They are completely unique, no two the same and are delicately made.  Beverly and her daugher, a talented paper artist, trade as PeachPlot and you can find them at venues all over Lancashire, Cumbria and their native Yorkshire.  There is a website at www.peachplot.com with links to their blog, shop and instagram feed.

The make the most wonderful gift and my Mum, Aunty and various friends have all been delighted with their own mouse.  I have Fiona, Frida and Robyn, Rebecca has Robin a little boy mouse in a handsome waistcoat.  If you are at all tempted contact them via their website, they are never at home always at craft shows but they do get back to you very quickly. Their wedding mice a so sweet and make a lovely couple.
  


Wednesday 7 December 2016

Marigold - A Goldcrest Lady in Liberty Lawn

 This is Marigold, a Goldcrest Lady, her name comes from the local nickname for Goldcrests which is Marigold Finch.  She is, of course, not a finch at all and is the UK's smallest bird.  With this in mind I reduced her pattern by ten per cent so she stands a little over eight inches, an inch and a half smaller than her sister bird dolls.

She is dressed in a lovely Liberty Lawn called Garden Trail from the 2016 collection The Garden of Dreams inspired by the beloved poems of Robert Louis Stevenson, ‘A Child’s Garden of Verses’.

‘the garden path trails and loops with excitement at every turn’

She is made from a delicate green Oakshott plain cotton with fly stitch, cross stitch and chain stitch to detail her plumage and she has a delicate yellow crown in chain stitch edged with black just like the female Goldcrest.  So small is she that even her little embroidered lavender sachet is less than an inch square.  It was harder to work so small but she has a satisfying delicacy to her that I really like.

She will be the last garden bird I make this year, I think, as I am now full steam ahead on Christmas presents including a Herring Gull in a sailor suit for my daughter. He will have yellow leather legs!






Tuesday 6 December 2016

Tuesday Talent - The Way to Blue

 Really like this lady's work, not doll related in any way but so interesting.  I found her work a while ago and wanted to share.

These are cyanotypes, "the old photographic process of cyanotype invented by Sir John Herschel in 1841. A light sensitive solution is applied to paper, objects or negatives layered on then exposed to sunlight, the solution is then rinsed off in water and the paper dried, fixing the image in glorious blue tones.".  Words taken directly from Sarah Middleton's shop. Her work is quite stunning and varied in detail but all in this wonderful blue.

Sarah, from Conwy in North Wales makes cards, framed prints as well as candle holders and these really interesting industrial framed prints that are only 10cm square.  I find the whole process
intriguing and would love to watch it being worked.  Have a peep at the shop, The Way to Blue for a very original craft brought right up to date.