I've had a brilliant day today in the company of the Pembrokeshire branch of the Embroiderers Guild. I've been lucky enough to run workshops for them in the past and they asked me to deliver another one on making books. Due to the level of interest the group grew to 15 which I knew was pushing it a bit but I am, as ever, always happy to foster anyone's interest in making their own books, so we went for it. Sadly one of the group was poorly but the others rose to the challenge and produced some beautiful books. They each produced at least one book, some also producing other structures that I demonstrated with them. Some of my photos were not as clear as I'd have liked but this is a small sample of what they created.
Saturday, 26 March 2011
Friday, 25 March 2011
Cemetery link to follow
* For some reason I cannot link to the right post, so go to the archive for 2nd February headed Maidens Garlands.
Thursday, 24 March 2011
Here come the girls
Life is busy at the moment but the beautiful warm Spring weather is a real distraction from the jobs on my 'must do' list. It was also my wedding anniversary this week and I remember it being this hot and sunny on the day I got married, 21 years ago. My young man took me out to celebrate in a new restaurant but I was more taken with the tantalising view of memorial stones I could see in a small cemetery across the road. Over a tall hedge I could just see a huge stone topped by an angel and this is unusual in Pembrokeshire. I'm not sure if it's because of the preponderance of chapels or what but headstones, although often wonderful, are not commonly adorned by angelic hosts. So, I played truant from my jobs yesterday afternoon and drove back to the cemetery to have a closer look. I am completely fascinated by cemeteries and memorials but not in a morbid way. I am entranced by the names I find and imagine the lives people led. I took lots of photos and then realised they were all of women's headstones. I told a friend I had spent the afternoon in the cemetery and she gave me that 'you need to get a life' look, but being surrounded by all these other women's lives is wonderful and I would love to know more about them.
Monday, 14 March 2011
Where are you Mother?

In the convoluted way my brain works I was looking for moths - hidden moths - and my eye caught the phrase, 'Hidden Mother tin types' What on earth was that? Of course I had to have a look and was amazed at what I found. Apparently, in the early days of photography it was so hard to get babies and children to sit still they were placed in their mother's arms with the intention that she would later be cropped out of the photograph. So that she didn't distract from the shot, she was often covered up. Now some photographers were very skilled at the deception but others seem to have just chucked a dust sheet over the poor dear and made her stand out even more. These 'hidden mother' photos are highly collectable and sell for good money.
Saturday, 12 March 2011
More words and pictures....
Thank you all for your comments about my sketchbook pages. I'm glad to read that a couple of you may take Sue's lead and post some of your own. I've just been reading Sara's post at Double Elephant about hers and they are wonderful. Rush here to have a look please. After my post I picked up another sketchbook and found it was one that I'd recorded various poems in. I'll often jot words down or notes about poems in any notebook I am carrying and I found a reference to a poem by John Cooper Clarke. I came across it at an exhibition in Cardiff, on a piece of work produced by calligrapher Elizabeth Forrest and just had to write it down there and then. It still makes me smile. It may not be new to you but just in case it is, see what you think....
Let me be your vacuum cleaner
Breathing in your dust
Let me be your Ford Cortina
I will never rust
If you like your coffee hot
Let me be your coffee pot
You call the shots
I wanna be yours
Let me be your raincoat
For those frequent rainy days
Let me be your dreamboat
When you wanna sail away
Let me be your teddy bear
Take me with you anywhere
I don't care
I wanna be yours
Let me be your electric meter
I will not run out
Let me be the electric heater
You get cold without
Let me be your setting lotion
Hold your hair with deep devotion
Deep as deep as the Atlantic Ocean
That's how deep is my emotion
Deep deep deep deep de deep deep
I don't wanna be hers
I wanna be yours
........and from the ridiculous to the sublime, if you want an audible treat have a listen to this programme on Radio 4 this week. It was in the Afternoon Play slot but it was readings of the poem 'A Sleepwalk on the Severn' by Alice Oswald. I've posted about Alice Oswald's work before so I am a fan but even I couldn't believe how wonderful this programme was. I've already listened to it again on the BBC i player. It is all about moonrise over the Severn Estuary and follows the moon in her five phases : new moon, half moon, full moon, no moon and moon reborn
I was always taught that if poetry baffles you, read it aloud and all will fall into place. Next best thing is to listen to someone talented read it aloud for you. They paint word pictures for you that come alive in your head. I sound a bit like I'm 'away with the fairies' don't I? I don't mind. This is a real gem and should be enjoyed by as many people as possible!
Thursday, 10 March 2011
Sketchbook practice
Tuesday, 8 March 2011
Safe arrival
I had a phone call on Sunday morning to say my friend had given birth in the early hours to a bouncing baby girl. Indigo, already foreshortened to Indi, weighed in at 9lbs 6 ozs. I think that classifies her as a bouncing bomb rather than a bouncing baby doesn't it? Anyway, I had already gathered the remnants of my indigo dyed fabrics to make something so I set to.
My friend is a great fan of Kirstie's Handmade Home and re-purposing things so I found a vintage tray cloth I'd bought in a charity shop. Not only was it the right shade of blue, it also had a ready stitched panel in it.... and a few tell tale signs of former users..... but I disguised those with a bit of judicious placement and decided to just cut the letters for her name out of the fabric.
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