Monday 21 January 2013

Tabland

Just a quick one today, before I embark on a lengthy post about our new extension. Tabby, our middle child, has an incredible imagination and lives in a world of her own most of the time, complete with its own unique fashion rules. Even Ellie often makes the comment, "I think she's in Tabland again, Mummy!" 

Here's Tabs wearing her favourite 'Mary scarf', adorned with what she calls 'stylashes'. I'm not entirely sure what stylashes are. Today she was wearing a headband with a costume jewellery necklace hooked onto it and then draped artistically over her left ear. That was also a stylash apparently!

 

Some of the conversations I have with Tabs are hilarious. This is one we had this morning, when discussing the band of naughty squirrels that keep invading our bird feeders. I get the impression that Tabby hasn't quite got to grips with the concept of hibernation yet!



Ellie: why aren't the squirrels hibernating?
 

Me: because there hasn't been enough food around for them this year and the weather hasn't been really cold until recently. Can you remember which other animals hibernate?
 

Ellie: Errr...hedgehogs! And bears and tortoises!
 

Me: Any more?
 

Tabs: I know! I know! Lions!
 

Me: Not usually, Tabs. Animals in hot places don't need to hibernate.
 

Tabs: Oh, ok. How about rhinos?
 

Me: No
 

Tabs: (in a hopeful tone of voice) Elephants?
 

Me : *facepalm*

Saturday 12 January 2013

More Cake!

So, it was Ellie's birthday earlier this week. I had been asking her for weeks what she would like on her cake and she had various half-hearted suggestions: Hello Kitty, Snow White, Izzy (from Jake and the Neverland Pirates - Ellie's favourite programme!) but she never seemed that enamoured with any of them. 
One morning she was sat at the kitchen table waiting for me to finish making her pancakes when all of a sudden she gave a mighty shout, scaring me silly:

Ellie: I know what I can have have on my cake, Mummy!
Me: What's that then?

Ellie: JESUS!
Me: I beg your pardon?
Ellie: I can have Jesus on my cake (big pleased grin on her face)
Me: Why do you want Jesus on your cake?
Ellie: Because He just had his birthday and we should always be thankful to Him when we get presents!
Me: Right...Well...yes, we should be grateful but I don't think it's very respectful to have Him on your birthday cake. Perhaps you can think of something else?
Ellie: Fine. I'll have a pink one like Jasper's christening cake then (looking rather huffy). 


What do we think? Isn't it a little blasphemous to have Jesus on one's birthday cake? 

So, I took my inspiration from Jasper's christening cake, as she requested, and made a pink, girly version. It was quite a tall cake - with five layers (albeit fairly thin ones) in alternating pink and plain madeira sponge (lemon flavoured). The buttercream was also lemon flavoured - quite strongly - to try to counteract the sweetness of the icing sugar.

Here it is!  



We had a little tea party to celebrate Ellie's birthday, and played a couple of games (pass the parcel and musical statues). In doing so we discovered that Jasper absolutely loves music and dancing! Obviously I don't mean that this is the first time in his entire 14 months that he's heard music. It's just he's never really paid much attention to it, other than bobbing up and down a bit to the nasty electronic music on some of his toys. This time he was really getting excited by the music we played (Now 83 - just right for a bunch of 5 year olds!) and every time the music was paused he burst into tears. Poor sausage! 

Jasper is a little emotional at the moment because he's just getting over chickenpox (having also had his MMR vaccination between contracting it and the spots appearing. This meant that the two viruses (as measles is a live vaccine) combined to make poor Jasper's temperature rocket to over 40C. This lasted for two days and then thankfully went back down to a less worrying level. It seemed that we were spending most of our waking hours either at the doctors or on the phone to them! He is also cutting his canines and so has had a pretty rough few weeks.The girls both had chickenpox (within a fortnight of one another) a couple of years ago so that's all three of them now. I remember having it when I was 5 and it wasn't a pleasant experience. It gets worse the older you get and so I'm glad they've all had it nice and young!



Tuesday 8 January 2013

Christmas Sewing Marathon...

OK, so here's a few pictures of things I've made recently. It's been a hectic old time as I rather rashly decided that it would be a really great idea to make lots of Christmas presents this year. What's wrong with that, you might reasonably ask. Nothing at all, I might reply, except if you've only decided with two weeks to go until Christmas! 

My sister-in-law and her husband have just built a house in the bottom of her parents' (my in-laws) garden and they are due to move in this month with any luck. I thought I'd make a nice cushion to go in their new living room and so rang my mother-in-law to see if she knew what colour scheme they were having. Dark red was the answer and so I looked about for some nice fabrics in that colour. The house is an oak-framed house and so I wanted something fairly traditional and classic - I decided upon the Rouenneries Deux range (by French General for Moda). As this was to be my first cushion (apart from the monstrosity I made in Home Economics when I was about 12), I wanted to go for something fairly simple and so naturally I went with the most time-consuming and complicated design I could find. This was a cathedral window cushion and I found a rather good pattern in the Moda Bake Shop - Charming Window Pillows. I did adapt it slightly, in that I didn't add any binding around the edges, more to save time than anything. It also didn't give any proper instructions on how to add the opening and so I had to make that up. I decided to do a banded back piece, with a semi-invisible zip between two of the three panels. It turned out rather well I thought! I wasn't able to hand it over in person and left it at my parents-in-law's house whilst we visited. My sister-in-law emailed me yesterday to tell me how utterly thrilled she was with it, so it made all the effort very worthwhile. 


The front of the cushion

Side view, showing the border a little better

The back of the cushion. The zip is between the bottom red panel and the middle panel




So, that was the 'simple' cushion I made. I also made one for my niece (daughter of the afore-mentioned sister-in-law). She is 13 and has decided that she wants her new bedroom to be black and white and grown-up. So I decided that I'd make her a cushion to match her new room and again, thought I'd keep it simple. Once again this didn't happen and I ended up making her a 3D 'F' shaped cushion. Her name is Francesca - I didn't just choose an arbitrary letter of the alphabet! There didn't seem to be any instructions on how to make such a cushion so I merrily made it up. I thought, as I was short on time, I'd also add piping (that I'd made myself - just to simplify things even more, you understand). This was extremely fiddly on the inside corners of the F - the bits between the top and bottom horizontal 'prongs'. Nevertheless, I did manage to sew it together and then stuffed it to within an inch of its life. It took over 1kg of stuffing to fill it to what I considered to be an adequate density. That's an awful lot of stuffing! Just in case anyone is interested, the fabric I used is from Makower's black and white range (the piping is the negative version of the main fabric). I used the flower version but there are all sorts of other patterns in the same range.


Here's the finished article!

The final photo I am going to show you is the sofa blanket that I made for my father-in-law. He was diagnosed with cancer a couple of months ago and is currently undergoing chemotherapy. As a result he is really feeling the cold, so I thought a nice soft blanket would be a nice present. I've made quite a few baby blankets in the last year, using smooth minky (or occasionally brushed cotton) on one side, and dimple dot minky on the other (as it is so lovely to stroke!) and decided to do the same this time, just in a much larger size. Obviously I wanted something fairly masculine and so decided on Robert Kaufman Cuddle Candy Stripes (in Tiffany/violet colourway), with a charcoal dimple dot minky on the reverse. I made it as you would expect - sewed all around the outside (leaving a gap to turn right way round again), rounding the corners off as I went, then turned right way out and top stitched the entire thing. It turned out really nice and I'm thinking of making myself one too!

Sofa blanket
 
I made the mistake of throwing out my daughters' naff Christmas stockings sometime earlier last year and only remembered as I was putting them to bed on Christmas Eve and they asked why they hadn't hung them up. Oops! Bad mummy! As a result I had to make some emergency ones - as well as wrap all three children's presents. One day I will learn to manage my time a little better! The trouble is, I am very organised when it comes to buying Christmas presents. I am normally finished by about September but this means that my brain goes into 'that's me done, no more Christmas related tasks for ME to do this year' mode and I somehow end up leaving everything like wrapping and food shopping until the last minute!



Wednesday 2 January 2013

Sorry for the delay :(

I realise that it's been some time since my last post - but December was a rather horrible month! 

So...here's December...

The boys (RIP) were taken to the abattoir the seaside right at the beginning of the month and we got them back (in bits) the following week. I must admit that I was very sad to see them go, especially when one of them was reluctant to get into the trailer. I was dreading getting the meat back, thinking I'd be in floods of tears, but it was surprisingly not too distressing seeing all the meat on the table. Out of the eight halves we sold five to friends and kept the other three. Unfortunately, what we weren't aware of, it being our first year of keeping sheep, was that ram lambs (as opposed to castrated lambs) start to lose condition towards winter, as they stop eating so much and start competing with one another - as well as standing around near the fence hoping to woo some women. Consequently, our lambs weren't as fat as we'd hoped but that's a lesson learnt for next time. We've already ordered castrated males for this year! This will also mean that we can keep the boys and girls together, and therefore rotate our paddocks through the spring and summer. 


Speaking of the paddocks - they are like lakes at the moment - despite the fact that they are on a slope! This never-ending rain is not good for sheep at all and I'm having to keep a careful eye on the girls to make sure that they don't get foot rot/rain scald/liver fluke/break a leg in the slippery mud...I was really quite worried about the fluke, as the snails that cause it are so prevalent in wet and (relatively) warm conditions. So many people have lost sheep because of it last year. So, I decided that I needed to treat the girls just to make sure. As fluke has been such a problem, the usual drenches were about as rare as hen's teeth and I couldn't get hold of any, not even from the vet! This meant drastic measures and so I asked the vet to come and show me how to inject the girls with an injectable treatment instead. It was fairly straightforward, mainly because our girls are so very tame. I did manage to stab myself with the first one, but luckily didn't depress the plunger and inject myself! 

I've also taken to bringing the girls up to the garden every few days, so that they have somewhere dry to stand (on the drive) and some better grass to eat. This has the added benefit of keeping the lawn down during the winter, with some self-spreading manure ;) The children have had great fun playing with the sheep outside! Here's a couple of pics...










As you can see, the playhouse in the background of the last photo is coming along nicely. Just the stairs and the veranda to go!

Other things that happened in December - On the day we sent the ram lambs off, I had a phone call from the hospital telling me that I had severe dyskaryosis/dysplasia on my cervix and so I had to go in urgently to have a colposcopy. That was really horrid, as they decided to do a LEEP/LLETZ procedure at the same time. I'm still waiting on the biopsy results but hopefully everything will be fine.

Bed is a-calling now so the things I made last month will have to wait for a new post tomorrow :)