Here is the promised full photo: Martha, neatly pressed and just waiting to be lined and adorned with bell pull hardware. I apologize for the indoor lighting. I'll tale a better photo once I get the bell pull hardware and finish it properly.
I thoroughly enjoyed this Morning Glory Designs sampler and will be offering the chart as a giveaway in October to share the joy. So, if you are interested, check back on 10-4.
Having finished one class project UFO, it seemed only proper to pull another from the list and try for another finish from the backlog. This is the
Mystic Stitcher's Pocket and Accessories from Victoria Sampler. It was the project from my first Stitcher's Hideaway and my first class with Thea Dueck way back in October, 2007. So far I have stitched the pocket, the scissor case, the front and back covers of the needle book and the fob. All that remains in the tuffet.
Here are some photos of the completed pieces.
The Pocket: Once this is lined, folded and sewn up, everything will be right side up again. I finished the pocket in one burst of enthusiasm during and immediately after the class. But once I got home the siren's call of other projects took over. Every so often, in the intervening years, I'd pick this up again and work one of the accessories. Sometimes on a whim, sometimes out of guilt ... but always with a considerable amount of pleasure. I do enjoy Thea's designs and have a fair few in stash still.
The Scissor Case [2-27-13]
The Fob [1-2-15]
The front cover of the Needle Book [December 2014]
The back cover of the Needle Book [September 2017]
The only remaining piece is the Tuffet [aka, the biscornu]: And, now, a mere ten years later, I have been struggling with the final piece in the set. Hardangar has never been one of my strengths. Thus far I have done just as much frogging as I have done stitching, always off by just one or two threads where the stitches should meet. Even though it'll be a pain in the neck to keep moving the hoop, I have switched to my smaller spring tension hoop. It holds the fabric more tightly, the better to see and count the individual threads in this rather densely woven fabric. Lo and behold, it's working. I stitched a good 40 minutes without frogging.