A cooking challenge, first time gardening, travel, photography, and blog about the spice of life
Friday, February 15, 2019
Making stained glass is hard work and fun
If you can find a stained glass workshop or course nearby,
it might go something like this:
Your nice teacher is supposed to offer you a choice of two
VERY SIMPLE designs but allows the students to select more advanced designs. We
are all thrilled. Each student received a mixed package of glass, and we traded
among each other if certain colors were sought.
You are instructed to decide about colors for each part of
your design and learn several techniques for cutting glass to approximate the
shape you want. You make lots of novice errors, but your nice teacher
encourages you. Then you learn how to grind the edges of the glass pieces so
they fit well together. If you are not a perfectionist, you piece may be
slightly lumpy.
Once all the pieces are cut, ground, and assembled, you learn
how to wrap each piece with copper tape. There are more technical terms for all
of this, but I didn’t take notes. I was busy wearing safety glasses over my
regular glasses and wearing gloves!
At this point, the class time is done and you have to return
another day to finish. The teacher’s boss says, “this is why newbies are
supposed to do a simple project first!” Our incomplete designs are safely
stored and I finished mine two days later.
Next, you apply a special liquid to the copper tape.
Finally, you get to solder! I was pretty nervous at first, but it got to be
fun. I mean, holding a thin tube of metal to the soldering iron and watching
drops of molten metal fall is cool! Well, hot. You know.
First, drops of solder are placed at each corner to keep the
pieces together. Then, strips of melted metal are created between each piece of
glass, either in smooth lines or by combining a bunch of drops. I like how
mistakes can simply be melted together and it looks ok! Now, I am not working
for Tiffany or anything. My heart came out a bit wobbly, but isn’t that what
life is all about? Finally, an optional liquid is applied to make the bright solder look antique. That was fun!
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Adventures with cross stitch
Once upon a time (1987 or 1988), in a land far, far away
(New Hampshire), a teenager imagined that making cross stitch greeting cards
would be a good idea!
How did that work out, you ask? Well, many moves later (8
different basements: to MA, within MA, to Germany, within Germany), the cross
stitch effort has been found! Less than half of one greeting card was completed
before the endeavor went into extended hiatus. The photo above is a hand-stitched GIFT from a friend- wow!!!!!
So when you live overseas, you can’t always get to all US
websites, and the sales website of the cross stitch company is BLOCKED. Unbelievable.
However, on the second-hand sales website that starts with an “e”, this same
kit is being sold for $19.99…. um, no?
Well, we know for sure that the directions are NOT in any of
the Christmas bins, because those have been gone through carefully. That leaves
a dozen bins where they might be, though not the box where the other stuff was.
Argh! And I had such good intentions!
Here is a sneak peak at the new project…. However, I
strongly recommend that you do not hold your breath for the finished
product!!!! To be continued…
Current inventory: colored floss- check; greeting cards and
envelopes- check; cloth to be stitched upon- check; tutorial sheet on how to
cross stitch- check; needle- missing, detailed directions on which colors go
where- missing. Um.
Gift from Jeff's sister, made by hand! |
An initial search yielded a package of needles, two hotel
sewing kits (also from the olden days), two large spools of white thread, and a
large spool of black thread. Also assorted nails, screws, felt pads for
underneath furniture, measuring tapes, etc. etc.
A visit to the US crafts shop on base yielded a package of
dull-tipped cross-stitch needles (“no need to bleed all over it!”), and a mini
cross stitch to test out if I want to spend another $20 on the same kit I already
own, with directions!
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