Sunday, December 30, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-In, December 2018

The topic for December is to " "Recap your accomplishments for the year!"

​Well, if you have followed me at all this year, you will know that my only accomplishments for the year were a few months of organization, which fizzled out when it came time to sort floss...The progress reports are in the following posts:

January: The before pictures and starting to clear cutting table surface and floor space.  This was my most productive month when it came to organizing. Beads, yarns, tools, fabric - all were consolidated, sorted and stored away.
February: Charts.  
This took a lot of time and the progress wasn't that apparent but it meant my charts were at least in some order.  
March: Floss (speciality) Quite a few thread brands ended up in their own boxes; not sorted by color, name or number, however. 
April: Floss (more speciality)  Everything but DMC was now packed away. Sadly, Anchor needs sorting and DMC is a hot mess... but my cutting table was the most accessible it has been in over a year!

I faded out here*, and never got the DMC or Anchor flosses sorted, nor did I work on the kitted-up charts in my cabinet which badly need sorting. My quilting fabrics require refolding and sorting as well and I think it's time to downsize that stash (especially the magazines!)

​*Technically, I continued to organize but my emphasis shifted to paper crafting supplies which were also a mess. I have summarized this progress in my other blog, here. I mention that here because my stitchery and my paper crafting occupy the same general space and were heavily intertwined in how the space was used. So any progress in creating room for product was of benefit to stitchery storage as well.

~~~~~

As for starts and finishes on actual needlework, I didn't place a single stitch. My left had still cramps after holding a hoop or frame from more than an hour and my mojo is stalled. I hope to change that this next year because there will be three trips (two road, one cruise) where stitching will be the best way to pass the time in hotels/staterooms. Here's hoping!

Sunday, November 25, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-In, November 25, 2018

Oops~ I almost forgot!

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-In: October 2018

The question for the month for WIPocalypse is: 

" Do you prefer to stitch on a rotation or one project at a time?"
I really don't have a preference. I have done both and both have their advantages.

Rotation removes some of the boredom that can arise when stitching on a single LARGE project. It is particularly helpful to intersperse stitching on a large BAP with smaller pieces (which might give on the felling of accomplishment when the small piece is finished), a piece with different stitchery demands (like speciality stitches, beading, etc.), or even a different BAP which, depending on how long the original BAP has been "in progress", may have a design more in tune with my taste (although this is usually why a piece becomes a UFO in my stash --- I started something new that appealed and all of a sudden, the old piece is no longer to my taste!)!

Often, when I do stitch on a large BAP, I can get on a roll, and it hurts my stitching mojo if I interrupt that roll by stitching on something else: I often lose my place (no matter how carefully I mark the charts). And sometimes I find that once I get onto something new, I really really have to work HARD to go back to that BAP--- it's appeal gets lost in the thrill of finishing smalls, etc.(see also above re UFOs!).

~~~~~

​Again, in October, no stitching whatsoever. Sorry...

Sunday, September 30, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-In - September, 30 2018

The topic for discussion this month is:
"How do you keep your stitching stash organized?"

​Well, I'm not sure it IS organized, at least not completely I posted several times this year about my organizational attempts, starting in January and fizzling out in May. I have gotten quite a  bit put away where it belongs but there is probably just as much that needs doing. Especially floss --- my DMC is untouched and needs a massive amount of time to put right and teh contents of my two embroidery cabinets need rearranging so everything can be contained....

At any rate, for embroidery, I use a number of binders (patterns), baskets (floss), bins and boxes (needles, beads, buttons, charms, etc,), all of which reside either n one bookcase or two large cabinets in my craft space. For my quilting, its two more cabinets... You can see photos of these areas in those five posts between January and May.

​For embroidery projects in progress, I have a large tote which holds the listed up patterns, hoops, Q-snaps and small notions while my 
traveling projects are in two Yazzii zipped bags, all in my bedroom.

~~~~~
Again, no stitching this month. I did, however, buy two kitted up Glendon Place patterns. Who can resist a sale?

Saturday, August 25, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-in, August 26, 2018

This month's topic for discussion is:

"Which is more satisfying to you and why – the process of stitching a piece, or the finish?"

That's a tough question for me to answer... it's almost like those polls which don't give an answer that is right for you!

For me, the satisfying part is the beginning: the picking of the chart, the floss, the fabric and embellishments (if any) and setting up for stitching. (can you tell I'm a stash builder? I love browsing the designer sites and the needlework supplies stores online, and when I was actively stitching, my budget was often screaming. Even now, when I'm not stitching, I'm still acquiring the latests charts and kits from my favorite designer...)

As for the stitching itself, the start is fine but, if the piece is a big one (and for me, it usually is/was), I soon tire of the piece and it becomes a chore to stitch... until I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. Part of that is due to the fact that there are now pieces lined up in my head which I would rather be working on (the results of that original stash-building exercise overlapping with a slow-moving piece which shows little "progress" despite the amount of time spent o it. You know the kind --- the  ones that don't look like anything at all until a certain amount of stitches have been put into it).

So I guess finishing is the most satisfying part, even though it is sometimes a let-down after all that work (sort of like that let-down when you finish a really good book and discover that it is the last one in a series and the author is not writing them anymore - that is, the author is dead!).

Can you tell I'm conflicted?

                                                           ~~~~~

Progress this month? None, although I have been thinking about it. I even went so far as to buy a special project bag for the needlepoint pieces I want to start AFTER I finish the two WIPs/UFOs in my project bag...

Sunday, July 29, 2018

WIPocalypse CheckIn, July 29, 2018

The discussion topic for this month is:


" Half-year recap: How are you doing with your goals so far this year?"

​I'd laugh if it weren't so sad. No progress. Not a stitch. Even my attempts at organization ave stalled out at the bin of DMC floss that needs putting away. I'm really having difficulty getting motivated. Heck, I have even spent several hours this weekend updating out financial records, which I absolutely HATE to do. And in two days, I have brought six months of arrears in my entries to Quicken for four credit cards and one checkbook. Only once create card and four bank accounts to go!

On her blog, Mel said:
"So if you’re feeling stuck, try that challenge on whatever you’re working.  One stitch per day.  Just do one.  By itself, it may not seem like much.  But one stitch leads to another, and to another… and then once you relax and accept that your one stitch per day meets the goal?  Everything else is a reward. It’s such a simple thing..."

She's so right. If it works for my financial records, it SHOULD work for my stitchery. I am going to try this!

She went on to say:
"I’m genuinely thinking of running it as part of this challenge next year (giving the HAED project designer credit for the idea, of course). Pick a stubborn UFO or the one you really, really want to finish, and stitch at least one stitch per day for 100 days."

What a GREAT idea!

Sunday, June 24, 2018

WIPocalypse Chek-In, June 24, 2018

The question for the month is:  "Tell us what you think the ideal stitching retreat would include."

​Well, I have been to a few quilting retreats and paper crafting retreats but never an embroidery retreat so I can't say for sure that I know what such a retreat would require. 

L
ike I said, I can't speak from experience other than three quilting retreats, two or three paper-crafting weekends, a card-making cruise (Yes, a cruise, to Alaska!), and a few local guild-sponsored quilt workdays, and I have to say I have one major issue: I never seemed to have the right supplies with me to accomplish much of anything and so I accomplished little, despite a car trunk filled with possible projects and a lot of tools!  Of course, many retreats are actually teaching events and, for a fee, one gets fully supplied kits as well as the services of a teacher or teachers so the need for supplies is lessened (but the cost is usually increased...).

I know that, when I stitch, I need to be comfortable, and I usually stitch in my bed, with my back supported by cushions and my feet up!  Therefore, a comfy chair with back support and a foot stool are the minimum. This is NOT a folding chair or a dining table chair or the like. 

Also, I need light, good light, preferably that can be focused on my stitching, and magnification (my old eyes need at least 3x magnification to work on anything finer than 12 or 14 count AIDA)! I totally rely on my Ott Lamp (floor model --- NOT a table lamp) with a magnifying arm that can be arranged to work over my left shoulder. Too big to travel with unless the location is close enough to drive to.

Price is an issue for me. I am retired, no surplus income, and the cost of travel, housing and meals (and any class charges) can add up to a major expense. 


​Which brings the real need, for me, and that is location --- I simply cannot justify flying as the luggage requirements would be horrendous (even enough clothing for the duration in a carry on and my stitchery supplies would mean surcharges for luggage with most airlines these days). And I really can't see driving more than an hour or two away from home as I am not a confident driver. Carpooling is not an option because there are no stitchers anywhere near me and even if there were, my experience with fellow quilters and paper crafters is that they bring so much "stuff" that there really isn't room for more than two people in a normal mid-sized car. Besides, car-pooling means I'm dependent in the scheduling needs/wants of others so I can't leave early or ... You get what I mean, right?

But, to be honest, I probably would never go to a stitching retreat anyway as I need to concentrate to stitch, and people prevent that --- my experience is that quilters chat and knitters chat and crocheters chat and papercrafters chat when they get together, so I have no doubt that stitchers chat as well!!! Sure, I could find a quiet corner, but that would mean I was being anti-social and why would I want to be marked as such when I can get the same solitude at home for free?. 

​I know, that answer is a bit snarky but, as a solitary stitcher (when I CAN stitch again), retreats really don't appeal to me.

                                                                  *****
Now, as for this month's report... nothing. nada. zilch. zip.

​I did pack my stitchery travel bag when we went to Myrtle Beach for the national daylily convention but I never opened it. The two-day drive down aggravated my bad shoulder and arm and it took two of the three days available in Myrtle Beach for the pain to subside, only for it to recur on the drive home. I am doing my physical therapy exercises, twice daily (UGH) and have begun to wean myself off triple-strength 
ibuprofen to find that even so-called "pain-free days" really aren't totally pain free (there is a nagging hint that the pain is there, waiting to surface again if I'm not careful).

As I said, I'm being good, doing my exercises and hoping for the pain-free periods to reach that magic two weeks so I can cut back on the exercises and maybe even pick up a needle again. The question is, will I be able to find my stitching mojo again? 

Monday, May 28, 2018

WIPocalypse 2018 Check-In: May 28, 2018

The WIPocalypse question of the month is: Where do you love to shop for stash?

When I can't find what I need in my stash, I shop online for anything needlework-related - we don’t have any needlework shops within driving distance so online is really my only option. I have a few places I do like to shop… tops on my list is Needle in A Haystack in Alameda, CA. I have read that others aren’t happy with the service there but I never have had issues. 

It’s been a while since I did any shopping for stash, although I did order two Michael Powell charts last month (I’m addicted to Michael Powell and have nearly all of his charts, even though I've only stitched two or three of them!). If I ever get back in stitching mode, I have enough thread to last a while but I will be running out of large cuts of fabric soon. Then I will have to be on the look-out for some good deals on linen and even weaves. 

Progress this month? Nil. Didn’t even organize. Spent a great deal of time i physical therapy trying to remedy the bad shoulder and arm pain that struck back in March and while I “graduated” from therapy last week, I can’t say I’m up to stitching yet, pain-wise. I had three or four good days this past week and woke up again on Saturday in pain which has yet to abate. 

Coming up? Road trip in early June so I have my needlepoint packed and hope I feel well enough on some days at least to stitch on that. 

Sunday, April 29, 2018

WIPocalypse 2018 check-in, April 29, 2018


Well, I did it, I beat the flu - finally, after three weeks - with only a residual scratchy throat to show for it. But... and it's a BIG one

For two weeks before the flue, my right shoulder and forearm were really painful. I woke up with this pain and though it was to do with sleeping wrong but it didn't go away in two ro three days like my usual shoulder spasms have done. However, when I had the flu, the pain was gone. (or maybe the flu was so bad I didn't notice it...). Anyway, once teh flue was gone, the pain was back, with a vengeance. I couldn't sit or stand comfortably, I couldn't find a place where the shoulder didn't hurt and the arm pain was constant. I finally caved adn called my doctor. Was sent for X-rays (no bone abnormalities) and physical therapy started last week.

It appears that I should have listened to my Mother all those years ago and "sat up straight" but the cause the shoulder pain is likely cervical, due to poor posture. And could be exacerbated by my tendency to stitch in bed and watch television from be in the evenings (wrong neck position. The arm pain, coincident to the shoulder, apparently, is tennis elbow. I don't play tennis, or golf - the alternate name for the symptoms so it might better be described as blogger's elbow as the therapist said it was probably fro using the computer!.

It's probably too soon to say but I think the therapy is helping --- the pain is lessened by evening and I have no issues sleeping but when I get up in the morning, it starts to ache again - not as bad as it was, but still uncomfortable. I am doing the exercises and hoping for the best.

But, like I said above, the way I stitch, with my neck forward and looking down, is a no-no, at least for teh time being. I can't see myself holding my stitcher at eye level while sitting up straight so another hold on returning to stitchery! Just as the left wrist was behaving and strengthened enough to hold the frame (the therapist's tests show my grip is now stronger on the left than on the right - and I'm a right-handed person: bad sign that the tendonitis in the elbow has weakened my right hand.)

​                                               ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Question of the month: Talk to us about your longest-running WIP or UFO.

My longest running WIP is "Palm Tree Elegance", a needlepoint (tent stitch) panel begun back in November 2010 on one of our travels and last stitched on in July 2016:
Picture
It resides in my travel kit and is taken out whenever we are long term guests of friends or hotels. The likely next stitching episode, assuming I am recovered by then, will be early June on a road trip to Myrtle Beach, SC where husband will be attending a daylily conference.

​I have a palm tree theme in my bathroom - embroidered on towels and shower curtain, framed cross stitch on the wall, and a set of decorative boxes papered in Palm motifs. This, if and when finished, will eventually join the framed cords-stitch on the wall.

My oldest UFO is a pair of crewel pillow tops, started in 1988:
The one on the left is the unfinished piece. (the color would be the same in both but do to bad light when these were taken... These, along with a number of other unfinished pieces (some of which I HAVE since finished), were packed away in one of our many moves and only resurrected when we unpacked at this, our final location (I hope!) in 2003. The wool is still useable and someday, if I get motivated, I may get back to this. I have to say, though --- my tastes have changed since 1988 and I'm not so much into flowers. Also,  having crewel pillows in a house with three cats with needle-like claws is NOT a good plan for their (the pillows') survival!

​                                               ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

​My progress in my 2018 resolution to clean up my craft space did make a little progress, however. Remember that pile of speciality threads from various projects that needed to be sorted adn refiled. I had done all the Rainbow Gallery threads back in March but that left a huge jumbled pile of Gentle Arts Sampler and Shaker Threads, Carrie's Crreations, Weeks Dye works, Dinky Dyes, Stranded by the Sea, Needlepaints, Caron Watercolors and Waterlielies, Kreinik silks, SanMan threads and more that, when sorted, spread from one end of my cutting table to the other!
On April 24, I sorted by brand and placed each bunch in it's respective ArtBin box (or a zip lock bag when I ran out of boxes!):
Picture
I need to inventory the colors but that can come later, when I decided on a better way, if any, to store these.

Meanwhile, my cutting table is now relatively clear on one end, with only a large grocery bag full of unsorted DMC threads to work through.
Picture
Needless to say, I consider that the most daunting project of all and is probably why it was postponed to the very end of the thread sorting!​                                               ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

So there you have my April report. I can only say it HAS to get better!


Friday, March 30, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-in, March 30, 2018

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-In - February 28, 2018

Sunday, January 28, 2018

WIPocalypse Check-in - January 2018

In this month's report, we are to answer the following questions:

"What SAL’s are you participating in this year? and If you are participating in the Olympic Stitching Challenge, what challenge are you accepting? What are your goals?"

I partially answered these questions on January 7 in the initial blog of the year but I will restate:
  • The only SAL I have on schedule this year is WIPocalypse. However, I am collecting the bands from the Linen & Threads Mystery sampler and I reserve the right to take on that, or any other SAL that comes along if my stitching mojo returns!
  • If I accept an Olympic Stitching Challenge (and I am not sure yet) it will be the "Endurance Race" adn teh Elizabeth Almond "Save the Stitches" blackwork sampler.
  • My primary goals are to a) get my stitching space organized and b) to get back into the stitching groove.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So let's start with my primary goal: Cleaning up and reorganizing my stash! 

Back in the final paragraph of my last post, I blogged about the mess my craft space was in, and how I hoped that, in 2018, I would make some progress in getting it all put back together and neatened up. This is my January progress report on that organization.

I started out gangbusters on January 1 and kept it up for a week before I fizzled out somewhat, but I did make progress, slowly but surely.

To start with, the dining room table, where my computer lives (and so where I blog and, therefore an extension of my crafting space.

On January 1, I set to work on a box that contained (and was overflowing with) charitable solicitations which were, for the most part, duplicates of ones I had already paid... I filled a kitchen trash bag and emptied that box. I didn't even sort. I just emptied! This took roughly an hour... and was relatively painless:

On January 3, my husband and I worked on getting several framed pieces of stitchery off of the table and into plastic bags before storing them in the basement with our other framed pictures. 

On January 6, I cleared various receipts, sorted, and bagged them into manila envelopes according to tax category. Benefit of doing this? Two checks found that needed to be deposited!

Finally, on January 7, I tackled the area to the left of my laptop which held bills to be paid and various bill-paying requirements (new checks, deposit slips, envelopes, etc.), membership cards and discount coupons, and miscellaneous "stuff". The result: a cleared workspace so I can do my taxes, pay my bills, AND blog.

So that was basically less than 24 hours spent in one week. Still to be done... box up last year's taxes and move several boxes from the corners of the dining room to a storage location (TBD). Then all that needs to be done is tidy up the tchotchkes and the dining room is serviceable again on relatively short notice (sure, I'd have to move a lot of studs and Charlie would have to move his puzzles but you know what I mean)!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Next, Now to my stitchery space, which encroaches on my paper crafting space more than it should, given how little I've been stitching this past year and a quarter!

​In my basement stitching area, there is a lot of stuff that lands on my cutting table and never seems to leave. As a result, I have roughly 12 inches by 30 inches of work space on that table!

I started there, on January 2, with beads and buttons and charms and the like and got all the aforementioned embellishemnts into two bins and a covered box and stashed in a cabinet.

Next, there was that bin of needlepoint wool in front of my stitchery cabinets

Next to one of my storage cabinets, there is an area/nook/wasted space that was FILLED with bogs of polyfill! It also held my needlepoint blocking board and some extra-long rolls of needlework fabric, some in tubes and some not. On January 2, I set about clearing that corner and getting as much of those yarn bins out of the way and into that nook. Let's just hope I don't need to block any large needlepoint pieces in the near future because that blocking board is WAY in the back! But I'm hoping that, when I get finished here, there will be a better place to put that blocking board!

On January 4, I set about finding a place for all those finished pieces that need to be finished that were stashed in in bin under my cutting table I found a lidded storage bin in the basement and set about gathering all the finished pieces in one place. This did clear a space for something else but the bin still needs to find home...

On January 5, I tackled the mess around my sewing machine in stages:
  • To the left of the machine, I cleared out the area, consolidated all project bags in a black 31 Tote and place the tote on top of my Bernina case
  • To the right of the machine, I cleared out the area and found other places for most of it. All that remains is my old Singer in it's case
  • And finally, I tackled the surface of the machine table.

Much of the stuff that was on top of the Singer and the Bernina table ended up in a reorganized top shelf of my Quilting cabinet or in a bin on the door. The fabrics in this cabinet and in the one on the other side of my sewing machine need a major sort but that will come later...

​And finally, on January 19 and 20, I started on the daunting task of sorting floss. AAARGH! It was a total mess... and still is but I'm getting there.

The DMC floss that I have is in zip-lock bags on rings in sterlite baskets, stored by color number and floss type (nylon, rayon, metallic, varigated, etc. all have their separate rings). The rest of my floss is in different containers, labeled by manufacturer (e.g. Anchor is in a Sterlite bin on rings, GAST and weeks and similar threads all have their individual Artbin cases, left-over kit threads have their own Artbin cases, and some silks are in special boxes). And all were/are scattered throughout my cross-stitch cabinets.

On that infamous cutting table, the floss that had been pulled for projects and not put back, nor had newly purchased collections (example: DMC's new colors) benn put away are were still in their packaging. I started going through all the project bags and sorting according to manufacturer. The boxed collections were put into the cross stitch cabinet on the bottom shelf, still in their shipping packaging, to be dealt with later. Kit left-overs were placed in their respective Artbin cases. DMC (some of which was already bagged in large ziplock bags by 100 color numbers) and speciality threads were bagged and set aside for future sorting.

Now that is not ALL the organizing I did this month --- there was, of necessity, some papercrafting organizing done as well --- simply because the two areas are overlapping in both storage and mess! It may look as if I have tackled the easy bits first (probably true... I mean, I didn't alphabetize my beads or arrange by color; ditto buttons; and I still have two quilting and two cross-stitch cabinets to empty out, sort, and reshelve). Still, I think I made some progress on all fronts and and am encouraged enough to keep on this task in February..

WIPocalypse Check-In, January 7, 2018

In the event that you are not familiar with WIPocalypse, it is a yearly challenge by Measi's Musings where Melissa, the blog owner states:

"The WIPocalypse was a stitch-a-long playing up on the joke that the world will end in 2012. It’s short for Works In Progress Apocalypse."The goal of the WIPocalypse is to make progress on your projects. How you go about this is your choice."

Since then, there have been WIPocalypse SALs each year and this year is the start of WIPocalypse 2018. 

Each month there is a "Question of the Month", an incarnation of “Stitcher Blogger Questions.” This was started on WIPocalypse in 2015 and continues. 

Also, in Olympic Years, there is an optional "Stitching Olympics Challenge". The 2018 Winter Olympics will be held February 9th to February 25th, and there are three options for “events” to challenge us in pushing forward on our WIPs during the Games. These options are:
  • Rotation Relay – rotate through as many projects as you can during the Olympics (for those who like to work on a bunch of different pieces)
  • Endurance Race – stick to ONE piece for the Olympics, and see how far you can push that one piece toward finishing (for those one at a time stitchers, or anyone else who wants to do some serious focusing on a particular piece)
  • Celebrate the Nations (stitch only in the colors of the Olympic rings on your WIP pieces, OR… your nation’s flag, OR… on some sort of piece that is reflective of where you live, eg. Americana pieces for US residents).
I have participated in WIPocalypse since it's inception in 2012, answering monthly questions to the best of my ability, and reporting on my progress (nil in 2017) on my WIPs and even on a few UFOs. I have never chosen to do the Stitching Olympics Challenge in that none of my WIPS seem to fit the options except the endurance one. Also, I find it hard to stitch and watch the Olympics at the same time so I tend to choose one over the other. 

OK, enough of an introduction. Now for the January check-in.

The question for this month is to "Introduce yourself, your projects, and any goals you have for the year!"

You can see who I am by reading my "bio" on the right in this blog. 

This blog shows all of my projects that I have photographs of, dating back to the early 2000's. I am an eclectic stitcher in that I will stitch any pattern that intrigues me: scenic, abstract, realistic, even the occasional "cute" (although that is not my favorite style) and in many different stitchery styles: needlepoint, cross-stitch, free embroidery, knitting (although no so much of late), and quilting (mainly crazy quilting). I like to use different stitches in all my needlework and also like to embellish with beads, charms, buttons, etc. I tend to enter challenges and keep on entering until I simply run out of ideas (example: the Bead Journal Project, 2010 - 2015 and the Crazy Quilt Journal Challenge, 2012 - 2015 being the main ones in my stitching history). 

I have four projects in my project bag at present in various stages of completion, all of which came to a screeching halt when I broke my wrist in the fall of 2016. They are:
  • ​Elizabeth Almond's "Save the Stitches" blackwork sampler, started in late February of 2014 and put away in April of 2015
  • "Palm Tree Elegance", a Dimensions needlework piece in my travel bag (I only stitch on this while traveling, in hotel rooms, etc.), started in November 2010 and put away after the last road trip in July of 2016:
  • "Biltmore", a kit I purchased at the Biltmore Estate in July of 2014 and stitched on briefly in the coffee shop at that estate. I have stitched on it once or twice since then but made little progress from my sole published photo - in fact it has regressed a little since much of the work I did in that coffee shop had to be frogged. This piece also lives in my travel bag:
  • and finally, "Love Is.., an intended first anniversary gift for a niece which has missed that deadline and may not make the second as well at there ate I am going. Started in September 0f 2016 and was put away when I broke my wrist, brought out briefly in February of 2017 as a test run of my wrists ability to hold the frame, and put back after an hour and less than four backstitched letters (and/or frogged letters!):

Please note:

1. I am NOT counting some UFOs that are still in my list from 2010:
  • "Antique Rose" napkins
  • "Angel of Love"
  • "Celestial Angel"
  • "Map of England and Wales"
  • "Harvest Sampler"
  • "Nature's Song" (excerpted from a larger chart)

2. I am NOT counting all the finish-finish pieces that I recently put altogether in a LARGE bin in my crafting space.

3. I am NOT counting all the kitted up kits and projects that I have stashed in my stitchery cupboard (I dread to think how many are in there), in another travel bag (at least ten, maybe more) and my in-house project bag (at least three needlepoint pieces and several more cross-stitch pieces). 

I mean, a girl has to have some limits! 

​Anyway my goals include getting as much of those first four listed WIPS done in 2018 as possible.
  • This year, I may try for the "Endurance Race" and I have that Elizabeth Almond blackwork piece still languishing, half finished, in my project pile, as a good candidate.
  • I will TRY to finish that "Love Is.." sampler for my niece sometime before her FOURTH anniversary (linen and silk, and it is stitched on linen)!
  • I WILL stitch on Pal Tree Elegance on a road trip this coming summer, but am pretty sure it will NOT be finished.
  • Biltmore...not so sure!!
And my biggest goal of all is to clean up and reorganize my stitchery space. I have shown detailed photos here of the before, and I will post detailed before-and-after picures of each step in my monthly WIPocalypse reports (here's hoping this attempt at reorganization, which entails my dining room and my paper crafting space as well as my stitchery space - doesn't take more than one month but one never knows what one will discover while sorting (I have already discovered two uncashed checks while sorting papers on my dining room table!)