grayestofghosts: a sketch of a man reading a paper (Default)
My partner helped me put together a small quilt sandwich today and it got me thinking.

For those who don't know, a quilt sandwich is the construction of the quilt before the actual quilting part. You have your quilt top (usually patchwork for most projects), the batting (fluffy stuff) and the quilt back (often a large, plain piece of fabric, but it could also be a patchwork if you want a double-sided one). So, it's fabric, fluffy stuff, and fabric, like a sandwich.

So, as far as we know, sandwiches have a definite invention in the Earl of Sandwich's household around 1762. However quilting is much older, and was widespread in Europe in the form of gambesons and otherwise much earlier.

So... what were quilt sandwiches called before there were sandwiches?
grayestofghosts: (percy)
So I am doing things little by little to stay sane. I've started I guess a zine library now by trying to keep all my zines in one place, a magazine holder on my bookshelf



The big copies are Better Homes And Dykes if you're interested, though I got these locally. I was intending to do this for a while and finally got my ass up to do it because I went to the library to get some seeds and they were giving out some free zines with the seeds and I picked up this one.



I honestly did not know that preserving tomato seeds was so involved.

Other than that -- I printed out more digital knitting patterns to add to the binder, and am actually backing up my computer after way too goddamn long without a backup. Take this as a sign to back up your fucking computer.
grayestofghosts: a shiba inu in a blanket (shibe)
A little while ago, as I've been resting my hands with cross stitch between projects (it seems the thing I've been doing that's least intent on destroying my fingernails at least), I decided to purchase some gold embroidery needles. If you don't actually do embroidery, this probably sounds insane, but you can often find them sold alongside normal embroidery needles for a couple dollars more a pack, though you don't get quite so many of them. They're not solid gold, of course -- some only have gold on the inside of the eyes, while some are covered in an incredibly thin layer of gold plating all over. Anyway, I wanted to be fancy and got some all-gold ones. They aren't prohibitively expensive given the hobby and I had just gotten paid, so, you know, treat yo' self, right?

Gold is considered to be superior to other needles if you have a nickel allergy, and also that the thin coating of soft metal can somehow make the process of punching the needle through fabric smoother, or in the case of the eyes, the threading easier. I don't have a significant nickel allergy -- I've had issues with earrings but never with just holding sewing needles, even for extended periods, so I have been thinking on the smoothness, and when they are fresh, they are extremely smooth. However I've used a single gold needle for something like a thousand stitches at this point and... the gold has almost entirely worn off! The gold in the eye is still there, and curiously some at the tip, but the part of the needle I hold is so pale, it's been stripped by use! I guess the gold at the tip is what matters most, but I did not know it would show so much wear without even a full finished project.

I've done a little research on gold needles and replacement needles in general and it sounds like a lot of serious embroiderers will grab a new needle for every project. Even though doing so, even if I did choose to use exclusively gold needles, would not be prohibitively expensive as I don't embroider that much, it's... just so strange to think about! Though I do have packs of needles that even if I started this practice today, I probably would not run out of needles for the next few years (though I would certainly run out of gold). It's one of those things that feels very wasteful but in the greater scheme of trash, probably wouldn't be, especially if one were not an avid embroiderer? compared to plastic bottles, paper products, etc... and there are apparently good reasons to switch out needles so often, because the oils of your fingers strip off the outer metals that run smoothly against the fabric and then the metal underneath can start snagging.

I don't know, it feels a lot like what I was thinking when I started buying fountain pens. It's not that I wasn't always a pen addict, but I didn't have any fountain pens -- I preferred gel pens, but with the number of pens I went through I always felt bad throwing so many away. And it was strange, because I was actually one of the few people using them until they completely ran out of ink! People are a bit irrational when it comes to this stuff, I guess.

Anyway, website is... currently on pause. I have a lot of shoelaces I need to make for a Pride booth later this month, and besides that I have the feeling that a lot of the Frankenstein stuff might be better in a book (?), but am also trying to get my writing brain for writing fiction back on track (???), also my AC is broken and it's like 100 degrees so I'm trying not to fry in my own home in the meanwhile. Too much going on, too little brain function, etc.

grayestofghosts: a sketch of a man reading a paper (alucard)
I have... been busy?

1) I'm preparing for a surgery in the middle of June. My pre-op appointment is tomorrow and I'm super nervous. I was concerned that this would leave me out of the Pride festivities but it seems like they're still canceled due to COVID and I know of at least one that's been rescheduled to September, so I should be okay to go by then.

2) I have been busy... weaving? Yes, weaving. My friend loaned me a table loom but I've bought my own inkle loom which is what I've been using mostly because of all the instant gratification it can give. I've sold some items at a craft show and am going to be making items for a booth at that September Pride event, though that's exciting. Given the nature of Pride and items that you can make on an inkle loom I'm going to be experimenting with harnesses and the like.

3) I've gotten into the Castlevania cartoon, and after all of Covid I actually kind of want to write. I think making me want to write is a very high compliment for any form of media so I have to say good job to it.

4) I'm still working part-time at my current job and am looking for full-time. I really, really need full time so I can move out again. I am thinking database management, given my experience and that people don't seem as crazy looking for people who eat, sleep, breathe their work outside of work hours for database as they do with, say, programming.

I do programming but I'm honestly not a programmer... I don't enjoy it and it's not something I would want to do in my free time. I appreciate some separation of work and pleasure even though I am working on craft as some supplemental income and that's been one of my main joys during the pandemic. I am still hesitant because craft seems very "shit where you eat" and is generally not very lucrative. However even with an education and experience like mine it's getting difficult to support myself with only a "normal" job and it seems like it's only going to get harder. If I actually start an online shop I will be sure to post something about it... but right now my inventory is all keychains, lanyards, and yardage and honestly not very exciting. I'm hoping that with my new shipment I may be able to make harnesses, suspenders, collars, jewelry, etc. I think the mercerized cotton might appeal to more people than the unmercerized stuff I've been working on. I will probably eventually post pictures.

5) I'm extremely disenchanted with twitter, even though I'm still on there all the time. Maybe I will convince some of my mutuals to make a community here, or on discord. It really is a cesspool.
grayestofghosts: a sketch of a man reading a paper (ow no)
A well-known issue with men's clothing is that they don't come in nice colors. This much is obvious.

So, I decided to do have a party on Thursday. A red party.



Victims under the cut )

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