Sew, sew…

It’s been a sewing week… first off, the puppy chewed through the cord on my good old Sears Kenmore sewing machine. That thing is a hoss… and I love sewing with it. Well, we tried to fix the cord and didn’t quite do it right. So the machine took off stitching too hard and too fast and messed up the gears and timing, we so, we had to call our local sewing machine fix-it wizard, Ron Woodbury. He tunes them up and so did his father, they know sewing machines!

It came home and we got to sewing… I mostly had to do some sewing for Jessy’s rock company… she needed velour bags…. Well, I whipped those babies up in no time and it’s so nice… it sews so sweet and smooth. All cleaned up and oiled. It’s running so smoothly, I just can’t wait to get to more of my sewing projects!

I got to thinking… I do enjoy a lot of crafts. At one point or another, these are my favorites….

Watercolor Painting
Silk Fabric Painting
Knitting and Crochet
Quilting and Sewing
Beading
Wool Hook Rugs
Scrapbooking
Gardening (Not really a craft, but I do spend a good deal of time at it… more a hobby)

Problem is, when I have them all out and around, I don’t know what to do first and all, and I end up not doing any of them! Just working, or reading, putzing.

Well, I got to thinking, perhaps it’s like when you have young children and they have a lot of toys… toooooo many choices means they just get overwhelmed and play with the refrigerator box in the yard. I’ve been feeling like that. So I got to thinking about it and I do have a good deal more space in the storage unit now that we cleaned it up and ditched a bunch of stuff… why not pack up some of it, and store it, make a little more room in the Moby, and then offer myself only a choice or two for awhile.

So I did. I’m not a summer knitter. I love to knit and crochet in the wintertime. When it’s cold. So all that went away. And I’m not that into beading at the moment… just not feeling it. Love the beads and I probably buy too many, but they are so pretty and well, kinda cheap, sorta. (Per piece they are not, but you can get a neat string of beads for a couple bucks, so it’s a nice little “pretty treat” that I’ll give in to now and then. Problem is, I don’t do anything with them. So no more treats, and no more beading… into storage.

Silk painting, storage unit. Wool rugs…. storage unit. I let the water color paints stay, but squirreled them away in my closet. Too hot in the unit, might degrade the pigments and such. And frankly, I just have one nice art box and a few pads of watercolor paper at the moment. But I did take it out of the big craft shelving unit.

I’m left with scrapbooking…. and sewing and quilting. And the scrapbooking is mostly still here because I have a friend and we do occasionally get together to scrap, so I wanted to keep it nearby. I used to scrap a lot, but just haven’t much lately. I’d like to get back into it.


After paying a little bit probably too much for my budget on the sewing machine, then sewing is going to be my hobby of choice for awhile. I brought back my last tote bucket from the storage unit with sewing stuff in it and yesterday evening, when the house was quiet, the girls at their Dad’s, no customer stuff, just me and the livestock, I got it all out. I sorted it and found that half the box was just junk and that felt good to pitch. The rest was a delightful collection of one yards of fabric that I FORGOT I even had! Years ago, I wanted to start quilting and of course, I geared up. I think I had 35 yards of beautiful fabric, just waiting. And all sorts of odds and ends of threads, notions, you name it. Just sewing stuff.


I had a pleasant time just sorting and imagining, and then I realized that I had nice beautiful Oriental themed fabric yards, all with a touch of gold on the fabric, to catch the light and look like silk embrodiery. Just beautiful. And I thought, this is perfect for my first big girl quilt. I’m going to use these nine different Oriental fabrics to start it with. My pattern is very simple, it’s actually just 3 rectangles for each block. And then you have all the blocks, you twist them, so to make a sort of basketweave of sorts. Simple, yet elegant, and perfect for these fabrics. The rectangles will leave most of the pattern of the fabric exposed and that is what I loved most.

I spent a little time surfing the web for other patterns, but none hit me for this project. I’m so good at doing crafts and starting out with like the most complicated thing I can find and then, failing at it, or well, worse, being tolerable at it, but then loosing interest. I’m going to change that. I’m just going to start out simple and build on it I apparently have plenty of fabric for a good many quilts….


Today, I spent most of the day with Maggie and we finished up her bandana quilt. It turned out just fine and she loves it. We both sewed and pinned and chatted, it was nice. Of course, sewing with a teenager can have it’s ups and downs…. it’s funny how a girl thing can be one minute telling me “I KNOW Mom” and knowing it all, to the next “MOM I’ve never done this before, how can I know what to do?” and not knowing anything at the next moment and right back flip flopping to the know it all thing! Haha… teenagers. Just lots of patience and maybe a Mike’s Hard Lemonade to keep you from squeezing them tooooooo hard. In the end, she loves it and wants to start learning how to make quilt squares too! I think we’re going to work on a sampler quilt for each of us. One for her and one for me. Just take neat blocks and try and make them work for us. And in the end, we’ll piece them all together and each have a learning quilt. Should be fun.

(I’d have pictures of her quilt, but my camera battery died and I can’t find my charger!!!! Waaaaaaa! It’s around here somewhere, I know it is. I’ve been cleaning and putzing and I think I just found it a new home and now I don’t remember where it is. But, I will find it… tomorrow is going to be a organzing day… I want to take a bunch more stuff to Goodwill and a box or two to storage. I’ve decided that I really really like a empty and simple home and work environment. And tomorrow is the day…. I’ll post bandana quilt pics tomorrow!!!)

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Biscuit Results…

I dreamed I was making the most perfect biscuits… all soft and fluffy, raised up and just a hint of sweetness and ready for some jam or gravy or just a big old dollop of butter.

I’ve never been able to really make them good. At least, I’ve never tried much and the few times I tried, well, they were not so good.

So, when I woke, I got out to the store and got a fresh carton of buttermilk and a few other things…. (puppy chow and some more canning jars for peaches and more pickles, but that’s later…) and got started. Cutting the butter into the flour, mixing and kneading.

I was surprised at how quickly they worked up. It really wasn’t that hard. And only about 10 minutes from mixing to the pan. I made up two batches, the two different recipes I had found.

Then I fried up some sausage and made a batch of scrambled eggs and called up my youngin’s and we sat down to a lovely brunch… and enjoyed the fruits of my baking labor…

The biscuit on the left is the first recipe. The simple one, flour, butter and buttermilk. Hands down, this was not a good one. It was thick and doughy and like nasty really. Gypsy was not impressed and even the pup had to work at hers for a good while… thick as a brick… Yuck.

Now, the second recipe, the one with baking powder and a little bit of honey, and that you fold over and over the dough? That was definitely the better of the two. I would have liked to see it raise up a bit more, I thought it really didn’t increase much in size from when I put it in the oven and took it out. However, I suspect that my baking powder might be the culprit there… It’s old and expired! HAHA…. Okay, I think I need to get a fresh batch and try again.

But they were mighty tasty and certainly won today’s bake off contest…

And they were DELISH with our fresh strawberry jam….

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Deliciously Flaky Buttermilk Biscuits

2 cups all-purpose flour (9 ounces)
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons chilled butter, cut into small pieces
3/4 cup buttermilk
3 tablespoons honey

1. Preheat oven to 400°.
2. Weigh or lightly spoon flour into dry measuring cups; level with a knife. Combine flour, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl; cut in butter with a pastry blender or 2 knives until mixture resembles coarse meal. Chill 10 minutes.
3. Combine buttermilk and honey, stirring with a whisk until well blended. Add buttermilk mixture to flour mixture; stir just until moist.
4. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface; knead lightly 4 times. Roll dough into a (1/2-inch-thick) 9 x 5–inch rectangle; dust top of dough with flour. Fold dough crosswise into thirds (as if folding a piece of paper to fit into an envelope). Reroll dough into a (1/2-inch-thick) 9 x 5–inch rectangle; dust top of dough with flour. Fold dough crosswise into thirds; gently roll or pat to a 3/4-inch thickness. Cut dough with a 1 3/4-inch biscuit cutter to form 14 dough rounds. Place dough rounds, 1 inch apart, on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Bake at 400° for 12 minutes or until golden. Remove from pan; cool 2 minutes on wire racks. Serve warm.

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MobyWoman is a book!

Okay, well not a REAL book… but I just got a bug in my bonnet today to find a way to print out the blog, or to make it easy for someone to read it from start to finish if they just found the thing.

I know I see people’s blogs and I find them after they have been writing for months or years and I wish I could easily read from the beginning and well, WordPress isn’t the easiest for that kind of reading. And I sort of wanted a backup of all that I’ve written so far… 900+ pages!!!!

Well, I tried all kinds of things, this and that, services, online things, WordPress plugins and I finally got it to work!!!!

CLICK TO DOWNLOAD The Mobile Home Woman – Year 2009

CLICK TO DOWNLOAD The Mobile Home Woman – Year 2010 – January through July


(They are big files, they will take a while to download!!!)

Once you have it opened up, you have to go up to the top and pull down the menu to SAVE AS and make sure it’s on your computer!

Have fun reading!!!

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If you have a blog and you want to do this…. here’s how I did it!

First off. You go under Settings and go to WRITING and make sure that the box for
Remote Publishing (XML-RPC) Is clicked off. And then SAVE.

Then you go under TOOLS…. and Select EXPORT.

You can pick certain things like oh, a date span or to have headers or not or whatever. I just left it at the settings that it defaulted to, easy like that.

Then click DOWNLOAD EXPORT FILE.

After that, you go to a site called www.BlogBooker.com And follow the pretty simple instructions. It takes a little while, so be patient. Especially if you have a lot of posts.

And then…. poof! You have these babies!!!

(I did two, one for 2009 and one for 2010, so far. Each was over 400 pages, with photos and such. I noticed that a few of the photos didn’t work out, not sure why, but hey, probably some sort of weird glitch, I do have a lot of photos on my blog!!!)

Good luck!!! Have fun with this!

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