I have been stitching. I'm a few days away from finishing the Christine Bishop Pulled Work Mat and will report on it within a week. I did, however, get carried away with another madwoman project on Saturday, and in the end it didn't require stitching.
Before I moved to the apartment where I now live, my earrings were stored on the inside of a cupboard door. The cupboard was an old one, made of boards. The doors were braced on the inside with horizontal wooden strips at the top and bottom. By tacking a piece of cotton fabric to these strips, stretching it between, I had a surface into which I could hook earrings. It was convenient and easy.
The cupboard was too big for my apartment, so I lost the earring hanger.
In the meantime, I bought an earring 'book' from the Innovations Catalogue. It worked OK for stud earrings, but was a messy solution for hooks, especially if the earrings had any length. It makes choosing earrings a chore. These days I don't wear earrings every day, but the effort of finding what I want is a disincentive, so I stick to a few I keep in a box near my bed.
Early last week, when picking up a newly framed photo, I began to wonder if a frame would work in the same way as my old cupboard door. I got to considering whether I had anything I could adapt and came up with a scroll frame. It was for a particular project and I haven't used it since. I put it aside to think about and to look for fabric.
In fact, they had them up to 28"! I came home with a set and got to work.
A hunt through my stash came up with a limited number of fabric pieces big enough. I found an accessible place I could hang it on my bedroom wall, below a painting Brigid had done around 10 years ago. I rejected bright flowery prints and a dark green linen in favour of a pale, dusty pink double damask that complemented the painting.
I haven’t used my staple gun for several years, but it was loaded with staples. I managed to staple one side, then pull the fabric tight, one side at a time, stapling the fabric to the inside of the stretcher, all without stapling my fingers. It took a while, and was tiring, but successful.
I found a long braid I made in a lucet workshop and attached it under Brigid’s painting, to the same hook. It hung well below the painting. I used a hook to attach the frame to the braid. My original thought was to stitch it, but Create in Stitch suggested a hook, and it worked.
Pretty well, I thought.
Next was the hunt for my earrings. Many were in the earring book, but others had strayed. When I found them I sorted them. A few singles went into my oddments tin to use as embellishments or cord stoppers. I have a small box of pairs to be mended: a job for Beads on Parade
The remainder I added to the hanging frame. I kept back a few small studs and hoops as too fiddly. I’m not sure yet if I will keep these in the earring book, or in a jewellery box beside my bed.
I probably could have managed with smaller stretchers - 24" maybe - as I'm not planning on buying more earrings. It doesn't, however, look out of place. I like the way it has turned out. It seems fitting: useful and decorative. It remains to be seen if it works.
2 comments:
It looks good below the painting. I hope it works well for you.
Many thanks Lyn.🤞🏼
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