Thursday, March 22, 2007

we all love tea


I learned to drink tea with my college roommates after we graduated from Seattle Pacific University. Innocently believing what we had been told about our potential, we charged forth from graduation to rent a house as our community headquarters for making the world a better place. Only to find out the world wasn't interested. Worse, it didn't even want us enough to provide full-time employment. We had so much free time we started reading books out loud to each other. This evolved into a "Monday Reading Night" tradition that continues to this day.

Our palate for tea has developed over time (as has our employment, thank goodness!). In the beginning years, we explored the tea brands offered by Safeway and settled on Tetleys and Biglow Vanilla Carmel Tea as our Favorites. Then a friend introduced us to a specialty tea shop on Queen Anne appropriately named "the Tea Cup." The whimsical names of their blended loose-leaf teas were advertisement enough...Afternoon in the Park, Commodore Grey, Paris Romance, and Decaf Plum to name a few. And the tea...well it opened our eyes and like true converts we haven't looked back.

My love of tea unexpectedly blossomed into a Christmas gift of a tea service from my husband and mother-in-law. It quickly became my favorite item in our house! We've been making pots of tea to drink together, even when it isn't reading night. To keep the teapot warm as it steeps, we've had to cover it with several layers of dishcloths.

Last weekend, I got together with some friends for an artsy crafty afternoon.

They did amazing things with beads...


Isn't this just a beautiful bauble?


Notice, please the tea...no art is complete without it!


I made my teapot it's very own, fully reversible Cozy!

The top two are the outside layers and the bottom three are the fleece and wool felt layers that went inside for insulation.


Here we are getting cozy with the cozy!


Monday, March 12, 2007

fLip FloPs wORkEd !

I just had to put out these pictures of spring in Seattle from last week. It makes me so happy to see everything changing, and growing.

The flowers are out, the moths and bugs are out. . .
The warm rain is come and
even the frogs are out!


Thursday, March 8, 2007

vinyl seat covers: how to and how not to



Inspirational Problem
I have a car with cloth seats and nanny for a darling little boy who likes to do things "ah by sef" a.k.a. all himself. This includes climbing into his own car seat. Now normally I would be all for this, as it involves much less bent and twisted lifting on my part. However it is the end of winter in Seattle, and that means mud.. lots and lots of mud stepping onto the door well, and then onto my cloth covered seat!


Solution
I decided to cover the seats, and went to Jo-Anne Fabrics looking for something fun and waterproof. Instead I found some very much on sale vinyl that matched my car exactly. Also I found fun boy fabric for accents.



Making the Pattern
supplies: brown paper, siscors, writing utensil


Method: I tucked the paper into the back crack of the seat and traced the shape of the top.
Then I tucked more paper into the edge of the seat where it joins the car wall and traced the shape of that piece.

1st how not to: Don't use a permanent marker to trace the shape..I don't even know what I was thinking!

Then I cut another piece roughly the same width of the top of the front seat, took the head rest out and put the paper over the holes, and then put the head rest back in. This held the paper in place while I traced the precise shape I wanted. I also cut little side pieces to match the seat shape.


Cutting the Pattern

I pinned the paper patterns to the vinyl and cut them out.

2nd how not to: don't just cut along the line if it is an edge that you want to sew to something else later. Instead remember to leave a seam allowance the first time you cut the pieces out. (Luckily for me, there was enough extra vinyl!)

I also decided to put some pockets on the back of the front seat for storing "kiddy" stuff.


Sewing the Covers
I joined the pieces together, then sewed hem tape around the outside perimeter to keep it all together.
3rd how not to: Don't try to sew through two layers of vinyl and hem tape at the same time if you have a Virgorelli sewing machine of indeterminately ancient age with all metal parts.

(It took me three hours to sew four inches before I figured out this gem of wisdom! After I gave up on the hem tape, things went much better.)

Here's the first removable pocket. It was kind of a bother, so I've put off making the others for a different time.



Finished Project!

Or, as my little muddy tyke said when he did finally make it all the way to his seat, "duh DA!" a.k.a. Ta DA!


Friday, March 2, 2007

Update On My Winter Relief Efforts

This morning brings a temporary setback on my efforts to encourage Lady Spring.

I thought my new strategies were working last week. The signs that led me to this erroneous conclusion? At least five days of 50 degree and sunny weather--all in a row! The cherry trees covered their naked limbs in blushing pink blossoms. My house plants shook themselves awake to grown more in a week than they did all winter.

I celebrated by lying in the sun on my pink comforter. I started fantasizing about packing up my sweaters with cedar blocks in our basement storage bins. I also bought pansies and assorted "pretties" from Ravenna Gardens to put in my planter outside.

This morning I've had to concede that my efforts may not have had the long-lasting results I hoped for.

It is snowing. In Seattle. In March.

Needless to say, you will not see me wearing my long johns. Oh NO, this definitely calls for flip-flops and a tank top!