November 29, 2012

Contemporary Wreath

Although my first love is always the traditional Christmas wreath of balsam fir from Nova Scotia forests, I thought I would try my hand this year at putting together a more contemporary design.
It is still a work in progress as I haven't quite mastered the art of nicely finishing off the mesh tails!

 
The mesh is easy to work with and available in a multitude of colors and shades. And it can be used both inside the house and outdoors. A wreath made with gold mesh and silver mesh with gold and silver ornaments would be striking!
My mesh loops are attached with pipe cleaners to a double ringed wire frame. There are dozens and dozens of possible combinations of colors and ornamentation. I got the mesh at Oceanview Garden Centre in the Chester area and one of the staff members there showed me a number of ways to decorate the wreath. I chose the white mesh as I thought it would show up well against the charcoal door and the green because it would complement the creamy yellow color of the house.
 
 
 
As I was putting it together, I thought how much fun Lucy and Apolline would have making wreaths, big or small, for Easter, Valentine's Day, Christmas - even birthdays! Their little hands would need a bit of help here and there to carry out their own design and colour ideas. I have seen instructional videos using styrofoam wreath frames with either pins or ribbons to attach the mesh. So as long as the wire mesh is available, there are a number of different ways to go about constructing the wreath.
 
 
And on the back deck, a more traditional arrangement with the red osier dogwood, chamaecyparis (nootkatensis and plumosa), and pine from our own garden.

November 10, 2012

This Weekend's Find

 
Darning Mushroom
 
Though it is possible to darn holes in socks by improvising and using a light bulb or an orange, etc., the right tool makes the job so much easier and more enjoyable. And the right tool is either a darning egg or darning mushroom, preferably with an attached handle.
 
Alas, despite the glorious resurgence of knitting over the last decade, and, in particular, the increased popularity of sock knitting, trying to find a darning egg or mushroom can prove to be daunting.
KnitPicks, online in the United States, has a darning egg for sale at $3.99. Plus taxes, shipping, and customs/duty fees.There are a handful of websites in North America that sell antique eggs or mushrooms for thirty or forty odd dollars! (Now, God love them, though the shipping fees to Canada would not make the purchase practical, the Brits are apparently still into repairing socks as there are lots for sale over the Pond!)
 
This morning, we set out for a drive along the South Shore of Nova Scotia. We stopped in Mahone Bay where I purchased my first pair of high boots with heels in over 15 years (Daughter No.2 will be so proud of me!). We stopped at Oceanview Garden Center in Chester and got some wreath making supplies and lots of creative ideas from the staff there. We went on a short walk with Nora through the woods along the Chester Connection Trail. And, on the way home, we stopped at Blue Shutters Antiques. I explained to the the lady what I was looking for and she immediately took me to a shelf in a back room with a darning mushroom - the only one in the store. And, given the cost of good sock yarn,  the $12.00 for an antique darning tool was well worth the investment.
 
I can only conclude that after buying luscious yarn and spending hours knitting a pair of socks,  people are either making do and mending with things around the house (the aforementioned light bulb, etc.) or - horror of horrors - they are throwing their socks away. (A wit, once asked to explain how she darned socks, is said to have held a sock over a trash bin, declared "Darn it!", and dropped the sock in.)
 
I hope that a good supply of darning tools appears in the marketplace before long. We have become such a disposable society...

November 04, 2012

Christmas at the Forum

This morning, I went to Christmas at the Forum, an annual Christmas sale held each year in Halifax. I haven't been to this particular pre-Christmas event in at least a decade. There certainly were a large number of vendors and lots of people browsing. While there wasn't much that interested me personally, I did make a couple of great finds.
 
 
The New Blue Birdhouse
 
The first is the Blue Birdhouse. The man who hand makes them (he had a variety of sizes and colors) told me that the roof is made from real metal roofing shingles and the key hanging at the peak of the house close to the roof is from the old post office in Fredericton, New Brunswick! I just love it.
 
And here's the second great find:
 
 
A block of tempered glass
 
 
that lights up at night with white mini lights inside!
 
The glass block has a large hole drilled in the back so a very small (20-25 bulb) set of Christmas mini lights can be inserted. The older couple selling the glass blocks pointed out that it could be used in so many locations inside the house. The ribbon can be changed to suit a variety of occasions, the color of the lights changed, and the block could also be used on a deck table on dark summer nights or to light the steps outside the front door. It is very pretty.