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Tuesday, September 22, 2015

New China & Dried Flowers








My new found ironstone mug and saucer are all ready for chilly mornings ahead. They make an impromptu vignette with other recent finds that always seem to start out on my dining room table.




A small wicker flower basket that I came across is perfect for all the dried weeds and flowers that I collect in fall. But right now I am gathering together a few display ideas with the dried bouquets I already have.




Still on the table are a few rose china dishes that I got at a great price that seem perfect for fall too, I am drawn to a bit of dusty pink in September. Just a touch. And I like the spare pattern these have against a soft ivory color.













I bought the grass a long time ago. I'm glad it lasts forever because I am always shocked at the cost of dried bouquets!




Better to keep the few fresh bunches that I get throughout the year when I can. I made an effort to dry my white roses in a sort of garland when I hung them to dry this time.








They are simply perched on top of this fab fruit basket I scored a few weeks ago for now. (I seem to go basket crazy this time of year!)




All the pale colors seem happy together with the touches of gold on this overcast day. We are due for our first fall showers this afternoon. Can there be anything more delicious?









Time to get the tea kettle on!

I hope you are also having a cozy start to your week!

Thanks so much for stopping by for a visit!

Jacqueline




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Friday, September 18, 2015

Vintage Musings At The Window. . .




Sometimes I come across the most adorable baby things! My little grand girls have all sprung up and are hardly small anymore. The older girls are all eleven-teen. That shift between child and teen is more dramatic than ever these days! Not too much "tween" left between. (So many interesting years ahead.) So I can't even pretend to need baby gowns around!




But these vintage beauties aren't that much about babies anymore. They have become more of a symbol of a vastly changed world in which so many of the domestic arts have slowly slipped away. And the joy that a fluffy cotton gown can bring by merely hanging in a breezy window just can't be easily explained! 




Nor can I account for the odd pull of other objects found in my vintage travels, with their random inter-relatedness. Shapes and forms seem to call themselves together in my workspace. A finial, a pawn, and a few porcelain water balls have made a statement among the laces on my ironing board. (Still literally an old board.) Do they remind me of little people?




I left the little pumpkin colored ribbon I found on the gown as a nod to the coming season. It mirrors the little ribbon motif  found in the crochet pattern.




I bought the little (big) pawns with the ribbons 'round their necks too. (I wonder if they would have had the same appeal without?)










A cool breeze drifts through the window reminding me that it is cooling down, yet it is not the chilly cool of spring. How can the same temperature feel so different at opposite ends of summer? It's never been tested, but I imagine that I am the kind of person who could keep this same measure of air, forever and always, as I stand beside this view to the world on the other side of the glass. But would I really keep things the same even if  I could? 




I am struck, suddenly remembering a quote I recently read from the writings of Miguel Ruiz.

"Whatever life takes away from you, let it go."




Perhaps this is me saying goodbye to another beautiful season, losses and all, as September drifts into fall. . . . 





Time to move on. . . .

I hope it's a wonderful weekend for you!

Jacqueline




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Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Ironing Linen~ Befores and Afters


I never like to start a post with a "before" picture. You deserve better! And if you have actually tuned in to see ironing?. . . Well, . . .  lets just say we are a rare bunch!




I asked one of my linen friends, Ginnie, the other day if she had any white-worked pillowcases available, and she said, "I don't know, all my new linens are still in the refrigerator!" If you understand the meaning of that phrase, then you have come to the right place!





I just worked with a small batch of linens today after soaking. They mostly just needed freshening up. Seems like I haven't had a linen day in ages! I thought you might like to have a look at what a difference pressing can make.





This pretty piece is a small hand towel. Guests will never use these, so I usually have them tucked in somewhere for display or as a doily over or under something. Didn't it turn out beautifully?





I am often asked about how to launder linens, but I am no expert. Wash them gently in cold water to avoid setting any stains, and if that's not enough I give them an overnight soak in a non-chlorine whitener like Oxyclean. If you want to know about the proper way to press things, here's a link to some hints by Heloise. (You will also find out what linens in the refrigerator is all about!)




It has been said that if your photos aren't good enough, they're not close enough. Well, with ironing, if your linens aren't pressing out smoothly enough, they are not moist enough! I keep a spritzer nearby for areas of cloth that have dried out too much, but I almost always iron linens quite damp from the line or dryer (low setting). A very hot iron is best.




I press embroidered pieces from the wrong side to keep from flattening and damaging the hand-work, but that can sometimes take a close look, as in this example. I had to put my reading glasses on! This is machine embroidery and is not that much different on the top side, here, from the wrong side, below.









Pressing makes this thin cotton fabric look so much nicer!















I like the look of rumpled hankies, but this one gets the treatment today.




I was hoping that this grey mark would soak out, but nothing doing. I'm going to imagine that it was a drop of ink from an old love letter that the owner was writing while she shed a tear or two. . . .




Hardly noticeable anyway.




Such lovely details!












I wouldn't hesitate to put this lovely pillowcase on a guest bed unironed if I was in a hurry.





But smooth linen is so lovely to lie your head down on!





This rumpled runner reveals a few secrets in the pressing.





The unpressed edging curls under.





The iron perks it up.





And begins to show a nice stripe in the damask weave.






But just look at this lovely spray of Lily of the Valley that emerges in the ironing! I hadn't actually noticed exactly what the pattern was! So very romantic!





I think a damask weave benefits the most with a good ironing. So beautiful and smooth now!





This is a rather long runner or dresser scarf as you can see. (Too thin a weave for a towel.)






And you may notice that I avoid ironing the fold. Folding is hard enough on fine linens. Storing them rolled in tissue is really best. I never do that, but I certainly admire those who do!





All done!




That's the end of show and tell for today! I can't tell you what good therapy this is if you don't already know!





So nice to have you visit while I do my laundry!

 Nothing like a good chat over the ironing board!

Is there a linen day ahead for you?

Happy ironing!

Jacqueline










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