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Showing posts with label vicky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vicky. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Thrifty Thursday

I am getting behind here. I better catch up!

We have this wonderful friend named Vicky who lives down in the Fond du Lac area. We became friends through the Wisconsin Sheltie Rescue and since then we've enjoyed keeping in touch even though we moved up to Oconto. 

We both really enjoy thrifting and set aside one day to get together where we hit all of our favorite thrift shops in the Calumet County and Fond du Lac areas. We meet up at the first one and we hit six or seven of them in a route, and see what kind of bargains we can find. 

Last year when we met for our thrifting we had made a stop at the local A&W for the chicken dinner. So that's what we chose to do again. Vicky even had coupons. It was nice enough out that we could even sit on the picnic tables and eat outdoors. Otherwise this A&W is the old fashioned Drive-In kind with the car hop and you sit in your vehicle to eat.  This was more fun to sit outside. 


Last year we had crawled up in this chair together. This year we were running out of time and had to get moving. So we convinced some little boys to take our cell phone and take pictures of a standing in front of the big chair.

Do we look Thrifty? 


Vicky also loaded me up with some quilting supplies from her mother who passed away.  These great quilt kits will keep my busy all winter long! They are complete with the fabrics and the patterns for each one.  I am going to make the most favorite one up for Vicky, in memory of her mom.  It has an assortment of cardinals and is a nice wall hanging quilt.  I will do the quilting parts and she will complete with the stitching of the embroidered leaves and blanket stitching around the appliqued birds.  So it will be a two-person project. 


One of the most spectacular bargains I found was this rolling Sullivan craft table for TEN DOLLARS! I saw it in the back corner of a thrift shop and I knew I had to have it. I had missed out on one on Facebook Marketplace last month for $25  and knew exactly where I wanted to keep it

.

They sell over $200 new at Jo-Ann's. Every once in awhile you can find them on sale for about $130 or use a coupon. So for a mere $10, it came home with me! It seemed to have been put together incorrectly and it was a little tilted at the main center section where it meets the frame. But Steve looked at it and said we could correct that at home. He nicely loaded it up in the back of the Saturn and rearranged everything else to make it fit.

We sure found a bunch of other wonderful bargains, didn't spend much, but we covered a lot of miles and had a lot of laughs.  Steve followed us around while I rode in Vicky's car with her.  It was a great way to spend a day.

After we headed on home, Steve unloaded it all in the house. I piled things up on the ottoman until I figured out what goes where. We have a deal when we bring something IN the house, we have to take something OUT! So there were other things that I've been putting in a box to donate to the thrift stores. Making things even-steven. But we sure did make a haul didn't we?  I needed a small casserole dish for the motorhome, got some boxed christmas cards, extra craft supplies, story books, and a hand crocheted Home Sweet Home in a frame. I even found a skein of wool sock yarn.



Steve found a pair of jeans, and a new windshield wiper for the Saturn.  We even found this great set of solar powered patio lights. They were brand new in the box and we checked them, and yes they work. The original price tag was $39.95! We got them for $4.99.  The string is only 9 ft long and we need closer to 18 ft for the awning on the motorhome. I went online and found the exact same box on Amazon for $20. So I ordered that and it should be here next week. Now we have a complete set for the entire length of the awning.  Nice! 



The white milk glass bowl with the lacy edge is for a project. We had seen on Pinterest where you make it into a pin cushion and the little scallops around the edges can hold scissors and other various sewing tools. 



We had kept our eye open at 5 or 6 different thrift shops looking for this type of bowl. We each wanted to make one. But we didn't see any! As we walked into the 7th Thrift Shop I mentioned to Vicky:  "Oh my, we still haven't seen those white milk glass bowls" And what do we do, we looked up on the very next shelf and there were four of them!  I also bought the tree made of wine corks for a craft idea for Xmas.



I thought these boxes were really cool. They're called Bob's Boxes. They are decorative nesting boxes that are very sturdy and heavy cardboard. I am going to organize them with a variety of my sewing things to stack up in the corner of the She Shed. A pretty way to store items instead of just using plastic totes.



When I got home, I found a box sitting at the front steps. It was from my friend Linda down in Tennessee! I had lamented about how my favorite cookies that are no longer available at our local Aldi store. They had been there a couple weeks ago and I bought one box. I had wished I had bought more.

 

They are very rich and creamy made with real maple syrup from Canada. They are so rich you can only eat one cookie at a time so a box lasts quite a while. But our Aldi was out and said they didn't know if they would get more, it's "seasonal" item.  I was feeling sad that I couldn't find them again. Well, that stinker friend Linda found four more boxes at her Aldi in Tennessee and mailed them to me! It cost her more to mail them than what the cookies cost!


Steve wheeled in my new-to-me craft table. After a little bit of adjusting on the bottom and he unbent two of the hinges. It was back in perfect working order. What a great bargain for $10!



Here it is all stretched out with my biggest rotary cutting mat.  Maybe I will need to buy another mat or two yet? LOL  I can also set my big ironing plank board on top of it for more space too. 


This is a great addition to my She Shed.  I can fold out only half of it, if it's all I need for space on a smaller project. When it's in the closed position it makes kind of a closed off cubicle out of my sewing desk area.  (and blocks off the view of the clutter on the sewing desk!) 

    


It works perfect to stretch out and lay out to piece the quilt blocks together instead of having me crawling around on my hands and knees on the floor.   Here is my newest quilt, and I am lining up blocks to pin together in a certain order, making sure no two same colors touch each other. 

We can even use it for extra buffet 

or dining table seating space 

for family gatherings. 


In the next blog I will catch up a little bit about our Saturday house project and then our Sunday family gathering for Halloween and my birthday!

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Our RV Is Parked - Birds And Rugs and Trees

The motorhome is parked in the driveway for a couple days. We are going to handle a few haircuts, a dentist appointment, and  then we will refill and regroup to go out again. Depending on the weather, we might take off Wednesday or even Tuesday afternoon. We will see. I think our next goal is to go to a National Forest campground that we know of in northern Wisconsin. We haven't been there for a number of years. It might be nice to get back there one more time before the leaves are down and the snow begins to fall.

For right now, we have a couple things to take care of in the house...

A month or two ago, my good friend Vicky had been sorting through some of her late mother's craft items. She came across this adorable chickadee wall hanging that was only partially finished. She asked if I would mind finishing it up, in honor of her mother to make it for her and her father to enjoy in memory of their beloved mom and wife.

Of course, I jumped at the chance. Beloved Evelyn had already done the hard work of all the adorable little chickadees. All I had to do was finish up the border, sandwich it together with batting and backing.... and run over it with my quilting machine. I put pretty swirls all over it in muted grey thread.  Then I put the binding around the edge and four little hanging tabs on top.

It was a lot of fun to finish it up, and I felt thrilled to be asked to complete it for them to remember her and her beautiful work.


Two weeks ago we spent the day with Vicky and I was able to personally give it to her so we didn't have to ship it in the mail. I could tell she was pleased. We had a great day together, hitting all of our favorite old thrift stores, and a bit of silliness for lunch. 


Her father does the most beautiful stained-glass work and we have been gifted with a few of his pieces in the past. She handed me a big box and inside was the most beautiful large array of holly leaves and bright red berries with a very delicate beautiful chickadee in the center! 



How wonderful is that! What a thoughtful beautiful thing to me as a thank you gift. He really didn't have to do anything, I enjoyed working on the quilt hanging.

Now that we were home for a couple days, I decided to find the right spot to hang it. I walked all around the house looking for the perfect place.

At the top of the stairs in my She Shed, there's this horizontally shaped window that cranks open awning style. It's just the perfect place to hang the chickadee! The hook is securely attached to the glass and it will slowly descend as the window is cranked open and shut. I used to hang a smaller blue blown glass heart from Mexico, and this would fit the space better. 



Little Binney watched me put it up into place. 
She approves.



Today is Sunday, which means it's a Packer Game Sunday. We do enjoy watching the Packer games, but often I will just listen to them while Steve watches. I will turn around from time to time to watch the good exciting plays. In the meantime, I usually sit my butt right down by the sewing machine or on the bench of my Sanna Kangas Finlander Barn Loom. Time to turn out another rug---



I was looking back in my records and I've already woven 11 rugs from this loom since I got it in mid-July. Two rugs became gifts, seven are already sold from my Etsy store, and I only have two left in my inventory. Time to get some more rugs created. I like the colors in this newest one, is kind of Hit and Miss with some flashes of turquoise, bits of gray, and a few little shots of other colors here and there. I love how the colors undulate from one to another.



I weave with two strips of rags together, doubled up which makes for a thicker rug. It lays flatter on the floor and doesn't rumple up as easily. It also gives the opportunity to make more random color changes, without abrupt endings of one color and beginnings of the next color.


Before the Packer game started, Steve thought maybe we should start planting the three new trees we picked up the other day. Happily, the trees made it through the four days while we were camping without being attacked by our backyard visitors, the deer! 

We had stored them close to the garage by the pergola where we hoped the deer wouldn't find them. We were happy to come home and see that none of the branches had been munched off. The first one we got planted was the cute little Japanese maple. This one was smaller than the other two and it is a tree that will stay smaller, more of a dwarf tree. We decided to plant it in the middle of Binney's little fenced-in potty yard. We thought it might give some nice shade to the area where the picnic table is on the patio and add a little color to that portion of the house.



I know it's small now, but hopefully it will spread its branches and reach up to the sky and fill out and become a nice little tree. The leaves are so delicate and dainty and quite small. I've never owned a tree like this before so it will be nice to see it grow and mature.



We quit for the morning and went in the house to watch the Packer game. I worked on my rug while Steve kept good control of his team with some armchair quarterbacking. Of course the players listen to him, and rallied around at the end to win in overtime with a free-throw kick. It was rather chancey but they finally pulled through, with Coach Steve's urging.

It was pretty hot and muggy outside. The temps were in the seventies but the humidity was 79%. It was heavy and grey and cloudy and damp. Not the type of weather we really want to be planting trees in. But they needed to get done.

The next tree we decided to tackle was the red maple tree. This one started losing some of its leaves already, as it is meant to do this time of year. So it might look a little scraggly in the photo. By looking up close we did see some new growth on the leaves and buds so we know it's a good healthy tree. We found the perfect spot for it in the backyard near some of the other maples that we had already planted two weeks ago. We immediately circled it with a new fence and posts and secured it from all three directions with gentle ropes to keep it centered and not bend over in the heavy winter winds.


Here is an up-close pic of some of the maple leaves.  It will be nice to see the new fresh ones break out in the spring and fill up the tree. This one seemed more balanced and symmetrical with more branches than the other two maples we put in a couple weeks ago. I think it will be a beautiful shining glorious tree, based at the northwest corner of our backyard.



Now it's time to tackle the willow tree. This was the tallest of the three trees, about 7 feet or so. I was quite excited to get a willow tree. They are generally pretty messy but they are beautiful--- dipping and swaying in the wind as the weeping branches spill over and down like a shower of leaves. We had one when we lived on the river, and I really wanted a willow tree again. We carefully chose a place where the roots would stay very wet. They do the best in that type of soil condition. Along our fence line we have lots of damp land, and there was a perfect spot to put this tree.



We got it into place and filled in the ground around it and gave it a few more bucketfuls of water. Although the ground was already moist and damp, little bit more water doesn't hurt. I think this will make a nice backdrop for our yard, back behind all of the apple trees that are already planted between there and the house.

These thin wispy willow leaves are really messy. They are not easy leaves to rake up if you keep them in a well manicured landscaped yard. With locating it this far back on our two and a half acre plot, the leaves can blow willy-nilly and I won't care. I was looking close at one of the branches and there's even new growth at the tips. That's a good sign for the tree. Hopefully the roots will get a good start this fall, before the cold weather creeps in and freezes the ground.



While we were working on the trees, we heard a cacophony of crazy sounds in hoarse sounding squawks. Overhead was a big flock of sandhill cranes flying to gather in the nature preserve and the state wildlife marsh behind our home. Group after group flew overhead, screaming raucously and calling to each other.



They know it's time to get going and head south. They know better than any of those educated weathermen, don't they? As we were working on the trees we probably saw 200 or more of the sandhill cranes fly over head.



So here's our backyard apple orchard. There are five different apple trees and one cherry tree. All of them have been surrounded by six foot high fences to keep out the deer. After a number of years worth of growth, we hope to be able to take down some of the fences. Closer to the house are 6 new maple trees and a burr oak in memory of my mom. We are doing what we can to keep them safe and give them a good start.



Inside one of the circled fences around the damp moist land I saw this great big mushroom had popped up overnight. It was about 12 -14 inches high and quite delicate and pretty. I don't even know what kind it is. We'll just leave it there to do its thing. I won't bother to pick it or dispose of it because it evidently needs to grow there. It's inside of a fence, so the dog or the grandkids won't get to it either.



After we were all done with our tree planting, we were debating on what to make for supper. It felt too hot and sticky to cook.  We turned on the AC in the house for the afternoon, and I didn't want to heat it up again with the oven. There is a little crossroads country bar and restaurant called the Cream City Country Club. It really isn't a country club at all. But it's a cute name.  It's only a few miles away. We ordered up some broasted chicken and barbecued ribs for take out. They sure give you plenty of food!

There will be enough left over for lunch tomorrow, for sure.

This evening, we will catch up with some of our favorite TV shows that we missed while we were camping. It's nice that Spectrum TV App allows us to go back in our library in find the favorite HGTV shows that we enjoy watching. So now that the Packers have won, the rug weaving and tree planting is done, it's time to act like couch potatoes and watch a little TV tonight.