I joined Blogger years ago and never used it, so this is a new start - a place to talk about my work, and my life.
Friday, April 1 - April fool's day, luckily no one played the fool with me :-) The first day of the month is the one day I allow myself to take it easy - spent limited time on the pc, produced only one pattern today and took care of the financials. Got some chores done and went out to do grocery shopping.
The pattern was made especially for a fellow-scroller named Alan, who makes projects that are sold in Australia to raise funds for an orphanage in Burma. Alan has made more than 2500 items at his own cost and he says they made enough money through sales of his cuttings last Christmas to plant a rice field that will help to support the local village in Burma. I always find it so amazing when scrollers use their talent to help out others, and my pattern donation is just a small contribution to the wonderful work Alan does.
Tomorrow will be spent in the workshop, starting the next three projects for Creative Woodworks & Crafts, August issue. There is a rustic layered cross, an oval trinket box with inlaid butterflies on the lid, and a teacher plaque to be done.
I may have to do some shop clean-up before I can start...many odd pieces of wood have found their way off the shelves and on to the floor lately. This tends to happen when I start searching for the perfect piece of wood for a specific project :-) The wood search was for a selection of 'comfort crosses' I made, they are small freeform crosses that fit in one's hand. This cross idea is the brain child of Al Ernst, one of my scroller friends. I made them from pretty hardwoods, rounded over the edges, and sanded them real smooth. Mom and Dad each received one and another went to mom's friend Siela, whom I felt was in need of comfort. Of course now others, having seen the little crosses, want them too. Scrolling the pieces is easy enough and the rounding over is done with my disc sander and rotary tool, but the hand sanding is a problem - my hands don't do well with the intense work required to obtain the silky-smooth finish that is required. Well, I'll just sand one every now and then, and not try to do a bunch all at once. I already told a few (younger) people they can have one, as long as they do the sanding themselves ~grin~
1 comment:
I like this , sounds like a lot of work shops ....
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