The Blue Hemp Dress: a follow up on not finishing the seams.

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Yes, it works like a charm!  The fraying that you see here will not increase.  Hemp linin is self finishing!  5 washes and the edges bind together like soft Velcro. 

 

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To boot, the first three washes, iron while still fresh from the washing machine and the seams learns to stay open!  I only need to iron if I need it to look crisp from here on.  The shots of the seams above are fresh from the dryer with no ironing. The caveat is to pull the dress (hemp linen garment) from the dryer (not an overly full one to crush the garment)  as soon as it stops and hang it up.  Put on a hanger and Done.

 

Here are some shots of the zipper after

One wash after the ironing.

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three washes (still damp but drying) and after the ironing.thursday 005

Love it!

Weekly Photo Challenge: Joy

Joy is when you love something and it loves you back.

I LOVE coffee!  And it officially loves me back! 

 

Really!  Also I got 5lbs of Organic French roast bean from Bill and I got 5lbs of Organic French roast bean from Bill for Christmas.  That is a cool 10lbs of Organic coffee and that is a lot to love!  Love it when you know Bill and he knows that you love coffee!

A Blue Hemp Dress

First off, Dresses are so much easier than coats!Solstice finishings 002

I cut the dress out of a modified pattern of the coat.  Yes, the same but not the same.

I bought in the ease and lengthen the bottom to become a skirt.  I love the feel of the material swishing around my ankles so I made it a maxi.

I tucked up the sleeves from a gather to a tuck  and it falls nicely from the shoulders.  Solstice finishings 003

The dress is made of 55% Hemp and 45% organic cotton so it is a keeper. As this is hemp I have taken upon myself not to finish the seams in any way as hemp has a tendency to just act like Velcro when washed a few times at the raw edges.  So I am keeping my fingers crossed that whole dress doesn’t fall apart meantime.  If the raw edges do begin to deteriorate I will do a Hong Kong finish.  Only time will tell.

Start to finish 3hrs for the dress and 35hrs for the coat.  Dresses are so much easier!

Felted Wool coat is finished and warm for winter

coat 1Solstice finishings 007  Solstice finishings 005Just in time for Winter I finished the coat!

dec 20 13 011dec 20 13 017I removed the excess cotton lining from the sleeves and finished by folding the silk up and over the cotton and slip stitched to the wool. This stoke of laziness gave me a warm inner sleeve as the silk falls gently around my wrist.

I created hoops of hemp thread for the hooks at the top and waist. They work really well.dec 20 13 004dec 20 13 027

This was an overly long project but worth every bit.  The coat will keep me warm for our west coast winters!

Community:A chalk artist in Victoria with a seasonal message to ponder

 

(This was in my inbox this morning from a true English Iteland Gentleman and I felt it was to share.  )

“Season’s Greetings

He’s back. No. I don’t mean Santa. I mean Ian Morris, a chalk artist on Government Street in Victoria since 2004.He often has to sleep in the doorway in this photograph and supports himself from donations from passers by, and the food banks. Last year I photographed him reproducing one of Raphael’s paintings in Florence. This year he has copied another Raphael.

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Ian was one of the premier artists featured in the Victoria International Chalk Art Festival this year as well as last.

Ian parents were from Liverpool. His father was at primary school with John Lennon. To visit Liverpool one day is at the top of Ian’s wish list.

Ian said that 2013 has been a good year for him. Tourists on Government Street, on their way to China Town, have been generous.

He said that he drew this year’s Raphael as a ‘thank you’ to the citizenry in Victoria. And to remind passers by -  what he called ‘ the frenzied shoppers’  – on one of the city’s major shopping streets, of the core meaning of the Season and on the abiding scandal of the numerous homeless on the streets in this capital city, in this rich Province, in this rich country, for whom there is still ‘no room at the inn’ : especially for the indigenous peoples. Ian feels strongly about the plight of the indigenous peoples in Canada. To him it’s a festering scandal.

Ian was insistent that I give money to neighbouring artists further along the street. He helps them from his meager resources, because they are destitute Inuit from Iqaluit, in Nunavut. Ian said that they have little money and addiction problems. They also don’t have a license to ‘ busk’ and sell their small stone carvings, so they are at risk of being moved along by City bylaw enforcement and of being fined for busking without the necessary permits.

( I am sending a separate email about the Inuit buskers near Ian. And here it is)

Here was Ian, homeless, hardly making a living himself, but most concerned – really very concerned – about the less fortunate : busking a few yards away from him, even though they were likely impacting the level of donations coming his way from passers by who might otherwise drop money in his hat. He didn’t want me to put any money in his hat, directing me instead to the Inuit.

Doesn’t it seem sometimes that only the poor are really generous ?

I can learn much from Victoria’s homeless premium chalk artist. Can’t we all ?

Wishing you all that you wish yourselves, and all your loved ones, at Christmas and in 2014.

Greetings again

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Here are the Inuit stone carvers that Ian, the chalk artist, asked me to help. They were from Iqaluit, in Nunavut, carving and selling little soapstone ‘inukshuks’ – an Inuit word meaning ‘in the image of man’ : stone figures built to resemble humans. Inukshuks can be found along Canada’s northern shores from Baffin Island to Victoria Island. Originally built as landmarks to aid in navigation and to assist in caribou hunting, the inukshuks have been adopted as a symbol to remind us of our dependence on each other and the value of strong relationships. Nunavut is the largest and most northern Canadian Territory and has incorporated an inukshuk on its Territorial flag.The Inuit were formerly referred to as Eskimos.One of the Inuit trio carvers was clearly disturbed. His loud mutterings to himself did not aid the cause. People hurried by not stopping to put anything in their hat. They had been carving for hours, they said, and had sold a few inukshuks, enough to buy themselves supper at McDonalds.”

Photography by Kevin Doyle

 

A follow up comment to the Photographer

 

People talk of the lazy ‘Indians’. But look at this Inuit. He took hours to carve this from the soapstone square ( seen in my first photograph), with a file – yet sold these for only $5. Would I work so hard for hours for so little ? And would I even have the skill ? No.Kevin's Photo

Weekly Photo Challenge:Community

Sustenance for All. This is bench made by the community for the community!Craigflower 237The bench is a cob cement creation with bits of wood, stone, glass, pottery, plastic, and other foundling to entice the viewer.Craigflower 239Craigflower 241The community makers sculpted on the back an Otter and hands to hold the sitters. Craigflower 246Craigflower 245