Thursday 5 December 2013

Screen printing fun

I learnt the art of screen printing while assisting the lovely Helen Rawlinson (do check her work, she makes the most gorgeous things!).

I decided to invest in a kit last year with the idea of printing baby vests but after printing a grand total of four vests, I ran out of puff and time and the kit and the blank vests just lay there abandoned.

But as I've now set up a Facebook selling page and might have a stall at my WI's Christmas Extravaganza, I figured I'd best get printing again.

With the help of my (very patient!) hubby, I've spent a couple of evenings printing the stock of vests and some tote bags too.





Ok, they're nowhere near as original as what Helen makes but I'm happy with how they turned out. All of these are now on sale on my page, so go and have a look.

Sunday 1 December 2013

Headbands, headbands, headbands

The past few nights (yes, yes, nights!) I have been making a series of flowery baby and toddler headbands to sell on my page and at craft fairs.

With the right tools, they're relatively easy to make and they are very cute.






Of course I needed a model but luckily, I have one at home who was happy to oblige.



If you want to purchase one of these, please go and check my Facebook page: Handcrafted by Dealuna.

Thursday 28 November 2013

Contact the Elderly

Have you seen any of Contact the Elderly's posters? You know, the one that says "Take Harry and Sally to tea"? I have, for some time. And all the while I really wanted to sign up as a volunteer but just never got round to it. Until this year that is.

Because we are lucky enough to have a ground floor loo, we were able to sign up as volunteers to host a tea party twice a year for a group of elderly people who would otherwise be lonely and isolated. If you don't have the right facilities at home to host a party, you can also sign up as a volunteer driver, you'll then go and pick up an elderly person once a month and drive them to a tea party, hosted by someone like me.


All too easily nowadays, elderly people just get forgotten about. And yet, they hold some precious nuggets of history that will disappear when they do, stories and memories which deserve to be heard. When my grandmother passed away, my biggest regret was not to have asked her to tell me more of her stories or repeat the ones she told us again and again so we'd never forget them. Whenever an elderly relative goes to the other side, I'm of course very saddened by their departure but I also can't help but mourn that little bit of history that goes with them. Events too insignificant to make it into the history books yet to me (and them), they all matter, they all contribute to our collective memory in some way.

I've always wanted to give those elderly people who have no one left a bit a of a good time, put a smile on their face for a few hours maybe days afterwards. No one should grow old lonely. But most importantly, I want our daughter to grow up respecting her elders and appreciating their contribution to the world we live in. I think that was the key incentive for me to finally sign us up as volunteers.

For my husband, there was another incentive. As a keen baker, it gives him the opportunity to bake all sorts of treats without the disadvantage of piling on the pounds by having to eat it all ourselves. It's also a great way to get impartial feedback on his skills, elderly people aren't afraid to tell it like it is!

Here's the selection we had on offer at the latest tea party: lemon macaroons, red velvet cupcakes, Battenberg and boterkoek (a Dutch specialty).
The parties have been such fun, I wish we could host them more often. If you have the means or the time, I urge you to sign up as a volunteer, it's really worthwhile.

Saturday 23 November 2013

Handcrafted by DeaLuna on Facebook

If I'd been a tad less busy and a whole lot more organised, I'd be selling my wares at Christmas fayres this winter. But I left it all too late and the holiday season seems to have sprung up on me out of nowhere.

So instead of dragging my lovingly handmade goodies from market to market, I've decided to make the most of social media and set up shop on Facebook.

If you like what I make, please go and have a look at the page, and most importantly, like it and share it!





Overnight headband

I think it's fair to say I love dressing up my daughter. And for a ten months old, she's already amassed an impressive collection of accessories, mainly shoes and headgear.

A lot of it has been bought or received but I've also taken great pleasure in stitching, crocheting and knitting hats and headbands for my baby girl. I think mainly because I haven't really got the time for big projects anymore and hats and headbands are so quick to make.

My latest creation was improvised one evening and finished by the next morning. With the festive season coming up, I wanted a red knitted headband to keep her little ears warm. I raided my stash and set to work but kept things really simple: one straight piece of knitting for the headband. Then for the bow, I started with the same width, decreased gradually towards the centre then increased gradually to get back to the starting width. Finally I knitted a tiny rectangle which I used to finish the bow and tie it to the headband. Add a big button and... doesn't she look glamorous?




Quickie bats

Okay, I'm obviously catching up and this is a properly belated post!

This year, I couldn't be bothered to carve a pumpkin for halloween, I simply had too much going on and I find hollowing the thing really tedious. I cheated and put a few halloween lanterns in the window. But then I thought it looked a bit bare and I felt I had to make a little something so I improvised with bits and bobs from my stash.

I found some polystyrene balls, bamboo skewers, black felt and a few sewing pins and decided to turn them into bats. Hubby and I learnt a lesson that day, don't spray paint polystyrene, the paint creates a chemical reaction that makes the polystyrene melt! I used a permanent marker instead to turn them black. Then I cut the felt into batwings, glued the wings to the skewers then pricked the skewers in the balls. Add a couple of red pins for the eyes, et voilà, a pair of bats, quick and easy!


Okay, they're not my most refined piece of crafting but hanging in the window, in the glow of the halloween lanterns, they looked pretty effective.

Wednesday 6 November 2013

Goodbye Miss Marple, hello Merlin

My beloved and gorgeous cat, Miss Marple, passed away just short of her 15th birthday in May. She was diagnosed with kidney failure and slipped away all in a matter of days. We had to make the heartbreaking decision of having her put down, something that still haunts me today.


Miss Marple really was my first baby. We went through so much together. She entered my life when I was at uni and accompanied me on the weekly train journey between my student flat and my parent's house. She relocated from Belgium to the UK with me and moved houses another 5 times in the years that followed. We fell in love with my now husband together. She went through all my ups and downs and in the years I was travelling a lot for work, she made my house a home, a place to come back to.


Miss Marple was loved by many, from the many housemates we shared our lives with to the friends who looked after her in my absence, not to mention my husband for whom she'd put on a full seduction show every day he was home.

She didn't take very well to having a baby entering her life and for that, I'll always feel a little guilty. She was a truly beautiful creature with a lovely temperament and a fantastic character. I'd hoped we had a few more years together but I guess it was time for her to go. I miss her every day and it was very hard to let another kitty enter my life.

But as Nimue, my daughter, is growing up, we noticed how much she was attracted to cats when we went to my family or to friends with felines at home. We decided she really needed a cat of her own to grow up with and Bristol and Wales Cat Rescue were organising a re-homing show at the end of September so... Enter Merlin!


Merlin is an "older" kitten, she's all black and very very soft and fluffy. She settled into our home without any problem and is steadily making her way into our hearts. She's mischievous, cuddly and oh so patient with our daughter!


The two of them became best buds in a matter of minutes. It is adorable to see the smile on my daughter's face when she sees the cat enter the room. It is lovely watching them play or cause mischief together. Miss Marple was a lovely cat, but the truth is she would never have bonded with Nimue in this way. Let's just say Merlin entered our lives at the right time and I really hope she and Nimue have many years of camaraderie ahead of them.



Goodbye Miss Marple, you are missed and will be missed for a long time. Welcome Merlin, you are a lovely kitty and we will provide you with the best home possible.

Oh, and a big thank you to Bristol and Wales Cat Rescue and their fosterers for all the amazing work they do.

Bear with me, I'm catching up!

Life has completely taken over these past few months and I haven't had much time to post. I'm going to try and bring everything up to date so bear with me while I catch up.

Friday 10 May 2013

Different lives, different trees

Back in February I learnt to make a tree of life pendant and blogged about it. The pendant has proved pretty popular and since the post went up, I have received six commissions for it!

Some commissions were very specific - colour, number of branches, position of the branches, etc, while others were a bit more open. After all, each person's life being different, it's only natural that commissions vary.

Here are five of them, the sixth one is still in the making.






I'm now considering making a few more of these to add to my jewellery stock so I can sell them at fairs and/or in my future online shop.

Sunday 31 March 2013

Two little spring hares

In Belgium, Easter isn't just about chocolate, it's another opportunity for children to get gifts, along with birthdays, Saint Nicholas and Christmas. This has led my hubby to declare that Belgian children are obviously spoilt. So maybe they are... But who am I to stop them?

In keeping with tradition, I wanted to get a little something for my baby girl, if only to mark her very first Easter. But I wanted it to mean something so I decided to make her a gift. 

Easter for us pagans is known as Ostara or Eostre and it celebrates the goddess by the same name. Her symbols were the egg (a fertility symbol) and a hare (as a sign of spring to come) - chocolate eggs and Easter bunnies anyone? So a bunny, or a hare, made perfect sense and I knew I had a pattern in a book I was given during pregnancy: The Home Sewn Nursery.


I got a little ambitious and decided to make two bunnies, a he and a she. That, with a babe in arms, was a bad move! I had to enlist the help of hubby so the bunnies would be finished for Easter and even with the two of us, we were still sewing past midnight to have them ready by morning. To make matters worse, the pattern is unnecessarily complicated in parts and I ended up having to do a lot more hand sewing than I'd planned. 

I used some natural linen for the head and limbs, Tilda fat quarters from my stash for the body and used Sevenberry scraps from my craft room cushions for the details. I couldn't find the right size and colour toy eyes in the sewing shop so I used black buttons for the eyes. 

When we were finished, we decided they both looked very girly so meet Peony and Rosie the little spring hares.

Peony

Rosie
I can't tell whether Nimue liked her gift though she did have a taste of Rosie when she tried to shove her in her mouth earlier. There will be a time when gifts made by mum and dad will be the most amazing thing ever and then there will be a time when handmade stuff just isn't cool. And then in later life, there will come a time when, if they have been kept with care, this kind of keepsake will be treasured immensely. I hope these two little hares will one day be just that. 

Tuesday 12 March 2013

All about comfort: speedy nursery makes

In the summer of last year, I'd bought some very cute, vintage looking, flannel fabric to make a spare cover for my maternity pillow but as with everything else, I never got round to it.



When Nimue was diagnosed with silent reflux at four weeks (horrible, horrible, horrible! I'll spare you the details), it became clear we'd be spending quite a bit of time on her feeds. During the day it's no big issue, it just takes a bit of patience but at night, when you have to spend a minimum of an hour each time in the nursing chair, you want to be comfortable. So I've used my fabric to first make a cover for the nursing pillow. A very wise move that's been as in the last few weeks, her reflux isn't so silent anymore and it's been good to have a washable cover on that cushion!

And since I had some fabric leftover after that, I've also made a neck pillow so if we doze off, we don't end up with a crooked neck. I've used a ton of toy filling I had in my stash to stuff the cushion and hey voila, our necks have been taken care of :-)



I didn't have a pattern for either. For the nursing pillow I traced around the cushion and then corrected the lines/angles. For the neck pillow, I dug up an inflatable one that lives in my suitcase and used that as the basis for my pattern. It was all done in about a couple of hours while hubby looked after the little one. Maybe not my best piece of sewing but it has been a real life saver these last few weeks!


Tuesday 5 March 2013

Cosy baby knits

I didn't manage to do much crafting during pregnancy. Frustratingly, just when I had the best reason ever to make lots of cute things, my creativity was sapped out of me. I have since learnt that your uterus holds your creative energy apparently so I guess while my womb was very busy making a gorgeous (if I may say so myself!) baby, there wasn't much energy left for other creations.

I did manage to start a knitted sleeping bag however and finished it just a few days before giving birth. I even got round to taking a few pics on my old baby doll (nearly 30 years she is!) but never found the time to blog about it. And yes that doll is massive, it's about the size of a six months old!


I've used a Debbie Bliss pattern, it's super easy to knit. But it still took me months to finish! The pattern calls for a zip but I was worried it might irritate the baby's chin so decided to use some grosgrain ribbon to stiffen the edges and use poppers instead. I've also added a tassel to the hood because, well, why not?

The bag is quite big so Nimue should be able to use it for a while and she's super toasty in it, she loves it. Personally, I think she looks like a little doll in there!


I had a fair bit of yarn left over once I was done with the sleeping bag so in an attempt to distract myself from the fact that my due date had been and gone and I was still without a baby, I started knitting a hat from the same book. I knitted the rib then realised I didn't have the right size needles to carry on. I was going to go needle shopping the next day but of course that morning my waters broke and all our plans got cancelled! 

It's taken me a while again to finish the hat, not because it's a particularly difficult or big project, I've just really struggled to find the time to knit. I'm glad I've finally finished it though, just before the weather gets too hot or her head too big for her to wear it.

As much as I've enjoyed making this, I'm going to take a little break from crafting so I can use the spare time to read some of the baby books I have piled up in my living room. I'm sure it won't take long before the crafting bug gets me again :-)