Skip to main content

Making Fog with a Foggy Brain

 Well, I am laid up with a cold once again. You know how cold meds all tell you not to operate heavy machinery while you are taking them? A sewing machine isn't exactly HEAVY machinery...I can hold all of my machines one handed. However, it isn't a good idea to operate a sewing machine if your brains aren't fully plugged in.



I currently have two tallitot on my plate, Miles' tallit which will need lots of machine embroidery and Nini's. Nini's tallit is Nova Scotia themed. I had been working on adding some fog to the tallit using oil paint sticks.


I was thinking that the fog needed something more.

 While tidying up (I do actually do that on occasion) I found a couple of spools of white silk thread. I also had pulled out a giant cone of a persnickety rayon/silver metallic yarn to use on Miles' tallit.

My cold has shut down many of my brain cells, but I can do a chain stitch by hand even with reduced brain power.



A little bit of stitching doesn't look like much.


But it is starting to look like what I envisioned in my tiny brain.




I hadn't expected to get quite this abstract but I think that it works.




Comments

  1. So sorry you have a cold, but I think your foggy brain is on to something. Living on the coast i can see your stitches as fingers of fog. You go girl.
    Sheila in SC

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks Sheila! There are things that I know in my bones. Fog is one of them. I grew up a twenty minute amble from the beach at the bottom of a hill where the fog often collected. I am really delighted that not only does the fog that I am creating please you, and me, it also makes Nini happy.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I love hearing from my readers. I moderate comments to weed out bots.It may take a little while for your comment to appear.

Popular posts from this blog

מְחַיֵּה הַמֵּתִים

  וְנֶאֱמָן אַתָּה לְהַחֲיוֹת מֵתִים: בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יְהֹוָה מְחַיֵּה הַמֵּתִים   You are faithful to restore the dead to life. Blessed are You, Adonoy, Resurrector of the dead. That particular line is recited at every single prayer service every day three times a day, unless you use a Reform or Reconstructionist prayer book . In those liturgies instead of praising God for resurrecting the dead God is praised for  giving life to all.  I am enough of a modern woman, a modern thinker, to not actually believe in the actual resurrection of the dead. I don't actually expect all of the residents of the Workmen's Circle section of  Mount Hebron cemetery in Queens to get up and get back to work at their sewing machines. I don't expect the young children buried here or  the babies buried here to one day get up and frolic. Yet, every single time I get up to lead services I say those words about the reanimating of the dead with every fiber of my being. Yesterday, I e...

Connecting with the past

A few months ago I had a craving for my father’s chicken fricassee.  If my father were still alive I would have called him up and he would have talked me through the process of making it.    My father is no longer alive so I turned to my cookbooks and the recipes I found for chicken fricassee were nothing at all like the stew of chicken necks, gizzards and wings in a watery sweet and sour tomato sauce that I enjoyed as a kid.  I assumed that the dish was an invention of my father’s. I then attempted to replicate the dish from my memory of it and failed.   A couple of weeks ago I saw an article on the internet, and I can’t remember where, that talked about Jewish fricassee  and it sounded an awful lot like the dish I was hankering after. This afternoon I went to the butcher and picked up all of the chicken elements of the dish, a couple of packages each of wings, necks and gizzards. My father never cooked directly from a cook book. He used to re...

The light themed tallit has been shipped!!!

 I had begun speaking to Sarah about making her a tallit in the middle of August. It took a few weeks to nail down the design. For Sarah it would have been ideal if the tallit were completed in time for her to wear it on Rosh HaShanah., the beginning of her year as senior rabbi of her congregation. For me, in an ideal world, given the realities of preparing for the High Holidays I would have finished this tallit in the weeks after Sukkot. So we compromised and I shipped off the tallit last night.  I would have prefered to have more time but I got the job done in time. This tallit was made to mark Sarah's rise to the position of senior rabbi but it was also a reaction to this year of darkness. She chose a selection of verses about light to be part of her tallit. 1)  אֵל נוֹרָא עֲלִילָה  God of awesome deeds ( from a yom kippur Liturgical poem) 2)  אוֹר חָדָשׁ עַל־צִיּוֹן תָּאִיר   May You shine a new light on Zion ( from the liturgy) 3)  יָאֵר יְהֹ...