And this error ridden project reduced to half its size will make one fabulous needlebook.
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And this error ridden project reduced to half its size will make one fabulous needlebook.
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Adios.
Error after error after error. I thought I was in the clear, a few flowers and stems should be an easy finish. I was wrong.
Not only did I short the stem by one stitch THREE separate times, I shorted the count from cabin to vase by two. I always count spacing three times, but must have counted the chart grid incorrectly. And this happened after finding three chart errors. 333. Should I purchase a daily number ticket?
Out of respect, I pressed her and groomed the back's rat nest in preparation for cremation. Because both height and width need changed, I'm done. Just not interested in spending more time on corrections. For now, it's over.
Hope everyone had a special day.
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...and family, through second cousins.
But I soldier on with a real rat's nest on the back.
The peacock (who hosted a few green jumpers) called for a light pink center to its feathers' eyes. Remembering Dziadzia's peacocks, the dark eye was outlined by a teal, and a sort of chartreuse in the feather. I looked at all the ugly yellow greens and chose the most gaudy. Perfect. A single stitch in the tail, looks nothing like the skein. Better than pink, better than dark.
I really dislike being a grown-up.
But the huge toad enjoying the never ending rain on my deck, reminded me that I am a great deal larger than all his frog cousins. They only visit when asked and my errors invited them.
I removed one light row and replaced with the brown, removed one brown and replaced with the gray making the porch roof higher. It's perfectly fine. So many sections were removed and replaced since starting this and I was truly frustrated, but the cabin is done, time to move on. The light brick of the chimney was too light so I inked it with my delicate flat brush. Just enough. I moved the floral down a few rows so the peacock above won't be much higher than the rest of the design.
The fricking cabin.
I started the cabin first since it's the largest block of stitches. Trying to convert the WDW to DMC took some time, finally found an up to date listing. And of course, had to change a few on this linen, but then revamped the chart. The second story windows did not align with the first, didn't like the door placement. OCD fixes were good, until I stitched them off one row, corrected incorrectly (yep, it's possible). Twice. Replaced a few logs. The charcoal thread looked odd in places, why ? .... because dark green strands were in the charcoal floss bag and very similar. Did not notice during stitching. Now an entire family of frogs lives in this cabin. I could have built a real cabin in the time taken to stitch this! Hmmm. Looking at this photo, there are three rows of light chinking instead of two. Dammit. What was distracting me since I knew it was two rows throughout? Need a minute to think .... is the rain stopping soon or can I set it to flame in the garage?
The new project bags are hanging everywhere, making me feel as if I'm in a shop. I can see the charts, making it very difficult to choose only one for my next stitch. Really. Browsing through a stack doesn't compare. They are on cabinets, lamps, in baskets, very distracting and I love it.
One more window to paint when the replacement sash comes in two weeks. First time painting white over taupe, three coats don't seem enough, but it is for me. Two brands, same coverage.
Hope everyone is OK.
Got a light?
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Jane Moore 1825
The Wishing Thorn
46 count, dmc, minor changes, no border, 4.5" square
Boom.
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