While cleaning my sewing table off, AGAIN, I found this dart marker roller. I don't know the official name of it but this one belonged to my mom. I never knew her to use anything else but this to mark her darts on her patterns when she made clothes for us. It's old black handle is scratched and worn from much use. It's got some rust but the "blade" still turns and is quite usable.
I was so surprised to find it because I thought the few things that I have of my mom's in the storage shed. When I found it I had to sit down and just hold it. It made me smile but also made me sad. Mom's been in heaven for somewhere near thirty years but just seeing and holding this roller bought back such wonderful memories.
I would like to display it in my sewing area but I'm not sure how to do that. Or maybe a better tribute would be to continue to use it. What do you think? Use it or display it? If I display it does anyone have any idea on making a nice display?
This blog is the place I share the tidbits of my life. What's for supper, my current sewing project, a good book I'm reading, a really cool website, and more of those bits and pieces that make me who I am.
Showing posts with label childhood memories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childhood memories. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Reflections of Childhood
Today I was reading the SoutherPlate.com and I suddenly saw something that brought me right back to my childhood. The photo below is the one that caught my eye. These two little figures are ones just like what I have at home. They belonged to my mother and when she passed away my sister and I inherited them. As a child I used to play for hours with them and other Amish cast iron toys.
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I was so surprised to see the teeter totter and the little wagon in this woman's collection.I have the very same ones. Mine are a bit scratched. |
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I have little cast iron desks just like these in my small collection. |
Saturday, November 19, 2011
These mixing bowls bring back memories
I saw these mixing bowls while working on Internet for a course I'm taking. I saw them and they brought back memories of my mom's speckled mixing bowl. Her mixing bowl was more of a brown/gray speckle but how we used that bowl. A big bowl of ice cream jello for dessert after supper or mixing a batch of cole slaw for a picnic. These memories are good ones of me and my mom in the kitchen.
I found the bowls on Amazon.com so I put them in my wish list. I share the list with my family for ideas for gifts...hint, hint!
Here's the link to the amazon.com page: http://www.amazon.com/Zak-Designs-Confetti-Assorted-Brights/dp/B0019M7IT4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1321749306&sr=8-1
I found the bowls on Amazon.com so I put them in my wish list. I share the list with my family for ideas for gifts...hint, hint!
Here's the link to the amazon.com page: http://www.amazon.com/Zak-Designs-Confetti-Assorted-Brights/dp/B0019M7IT4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1321749306&sr=8-1
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Whipped candles
A few days ago there was a post from someone in one of my favorite Yahoo groups. It was about candles. It reminded me of a time in my childhood when my mother and I would spend Saturdays making whipped candles as Christmas gifts for friends and family.
My mother was a crafty person. She sewed, crocheted, cooked, and did a little bit of everything. Every Christmas for many years my mother would pick a project and that would become the focus theme for gift making. For a few years mom got hooked on candle making. She made her own candles right in our kitchen with an old pan that melted the wax and different wax forms and everything else that was needed. I loved helping her make them.
Mom also decorated those candles to make them special. One particular project she got enthralled with was enhancing candles by whipping melted wax and applying it around the candle.
I searched Internet trying to find a photo of how her candles would turn out but couldn't find exactly what I was looking for. I did find two examples that shows whipped candles although the designs are a bit different. Here they are so you can get an idea of what they look like.
Mom would get flat wood for the base and then get Christmas decorations such as artificial Christmas flowers, small ornaments, little plastic fuzzy reindeer, spray on snow, etc. and column candles (ones she made at home or ones she bought on sale from the previous after Christmas sales).
On a Saturday we would set the kitchen up for candle production. We laid everything out and got our designs ready and then we would melt the wax. When the wax was melted we took a hand egg beater and would whip the daylight out of the wax. As a child I was always amazed to see a clear melted wax turn into white fluffy "snow".
While the wax was warm we would take a knife and "ice" the candle. When all the candles were waxed we started putting our scenes together. We left the wood base bare since it usually was a piece of wood cut from a large branch or small tree trunk and we wanted it to look natural.
Next, we would glue the candle on one side of the wood and glue the reindeer on the other side. Then we would decorate it to make it look like an outdoor Christmas scene and the candle was the snowy tree. A few times we made snowmen out of the candles and those were really cute.
Finally there was one Christmas season that was my mother's last season in candle making. It was when we were melting wax and we got sidetracked on another project and we caught the kitchen on fire. Fortunately the fire was contained to the kitchen although the fire department did tell us that the kitchen was a total loss. My father never got mad at my mother over that. He just looked at her and shook his head. My mother announced a few days later that her candle making days were over!
It might be fun to try this project with my own kiddos...except that I'll make sure I wear my FlyLady timer around my neck so I don't get distracted. That's one part of the project I don't want to repeat!
Denise
My mother was a crafty person. She sewed, crocheted, cooked, and did a little bit of everything. Every Christmas for many years my mother would pick a project and that would become the focus theme for gift making. For a few years mom got hooked on candle making. She made her own candles right in our kitchen with an old pan that melted the wax and different wax forms and everything else that was needed. I loved helping her make them.
Mom also decorated those candles to make them special. One particular project she got enthralled with was enhancing candles by whipping melted wax and applying it around the candle.
I searched Internet trying to find a photo of how her candles would turn out but couldn't find exactly what I was looking for. I did find two examples that shows whipped candles although the designs are a bit different. Here they are so you can get an idea of what they look like.
Mom would get flat wood for the base and then get Christmas decorations such as artificial Christmas flowers, small ornaments, little plastic fuzzy reindeer, spray on snow, etc. and column candles (ones she made at home or ones she bought on sale from the previous after Christmas sales).
On a Saturday we would set the kitchen up for candle production. We laid everything out and got our designs ready and then we would melt the wax. When the wax was melted we took a hand egg beater and would whip the daylight out of the wax. As a child I was always amazed to see a clear melted wax turn into white fluffy "snow".
While the wax was warm we would take a knife and "ice" the candle. When all the candles were waxed we started putting our scenes together. We left the wood base bare since it usually was a piece of wood cut from a large branch or small tree trunk and we wanted it to look natural.
Next, we would glue the candle on one side of the wood and glue the reindeer on the other side. Then we would decorate it to make it look like an outdoor Christmas scene and the candle was the snowy tree. A few times we made snowmen out of the candles and those were really cute.
Finally there was one Christmas season that was my mother's last season in candle making. It was when we were melting wax and we got sidetracked on another project and we caught the kitchen on fire. Fortunately the fire was contained to the kitchen although the fire department did tell us that the kitchen was a total loss. My father never got mad at my mother over that. He just looked at her and shook his head. My mother announced a few days later that her candle making days were over!
It might be fun to try this project with my own kiddos...except that I'll make sure I wear my FlyLady timer around my neck so I don't get distracted. That's one part of the project I don't want to repeat!
Denise
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