Friday, March 11, 2016

A stitch in time saves 9,817,643 (Part 3)

[Editor's note. This is the third post in a three-part series. Part 1 is here and Part 2 is here. --RWP]

Okay, first of all, to let you know that I am no longer a complete idiot when it comes to technical things (why are you laughing?), I received some excellent tutelage via e-mail from one Adrian Ward of Somewhere, Scotland, and can now rotate photographs using my new operating system (Windows 10) just as expertly as I did using my old one (XP). Here's proof using the two photographs that faced west in the preceding post:

Footprints in the Sand:


...and Family Circle:


I know you will agree that they look much better facing south.

Moving right along with Part 3 of this series, here is a cross-stitch Mrs. RWP made in 1988 for our silver anniversary (for readers in Alabama, that means we had been married 25 years). It is displayed over our piano:


The next two hang in our master bathroom, and Mrs. RWP is especially proud of their borders. If your device allows zooming, zoom in for a closer look. A bird bath is on the left:


...and a clawfoot tub is on the right:


I wouldn't lie to you. Here they are together:


A fruit basket that contains 53 colors and took Mrs. RWP a year to complete hangs in our kitchen:


A small cornucopia that we had framed as a companion piece to the fruit basket hangs over our pantry door:


Finally, a second 53-color beauty that took Mrs. RWP another year to complete hangs in our entrance hall/vestibule/fwah-yay (pick one) along with the bluebird-adorned Psalm 100 that I showed you in the preceding post:


Thus ends my three-part series showing you Mrs. RWP's prowess and talent with a needle and thread.

P. S. -- Yorkshire Pudding asked in a comment on the previous post if I am rich. I used to be, but I spent my entire fortune getting these beautiful creations framed. To do less would be criminal.

7 comments:

  1. Glad you found the icon to click. I dread to think how they go on in the southern hemisphere.
    These are amazing.

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  2. Love them.
    Can you ask Mrs RWP what thread count these beauties were working on?

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  3. Adrian, Mrs. RWP thanks you very much!

    Sue, I can and I did. She uses 14-count Aida cloth.

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  4. Ah. Much more sensible. The last one I did was 18 count, and black cloth. Not kind to eyes or hands.

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  5. Sue, I imagine not! The only thing harder to work with might be linen, but Mrs. RWP's eyesight can't deal with that!

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  6. The fruit basket is so impressive that I should like to offer you $365 for it - a dollar for every day of Ellie's painstaking labour. I expect the money will come in handy having spent your entire pension on classy frames.

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  7. Yorkshire Pudding, the Democrats here are trying to have the minimum wage for fast-food restaurant workers raised to $15.00 an hour. For a 40-hour work week, that's $600 and for a 52-week year that's $31,200 and I think Ellie's talents are far greater than someone who takes a hamburger order and can't make proper change without the help of the cash register display. The price on the fruit basket, therefore, is $31,200 and not a penny less. Probably 20 years ago an owner of a craft shop told us that the going rate at that time for finished counted cross-stitch items was ten cents a stitch. In other words, Ellie's creations are priceless.

    ReplyDelete

<b>Always true to you, darlin’, in my fashion</b>

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