Showing posts with label other crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label other crafts. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 December 2011

House-Off 2011

After visiting Germany and Austria several times during the winter festive period and seeing the glorious Lebkuchenhaus displayed in the windows of bakeries and sweet shops, I resolved that one day when I was spending relaxing Christmas at home, I would make my very own Gingerbread House. This year was that year, and I'd been reading various websites for the last few months, and some good friends in Germany sent me over some genuine German Lebkuchen spices to help me on my way, but at home only Daddy knew, just incase it turned out to be an unmitigated disaster.

A few days before Christmas my sister and I were indulging in a look around The Good Shop in Worthing when she turned to me and whispered conspiratorially, "Don't tell anyone, but Boyfriend and I are going to make a gingerbread house for Christmas day!". My world briefly crumbled, then I recovered my composure and said that I had been planning one for ages and that she could make one if she wanted, and that would be okay because mine would be better anyway! Amid this sisterly rivalry, House-Off 2011 was born, and we spent the next few days trying to psyche each other out with jokes such as, "I wonder if I could make candy hay to put in the hay loft of my gingerbread stable block" and "Do you think the inhabitants of my gingerbread house would prefer a hot tub or swimming pool?". Except I wasn't joking.

On the day before Christmas Eve I rolled out acres of gingerbread (following a recipe from the BBC Good Food website), cut it to the rough size for baking, and then used my templates to cut the final shapes as soon as they came out of the oven. On Christmas Eve I made up the icing and assembled my masterpiece, doing the decorative icing after it was structurally sound. 

First, I pieced together the hot tub as a practice, and because it needed most time to set as later I would waterproof it interntally with melted white chocolate, and as my joints were less than neat, it benefitted from a milk chocolate outer covering too. I filled it with blue curaรงo to give it that "Come jump in" look.
Next up was the dog kennel. By now I'd realised that the icing set faster than I could work, so I softened it very slighted with some warm water. I assembled the walls and let them set while I coated the hot tub in chocolate, then added the roof and some decorations.
While I was steeling my nerves for the house itself I worked to improve my icing accuracy by decorating a small copse of fir trees, the herd of reindeer, a couple of snowmen and Mr and Mrs Santa. These fab cookies were made using some stand-up Christmas cookie cutters I had bought (furtively) in the cook shop where House-Off broke out. I didn't roll the pastry out thin enough, so some post-baking cookie carpentry was in order to make them fit together - I thought were worth the effort though.
Time was ticking and I could delay the main event no longer. With a certain amount of nervousness and several boxes of sugar and flour to act as supports, I iced together the walls of my house, iced the chimney onto the roof, and then the roof onto the house. I was getting more confident with icing by now, so did some more decorative icing around the edge of the roof to make icicles, and around the Foxes Glacier Mint windows for some festive cheer, then carefully added the kennel, hot tub and stand-up cookies to the scene. I'm pretty pleased with it - I think I might have found a new hobby!



And here they are together for comparison. I think they are both good, but in different ways. I think mine has a more Austrian mountain village look to it, while Sister-Girl's is a more fun 'Hansel and Gretel' style. Roll on next year, when there really will be a stable block!




Monday, 19 December 2011

'Hideaway' Quilt


In the depths of my deep dark Antarctic winter, while I was frantically knitting my Winter blanket, I started wondering about patchwork quilting, in part I think as I imagined it would be a faster way of crafting. With a lack of both supplies and knowledge, I had to set my fabric lust to one side until such times as I could pursue it properly.
'Hideaway' Quilt
Shortly after my return home a leaflet about a crafts demonstration at a local church was pushed through our door, and happily quilting was one of the events! I met the lady who runs the local quilting group, joined up and started sewing! A few days later I fell into a quilting shop; the fabric fumes quickly went to my head and I came home with a charm pack of Moda's Hideaway fabric, and absolutely no idea what to do with it.
I decided that simple was best, so spent a few hours arranging and rearranging the squares into a pleasing order, and then a few days sewing them together, while thinking how quick this patchwork lark was.
It took a few weeks to find and sew the right border fabric, and once basted together, it then took a few months to actually quilt it all together... and suddenly quilting wasn't seeming like the quick option!
Working the quilting out was part hardcore maths to make it all fit neatly, and part totally winging it and hoping it would turn out alright in the end.
I'm really happy with the end result, and have learnt a lot about quilting, not least, don't attempt detailed quilting on a busy fabric, or your hard work will be wasted! Fortunately the outer border's celtic knot detail shows up nicely on the reverse side, so all is not lost.
All it needs to be properly finished is for it's intended recipient to be born!
Leaves and loops
Celtic knot border
Reverse side




Thursday, 7 April 2011

Met Office Mk2 Strawberry Gauge

Met Office Mk2 Strawberry Gauge
A few years ago, when I worked for The Environment Agency, I used to visit and maintain various rain gauges around the West Midlands. We looked after them on behalf of the Met Office, who used the data to calibrate their radar images of rain fall. We had some automatic tipping bucket gauges, some monthly storage gauges and some daily or '5-inch' rain gauges. These are the classic Met Office rain gauges which were invented in something like 1872*, updated to the Mk2 in 1875, and haven't changed since. They are a thing of beauty.

Periodically rain gauges would need to be replaced if they failed inspection, and I rehomed a couple with vague ideas of using them in the garden for plants or something sculptural. They have sat at the bottom of Daddy's garden ever since, but during a recent conversation with friends about using copper tape to slug-proof strawberry plants, I realised I had the perfect solution - I give you the Met Office Mk2 Strawberry Gauge!

The main body of this one already had a slit in one side after a nasty incident with a grounds-keeper and a ride-on lawn-mower (final score: Lawn-mower 1 - Rain gauge 0). I lengthened the slit and tidied the edge up with a metal file, then drilled a line of holes on the other side and used a hacksaw blade to make another slit. I hammered the top of the slit inwards, and used pliers to persuade the bottom half outwards. I didn't manage to make the hole very big and had to sort-of post the stem/leaves through from the inside, but it worked. I also drilled several holes in the bottom of it to allow for drainage. The lid of the rain gauge was used as-is with no modifications, as it has an internal funnel which allows it to drain.

Overall I am pretty pleased with how it came out, although doing the metal work was far harder than I had anticipated. I have another base, and several internal cans, but I think the neighbours deserve a break from banging, thumping and drilling for a few days - my arm muscles certainly do!

I'll have to wait a few months to see quite how slug-proof they are, but I am looking forward to fresh strawberries for breakfast enormously!



*That's a total stab in the dark. I remember from university that it was pretty old (18-something), but don't quote me on the exact date. Do let me know if you know though!