On returning my focus to writing

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Writing group starts up again at the beginning of February, and I realise that I have done very little writing or even thinking about writing lately. Really shows how important something like a group is with regular meetings to keep you motivated. I have done absolutely nothing to try and further my career as a writer over the last couple of months, although to be fair I have done quite a few other things, some of which I have recorded on this blog. One thing is working on the kitchen which is coming together quite nicely, although nowhere near finished.

One of the things I was thinking of doing towards my career was take a drawing class. At first the connection may not be obvious, but there is one! I’ve always been a keen crafter, pretty much anything you can do with a needle and thread I’ve tried, from sewing to knitting to embroidery and all sorts in between. For many of the things I’ve made I have created my own designs rather than using somebody else’s, and one thing I would like to do is to try and sell my designs and ideas. I’m not really interested in making the things and selling them, I’d rather have the designs featured in magazines and so on. Heaven knows there are any number of crafting magazines and websites, and all of them need ideas for projects, so there must be a market. Hence the drawing class, on the basis that if I can produce drawings of the proposed project, it might help to sell it. Photos are good too, but magazines often have line drawings of the steps in making something, and I’d like to try those. I was never much good at drawing at school, so there is no telling how I might go at it now! There are a couple of short courses I could do at local colleges, and also a unit in one course called ‘Develop self as artist’ or something similar, which might be just what I need.  Both the drawing and the writing seem to me to be useful in this venture.

Driving home from work last week I stopped to take some photos of a very striking cloud formation. I also think this is something I should do more of, take photos of fairly random stuff. In the past I’ve mainly only taken photos of things which were important to me, family, house, garden, animals etc., and when I went somewhere particular. For writing though, it might often be useful to have my own photos to illustrate articles etc., so I should try and build up a stock of photos of subjects which might be useful. This particular cloud formation was one of those white fluffy ones which look like so much shaving cream piled up, pure white against a brilliant blue sky. Unfortuntely there were power lines along the side of the road, and even though I scrambled around on the verge a bit I couldn’t get rid of them altogether. If I need to use these pictures I think I can probably crop them out though, or edit them out. Here are a couple of shots where I managed not to get the powerlines, although I think the first has too much foreground vegetation.

Clouds 1

Clouds 1

Looking at the quality of these I think maybe a new camera has to get added to the list of things to do/get!

Clouds 2

Clouds 2

Quilt completed

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I finished the quilt I have been making for my Dad, which was supposed to be for his 85th birthday at the beginning of December, but didn’t get done in time. I went to see them on the day after Boxing Day, and gave it to him then instead. Of course he was kind enough to be very pleased with it, but I have to admit I was quite pleased with it myself.

I bought the fabrics for the quilt top online, by searching for ‘quilt fabric’ and ‘bugs’, since I wanted nature inspired designs. I ended up buying from two different places, www.eQuilter.com and www.bugfabric.com. The only thing I did wrong was to not pay enough attention to the scale of the design on the fabric. Most sites do tell you how many inches across the motif is, or something similar, and I didn’t look at that and got a couple of patterns which were really a bit too big. Still, in the end they all worked in together. I also have this strong feeling that one shouldn’t be too precious about putting together fabrics for a quilt, after all it is a craft which began as a way of using up scraps left over, and recycling old clothes and linen. The idea of going out to buy completely new fabric, cut it into small pieces and then sew them all back together again is not quite in the true spirit of the thing to my mind.

Anyway, here is the finished article

Dad's quilt

Dad's quilt

It should actually be hanging short side at the top, portrait format rather than landscape. But since I left taking photos of it until the last minute I didn’t have any other easy way of hanging it except on the clothes line. The big butterflies are hand appliqued, the rest is machine pieced and quilted.

A closer look

closer lookI was particularly pleased with the spider web fabric, since when my kids were little one of their favourite books for Grandad to read to them was a book about a spider, called Wolfie, by Janet Chenery and Mark Simont. I found a pdf version here just now, and had a little moment of nostalgia.

On the subject of quilting being a make-do-and-mend type of activity, I have decided to start another quilt using the English patchwork technique. My mother did one many years ago, and I’m going to do likewise. The idea is to use up all the little bits I have left over from years of other projects, at least all the cotton bits. Other quilts, the girls’ clothes, my clothes, clothes made for other people, you get the idea. I’ve started making hexagons and am putting them all in a box to sew together when I start to have enough. Another thing that this technique uses up is junk mail, and advertising material, since a lot of it is printed on slightly heavier than normal paper. It is really satisfying to cut up the little booklet of ‘changed terms and conditions’ which comes with the bank statement, or the flier in the mail from our local politician. Finally a use for all that stuff!

The rythym of words

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Listening to the televison last night, not watching as I was in the next room. The sound was turned low so I couldn’t hear what was being said, but found myself listening to the rythym of speech. The show was a comedy, American I think, with audience, canned, laughter. I found that I could almost anticipate when the pause for laughter would come. There were two male characters, and although I could not hear the words and did not know which lines were going to be funny, there was a rhythm to it. If conversation is like a game of tennis, where the speech gets hit back and forth between two people, then this was like a game of tennis where every few strokes the ball goes into the audience. By laughing, the studio audience showed that they had understood, and were supportive. They tossed the ball back to the players so that they could continue.
I have also been reading recently The Little Red Book of Writing, by Mark Tredinnick, and he speaks about the rhythm of writing. Read your work out loud, he says, so that you can tell if it flows, or is stilted and unnatural. The best writing is like speech, only you have practiced it and polished it until it has rhythm. I think this is something I have generally done anyway, but it makes sense, and I shall certainly make a point of doing it in future.
I finished Dad’s quilt this morning, the last step being to stitch on a label. I included his name, where he lives, the occasion the quilt was made for (being careful to say given for, not on, since I have missed his birthday by almost a month). I bought a laundry marker to write the label with, a Pilot one here, which is supposed to have a point made especially for writing on fabric, and it is certainly much better for the purpose than a normal permanent marker, which is what I have used in the past. The only remaining thing is to take photos, which I will do tomorrow, and then give it to him. I’ll post photos here too.

Lessons Learnt whilst Making a quilt

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I’ve been making a quilt for my Dad, since it’s his 85th birthday. I ordered the fabric online months ago, choosing patterns from nature. There are butterflies, bees, dragonflies, birds, trees and leaves, and one fabric is tree bark. Dad is and always has been a lover of nature. I got the top pieced quite successfully, and this week started to put it together with the batting and the backing.

I laid it out on the biggest table I have, since it’s not a big quilt, only single bed size. Designed more as a lap quilt or knee rug than anything else. I had to join the backing, so I did that first and laid it on the table, then the batting on top. I used Warm & Safe,  a rather advanced batting from America which is made of sustainably grown trees (more nature) and is also rated as being fire retardant, which I thought was a plus. It comes from The Warm Company, but this particular product doesn’t seem to be on their website yet. Then I put the quilt top over that, and smoothed it all out.

I’d decided to pin baste rather than thread baste, and used as many safety pins as I had. Then I took the quilt to the machine and started to quilt. Nothing fancy, just quilting round the edge of some of the blocks to start with. I had done maybe a third of what I intended to do, then got too tired and went to bed. Next morning I laid the quilt back out on the table. Disaster! What I thought was a nice reasonably smooth job looked shocking, with more wrinkles than a Shar-pei puppy. Nothing for it but to indulge in a spot of reverse sewing and start again.

This time I thread basted, lines of long stitches about four inches apart over all the quilt. Then I looked on the web for any hints as to how to get a reasonably good result. This was one of the best pages I found. Put the sewing machine on a bigger table was first, with clear space all round, and so that the weight of the quilt would be supported and not dragging against the needle. Closer basting also helped, other things I could have done but didn’t include spraying the table with a silicone based furniture polish to help the fabric move over the table evenly, wearing gloves so that I could manoeuvre the fabric better, and making an extension to the sewing machine bed so that I had a bigger flat area to work on. I decided to try without all these things since I don’t quilt often (actually I think this is only the second time). The furniture polish I would have done except I didn’t have any and it was Sunday.

Then, with some trepidation (I’d already done enough reverse sewing for one project) I started again. This time I’m pleased to say that the result was satisfactory, although more practice might have improved it a bit. Now all I have to do is add the binding, and the quilt is done. Oh, and I need to remember to take a picture of it when it is finished.

I titled this post Lessons Learned Whilst Making a Quilt, and I bet you can guess what the lessons were! As with almost everything in life, preparation is the key to good results, isn’t that boring?

ABC Classic 100 Twentieth Century List

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ABC Classic FM – Classic 100

I spent some time listening to ABC Classic’s Top 100 20th Century music last week. Not all the time, as I was at work for much of it, but I did catch some of it. Strictly of course it’s not the ABC’s top 100, but their listeners’. I think this point might have been forgotten by some of the people who called in to comment, and criticise the choice of music. The list was the choice of ABC listeners, or at least those who made the effort to vote, and as such the presenters can’t be held responsible. I was particularly struck by one caller who said that as soon as Elgar came on (I think Pomp and Circumstance, number 21) he turned off. The gist of his comment was that he was not prepared to listen to Edwardian English colonial propaganda, and judging by some of the comments on Facebook he was not alone. Personally I love it, memories of watching the Last Night of the Proms on TV, and I think the point is that it is a very evocative piece of music, it says what the nation felt at the time, and whether that feeling was moral or ethical or whatever doesn’t change the fact that it existed. Perhaps we know better now, perhaps not.
If there is a group of people who could justifiably feel miffed about being under-represented in the listing then surely it is women. So far as I know there was only one women who made the list, which means all the other 99 pieces were written by men. In the nineteenth century this might have been expected, but in the twentieth? What is it about writing music which has made it such a male domain? If you considered writing as in literature, or painting or drawing, the inbalance would be far less.
Elgar must be pretty popular amongst the ABC listeners, he got 5 pieces in the Top 100, and his cello concerto came in at number 1. One of the high ranking pieces which blew me away was Carmina Burana by Carl Orff. I knew the first part well, the O Fortuna as I now find it is called, from many TV commercials, movies etc. It immediately brings to mind the Old Spice TV commercial. I had never heard the whole thing though, and I loved it. So much so that I went online and found and ordered a CD copy of the recording which had just been played.
The issue of CDs against MP3 music is something I have been thinking about recently, having just bought myself an MP3 player (one of the few which has nothing to do with a certain fruit). Looking for places to legally download MP3s though is not as easy as it would appear. Amazon won’t sell to Australia, although reading various forums it seems there are ways round that. I’m not sure I want to do that though, apart from the legality of it, my feeling is that if Amazon doesn’t want to sell to Australia, for whatever reason, then I’m not going to go round in circles trying to buy from them. ‘Get stuffed Amazon’ just about sums up my feelings!
There are other sites, but they mostly seem to be biased towards current and popular music (nothing wrong with either, just not generally what I’m interested in). In the end I’m thinking that I will just continue to buy CDs and rip them onto my computer. At least that way I still have the CD, so if the computer dies or the MP3 player does then I just rip the CD again.
I found a couple of promising looking sites for buying CDs online, both Australian. One is called CDWow, the other Buywell
Both seem to have a good selection, at least for the few random things I looked for. I have ordered from the Buywell site, look forward to listening to the music when it arrives.

My orchid cactus has been flowering recently. For an ugly looking plant it does have beautiful flowers. I think its proper name is epiphyllum, but I don’t know if it is a species plant or a hybrid. Another thing I should know more about!

Orchid cactus

Orchid cactus

Gorgeous vintage and retro clothes patterns

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I got an email this morning from a company I bought some sewing patterns from a while back. Decades of Style pattern company have put photos of many of their patterns made up on their site, and the results are gorgeous. Not all of the patterns are there, but a good number of them, beautifully made, and with such authentic looking fabrics.

I bought some of their patterns months ago, mostly because I saw a blouse reviewed in Threads magazine, and when I visited the site the postage was the same price for up to 5 patterns. I’m ashamed to say I haven’t made them up yet, but seeing these photos has made me determined to bump them up the ‘to do’ list a little! That’s after I’ve finished a quilt for my Dad’s 85th birthday (in 2 weeks) and a dress for a Christmas function for my daughter, also in 2 weeks. Both are fortunately fairly simple projects.

Two of the patterns I bought from Decades of Style were blouses, the 1940s Girl Friday blouse, and the 1950s Collar Confection blouse. Both would be good to have made for the summer, I will make myself an appointment to go through the stash and see what fabric I have to use. Whilst the examples on the website are made of vintage inspired fabrics, I think they would translate quite well into contemporary fabrics if well chosen. Lightweight linen in a plain colour or small print would do fine, or a softer rayon type print. I am pretty sure I have something suitable somewhere.

Another project I’ve been giving some thought to lately is the re-organisation of my sewing space. Actually I don’t think the word re-organisation is valid, since that implies an existing level of organisation, which I can’t honestly say there is. I have a space, not huge but I think adequate, but it needs cleaning, tidying, and lots more storage. Not only that, but it needs to be organised so that I can find what I need, and don’t end up going out to buy more of something just because I can’t find what I already have. I can’t wait to go through all the boxes which are hiding in the garage and sort them out and create some kind of reference for what is in them. Most of the stash will have to stay in the garage since there isn’t room for it in the house, but it would be really good to know what was out there and where it was. A database of some sort is required I think, although I have thought of just taking photos of the content of each box and having them on my computer for browsing when I want something.

I’m also working on how to set up a cutting out surface. The space I have doesn’t really lend itself to a permanent cutting out space, which really needs to be at least 1.5 metres square, and preferably more, with room to walk around all four sides. I’m trying to come up with a project for fold-away cutting out space, but not too hard to put away so that I don’t bother to do it. My current thought is a couple of small chests of drawers, on castors so they can be moved, and with flaps hanging down each side which can be raised. Two chests together, and the flaps, I think can be made to give me a surface about 1.2 metres by 1.8 metres, and still be manoeuvrable in the room, which is only about 2.4 metres wide, although quite long.

Something similar to this, but I’ll probably try to make it myself, or at least put a top onto a purchased chest of drawers. That’s after the kitchen, and the tool cabinet in the garage which isn’t finished yet! And a few other things!

This week’s photos are what in England we used to call an Easter cactus, because it flowered about Easter. Here in Australia it flowers in spring, but that’s nowhere near Easter. I’ve Googled it, and I think it is properly called Hatiora gaertneri, the name being nowhere near as pretty as the flower, as usual. It is really spectacular this year, although I should have moved it into the sunshine before taking the pictures, it would have looked even better.

Easter cactus

Hatoria gaertneri, I think

Easter cactus 2

Hatoria gaertneri, I think

Hatoria gaertneri, I think

On Selecting Subjects

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I was intrigued to find this website, and astounded. Who knew there could be so many ways of starting to write, or get ideas for it? Does this mean that the infamous writers’ block is so widespread that all these starters are necessary, presumably so. I particularly like the Story Starter idea, and the Plot Generator. I’ve been reading elsewhere about the use of software to create articles, which I don’t like the idea of, but using software to spark an idea is not quite so bad.

I have to admit that as a newbie to blogging I’m finding it difficult to think of things to write about. I guess part of the difficulty is that I’m trying to write this blog as practice, and also to show my writing when I can get started, so I’ve limited myself as to topics. I think perhaps the practice part needs to have more prominence, I should just write and not worry about who might read it.

It’s a similar quandary to one I read about recently, that of making small talk. Making small talk is definitely a skill, and one which needs to be learnt and practiced. I think I used to be quite good at it, I can remember going to functions, and having to sit between two strangers at dinner and make conversation with them. I used to be able to do it, but I’ve gotten out of practice, although I think I’m getting better at it again. I also think I am more confident to say things, and less worried about what people might think.

The book I read about making small talk suggested ways of thinking of topics, using your surroundings as a starter. For instance, the view from a window, or a picture in the room might suggest a subject for conversation. One point strongly emphasised was the difference between open and closed questions, and that closed questions don’t encourage the flow of conversation. I find this difficult though, since the open questions suggested sound a bit stilted to me. The writer was very strong on such things as ‘What experiences have you had?’, ‘What places have you visited?’ and similar things, which I also feel are a bit intrusive.

On the other hand, we are often told that people like to talk about themselves most of all, so perhaps this is the right approach. I kow that I am sometimes out of synch with other people on this, I’m not sure if it’s my English upbringing which makes me more reserved than the Australians I mix with these days, or whether I’m a bit old fashioned. I think it may be the former, since Australians of my age group are more frank about things than I tend to be. I’ve always noticed it ever since I came to live here, subjects which I would not bring up seem to be acceptable topics of conversation.

I don’t really know where this post is going, perhaps because it’s really going nowhere. I need to practice two things, first thinking of topics for conversation, preferably before I need them, and second thinking of topics for blog posts.

In the meantime I might add a picture, one of those being worth a thousand words!

Garden of the Heysen family home, Hahndorf, South Australia

The Cedars, Hahndorf, South Australia

This is a photo I took in the garden of The Cedars, just outside Hahndorf in South Australia. The property is where the artist Hans Heysen lived and worked, and still belongs to the family. A beautiful setting, much more English than I remembered. Subject for another post perhaps.

Note to self. A good idea would be to select a topic, a place, person, book etc., do some research, and write the blog post as a mini article on the subject. Hone my skills at research and writing at the same time, and demonstrate what I can achieve in both areas.

Blogging, the Great Automatic Grammatizator, and new skirts

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Browsing the net, a link in a newsletter I subscribe to sent me to some skirts in an upmarket shop in New York. This reminded me that I shall need some skirts to wear for work in the coming summer. (For those of you doing a double take at this, I live in Australia.)

Here are the skirts if you’d like to look.

I started googling for ideas for skirts, and typed in ‘make your own skirt’. The first few results were interesting, but genuine. After only a page and a half though I started to get some really weird hits. After a bit I realised that these articles are what I’ve read about in terms of computer generated internet content and articles. I know that there is software which will compare the text of an article with what is already on the net, to see if the writer is just trying to re-use old content, either theirs or somebody else’s.Most popular and well known being Copyscape.  I’m guessing that these articles are written by some kind of programme which just changes some words, to try and make the piece original. The results are hilarious to say the least, or they are once you realise what is going on. Up to that point they are just plain perplexing, as in I’m thinking “What the ?!!!”

For example, see if you can figure out what this person is trying to say ‘it’s necessary that we peek following ourself.’. Do you think they mean we should look after ourselves?

As if to demonstrate the need for original content, it wasn’t long before I came up with the same article on more than one page. To make it worse, the sites weren’t even about making skirts, which was what I was looking for. They were for all sorts of other things, in some cases I don’t know what they were about. One was multi-level marketing, some were just inexplicable.

If you try searching just blogs, I think you get even better examples of computer generated content, as opposed to quality original writing. I’m not going to post any links here, for fear of offending someone, but try it for yourself. It reminds me of Roald Dahl’s story, The Great Automatic Grammatizator’, but I’d have to dig out the book and read it again to remember exactly how it goes. It was I think based on a guy who invented a machine for writing novels and such. The theory being that there are only limited numbers of combinations of words, and that literature could be written according to a mathematical formula. I’ve heard the same idea applied to music.

How did I get from deciding I need new skirts for work, to deciding to read a Roald Dahl story again? Go figure! And have fun looking for similar examples of writing.

OK, so I’m new at blogging!

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Now I feel like an idiot! It seems the plug ins I was looking at (not sure of the spelling, should it be plugin or plug in?) are available if you have downloaded the WordPress software and are using that. Since my blog is still hosted by WordPress I can’t use them, or at least I can’t see how. If anybody can tell me different then I’d be happy to hear them.

Still, disappointed as I am, I need to remember the reason I am writing this blog. It’s part of working towards my goal of being a good freelance writer of magazine articles, so the content is the thing, not the gadgets.  Also, I figure that maybe search engine optimisation is something best done by a human, not necessarily by a machine. Some of the internet content you read consists only of words and short phrases which don’t really make sense, and now I’m wondering if they have been written by a machine.  Those are the kind of articles which nobody actually reads, although I have this vision of people who maybe are not fluent in English looking at them in complete bewilderment!

What I think I am going to look around for is a good note taking piece of software. I did use Webnotes for a while, but then when Firefox got upgraded it was no longer compatible, and so far I haven’t found a substitute. I want something I can just open and type a few words into when I’m inspired by an idea for a blog post. If the inspiration is a web page then I can use Scribefire, but if the idea just comes to me out of the blue I need somewhere to put it, and to be able to find it again. The electronic equivalent of a notebook and pencil. Who knows, maybe I should just use one of those anyway, I need one for when I’m not at my computer (haven’t yet got a tablet or a smart phone, and even if I did I wouldn’t necessarily always have it to hand). I’m sure there must be something around, watch this space!

Best plugins for WordPress

Blogging 101 | TrisHusseyDotCom

Doing more browsing on Tris Hussey’s site, found this post about plug ins for WordPress. I have to admit that apart from Akismet, which I think you get by default, I don’t know what any of them do, and most of them I can’t even begin to guess. A few I suppose are reasonably obvious, and I can’t imagine myself needing some of them, not just yet anyway. Time to spend some time investigating I think.
One which I find intriguing is All in One SEO pack. The idea of software changing my post so that search engines will find it is a little spooky, perhaps I’m being old fashioned. I might give it a try, so long as I can over ride it when I want, since I want the words on my blog to be mine, and not somebody else’s. Still, I’m also keen on the idea of the blog being seen, so that’s a consideration.
I’ll check it out and report back!