I haven't posted much lately, have I? I really haven't been doing anything blog-related. I'm between projects in every area of my crafty life, and have been focusing on other things instead - like refinishing a couple of tables in my house, cleaning up the yard in preparation for bulk brush pickup day in a couple of weeks, and shuffling around some of the artwork that hangs in my house to freshen things up around there.
I have also done a little bit of SCA-related stuff lately, but nothing major - just some small mending and repairs to old costumes, and some cleanup and reorganization of my costume closet and my camping gear. I did also get a new air mattress and a new fancy rechargeable air pump for camping, and I'm going to be replacing my old camp chair next week.
I do also have some new costumey/crafty projects coming up in the next few weeks that I'll post about:
- I'm still working on a hand-sewn Viking serk that I started in like May and haven't been working on like at all this summer (oops)
- There are a few new weaving projects I'll be posting about once I get them done, which is dependent on when my new thread arrives in the mail
- There may or may not be a new Regency dress in the works. In fact, there might be TWO of them, I'm just not sure yet
- I did make a birthday present (piece of garb) for a friend recently, which I've been dying to show you, but I have to wait until I actually give it to said friend before I post about it
Just in case anyone actually cares, here's what's been taking up the bulk of my time this summer:
I got this corner table for free from someone's curbside trash in 2017, and I JUST got around to stripping the paint off it and refinishing it so I could use it. Whew! It took me about a month's worth of actual working time to get all that paint off (three badly-applied coats of paint plus a primer coat that had soaked deeply into the wood).
It lives in my bedroom now, and so far, I haven't piled any laundry on it.
This little side table/stand is an actual antique, given to me by a friend several years ago, and she believes it's from the early 1900s, possibly the late 1800s (I honestly have no idea; there's a maker's signature underneath it but I couldn't make it out in order to look it up).
The finish was badly damaged, but the structure was completely sound, so all I did was strip it and re-stain it. This one took me about two days to do from start to finish. After working on that corner table for so long, this was a nice, easy, fast project, and really fun. It lives in my living room.
Anyway, I'll be back in a couple of weeks when I have some actual sewing/weaving projects to talk about.