Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Knit in Public Day!

Knit in Public Day - June 18


Who says size doesn't matter
On June 18 you can come out of your closets, your pantries, and your basements and fully embrace who you are!

You are a KNITTER! (Or a CROCHETER - I don't discriminate around here).

If you're a WEAVER or a SPINNER, or a DYER (not to be confused with dying or the angel of death on Touched by an Angel who's real name is John Dye - no I'm not making that up) - I like
you too!

I know, I know, it's hard to admit to it. Especially when yarn arts are associated with grandmas and even though you may have grandchildren you are not that age yet (talking to myself here).

He can knit for me anytime.
But yarn isn't just for old people anymore. Or just for women. Yarn is ageless and genderless and can be celebrated by all!


No one says you actually have to know how to knit.














Apparently aliens knit too



Run out of people to knit for? Even trees need love.





Evil laugh

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Book Review: Patchwork Mysteries #1: Family Patterns - Kristen Eckhardt

In this first book of the series Patchwork Mysteries, we meet Sarah Hart, a widow who makes her living taking in borders and restoring antique quilts. And she likes to solve mysteries too.

The first mystery revolves around her grandmother Molly, who disappeared in 1920, when she was a young married woman, leaving behind a husband and six year old boy.

Molly was never found and her husband lived with the towns suspicion for the rest of his life, many convinced that he had murdered her.

When Sarah's twelve year old twin granddaughters discover a hidden passage in the family home, it leads them to the quilt that belonged to the six year old boy - her father.

While Sarah restores the quilt for her father who now resides in a nursing home and is suffering with bouts of Alzheimers she discovers clues to the mystery of Molly.

This mystery honestly had me stumped. I can often solve them before the protagonist, but this one I couldn't. However I would add that the author cheated a little. Sarah had information that wasn't given to the reader. Still even with that, there were clues that could have left the reader to jump.

My other complaint and I have this complaint with any author that does this, is characters who have names that begin with the same letter. In this case there's two sets and they will all be part of the regular series. Sarah's twin granddaughters are Amy and Audrey - yes I know people often name twins like this, or they give them rhyming names, but not all the time. It would have been better to give them completely different names. I had to keep checking to see which one was which.

The other problematic set is her best friend and neighbor Martha, and her daughter-in-law Maggie. Both names are similar and have been around for a long time and don't give clues to age.

So authors, if you are reading this, please watch what you name your characters.

This is also a book put out by Guideposts, a Christian publication, so there is references to Christianity, however I did not find it heavy handed. Sarah utters a few prayers, there's one unlikely coincidence that can be chalked up to the hand of God, and a few mentions of a church, but it was all well done and not over done. Still this might be a problem for some people.

Fortunately I like inspirational fiction and although the mystery is tied up, the problems of the characters aren't, which makes it real.

Sarah herself is a likeable character. And I also enjoyed the attention given to the restoration. I never knew before how it was done and it was very interesting and meticulous. I would never want to restore an old quilt - I prefer creating a new one - but I can appreciate the artistry that's involved. It can be very painstaking. It's not too often that I learn something new from a cozy, and I found this fascinating.

I'm looking forward to the rest of the series.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #11: The Wedding Dress - Mary O'Donnell

Somehow Annie missed seeing this dress in the attic before even though it was on a mannequin. True, it was covered, but...for someone who likes to solve mysteries, she sure doesn't explore the attic as much as most people would.

However you have to play along to enjoy the series and it is a fun series.

Annie knows this dress wasn't her grandmother's dress, so who did it belong to? We get to go back to the first owners of Grey Gables to find out.

And there's a new kid in town. Annie's Hook and Needle Club friend Gwendolyn has a son who has returned home, and he's brought with him his fiance, Dervla, a young woman he's met in Ireland. Trouble is Gwendolyn isn't very welcoming, so Annie takes Dervla into her home.

And there's a famous artist in town who wants to do a painting of Grey Gables.

The book's first chapter takes us back in time and is intriguing, and then the author ruins the next chapter by doing information dumps all over the place about stuff we already know. Now, some might argue that it's necessary, but this book is a part of subscription club, so it's likely that readers would have read the previous ten books, and if not, information dumps are unnecessary. Readers don't have to know everything. They can put pieces together. And important information can be put in here and there. Shame on the author and editors for resorting to this.

So once we get passed that, the book is entertaining. Gwendolyn who is normally a nice person is completely unlikable in this but that's okay. People are complicated and even nice people can act horribly. I like to see the faults in characters.

The author wraps things up nicely in the end, taking all the different elements and tying them together. And she moves the possible romance between Annie and the town mayor Ian closer without rushing it. We suspect they will eventually get together, but it might not happen. And that's just fine.

I've tried finding out more about the author, but she isn't the only one with that name and I get led to different places.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Vineyard Quilt Mysteries #1: Threads of Deceit - Mae Fox & Jan Fields

I fell in love with Annie's Attic Mysteries and now I'm trying a new mystery series by Annie's as well.

This is the first in the Vineyard Quilt Mysteries. Antiquities bounty hunter Julie Ellis and her business partner Hannah Marks are on the run from those that want to harm them. They obtain jobs at the Quilt Haus Inn. Julie as the manager and Hannah as the cook, thinking they'll settle down to a more peaceful life in rural Missouri where Hannah can make creations in the kitchen and Julie can take up quilting again.

But it isn't long before Julie stumbles on a murder mystery when Daniel walks through the door of the inn. He convinces her he's a quilt expert (only quilters are allowed to stay in the inn) but after he's signed in he reveals he's really an archaeologist looking for a sunken ship.

Soon Julie is up to her old tricks as she helps Daniel.

This was a fun book with a unique setting and interesting characters such as the flamboyant Shirley who runs the tea and quilt shop that is part of the inn and gives wild history lessons during quilting time, and Inga, the uptight and meticulous housekeeper who disapproves of Julie.

There were a couple of spots that jumped suddenly from one moment to the next without any warning or obvious space, and one ridiculous plot point (I don't care how much you like to stitch, no one is going to embroider a threatening message). The ending seemed rushed as well. It would also be interesting to read about Julies exploits that got her into trouble in the first place.

At this point there's only two books in the series. I'm looking forward to the next one. Fields has written for Annie's Mysteries before.



Monday, February 22, 2016

Annie's Attic Mysteries #10: Emeralds In the Attic - Jan Fields

It's masquerade party time!

While looking for the perfect outfit in the attic...

Hold on here. After two years there's still stuff in the attic that Annie knows nothing about?

Apparently so. Anyway, she, good buddy Alice, and Peggy (who can be a bossy witch sometimes as we found out from the last book but isn't one in this one) go up to the attic to see if they can find some formal gowns to wear to the party. And they do. And they fit perfectly. Of course.

And they also find some costume jewelry. Emeralds in fact. Fake ones of course. A necklace, earrings, hair comb and a brooch.

Mary Beth has also given them a challenge - that Mary Beth just can't leave them alone to do their crafts. Nope, they've always got to be working on something to give to charity. In this case, it's masquerade masks that need to be gussied up for an auction.

So Annie uses some of the emeralds from the broken earring for her mask. And on the night of the party when Ian Butler picks her up - they're dating but not dating, as in "friends". As in no kiss goodnight - Annie just can't figure out what to do with her hair, she puts in the emerald comb.

But of course, strange things are going to happen because this is a mystery series. Why on earth are rich people vying for and stealing her fake emeralds?

And her house gets broken into again! This has happened in several books now. You would think she would get a series of new locks and an alarm system attached to her phone with all these people breaking in and leaving a mess that she has to clean up.

Another fun book in the series.

*****
Jan Fields

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #9 - The Deed in the Attic - K.D. McCrite

Life really isn't fair.

I can't get one house of my own but Annie (yes, I know a fictional character), gets three.

This time she finds a deed in the attic showing that Grandma Betsy had ownership. So that means Annie owns a house in Texas which she shared with her now dead husband; Grey Gables, the house that Betsy left her, and now this other house that is apparently scary and not in good shape and haunted.

Yes, haunted.

So Annie and a few friends from the Hook and Needle club decide to go on a ghost hunting expedition and investigate the house. Turns out a couple of Hook and Needle friends don't get along so well when they're not crafting - that Peggy can be a bossy witch. And it also turns out that you need a kit to take with you ghost hunting. Not just flashlights.

It also turns out that although the house has been severely neglected because it hasn't been lived in (houses do that. The less you use them the older they become. It's like they need to be loved or something) the house itself is still in good shape, and although not big, it just needs some love and kindness to bring it back to its glory days.

Still, Annie wants to solve the mystery as to how Betsy obtained the house. She didn't just go an buy it. It was given to her. But why?

Now if I weren't so bitter about Annie getting three houses while I can't even have one...still, it was a nice little cozy.

*****
K.D. McCrite

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #8 - Boxed In - Karen Kelly

The book picks up on the return of Annie from a visit to Texas to see her family. And for some reason everyone is funnier than they were before.

Which is probably about the author. We actually get to see some of the authors style in this book. 

Annie goes back up to the Grey Gables attic with its Mary Poppins bag of never ending stuff. This time she finds a birch bark box holding a Native American ceremonial collar and a poem. And the question as always is - who's is it.
                                                                                                              
I'm starting to wonder if Grandma Betsy was a kleptomaniac and not just a holder of things for everyone else. 

So there's a trip to the museum, rose hip jelly - I have no idea what rose hips are. I didn't know roses had hips - a new friend at a senior's home, more fun with the mayor - which doesn't sound as innocent as it really is, and a new challenge to the Hook and Needle Club from Mary Beth. That Mary Beth always has something she wants the members to do instead of just letting them do their own projects.

Another fun mystery in the series. I am so hooked on them I can't wait for the next one to come to my door.


*****
Karen Kelly is an author who shares a name with several other authors. A google search revealed a Karen Kelly that writes inspirational fiction to another Karen Kelly who writes steamy romance. Not the same author as this one.

So no website link for this one.


Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #7 - Rag Doll in the Attic - Jan Fields

It all begins with a dare.

And a lighthouse.

And a keeper with a tragic past.

And three girls.

Annie is having nightmares about three girls on the road to the lighthouse after discovering a rag doll in the attic of Grey Gables while looking for items to lend to the local library for a children's display.

And so we have another mystery which includes a dangerous walk on a stormy night to the lighthouse, a disapproving mayor, a handsome new man in town that has taken and interest in Alice, and a decision that Annie feels she needs to make.

First off, I liked the fact that one minute Annie and Alice (her best friend) do something entirely teenager and go on the ill advised stormy weather walk (the dark and the wind could lead to disaster) and the next minute get completely mothery when they come across their young teenage friends at the lighthouse. This is so typical of middle aged women with a sense of adventure. We are both teenagers and responsible women at the same time.

The thing that had me stumped though is why Annie had to make a decision between living in Stony Point or living in Texas where she came from. She has two houses. One that she lived in with her husband and daughter, and Grey Gables which she inherited from her grandmother, Betsy. Why not live in both? She could be in Texas between Halloween and Easter, taking advantage of the warm weather and the important holidays with her daughter and grandchildren, and then go to Stony Point after Easter to enjoy the coastal spring, summer and early fall. I see no reason to make a decision.

But that's just me being "cool, I've got two houses."

Personally, I wish I had one.

This book also breaks a bit from the rest of the series with Annie's unexplained dreams. A hint of the paranormal here? But then the series, although not religious, does not shy away from religion as we also delve in deeper to Annie's faith and her background of having missionary parents. Personally, I have no problem with Annie having dreams about what happened, but a more secular reader might.

Still, a fun addition to the series.

*****
Jan Fields is an author of mysteries and children's books. She's written several books in the Annie's Attic series, and several in other series as well.  Here's her website.

And her blog Cute and Cranky

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #6 - The Map in the Attic - Jolyn Sharp

The book opens with a fire at the Coynes, a young family who manage to escape before the fire engulfs their home. Mary Beth, owner of "A Stitch in Time" takes them into her home and helps them get on their feet.

Meanwhile Annie finds an embroidered piece of linen in the attic and realizes it's a map. But a map of what? And who created the lovely piece?

Somehow the fire and the embroidered map, are all tied up with the history of Stony Point, a history not everyone wants known.  And who is trying to steal the map, even breaking into the museum to snatch it?

As always Annie has her friends Alice and Ian to help her.

Again, another fun book and this one heats up (get it - fire - heats up). No seriously, things get pretty tense. We also get to go on a lobster boat to look at the coastline of Maine.

I love that I get the sense of being in Maine in these books. I would love to visit sometime.

*****
Jolyn Sharp doesn't seem to have a website. She has written a book for the Grace Chapel Inn series from Guideposts.




Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #5 - The Package - Sharon Dunn

When Annie and her handyman Wally go on a hunt for mice in the attic of Annie's Victorian house Grey Gables, they find instead a package filled with old stock certificates and a mysterious note thanking Annie's grandmother Betsy for holding on to them for her.

Realizing that the stock certificates don't belong to her, Annie sets out on a quest to hunt down the real owners. But first she has to find out who Joan and Therese are.

Meanwhile at the needlework shop "A Stitch in Time" owner Mary Beth convinces the Hook and Needle Club to take some teenage girls under their wing and teach them how to do some needlework skills. Annie gets the brilliant idea of getting the teens, and the club to work with the seniors at Seaside Hills Assisted Living making layettes for newborns.

Between teenage girls and their problems, finding the rightful owners of the stock certificates, and a strange woman who comes to Annie's door, Annie is kept busy solving yet another mystery from her attic.

Again, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Each book introduces us to more people in the town of Stony Point, Maine and we always get to visit with the regulars.

Loving the cozy mysteries. I had left them for so long and now I'm glad I'm back.

*****

Sharon Dunn is a successful and award winning writer of mystery and humor, a crafter, and a mom. 
 

Sharon's Book Links


Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #4 - Letters In the Attic - DeAnna Julie Dodson

Annie is up in the attic again, this time she discovers a stack of letters from an old childhood friend.

Whatever happened to Susan Morris? Although they spent a lot of time in the summer at Grey Gables, Gran's house, and kept in touch whenever Annie went home, by the time Susan went to college they no longer wrote to each other.

For Annie, life was filled with a husband, a child, and the family auto dealership. Still, maybe she should have kept in touch. Especially now that her husband had died, her child was grown and she was retired and the new owner of Grey Gables.

It sends Annie on a mission to find Susan. Along the way she tries to make friends with a woman who's husband appears controlling and abusive, and she meets a charming man from Susan's past. Maybe he holds the key to the mystery of Susan.

And of course there's still Tuesday mornings with the Hook and Needle club, who love to help Annie solver her mysteries. Adventures with her best friend Alice MacFarlane, and the continual fixing up of Grey Gables to her former glory.

There's some gripping scenes here as the ending is played out. Again, a wonderful cozy mystery.

*****
DeAnna Julie Dodson also writes her historical fiction series "Drew Farthing Mysteries"  under the pen name Julianna Deerling.

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #3 - The Photo Album: Marlene Chase

In this episode, Annie finds a photo album filled with pictures from her childhood. Yet strangely one picture has an unfamiliar teenage boy in the background.

The face haunts her, so Annie sets out to find out who this boy is and what happened to him which leads her to a tale of murder that involves one of her new friends.

Meanwhile a handsome man comes to her door claiming to be an antiques dealer which leads to more questions. Soon news gets around that he's interested in her, and gossip travels fast in a small town. And of course the Hook and Needle Club is a part of it.

This is another fun addition to the Annie's Attic Mystery collection and should appeal to crafters and cozy mystery readers.

*****
I can't seem to find a website for Marlene Chase. From the author bio on the book she's a retired editor for the publications of the Salvation Army. She has a few books out including "The Layaway Doll", "Our God Comes", and "Beside Still Waters". 


Tuesday, February 2, 2016

When Patterns Go Bad

Dear Knitwear Designer,

First off, congratulations on becoming a designer. Most of us can't figure out how a pattern works, never mind actually create a garment out of our heads. Well, actually you create garments out of yarn, but you know what I meant.

Secondly thank you for offering your brilliance to the rest of us. It's great that we can buy patterns directly from the designer and sometimes you even give your work away for free! That's quite generous and I have no idea why you would do that other than to get your name out there, but we all thank you for it.

Now may I offer some suggestions? I don't mean to criticize - okay, yes I do. But it's only because I work in a craft store and I see the frustration and bewilderment on our customers faces when they come in with a pattern that they got from you, dear designer.

As a writer I know how important the details are. It doesn't matter if I have the greatest story to tell, if I can't use proper punctuation and spelling, my readers will throw my book across the room and vow never to read my work again. There are plenty of other writers out there who can use punctuation and spelling and readers will go buy their books instead of mine.

And the same goes for you, dear designer. You may have created the most exquisite shawl, the coziest sweater, the funkiest socks, or the most marvelous scarf/hat/mitten set, but if people can't read your patterns, they will throw them across the room and find a designer who also makes beautiful exquisite designs and good readable patterns. Now if your patterns are as easy to understand as your garments are beautiful, then you will have customers coming back to you over and over again and you will become rich and famous and have yarn given to you by the exclusive companies around the world while the rest of us deal with our jealousy.

So I'm going to give you some pointers on what is essential in a pattern and I give this to you both as a knitter/crocheter, and as an employee in a yarn shop.

  1.  Your yarn. 
    1. By all means tell us what yarn you used. Saying Red Heart is not telling us the yarn. Red Heart is a brand name. Red Heart has a thousand or so yarns under it's brand name. You need to be specific. Tell us the brand name, the name of the yarn, and the color. 
    2. It is important to tell us the weight of the yarn. Is it a DK, a worsted, a fingering? Knitters more often than not have to substitute yarn and it helps to know what to substitute with. There are a lot of reasons for substitutions. Price, availability, contents (lots of customers are sensitive to wool or they want to go organic) and color are just some of the reasons why substitutions need to be made. In five years that lovely yarn you used may be long discontinued. Personally I have patterns from decades ago, and even from the 1800's. Don't you want your pattern to be around for a long time? Then you need to give information for substitutions.
    3. Tell us what the yarn you used is made of. Again important for those who might have allergies.
    4. Is there anything special about this yarn? If this is a basic yarn then you don't need to say anything, but if it is a specialty yarn, then we need to know. Is it a fuzzy yarn? A chenille? Does it have long color changes or short ones?
  2. Tools
    1. Americans designers are especially guilty of this. Saying "size 5" needles is not enough. Is that American, metric, or UK? Give us at least the metric size as well for those who live outside of the states. And if you use metric then let the Americans know the size in their language. Hey, I didn't create the system, I'm just trying to function in it.
    2. If a circular is necessary then state the length of the cord needed. In metric and inches. If you did the pattern on double points then tell us that. Give as much information about needle and hook sizes as possible (yes, crochet hooks have American and metric sizes as well).
  3. Sizing
    1. Tell us the gauge. Especially in sweaters, socks and hats where fit counts. And tell us the finished sizes. I'm currently working on a sweater where the finished size isn't mentioned. Yes, I know. It's stupid but the sweater looks so cool. So now after realizing that it's going to be too small I have to make adjustments. It's a one size fits all, only it doesn't fit anyone unless you're a size 0 model. Give us dimensions of the front, back and sleeves if it's a sweater. The more parts, the more dimensions needed. 
  4. Abbreviations
    1. Sure you know exactly what you're talking about when you give abbreviations. But you don't know if your fans do. K and P are pretty basic, but beyond that, you need to make a list of all your abbreviations and what they mean. Do you really want your knitters to have to search the internet to read your patterns? They might get sidetracked by the kitten videos and never get around to your pattern because you made it too hard to read and the kitten videos are easy to watch. So if you really want to knit from the back twice and then in the same stitch purl into the front and then jump up and down three times and then pull everything through, then you have to explain this and not just write down kb2pfj3pt. If you make your abbreviations chart at the beginning of the pattern then you can use your abbreviations to your heart's content and even make up some of your own. And by the way, you crochet designers are not exempt. English and American abbreviations are different. Don't ask me why, they just are.
    2. If you have difficult directions then you might consider offering a video that they can watch. Still explain on the pattern itself, but you can direct your knitter to your video. 
  5. THIS IS REALLY IMPORTANT
    1. Just like writers need editors and readers to find their mistakes - no writer is perfect and when you've read the same sentence over and over again you end up reading it the way it's supposed to read, not the way it really does - you need to have another knitter proof read your pattern. Maybe that means they actually have to make the piece. That way they can say to you "What does this mean?" and then you can tweak that instruction so any dummy knitter can understand it. 
I think that's it. I hope I haven't caused anyone to start throwing around knitting needles exclaiming "She just doesn't understand artistes!"

Hopefully we can tame those patterns and turn them around from badness to goodness so they can be responsible citizens in the yarn world. Otherwise they will be tossed aside and forgotten while the well-behaved patterns get the rewards.

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #2 - Medals in the Attic - Cathy Elliot

Medals in the Attic

 In this episode to the series, Annie finds a carved wooden case with a glass top. Nestled in the case are two military medals. She knows they aren't her grandfathers, those are proudly displayed in the living room.

So who do these medals belong to and why did her grandmother Betsy have them?Annie knows she needs to find the owner of these medals and this sets her on a journey that reveals a secret that causes someone to become very angry with her.

It also creates misunderstanding with a new friend that causes hard feelings within the hook and needle club. Let's face it. Women can be difficult. But then so can men and as it turns out, it is a man that causes this little scuffle. Sometimes it's not easy being the new kid in town.

While she tries to solve the mystery Annie is also renovating her kitchen at Grey Gables, and looking for things to donate to the local charity auction, plus she's getting closer to the local mayor Ian Butler.

The wonderful thing about a series whether it be books or TV shows, is that there's time to flesh out characters and revisit favorite places. If you like New England fishing towns, cozy mysteries, people with imperfections, and crafts, this is a lovely series to read.  As stated before, the writing isn't the best but that's because of the formula aspect of having all the works sound the same.

It will leave you wanting to visit Stoney Point, Maine again and again.

*****
Cathy Elliott is a retired librarian and the author of a few books. You can find her amazon link here. 





Friday, January 1, 2016

Crochet Bombs: When You Just Don't Know What To With All That Yarn

When I was five I learned how to knit. I didn't make anything, just a lot of holes, but I learned the basics enough so that when I was 18 I was able to pick up a set of needles and start making and redisigning sweaters.

When I had five year olds I couldn't figure out how my mother taught me how to knit. These people that I had, although intelligent, couldn't do anything with a set of knitting needles except poke people's eyes out or make holes in the couch.

I taught myself to crochet as well. I was quite happy with these skills until a three year old got a hold of an intricately cabled sweater that I was working on and cut holes in it. I put the knitting/crocheting away and discovered that I really loved needlework.

All those beautiful pictures that I could paint with threads! I was in heaven, especially since my artistic ability stopped in the first grade. But I could make the most detailed works of art just following little blocks of color. I even did a little designing.

Lately I have returned to yarn. Perhaps my desire for homemade sweaters have returned. The patterns are more beautiful than ever.

Now crafters are known for going a little crazy. I think most crafters have an excess gene. The one that makes us collect more patterns than we can possibly make, and more fabric than we can sew and more yarn than we can knit.  And it appears that some crocheters just don't know when to stop crocheting. Personally I'm happy making sweaters and an occasional afghan, but some crocheters just have way too much time on their hands.

Need proof?

 Take a look at transporation. A new paint job just ain't enough.

Now, if you saw this coming at you, would it scare you?

On the other hand. This might be clever. Get your enemy rolling on the ground laughing and you can pick them off.
 Remember the Partridge Family? Except Shirley didn't make the kids crochet the bus cover, she just had them paint the bus, otherwise they wouldn't have had time to rehearse.
I always think these cars look silly in the first place. Usually you see a big guy squeezed into them looking like something out of a cartoon. I've always thought in a car accident they would just be squished like a bug.

This car is just asking for it.
 Not only did someone crochet a car cover using the pepto bismal yarn they had that no one wanted for sweater, but they also created covers for the friends that laughed at her.

I'm telling you, there's dead bodies there, cleverly disguised as art.
Take this to school and the kids aren't going to laugh at you at all.

And they won't throw things at you either.

And you won't be labeled as the wierd outcast.

Honest.

Yeah. Really, No, I mean really. It won't happen.



Filet Crochet

It has nothing to do with how you cut up a fish.


Okay, this is gorgeous.

But really, wouldn't it have been better to spend the time actually practicing the piano?
This is beautiful too.

But it won't stay that way when you have kids with sticky hands and cars that drive by spraying mud.














Yarn Grows on Trees

 Trees are apparently judging from all the pictures out there, the most popular thing to clothe.

I guess some crocheters are offended by naked trees.
I remember socks that looked like this in the seventies.

Do trees really get that cold?
Why?

When I think of all the babies and the homeless these blankets could cover.

There's actually some pretty cool crocheting going on here, but...but...

why?

Book Review: Annie's Attic Mysteries #1 - The Lady In the Attic by Tara Randel

To find out more about Annie's Attic Mysteries check the tab at the top of the page. Annie's Attic publishes craft novels.

This is the first in a series. Randel has the job of setting up the series for all the other authors who participated in this series.

Widow Annie Dawson leaves her home in Texas to go to Stoney Point, Maine, a fishing town, to take care of the estate of her now deceased grandmother Betsy Holden, a famous cross stitch designer who has left everything to Annie including the Victorian home, Grey Gables, and everything in it.

It's in this book that you first meet the important characters in the series, including her childhood friend Alice, the owner of the craft shop "A Stitch in Time", the members of the hook and needle club, and the mayor of the town Ian Butler. And you get to listen to the whiney voice of Annie's grown daughter LeeAnn on the phone who doesn't like the idea of Annie actually moving away for awhile and getting a new life.

The Lady in the Attic refers to a cross stitch piece that Betsy Holden left behind and that Annie finds in the attic of Grey Gables that no one has seen. Betsy did scenery, yet in this picture there's a woman on a porch, not the usual Betsy design but her work is unmistakable.

There's something familiar about the woman and her surroundings, so Annie sets out to find out who the woman is with the help of The Hook and Needle Club. What she doesn't expect is the animosity that she experiences from the town people while on her search. They don't take well to strangers even if Annie spent childhood summers in the town and she is the granddaughter of their most celebrated citizen. She's still an outsider.

As I stated in the Annie's Attic page, I'm not crazy about the writing style. However I recognize that a lot of it is editors creating a formula.

Having said that, I found the characters interesting and multi-dimensional. I figured out the mystery but I was still excited about the ending. The story kept moving along and I cared about the outcome and I looked forward to the other books in the series.

Important Links Regarding this Book