Friday, May 30, 2025

Blue and White Fabric Colllages on Handmade Paper

I had made these fabric collages in February or March.





 Yesterday, I framed them.


 Quite pleased with myself.

Is it Over Yet?

 The following is NOT to be shared with my mother.

A year or two ago, my shaking hands started to concern me.  I went to my GP who said maybe Parkinsons but I'll send you to a neurologist.

The neurologist said definitely not Parkinsons, probably essential tremors but I'll send you for an MRI just to be sure, not expecting to find anything.

The "anything" turned out to be a meningioma, a benign tumor in the tissue between the skull and the brain.  My meningioma was about 2.5 cm and 3 cm is the size where it may start pressing on the brain.  Treatment advised: radiation.

A subsequent MRI showed no change in the size but after much thought, I decided to go for the radiation because I wasn't sure I wanted to wait until surgery was necessary and I figured 74 is a better age to do it than older.

They recommended 5 radiation treatments, every other day, and the duration is approximately 25 minutes.

The treatments themselves were fine.  They make a mask which fits over your face and is attached to the treatment table.  A little claustrophobic considering you can't move your head and have no concept of how long you've been lying there.

While I was lying there, I tried to distract myself by thinking about quilting/needlework projects.  And I kept time by counting songs of the 50s and 60s playing in the background.

I don't know the result of the treatments - I will have a followup MRI and doctor's appointment in July.

Before the treatment, I asked what they do with the mask when the treatments are over.  Trash unless I wanted to keep it.

And so was born "Is it over yet?" - a mask made from the treatment mask.

I failed to take a photo of the "naked" mask but this is what it looked like, sort or, lying down as on the treatment table.


 And this is the finished mask:


 The top part is 2" squares of different needlework techniques - applique, quilting, mosaic quilting, needlepoint, thread bits joined by Solvy, using leftover bits and pieces from previous projects.

The curly grey hair is from an unravelled sweater from Faigie's estate.

The nose/mouth opening on the mask was not pretty so I covered it with a mask I made from Faigie's felt, covered with eight flowers to represent the approximately 8 songs which played during each 25ish minute treatment.  And I couldn't resist a few beads and seed embroidery stitching.

I am still debating whether to put 5 (for the number of treatments) and 25 (for the length of each treatment) on the sunglass lenses.

I will probably gift it to the radiation doctor when I have my followup.

Monday, May 12, 2025

Stenciling sort of

I recently showed at a POM L&S meeting the matzah cover I made.  Members asked questions about how I did the Hebrew lettering.  I will be demonstrating the technique on an upcoming L&S meeting so I better get my ducks in a row so I can show how I did it.  It may not be the best way of doing it, but it is the way that works for me.

In a recent L&S meeting about the Little Synagogue on the Prairie, there was a "mizrach" on the wall.  It was common in Jewish homes to have a sign or plaque on the wall called a mizrach which means east, the direction towards which prayers are said.

I went to Google and typed in "mizrach".   It sent me to Wikipedia.  All I really wanted was the Hebrew word מזרח

 

  

I highlighted מזרח and copied it into a new document in my word processing program.

 

  

I adjusted the font to "Aharoni" (you can chose whatever Hebrew font your word processor has but I chose Aharoni because the letters are thick).

I adjusted the letter size to 240 pt - this gave me all four letters on one row.  You could make them bigger, or smaller, depending on what you are making.

And I got this which I printed onto coloured paper - I will explain why further on.

  

OK.  So now we have the base for the template.  If you are planning to make a stencil, tape the paper to a window, tape a piece of freezer paper, non-shiny side facing you, onto the base and trace the letter outline with a pen or pencil onto the freezer paper.


Remove from window.  Cut out the inside of the letters.  Et voila, a stencil you can iron onto fabric to paint with fabric paint.
 

 

 

If you are planning to cut out fabric letters, cut out the letters, cutting around the black ink.
Now flip the letters over so all you see is the pink.

Trace the letters onto fusible - I used Steam a Seam Lite.  I am assuming you know how fusible works, if not ask someone who does know.


There are two steps to the fusing. 
 
You will need to peel off the paper on the unwritten side of the fusible and fuse it to the fabric from which the letters will be cut.  Fuse either

a) onto the wrong side of the fabric; or
b) onto something like batik which doesn't have a right or wrong side, or onto a silk where neither side is discernably right or wrong.
 
 I used batik because I wanted to use up my bits and pieces.

Cut the fusible to separate between the letters.  This is where you peel off the paper not written on Then iron the fusible onto the fabric. COVER WITH PARCHMENT PAPER BEFORE IRONING.  Sorry for shouting.
It is much easier to cut out if you don't cut the letters until they have been fused.

Once you have fused onto the fabric and cut out the letters, you will have this:
 

Now peel the fusible on the back of the letters, place the letters on the fabric where you want them and you will have the final lettering.  I fused onto a goldish synthetic fabric which I will eventually finish off with quilting, embroidery or something else.


 

 Alternative sources for lettering:

 Masterfont - used to have a place where you could try out the font.  I used to try out the words I wanted, then copy and paste into a word document.  Don't know if this will still work.

alefalefalef.co.il - a graphic designs site but they have free Hebrew fonts.

 















Thursday, May 1, 2025

Alana's Quilt - Finished

I finished the quilting.  Remind me not to do large quilts on a domestic machine.  I have cut off the excess backing and batting.  Quilt not entirely squared but close enough.  I cut out 2.5" strips from the fabric cutoffs for binding.  Maybe tomorrow.



 I haven't figured out yet how to upload the photos Menachem sent me.  I made the backing from the fabrics above.

I am very proud of myself - I pieced the cutoff batting and have put it away so that when I need batting for something, I don't have to worry about different types of batting not being compatible. Yay me.