kareina: (stitched)
[personal profile] kareina
Yesterday some of our friends from choir came over for home made pizza and movie night. They left right after the movie, which meant that I was able to go to bed around 21:30 and sleep for more than nine hours, which I needed after a busy week of not quite enough sleep each night.

This morning I woke up inspired to actually start working on the new gambeson I have been thinking of making. This one will be done much like a Viking or Rus kaftan, but made from a couple of layers of modern terrycloth towel, covered inside and out with linen (or, more probably, a linen-cotton blend--it has been years since that fabric was purchased, so I can't swear to which it is, but I have my suspicions based on the budget that would have applied then).

I am, of course, sewing it by hand, and have chosen to do it the slow, methodical way:

1) Cut out a piece in the towel fabric. Cut the second layer of towel very slightly larger than the first.

2) Set towel piece #1 on the black fabric, turn the outside edge of the fabric over the edge of the towel, baste it into place, re-smooth out the fabric/towel, cut the next edge of the fabric, fold it just over the edge of the towel and baste into place. Repeat till all four sides are done. Do the same thing with the other piece of towel, but with the blue fabric this time.

3)Set the larger (blue) piece of fabric covered towel onto the smaller (black) fabric covered towel, carefully, so that it sticks out past the other by the same amount on all sides, and quilt them together in a lozenge pattern using black linen thread.

4) Repeat steps 1-3 for the next piece of the project

5) Take the two now-quilted pieces and line up the edges to be stitched together, with the right-sides out. Carefully whip-stitch the inner (black covered) towels together for the length of the seam.

6) Open that seam up, carefully flatten the upper (blue covered) towel against the seam, and set a strip of linen tablet-woven band (thank you to my Apprentice #1 for weaving that!) over the seam. Carefully back-stitch through the tablet woven band and both layers of fabric covered towel on one side of the band.

7) Carefully flatten the other upper (blue covered) towel against the seam and be certain it is tucked under the tablet woven band. Back stitch the second side of the band through the other set of fabric covered towels.

8) Repeat steps 1-7 for all of the other pieces of the project.

9) Edge the neck, front opening, and hem with more tablet woven band.

I managed to accomplish steps 1 & 2 in the 1 hr 40 minutes I worked on this before [livejournal.com profile] lord_kjar, who had stayed up late making a wall-mounted knife block for the little knife I want within reach of the stove, got up.

Once he was awake I took a break from sewing so that we could discuss our plans for changes to the pantry in the kitchen, and we looked at the 3D model he has made on the computer for what he has been thinking. This got us to debating exactly how big the pantry area needs to be, and how big the open area on that side of the kitchen should be, so, of course, we left the computer and walked into the kitchen to point, discuss, and re-measure.

The plan involves moving the cabinet with glass doors that came with the house from the corner to the middle of that wall, raising the upper part of that cabinet till the top touches the ceiling so that there is room for the microwave to stand on the cabinet base, then building a set of pantry shelves wrapping from the light switch to that cabinet. The question we were debating is exactly where the cabinet should sit when the work is done, and whether it is more important to have a larger pantry, or more open space on the right side of the cabinet.

Therefore I suggested that we give it a try--take down the wall-mounted shelves in the middle of the wall, move the cabinet to approximately where it will be after building the real pantry, take off the upper part and make it ready for the extension, and move the bookshelves that we have been using as a "temporary" pantry into the corner where we want the real pantry.

He was ok with this, so we did. The "nice" dishes that live in that cabinet are now in two banana boxes in the storage area downstairs, the wider bookshelf has been moved into the corner to the left of the cabinet base, the microwave, toaster, etc. now sits on the cabinet base, and the narrower bookshelf (which didn't fit on the other wall) has been brought downstairs, while the even narrower shelf that used to be downstairs has been brought upstairs to act as a temporary pantry shelf.

The verdict is that I really look forward to finishing the real pantry, as we currently have too many things standing behind of or stacked on top of other things, but that, overall, the idea looks like it will work.

Once we got that done he went out to the forge shed, where he is working on building a ventilation hood over the forge, and I returned to the gambeson in progress. I managed to get it far enough along that one sleeve is 90% done--the underarm square is totally attached to one side of the sleeve, and the sleeve has had its lining sewn shut and the tablet woven band has started to be attached. I might have finished it, but it was nearly 21:00 at that point, so I put the project down, satisfied now that my idea for doing the seams will work, and did my workout.

Then I turned in my Chatelaine's report and typed up this. Now it is nearly midnight, and time for me to do yoga and get some sleep before work tomorrow.

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