Happy Merry Christmas Needlepoint Year End

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Today is the official year end to turn in needlepoint Christmas ornaments at my Local Needlepoint Shop (LNS), Chapel Hill Needlepoint so stitched canvases can get fabricated into actual ornaments in time for Christmas. I only stitch Christmas ornaments so today is like my year-end, my April 15, my New Year’s Eve.

 

I first learned to needlepoint as a child, but had not picked up a canvas since boarding school until two and a half years ago. I had gone to a friend’s house that had the most beautiful ornaments and quickly got hooked making my own. Last year I stitched 34 ornaments in one year and thought that seemed a little obsessive.

 

At my LNS there is a community table where any customer is welcomed to sit down and stitch and talk and learn from each other. At first I was a little intimidated by the years of experience and the quality of the group’s work, but I sat down anyway. I was quick to find out that regardless of your skill level it was the most welcoming and fun group of ever changing women and some very friendly regulars.

 

One stand out stitcher is Elizabeth Hurd. She worked on projects that are museum quality. If I had a question I knew she had a great answer. Last year on this year-end turn in date she asked me how many ornaments I had completed since it was my first full year of needlepointing. I can’t remember how many she had done, but it seemed to be fairly equal to my number.

 

“How about we have a contest this year to see who can do the most?” Elizabeth asked me. There was no talk about size or level of difficulty, just number. Since I clearly was already addicted to needle pointing I quickly agreed to this competition. It was my hope that I could equal that year’s number of 34, so off we started.

 

As we would sit around the “stitchers’ table” other friends would ask about the competition. No one else officially said, “I’m in it with you,” but people’s interest was peaked. Questions would arise, “Is the contest just Christmas ornaments or do other small things like Easter and Halloween ornaments count? What about two sided or 3-d ornaments, do they count as one or two?”

 

I started the year off a little slow, not quite keeping pace with my goal of three a month. My original challenger, Elizabeth was working on a number of giant projects, like a kneeler for her church, so I was fairly certain that I had a chance against her. But I had no idea who else was silently in the contest.

 

In the friendly way the whole thing started we said, “Any ornament, regardless of size or complication counts as one and all are welcome to compete.” Eventually my friend Christy who I got hooked on needlepoint last year and Kate a long time stitcher and practically pro-needle pointer both announced they were also in the race. This meant I had to pick up the pace. In the last two weeks I finished seven projects.   The calluses on my pointer fingers are proof.

 

At Mah Jongg today I finished one last little initial ornament and asked Christy what her number was. Forty! She had finished forty – quite a feat for her second year. I went to Chapel Hill to turn in my last five canvases. There at the stitching table sat Elizabeth Hurd and Kate. “How many?” they asked. “Forty-three,” I proudly announced.

 

Elizabeth said, “Congratulations, you easily beat my twenty, but sit down.” I looked at Kate, “How many?” I asked the dark horse at the table. “Fifty!” I was easily beaten, but I did not lose.

 

There was no prize for this contest. I won with the forty-three new Christmas ornaments I will have on my needlepoint garland this year. Kate quietly put out the most with 50, but she generously said, “The contest was originally Christmas ornaments, if you had kept it just that you would have won since about 12 of mine were Easter ornaments.” It was a kind thing to say, but unnecessary. The camaraderie, fun, and fellowship of the stitchers table is the best part of the whole contest.

 

So now it starts all over again. The new needlepoint year is today and Kate already finished one while we sat at the table. All are welcome to join. Some friends are joining by setting a personal goal rather than trying for the most. I want to learn new and more complicated stitches this year. But you can bet damn sure I’m also going to try and beat my this year’s number of forty three. For now there is laundry to do, a garden to replant and photo books from summer trips to complete. I think I need to get into a scrapbook contest to get those done.


Passing On the Passion

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There are two kinds of people in the world, those who have a passion but like to keep it to themselves and those who have a passion and want to share it with their friends. OK, maybe there are more kinds of people in the world, like those that don’t have any passion or whose passion is for something so tawdry they better not share it, but I’m not talking about those kind of people today.

 

I am not the passion hoarding type, but rather the passion sharing type. Now in the passion sharing type there are further breakdowns. There are those people who like to force their passion on others because they feel like everything they like is what everyone else on earth should like and then there are those who are happy to teach others who show an interest. I’m the second type. Today was the perfect example.

 

Since I needlepoint any time I am sitting, which is not just when I am watching TV home alone, but when I am playing Mah Jongg, or at a board meeting or in the car as long as I am not the driver, lots of people have observed me stitching. One friend, Pokey thought that a needlepoint learning party would make a good auction item for the Durham Academy auction so I asked Nancy, my needlepoint storeowner if she would host a party with me. Nancy, always happy to teach new stitchers, agreed readily.

 

Today was the day that the winner, Kim and her chosen guests came to have their party and learn to needlepoint. Since most everyone except Kim was a needlepoint virgin I was not sure how teaching six women all at once was going to go. Why I worried one moment I do not know because they all took to it beautifully. It helps that they were all smart, type A’s with a large number of advanced degrees among the group. But being smart is not a prerequisite for being good with your hands.

 

The one theme among the group was the discovery for good lighting and perhaps a pair of readers to be able to see the tiny holes that they were stitching. Since it was a party we had a ton of food, which was hardly touched because each woman was busy mastering the basket weave pattern. I had wine for everyone, but I think it was best they did not drink as they were just learning.

 

I am happy to report that everyone succeeded and is well on their way to actually making an ornament or a belt. Thanks to Kim for bidding and winning the party at the auction. Raising money for the school while passing on that passion is something that makes me so happy.


Needlepoint Treadmill

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Today was a red-letter day in my small world.  I got back four ornaments from the fabricators.  Not just any ornaments, but two were three-dimensional ones and one was a fairly big Santa.  The HOHO Jack-in-the-box was probably the biggest ornament I have made so far so seeing it finished and ready to go on the Christmas tree was very exciting to me.

What, its only August — aren’t you thinking about Christmas too?  I dream about Christmas all year long.  This year especially since I set a goal to make a dozen needlepoint ornaments.  See, if you want to make an ornament and have it on your tree this year you have to finish stitching the canvas by September 10th so that the saints who take them from that point into the beautiful ornament with braid on the edges and a nice cloth backing have time to do their magic.

True to form I way surpassed my dozen-ornament goal long ago.  I am going to have to keep my actual number to myself so that I appear less obsessed.   I can justify doing all this needlepoint because it was a goal I set, but I think it has been at the expense of my weight loss goal.  I certainly do spend more time sitting than I do working out.  I am able to needlepoint standing up and have been known to do it while standing in the parking lot at school while waiting for Carter.

I think that what I need is to start to do needlepoint on the stationary bike at the gym, or on the treadmill.  I’m not sure how fast I can walk and needlepoint, but since I have already surpassed my ornament goal I need to add exercise to the equation.

One of my favorite parts of this needlepoint life is going to Chapel Hill Needlepoint, by local store owned by Nancy McGuffin.  Not only is Nancy’s a place to buy canvases and threads and all the do-dads needed for needlepoint, but also she has a big round community stitcher’s table.  Sitting around with Anne, Kate, Mary, Vickie, Elizabeth and any number of other enthusiasts is great fun.  I have learned from them all and they kindly listen to my stories.

I’m not sure there is room, but if Nancy were to replace the round table with a circle of stationary bikes I think she could charge us gym memberships and we could still stitch and talk while we worked out.  My other idea to keep me moving while still needle pointing is that maybe I have my strong light source powered by a treadmill and unless I am making enough energy from walking I won’t have the light I need to see.  I’m not sure what the answer is, but I do know that working out just to loose weight is not enough for me, I like to have a finished product for all my hard work other than my body.