Category Archives: NJNA at Seminar

Bits and Pieces

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On Tuesday I was one of the lucky door prize winners.  I bypassed all the painted canvases and headed straight to the charted designs.  I found several that were appealing but settled on this one:

The design is cute, but I focused on the finishing.  It is stitched in one long rectangle and folded to get the effect desired.  I think I will try that this fall, and maybe it will be something we can try in the future!

Last night was Expo!  For anyone not familiar with the ANG Seminar, that is the merchandise night where you can find things sold by teachers, other needlework designers as well as those who cater to the desires for those of us in needlework trying to find the best in accessories including laying tools, bags, totes, jewelry.  It is also, later in the two hour shop time, a chance to connect with your favorite teachers/designers and tell them about the piece you finished and how much you loved it.

These were my purchases of note:


On the lower left are notecards that I purchased from Lois Kerschner with photos of some of her stitched scenes.  On the lower right are some cute small needle minder magnets purchased from Nancy Cucci.  There are four large disks with holes for stitching that I got from Toni Gerdes.  A couple of my other stitching groups would like to stitch designs on these as a meeting program.  There are other colors, but these are red, white, navy blue and black to complement the ones I currently have at home, beige, olive green, and burgundy.  Then in the center is a design with excellent directions being sold by the Potomoc Chapter as a fund raiser.  A chapter member designed the square for the fund raiser.  Several members stitched it in a variety of colors as well as altering the square motif in the top which were on display.  The directions are well done and the diagrams clear.  Hopefully, this too will be stitched shortly!

Part of the fun of Expo! is bumping in to others you have stitched with at seminars in the past and catching up with them.  They can also be enablers telling you what you really need to buy before the vendor runs out!  I skipped those booths where I knew temptation would be strong as I don’t need any more new kits before I have tackled a few purchased at previous seminars!  Maybe next year I will have completed a few of those, yeah right.

Wednesday is Tour Day at ANG!

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Hi Everyone!

Because tour day is always my favorite part of seminar, I generally only sign up for six days of classes.  This year, ANG did not have any tours on the schedule.  I imagine this is due to the past few years having very little participation.  So Sue and I talked with the concierge here at the Hyatt and arranged for a tour of two plantations near NOLA.

We were picked up directly in front of the hotel this morning and our entertaining bus driver took us first to the Laura Plantation.  This was a creole plantation (French, Roman Catholic).

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Front view of the Laura Plantation house

The Laura plantation is unique in that early-on the inheritance passed through to the women in the family, a French and not American possibility.  One tough old lady managed the plantation and family to obtain untold riches.  Yet she was mean as could be.  As interesting as this story is, the reason that this house is preserved is that the man who wrote “Brer Rabbit” based his stories on ones that he wrote on this plantation while listening to the oral histories of the black slaves.

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What a welcoming veranda!

I’d like to draw your attention to the doors on the front porch and then two similar doors from inside the house.

Sue and  I thought that these were beautiful and would be interesting needlework designs.  We learned that these were painted onto the doors using a carved potato.  Every door was beautiful in itself and no two were alike!

I had to include this picture of the glassware on the dining room table because it reminds me so much of my Granny’s stemware!

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From the house, we walked though the banana garden (36 kinds of bananas) to the slave quarters.

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Bananas growing at top and the flower hanging down!  Very interesting.

As noted before, the slave quarters are the reason that this plantation is considered a historical place.

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We also saw the “dowager” house which housed eight people (including favorite slaves) in eight rooms — contrast this with the slave quarters which housed six people in one very small room.

Our tour guide at Laura was awesome — bordering on a professional actress (if not an actual actress).  Listening to Camille was worth the trip all by itself.

Afterwards, we drove a few more miles down the road to Oak Alley plantation.  There have been about a dozen films shot here and I think it fits most people’s perception of a “real” southern plantation.

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The back entrance to Oak Alley.

When we arrived, we were greeted by a lady in hoop skirts and offered the possibility of a mint julep which we could take into the house for our tour.  In the dining room, I was intrigued by the large lyre-like feature hanging where one would expect the chandelier to be.  This was an idea from India — a large, slow moving fan — that would keep the dinner guests cooler during a long dinner.  It’s power came from a young slave (about nine years old) who would slowly pull the rope until the last dinner guest had left the room.  The table and chairs were quite short because the average creole man was about 5′-4″ and the average woman was 5″-0″.  However, the silverware was quite large because it was a subtle way of advertising your wealth!

When we moved upstairs to the bedroom, we were told about the rolling pin bed frame shown below.

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It seems that the mattresses were stuffed with Spanish moss which grew in great abundance.  It was quite comfortable but would become lumpy over the course of the night.  A rolling pin bed would have one of the spindles that detached and slaves would roll the mattress for about 1-3/4 hours each day per mattress to get it all flat again for the next night.  An example of a detached spindle is shown on the bed.

One of the most spectacular design features of the house was the medallion in the master bedroom.

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The last owner of Oak Alley did not have any heirs, so it set up a non-profit foundation to care for the house and a few acres of land.  Other family members maintain homes on the remaining acreage and oversee the foundation.

Here’s Sue in front of the alley of oaks that gives this plantation its name.

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After a quick bite at the cafe and an even quicker jaunt through the gift shop, our bus driver brought us back to our hotel in NOLA — just in time for stitcher’s EXPO!

Cheers, Rosie

 

Seminar – Days 4 and 5

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On Tuesday, Jill, Sue and I did not have class.  So we went to the WW II Museum.  My dad fought in the Second World War (as well as Korea) so I wanted to see how the museum treated the European Theatre.

The exhibits were wonderful but I felt that there was much more in the Pacific section, perhaps because the overall battle was longer and more extensive geographically. At any rate, the museum tells a very moving story of the courage and fortitude of the men and women of the Greatest Generation.

Last night, we had dinner at Commander’s Palace.  Best shrimp remoulade ever!  When we left, they took us though the kitchen to see behind the scenes.

Today, I had a one day class, Swirling Tulips by Gail Stafford.   Below is one quadrant of the design.  Tomorrow, we start Beets so I will have another root vegetable piece!

Commander’s Palace!

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Hi Everyone!

I’m a day late in writing this post, but yesterday was a bad computer day when two of my three accounts stopped working.  By some miracle of cyberspace, they are all happy today!

So yesterday was my second day in “At the Beach” with Gail Stafford.  Despite missing two hours of class for conference calls, I think I made pretty good progress.  Gail was very understanding and walked me through what I missed.   If I hadn’t had the calls, at least part of the beach towel thrown over the left chair would have been stitched!

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So this post gets its name from the restaurant where Carol made reservations for our whole NJNA contingent.  Cathryn had told Carol that this was one of the best restaurants in NOLA.

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Carol heard that the shrimp remoulade was awesome, but it was only available on the tasting menu.  So, Carol asked and the chef agreed to make an exception; so three of our group ordered that.  I had a heirloom tomato salad with local ricotta and a basil sauce — it was so good that I used my bread to sop up every last drop!  For dinner I had the pecan crusted local gulf fish (sheepshead) in a saffron sauce with champagne-poached crab on top!

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Is your mouth watering yet?

As we were getting into our taxi, a parade of lighted bicycles went by!  It was highly reminiscent of our first seminar in Philadelphia when we had the naked bicycle parade!  Apparently this is an every Tuesday and Thursday night occurrence in NOLA.  The picture is a bit blurry, but you get the idea!

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Tomorrow is tour day — always my favorite day at seminar!  Sue and I have signed up for a tour of two plantations.  Stay tuned!

Cheers, Rosie

First Touring Day in NOLA 

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Jill and I did not have class on Monday so we started the day stitching on our Saturday/Sunday projects, cleaning up some  “spaghetti”. Then we started our city tour by picking up the Hop on/Hop off bus outside our hotel.

After traveling through the Arts District and past the WW II Museum, our first hop off was in the Garden District.  There we had a wonderful walking tour of the beautiful mansions with their extensive gardens .   Some of them are owned by celebrities like John Goodman and Sandra Bullock.  Others have been in the same family for generations.  All exterior renovations are strictly regulated to maintain the character of the District.

We then toured a cemetery .  Because of the high water table, burials are in crypts above ground.  Some  are very elaborate and landscaped.  It felt like a city!

After getting back on the bus, we traveled past the warehouses that store the Mardi Gras floats.  Some door were open so we could peek in. Wow!

Then on to the  French Quarter where I had my first Hurricane in the French Market.  Lunch was a shared half muffaletta – similar to a Stromboli but with an olive spread inside. We walked a few blocks to the Quarter Point, a needlepoint and knitting shop.  Lovely painted canvases were offered as well as yarns like I have never seen.  They said that the French Quarter location allows them to offer more unusual yarns!

After a walk through the Quarter, we came back hot and tired but happy to  have gotten a taste of the city.

Below is my progress on Florida Palm.  Who knows what today will bring!

At the Beach!

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Hi Everyone!

Today I started a new piece called “At the Beach!” with Gail Stafford.  Wouldn’t you know that I had to paint again?  This time it was with acrylic paint and brushes.  Luckily, I tom-sawyered the teacher into using my canvas as an example.  It looked gorgeous until I took over to finish it.

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You will see that tonight I have many loose threads on my canvas — also known as spaghetti.  I think I’ll try to tackle some of that before morning.

Sue, Heidi, and I had a delicious lunch at Cafe Allegro — directly across the street from the hotel.   Tonight, most of my peeps will be attending the Cyberpointer Chapter meeting and I’ll be on my own.

I don’t think anyone wrote about last night’s opening banquet.  It definitely had a New Orleans flavor to it.  During happy hour, we were serenaded by a jazz band who then led the “Parade of Stitches” into the banquet hall.  Dinner was Chicken Gumbo with Louisiana Rice, Smoked Chicken, Sweet Potatoes and Roasted Squash, and King Cake Ice Cream.

I got separated from the NJNA group and ended up sitting with Tina, Melita, and Brenda.  Both Brenda and Melita won awards in the judged exhibit pieces.  Melita won a first prize in the Original, Non-Professional category for “Festive Fireworks”.  Brenda received second place in the Independent, Non-Professional category for her “Rose Swirls”!  Pamela Harding, designer of Serengeti, was also at our table — so I am convinced that I stumbled onto the Rock Star table!

Next year’s Stitch of the Month project is on display in the exhibit and I’d say that it is another winner!

Cheers, Rosie

Day 3 of For the Love of Chocolate

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Although you cannot see much progress on the canvas, there were several new techniques we covered today.img_0116
We started the day working on the cone for the ice cream cone beginning at the bottom of the cone to get a straight run up those diagonal cashmere stitches.  There will be three Hershey kisses in the band to the right in red, silver and the completed one, pink stitched in shiny Kreinik (HL).  Below that is a continuum of chocolate working in from the outside with dark chocolate, through milk chocolate to almost white chocolate in the middle.  The empty blocks include a chocolate  coated strawberry and a box of four See’s truffles–can you guess that Nancy is from California where See’s chocolate is king?  I began the heart chocolate to the right which will have dark chocolate and a decoration of white on it all in beads.  It is another box worked best from the bottom up.

Directly below the heart is an empty box which will eventually have my name or initials–same number in both–and the year of completion.  This is accomplished by the dimple effect–starting and stopping diagonal stitches so that dimples form showing the letters.  As all the stitches go from top to bottom and there is no backstitching, some planning must be involved–I am still at the planning stage and may be there for awhile!

This class was fun and enjoyable, and this is a project I am excited to finish hopefully before the end of the year as I have diagrammed 2016 and not 2017!  Two days away from stitching and then on to another Nancy Cucci class.

Sue

First Class at Seminar

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imageI arrived in New Orleans on Friday, excited at the prospect of three classes as well as the opportunity to get a feel for a city. After a superb dinner in the Arts District, I went to sleep anticipating my first class, Florida Palm with Gail Sirna.

I Ioved the tropical theme of this piece, done in wonderful silks .  Gail is a very patient and well organized teacher.  We made great progress in our two days of class, working on every area of the design.

Tomorrow, Jill and I head out on a sightseeing tour of the city, going to the Garden District, French Quarter and who knows where else.  More tomorrow!