I should probably call this video “Clara’s Whimsy Wednesday.” There are a couple updates with lots of Clara.
Here is what my narrow pattern weights are made from and the purchased weights I use:
I should probably call this video “Clara’s Whimsy Wednesday.” There are a couple updates with lots of Clara.
Here is what my narrow pattern weights are made from and the purchased weights I use:



This Millinery Monday, I share some of the original straw ornaments or straw motifs in my display collection. These pieces date to the early 20th century from Italy. The designs range from those found on millinery pieces from the nineteenth century through the early twentieth century. Each are made with straw, whole or split, and straw threads. Thes motifs or ornaments would be used to embellish hats and bonnets. Some, similar and often much smaller ornaments were worked directly on the woven or lace-work straw bonnet or hat.
My goal or hope is to develope the skill to recreate some of these well enough to do them justice. Creating these motifs is a type of straw skill that takes years, or even decades to develop.
If you look closely at the materials in antique straw ornaments, you discover just how much the length of straw has changed. The wheat and rye cultivated for the millinery industry produced shafts that were quite long between the elbows. If you walk a modern day wheat field, you know the wheat has been engineered to be much shorter with larger heads for grain production.

















This child’s winter hood is quilted is a sweet heart motif. Hearts circle the brim and center the back of the crown, while scallops fill the bavolet and a double circle motif finish the brim. The green silk taffeta is nearly tissue taffeta soft. While not being overly dry, it has numerous wear spots from storage the pink interior is a medium weight solid cotton.
Construction deviates from the most common brim, crown, and bavolet by using a two piece crown considting of a central horseshoe shape and a crescent arch connecting it to the brim. This creates a nicely shaped crown with less bulk. This also shows off the quilted hearts in the back.
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This lappet style hood is the newest addition to my collection. The exterior uses two different brown stripe silks: one for the brim and bavolet, one for the crown. The lining is a bright blue solid silk taffeta. The ties and back bow are made from the brown stripe silk and the blue lining.








I started writing this post earlier in December before catching my mystery germ. I had plans for a lengthy post reflecting on the year. But, I find I am still too tired to complete what I wanted. I wanted to elaborate on each of the points in these lists. Maybe eventually.

This year has been an incredible challenge for so many; it has been filled with loss and uncertainty. Personally, the “hard” has been a continuation of the previous years with their struggles. As the year closes, I am choosing to reflect as honestly as I can.

Things I am grateful for in 2020:
What I Feel Accomplished About
Favorites of the year: Okay, it is really difficult to pick favorites.









Smaller projects:









Originally, I planned on doing some extra fun projects this past weekend and today. But, things didn’t go as planned. Instead, I caught a germ. My awesome Doctor says it sounds like C19. So, while the halo of fire seems to have passed, I am on quarantine through Sunday. I am much, much better off than so many people. For that I am grateful. I am sulky that I missed visiting for Yuletide as well as the village parade and luminaries. But, it is what it is.
I was determined to have a project for this last Whimsy Wednesday before Christmas. My brain fog made thinking of something a challenge. Then I realized how many people out there have packages in limbo and could use a cute space-holding gift or gift holder. This cute card holder can hold a gift card, a membership card, or a photo of a gift on its way.
My version uses a piece of melton wool 4″ by 8″ with one end rounded off. My snow friends are from my cabbage patch (scrap basket.)
You could use melton wool, wool flannel, fulled wool, felted wool, cotton flannel, felt – They key is to use a fabric that won’t ravel. If you are concerned your fabric might ravel, use a little fray-check. If you are in a hurry or have young hands helping you, a glue stick will work nicely for decorating.
Remember: I have several free projects available. These can make nice last minute gifts or fun ways of packaging. Please use them if you need.
I was surprised to find a mailbox full this afternoon. Thank you so much for the sweet surprises. I filled my tree with the gifts.
Here is the PDF with my 4 inch and 3 inch versions of the elephant.
I finished my elephant while the video uploaded:
Additional information on the elephant: https://steifftiere.de.tl/Am-Anfang-war-der-Elefant.htm
Are you giving one of my e-publications as a gift?
With all the challenges of the pandemic, e-gifts are a wonderful way to give a gift.
But some may be wondering how do you give an e-gift? What do you wrap and put under the tree?
With those questions in mind, I decided to create printable Gifting Cards for you to print and wrap.
These are not gift cards, but Gifting Cards. They hold no monetary or purchasing value. They are stand-in cards that you can wrap to put under a tree or tuck in a holiday card. The actual e-gift must still be purchased from my Etsy shop and the PDF (or PDFs) forwarded to the gift recipient.

Suggessted steps:
I hope this makes your gifting easier this year. Thank you for your continued patronage.
E-Publications currently available (and on sale) in my Etsy for E-gifts: