Saturday 23 September 2017

Loot from France

I hope you've enjoyed the extra posts this week about my trip to the French quilt festival in Saint Marie aux Mines, with quilt photos.

This post is back to  business as usual with the added bonus of revealing some of my craft loot from France.  I didn't actually buy a huge amount as fabric was way too expensive and I was conscious that we were flying back into London City airport and travelling home by public transport so I didn't want our bags to be too heavy.  As well as craft stuff, I found a few other things like a calendar featuring the local houses, two vintage champagne cups, a vintage metal and wood box decorated with decoupage, a Clover chalk marking pen, some lengths of lace and ric-rac from a haberdashery, a ceramic christmas decoration and some birthday and christmas gifts.

At the quilt show, I discovered 'cartonnage et broder', which is basically the French art of making useful household objects out of heavy card and covering them in fabric and embroidery.  I bought a couple of patterns on one stand which turned out to be not as good value as I thought since they don't actually have the fabric or card in the 'kit' but they are still really cute, like something the Victorians would have made for their parlours.




I found a cute kit for a little coin purse made out of yo-yos.


and a couple of applique kits for needlework-themed and embroidered items.



This is a vintage little embroidered mat, with some ceramic ornaments I found. The smaller heart button has embossed decoration moulded from actual needlework.

My biggest purchase was an unfinished quilt top from the Mary Koval salesroom which is marked as dating to c.1870.  It's in really good shape apart from a bit of sun fading in places.  I will probably think about adding a border to it. I just loved the colours in it.


I found some beautiful wool/cotton yarn on a Danish stall which was available in many icecream shades, I had a hard time settling on these three cakes.  They might be a shawl.


At the religious-themed gift shop at Mont St Odile, I spotted this tiny creche which DH kindly persuaded me to buy and even promised to paint  for me to use in a Christmas dollshouse scene. I've put a fork in the picture for scale.


This is the official show tote bag, I bought one for me and one for m-i-l.


These are the metal charms I found on several stalls at the show, a group of sewing charms which might end up on one of the stitching projects above, then a variety of useful fretwork and items that could work in a dollshouse.


I had to buy this cute gift box when we did our wine tasting, designed to look like a typical Alsatian house.


So as usual things have been added on to my lengthy To Do list at a much speedier rate than they are coming off it, but I had fun shopping and look forward to tackling some of my new projects.

Meanwhile back on the ranch

The plumber that let us down in the summer has finally started work on remodelling the bathroom to insert a shower.  He actually started the day after we got back from France so I made sure to clear the access route and the bathroom before we went on holiday, so all's we had to do was to remove the blinds and toiletries when we got back. The toilet and sink have now been temporarily removed and he is preparing the site for the new shower against the door wall.  Needless to say there is dust everywhere, and even the cat turned pink one evening after she found some brick dust to roll in.  I also narrowly prevented her from disappearing under the floor boards while I was talking to the plumber one evening after he had lifted some boards for access. The lower hallway is full of bits of wood, and huge boxes that the shower bits are waiting in, and it's all a bit chaotic.



Directly above the bathroom is my knitting and lace room, and my heart absolutely sank when the electrician who will be doing the rewiring work and installing the fan announced he would need the knitting room cleared to lift the floorboards for access.  I didn't think I could face it but DH and DS pitched in like heroes and my much-mocked large collection of tote bags finally came into its own to collect all the yarn off the shelves.  It's all clear now but I feel a bit traumatised at the thought of having to put it all back once it's all over. I'm also feeling stressed because so many things around the house are in the wrong place now so that even unaffected rooms are crowded with displaced items. There is also the danger that he will want me to move my (enormously heavy and huge) machine quilting frame because it's blocking the fuse box. I need to focus on how nice it will be to  have a shower.

While we were on holiday I was doing a little bit of cross stitch on some holiday gift tags in the evenings, and also knitting on my second Rose Window hat which I finished shortly after we got back.  This one is knitted in Paton's navy wool blend and Artesano fingering weight.



 I've been so busy all week dealing with the building works, my physio appointments, the overgrown garden and holiday laundry that I've only just done some quilting on my frame for the first time yesterday, and I haven't done any bobbin lace at all for a few weeks now.  I've done a bit more on knitting the twisted rope edging onto my GAA Afghan and I'm almost finished the first side now.



Just before we went on holiday, I cut an area out of the lawn for a new flower bed and DS kindly cleared the rest of the turf. So this weekend we are digging in some manure to that and around the new patio, in preparation for planting. Our soil is very sandy and stony so I sieved the soil by the pergola where the rose will be planted to try to improve it.  I'm planning to order a climbing rose called Madame Caroline Testout, which is pink and is supposed to cope with exposed conditions like our windy garden. It will come as a bare root plant in November.

Friday 22 September 2017

Quilt photos from the European Patchwork Carrefour 2017

This is a follow-up post of a few quilt photos, to my main post about visiting the Carrefour Europeen du Patchwork, Sainte Marie aux Mines, France in September 2017.   I took loads more photos but they didn't all turn out or I didn't manage to secure the artist's name.


Voyage au bout du Monde, Japon, JP 2017



Three quilts from the Amish exhibition

Eagle folk art quilt, Berks County, PA, c 1840


Fantaisie Florale
Annik Wiard, Belgium


Vase des fleurs et roses grimpante
Michele Beugnon, Paris
I think this was my favourite quilt from the whole show, beautifully done.


Tentmakers of Cairo, Al Farouk shop

I'm not entirely sure but I think this was from the
Andree LeBlanc exhibition, of France, which was 
all work done in pineapple and log cabin variations

Ogeechee 
by Aline Joulin of France

Vintagequilt
by Madeleine Linden, Belgium

Herbier
by Claudine Kachelhoffer, France
Each square has an embroidered herb in it.

Monday 18 September 2017

A visit to Carrefour Europeen du Patchwork, Sainte Marie aux Mines, France

No post last week as I was away on a lovely holiday to the Alsace region of France.  We combined a visit to the European Patchwork meeting with a week touring the Alsace Wine Route.  I will be writing a few posts about various aspects of my holiday but this first post is aimed at other people who may be considering a visit to the patchwork festival in Sainte Marie aux Mines which takes place in mid-September.  I know when I was trying to research my trip, I could find very little written online (in English anyway) about visiting this well known event, now in its 23rd year, even though it attracts around 22,000 visitors.  I enjoyed my visit but logistically it does feel like a small community show that has been a bit overwhelmed by its popularity and the practical arrangements have not quite caught up yet with the crowds it is attracting.

Location: The festival is held over four days and is unusual in being located across four towns.  The majority of exhibitions (around 12 sites), and the main shopping area, are located in Sainte Marie aux Mines which is a small town known for hosting various conferences such as a large mineral and gem show.  The other three locations are even smaller:  Sainte-Croix-Aux-Mines (4km from Sainte Marie aux Mines, hosting four exhibitions), Liepre (4km further on from Sainte Croix aux Mines, with three exhibitions) and tiny Rombach-Le-Franc which is 1.5km from Liepvre and had just two exhibitions.  The show is open each day from 9:30am to 6pm and does not follow the French customary lunch closure. The venues are a mixture of churches, schools, church halls and dedicated event spaces, plus temporary marquees for some of the shopping area.  When you get your tickets, you are given a programme which is available in English. The programme has maps of all four towns giving a general idea of the exhibition locations (not a very exact location and we had to hunt for some of them). The locations themselves are numbered and signposted by number from nearby roads, and marked with large banners outside the entrances which also display the number.  Be prepared for a lot of walking in Sainte Marie aux Mines where the venues stretch from one end of the town to the other. I am not disabled so I can't comment fully on access, but it seemed like a less-mobile person would perhaps not be able to visit everything due to all the walking, frequent short flights of stairs up to entrances, some venues being crowded or having access obstructed by church pews or temporary display stands.

Accommodation: I started planning my trip in late May so about three and a half months ahead, and already found that all accommodation near to Sainte Marie aux Mines had been booked up. I decided to combine the visit with a holiday along the Alsace Wine Route so I started looking on the eastern side of the Vosges mountains.  We chose Obernai (about 40 minutes away from the quilt show) but I think many people were staying further south in the large (and lovely) town of Colmar. I booked via Expedia and got quite a good deal on our hotel compared to the prices that were displayed at the hotel itself anyway. Having visited the quilt show, I think I made the right choice for visiting the Wine route as it would have been more of a pain to try to get out from the mountain-enclosed Sainte Marie aux Mines area every day to tour on the Wine route.  For example we found we were in a slow moving queue of traffic late on the first day all the way back eastwards through the valley, presumably the 'rush hour' of commuters taking the main route back.

Transport: We hired a car for the duration of the holiday. We were based in Obernai, near Strasbourg, and we found that it was an easy drive to Sainte-Marie aux Mines of approximately 40 minutes, down the main motorway of the A35, then across the mountains through a fairly level valley on the N59, so we didn't have to tackle any winding mountain roads thankfully. Driving on the right was a bit of a challenge for DH for the first few days but after that it was fine.  Roads are good and traffic was never too busy.  There are free shuttle buses between all four show locations: the show programme includes maps for each location showing the shuttle bus stops and also contains a printed shecule which shows buses departing every 20 minutes between approximately 9am and 7pm depending on location. The shutttles were coach sized so presumably could accommodate 40-50 people. I didn't use the shuttles so I can't comment on what they were like, but I'm sure glad we had our own car on the first day when it was throwing down rain with driving winds.

Parking: Each town offers free parking for visitors over several small parking lots which are marked on the maps in the programme.  I would strongly recommend printing the event location map from the website before your first day as signage in the towns was minimal.  When we arrived in Sainte Marie aux Mines on day 1 (so before we had a programme), there were no signs at all for parking even though we came in on the main road from the east.  After driving through the outskirts of town for a while, we eventually parked in the first town car park that we came to, then ventured onwards on foot through the driving rain and strong winds which was absolutely miserable.  It turns out that the majority of the event parking in this town is up the hill at the top of the town near the shopping area. Even that parking was only signposted once you got very close to it, so having a map will really help.  On our first day, we arrived in Sainte Marie Aux Mines at 9am which is 30 minutes before the show opens, and easily found a space.  But when we returned the next day in the afternoon, we had to hunt for some time to find a space as all the parking lots were full: we eventually managed to park on the pavement at the extreme end of the town.  In the smaller towns it was easier but could still be busy.

Tickets:  I had pre-purchased tickets online but it turned out this wasn't necessary.  Almost every exhibition venue had a desk at the entrance where you could purchase passes for 1 day, 2 days or four days, and be given the programme.  I showed my e-ticket at the first venue we visited and they exchanged it for a gold ribbon wristband which was then our passport to enter all venues.

How long do you need for a visit to this show?  This is obviously depends on your individual personality.  For me, I felt two days was sufficient.  We did one long first day in Sainte Marie aux Mines visiting all the exhibition sites (except number 1 which was too far away from everything else) and having a good trawl through the shopping area in the afternoon.  I am much more interested in traditional/conventional quilting so in some of the more contemporary/art-based exhibition sites we literally walked once around the room and departed. I would estimate that more than half the quilts on display over the whole festival are very contemporary and art-based, very cutting edge and challenging.  If this type of quilt is your passion, then you will probably need more than two days to enjoy them all.  Even in exhibitions we didn't care for, it is still interesting to see inside the village churches. The next morning we visited the other three towns and viewed all the other exhibitions, and had a picnic lunch on a bench. On the second afternoon, I returned to the shopping area in Sainte Marie aux Mines for a second shorter visit just to check I hadn't missed anything that needed to come home with me.  I did not take any of the 23 classes on offer nor attend one of the three or four lectures, so if you were planning to do those then you would need additional time.

Is it worth making a visit to the show only, and not as part of a holiday to the area?  Again, this would be down to individual preferences.  I had a brochure for a UK tour which was proposing to visit the show by coach, travelling over two days with an overnight stay en route each way and I think spending two days at the show itself.  The cost for a single person was more than I paid for our ten-day holiday flying into Strasbourg from London including hotel accommodation for two and a hire car for 10 days.  Although I enjoyed the show a lot, it is not a huge show like Paducah or Houston and for me personally it would not be worth enduring two days on a coach just to visit.  The show was a pleasant add-on to our holiday in a very lovely area.

Language:  My native tongue is English and I still remember some school girl French.  As is usual in Europe, most local people speak at least some English and German. In fact it was quite usual to be addressed in French, then they would switch to German when they saw your baffled look, then ask if you were English.  The traders were from all over anyway so I heard conversations in Spanish, Italian, Dutch, French, German, English and more - everyone is happy to try to make themselves understood so as long as you too are prepared to make an effort then you should be fine. You are unlikely to find many people fully fluent in English so don't expect that.  Pointing at things works fine and they can often show you the price on a calculator or write it down if you don't understand the words. I even had a couple of people use Google Translate on their phone and show me the English translation! Everyone was very friendly.

Money:  the currency is of course Euros and all prices I saw at the show were in Euros.  I was pleasantly surprised to find that almost everybody was accepting cards, unlike English shows where traders often struggle to get a signal for their card machines.  So I was able to put most of my purchases straight on to my card.  Ironically the one place I couldn't was my biggest purchase from an American antique quilt dealer when I bought an antique quilt top, so we had to visit an ATM after that cash purchase.  There is an ATM at the Credit Mutuel halfway down the main street, and I also saw another bank down the hill  near the bottom of the town. My credit card (Mastercard: Halifax Clarity) lets me withdraw cash from ATMs at a good rate.

Food:  some of the exhibitions are located in purpose-built event halls and these often had small tea rooms or snack bars offering light meals.  The largest could accommodate perhaps 40 -50 people so they were always crowded especially when it was raining outside, and you had to wait a while to be served - I saw several grumpy people either leaving in a huff or futilely trying to attract a waitress' attention.  There were also outdoor food kiosks which in the smaller towns seemed to be manned by community groups or local patchwork groups, so it was easy to get a tea/coffee and pastry and some of them were doing BBQ etc. However in typical French style, none of these were open at 9:30am when the show opened, and I think most only got going late morning or in time for the typical French lunch period of 12:30-2pm.  Sainte Marie aux Mines as the largest town did have several commercial restaurants and a few patisseries/tea salons but again none of these were open in the morning and only a few at lunch time so those were also very crowded.  So it was a bit miserable in the driving rain and wind at show opening on the first day with nowhere to go inside for a hot drink.  Being a somewhat paranoid person, I had brought a packed lunch with us so we were able to eat inside our dry car at a time of our choosing thankfully. We generally found food in the Alsace area was more expensive than the UK, even a budget meal would be 25 euros for the two of us (£25) and a 'normal' meal of two courses with a drink would be 35-50 euros for two. We saved some money by buying supplies at the supermarket for breakfast and the occasional picnic in our room, and I will confess to eating at McDonald's twice (although even that was 15-20 euros).

Toilets: these are not marked on the map so use them when you find them.  I didn't see any port-a-loos to cater for the crowds apart from a small temporary box with either 1 or 2 stalls located in the outdoor commercial area, so you are reliant on the occasional toilet in the exhibition venues which are usually only a single stall or perhaps two.  Needless to say there were queues of women for almost all of these and the stalls were running out of toilet paper, so perhaps bring some paper in your bag to be on the safe side. Men as usual could walk right in  to their toilets - grrrrr.

Weather: as mentioned above, the first morning was horrible with strong winds and driving rain, and it was cold at only 10 degrees Celsius. I assume this isn't the norm as half the commercial area is in outdoor tents as were many of the food areas.  So it was a bit miserable and crowded in the tents as they tried to keep the flaps down to keep the weather out, and it was wet underfoot.  The sun was out the next day and  they were able to open the sides of most of the tents presenting a much more pleasant shopping experience.  At the first exhibition venue we went to, it was very frustrating to be huddling in the driving rain in a slow moving queue when I could see through the doorway that there was a large dry foyer where we could all be inside, but I guess it isn't the French way to deviate from the planned process.

Shopping:  the main shopping area is called the Commercial Area which is located at the top of Sainte-Marie-Aux-Mines.  It has a single narrow entrance into what I assume is normally a large open courtyard which for the show was crowded with tents housing many traders.  This joins onto a building which has two large rooms of traders and an adjoining restaurant. According to the programme there are around 150 traders in all. Entry is free so you don't need to have a ticket to go shopping. I really enjoyed visiting all the stalls as there were so many things that we don't normally see in the UK.  However, most of the fabric on sale is the normal American fabric brands such as Moda, batiks, printed panels, Kaffe Fassett fabrics etc, but at very expensive prices due to our current poor exchange rate: many stands were asking 18 or 22 euros per metre (about £18 or £22).  So I wasn't really shopping for fabric as I can buy the same things somewhat cheaper in the UK.  There were a couple of stands selling printed linen for making European-style bags or quilts, and a couple of stands selling fabric from Japan, and a couple with African fabric.  At least two Dutch shops were there: Petra Prins Patchwork and Den Haag en Wagenmakers, with their gorgeous but even more expensive fabrics.  There were the usual types of stands I would see in the UK: Handiquilter and AQPS and Bernina, craft lights, wool applique specialists, soft toys, multiple bag supply stalls, magazines such as Quilt Mania and Magic Patch, quilting stencils, haberdashery etc. I was surprised to see very little representation of the French Boutis style of quilting apart from some books and in one stall they were selling the soft cotton yarn to pad the stitching channels with.  I tended to like the stands I don't usually see:  there were several stalls selling dozens of metal charms very cheaply at 10 centimes and upwards which are useful for everything from quilting to dollshouses to scrapbooking, and others selling unusual buttons handmade from Fimo or ceramic. There was a healthy representation of cross stitch and embroidery, and I purchased some patterns for embroidery decorated boxes made of card.  There was a limited selection of knitting wool and I purchased some lovely wool/cotton blend from a Danish stall. There were several stands specialising in applique kits to make both quilts and a range of household items such as book covers, storage baskets, spectacle cases, handbags, hanging storage totes etc and I bought some kits here as well.  Out in the town itself there were also a handful of pop-up stores in disused shops, hopping on the bandwagon to sell threads and home-dec fabric remnants, garments, bric-a-brac, yarn and secondhand clothing, which reminded me of Paducah.  Also like Paducah was that a few normal stores were displaying quilts in their shop windows.  On the main street, Jane Lury of Labors of Love had taken a shopfront to sell her antique quilts (mainly American I think), orphan blocks and unfinished tops.  In the Theatre where Mary Koval was displaying antique quilts from her collection, she and her husband also had a sale room selling antique quilts, orphan blocks and unfinished tops which is where I bought my top.  In some of the venues there were sales tables with items made by local groups to raise funds: I found a couple of lovely embroidered needlebooks in one church.

My highlights:  apart from the shopping, my favourite exhibitions were the antique quilt displays of Amish and Mennonite quilts, Mary Koval's display of antique quilts, Jane Lury's Labors of Love shop, the Cairo tentmakers, the display by the Beauville textile company from their archive of printed fabric,  and several exhibitions in Liepvre such as the Quilts of Legend  by the France Patchwork Association and 'From Tradition to Modernity' by the Patchwork Guild of Germany. I also liked Ian Berry's 'Behind Closed Doors' of fabric pictures made from denim jeans.

*****

So I hope you find the above post useful if you are considering a visit to Sainte Marie Aux Mines -  let me know in the comments if you did.  Or if you've been already, leave a comment with your own hints and tips for this event.

And finally here are some photos.

Applique stands (above and below) in the commercial area


Exhibition space

Inside a church

One of the displays of Amish quilts, in a church

Artisan stalls in an old farm yard

I think this is Mary Koval's exhibit in the Theatre, and below
is her sales room.


A waitress dressed in traditional Alsatian costume
in one of the tea salons (for the benefit of visitors)


One of the event venues, showing the banners outside the entrance




Saturday 2 September 2017

Suddenly, a patio

The big news this week is that quite abruptly we have a patio at long last under the pergola that we finished at the beginning of June.  The patio guy contacted me Thursday to say that he could come Friday, so I hurriedly arranged a day off.  It was supposed to be a two day job but he turned up with three other guys so between the four of them, they completely finished it in eight hours on Friday.





We're so pleased to have it finally done.  Now we can clean up around it and start getting in some planting.  I'm going to order a rose to grow up the front of the pergola which will come as a bare root plant in November.  The side panel will have a clematis, and I would like to put a water feature in the corner in front of the bamboo.  I've ordered a couple of small outdoor sofas in the end of season sales for it.

So I spent a lot of Friday in the sewing room where I could frequently monitor the workmen and be on call for design decisions and making tea.  I finished quilting the red and white quilt (quilt number six) and ran it through the washing machine, and put it out to dry after the workmen had left.


Today I machined on the binding, and it's all done now.  I normally stitch binding on by hand as I achieve a much better result, so it felt a bit like sacrilege to be using the machine, but it was certainly faster. I used a three step zig zag and my usual single fold binding, which seemed to work better than trying to fold around double fold binding which never seems to stitch down evenly for me.



Earlier in the week I finished quilting quilt number five, which was the twisting pinwheel tablecloth I made a while back.  I used the walking foot to stitch a grid across the blocks, and then went around the edges of the border print.  It's looking very smart in our hallway now.


Quilt number four, the William Morris grid quilt, is still on the frame and I'm perhaps approaching the halfway point.  I haven't done many passes on it this week due to lack of time, and also one of my homemade rachets broke loose and I had to re-glue it.

I've done about three hours on my Bucks Point lace hexagonal edging this week, and am slowly creeping around the second corner.  So I will have to try to replicate what I did on the first corner when my teacher was helping me - I wrote it down afterwards so I can refer to my notes this time.

Evenings have been all cross-stitch, I feel guilty because I am really neglecting my knitting but I'm enjoying finally progressing on this long term stitching project.  I've also made a couple of apple pies from the apples on our tree, and there are still loads ripening on the tree.   In the garden, I've started cutting turf to clear a space for a new flower bed in the lawn.  Our garden is very shady so I'm going to relocate several plants that are suffering from lack of sun into the new bed.  They will get more light there although it will still be shaded part of the day.  Now that the trees and shrubs we moved three years ago are maturing and getting bigger, the ground underneath them is in deep shade so things that I planted back then now need to be moved.  I won't do it yet, I'll wait until the end of the month or perhaps in October.  I can't do a lot of heavy digging as I've been having problems with my left shoulder, an ultrasound scan has revealed something called calcified tendonopathy which is basically big words for yet another thing falling apart in middle age.  I've having physiotherapy for it which hopefully will help and it has also been improving on its own. Luckily it doesn't impede anything important like knitting or sewing :)