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Friday, January 28, 2022

Modular Wrap and Stack Bracelet

 The idea came from the show Beads, Baubles & Jewels. You create segments with beads, chain, leather, really anything you like, and then connect them together. My set of six segments were inspired by the medallions with red, teal, and aqua enamel, which I had purchased somewhere, probably Michaels.

 Linked together, they weren't quite long enough to wrap around my wrist six times, so I added a roughly two-inch segment with the clasp.


This is a good way to use up odds and ends and extra beads.  I used jump rings to connect the different sections, but you could use proper clasps, allowing you to wear the segments individually or just a couple together. Fun with modules!

Sunday, January 23, 2022

Crossings by Alex Landragin

 

Crossings is a historical love story with supernatural elements, but what got the attention of most reviewers was the unconventional structure. The novel consists of three parts, narrated by three different characters, that can be read in order or by jumping around from section to section, following a set order of page numbers. I think rather too much was made of this, though; were you to republish the book following the latter order, you'd have a novel that interweaves the stories of different characters in different times and settings -- a structure used all the time in fiction.

But the story itself is a good one. At it's core, it's about a Polynesian woman, a member of a tribe that can transfer souls from one body to another, struggling to find the soul of her lover (unwillingly "crossed" into the body of a European explorer). As she follows traces of him, she experiences a number of lifetimes -- a French sailor, a Louisiana slave-owner, a hideously disfigured woman, so on. Several real people get caught up in the chase, too, most notably Charles Baudelaire (providing an explanation for his real world fate) and Coco Chanel (fittingly a villain, given she was a Nazi collaborator in real life) (why aren't more people outraged by that?). The story plays with notions of gender, race, colonialism, and economic disparities, but ultimately Landragin is concerned with telling a good story. 

There are flaws; in addition to the structure not mattering as much as it seems, the aforementioned villain is relegated to the background for most of the novel, and that story line is left unresolved by the end of the novel (both ends). While I like the idea that the characters will be continuing their journeys, rather than everything being tied up in a neat little bow, I think the villain needed a to be a bit more present in the story. 

Ultimately, though, the outcome -- of either the love story or the villain's plot  -- don't matter as much. I described this as a love story initially, but really it's about the human capacity for reinvention. As Alula herself admits, as the years pass she begins to revel in the experiences she has, the places she is able to go, the people she is able to become. Her decisions are ethically questionable at times, if not outright immoral, but watching her navigate the years is entertaining. 

I was inspired by the book to make a necklace! 

Eyes are crucial to the book's method of soul migration, and as I read I kept thinking of the eye cabochons I received from a Blueberry Cove Beads box years ago. Once I was done with the book I rooted around in my stash and found a pendant with a map of Paris (a central location in the book) that I hadn't found a use for. A pink flower bead to recall the Polynesian island where the story began was the finishing touch.

Monday, January 10, 2022

Book Round-Up: Belated Christmas Edition

 In a Holidaze by Christina Lauren: This was a cute story about Mae who finds herself reliving the same family Christmas vacation over and over. The Groundhog Day element was dropped fairly quickly, but the rest of the story -- about her budding romance with a childhood friend and her relationships with different family members -- was sweet.

Christmas Pudding and Pigeon Pie by Nancy Mitford: I finally tracked down the much-recommended Christmas Pudding novella, and it lived up to the hype. This satire about English gentry (and wannabe gentry) spending the Christmas season in the country but not knowing what to do without nightclubs and champagne was laugh-out-loud funny. Pigeon Pie is another novella satirizing the wealthy and privileged as they cope with the Phoney War, but it had the bad luck to be published right before WWII started in earnest, making some of the story appear too irreverent. It's hard to laugh at some of the Hitler jokes when we know all too well the atrocities he was committing at the time.

The Christmas Bookshop by Jenny Colgan: Colgan has a thing for women reinventing themselves by selling books in Scotland, and I am here for it. This was a delightful book with a lovely romance and an even lovelier rapprochement between sisters (and nieces). I have now added Edinburgh to my list of places to visit.

Thursday, January 6, 2022

My Annual Epiphany Photo Dump!

 Once all the holiday prep was over, I finally found time for stitching.

Christmas Forest and Christmas Girl by Tamar Nahir Yahai:

A second covid-themed ornament (sigh) by BeverlyStreetShop:

 Floral trees by Fabric and Ink (this was a kit to make two pink trees, but I was inspired to use green sequins for the second one):


 A kutch embroidery tree designed by Sarah Homfray for Stitch Magazine. This is a new-to-me stitch from India, and it was lots of fun to do:


Nutcracker Dancers designed by Naoko Kudo, from the December issue of Just Cross Stitch:

Santa Birdie by Bobbin and Fred, from the 2021 Just Cross Stitch Ornaments magazine:

And finally, finished in the nick of time, the indefinitely-named Applique Banner from Mollie Makes magazine:


Happy Three Kings Day!