Sewing offers worlds of new opportunities to make mistakes. Take this morning for example.
I am still working on the sweater set. It is not that it requires inordinate amounts of time, but just that I have had difficulty devoting time to sewing. There are too many obligations and temptations in life.
I was, however, determined to finish up this morning. Only the hem remained on the top, and the cardigan needed only sleeve hems, buttons, and buttonholes. Easy job, right?
Well, I didn’t sleep very well last night. I had a tremendous headache that would not go away and which kept waking me up during the night. Actually, I am not sure if I my head woke me or my back since my back absolutely refused to be in any form of reclining position pain free. I tried various positions: pillows under legs, back or elsewhere had no effect. I was awake every hour contemplating my misery before shifting, drifting off, and waking again.
Still, I thought I was pretty with-it this morning. That is, until I noticed that I did my double needle hem inside out. The nice double needle work was on the inside and the fuzzy nylon from the bobbin was on the outside. I temporarily thought of leaving it that way, and, of course, I could have ripped the hem out and did it the right way but that seemed to difficult to my sleep deprived brain. I just decided to reverse the procedure and double-stitch the hem, this time the right way, encasing the fuzzy nylon in a row of twin needle topstitching. It turned out pretty nicely.
Here it is in progress:
As you can see, I stopped in the middle of the row. The thread kept breaking. Apparently I misthreaded the machine. It occurred to me that perhaps I should not be sewing. I finished the hems and decided to stop before attempting buttonholes. It appears that I don’t tolerate interruptions to my normal 6 hours of sleep well.
I so empathize with you...had many days that I was "off" and in my own way. Be kind to yourself, next time you'll just zip through whatever needs to be done.
Suzanne
Posted by: | May 10, 2006 at 10:07 AM