Treats


Wordle is one of those web toys that you can play with for hours. Currently I am fascinated with sayings, expressions and text on samplers so this toy for generating “word clouds” from text had me hooked. I am thinking it would be a very contemporary way to have text on a sampler.

You can paste in a block of text, enter a del.icio.us user name to see their tags or simply paste in a block of text to generate a cloud. The clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text.

Once you have created some word clouds you can save to a gallery.

Wordle is a Java applet, and since Java applets can not write anything to your computer you will need to take a screen shot if you want to same a picture. If you are on a Mac if you hold down the apple key, the shift key and 3, all at once. A picture will appear on your desk top. Open the picture and you will see it is a screen shot!

Perhaps one of my readers can leave a comment and let PC owners know how to save a screen shot because I don’t know!

You can tweak your clouds with different fonts, layouts, and color schemes.

As you can see I had a lot of fun. Click on the images to go to larger sized versions of the screenshots.

The first two images are created by using a block of text from an article on samplers I wrote. The image above and below are both generated from the URL of my blog. I found it interesting that a very large word is people. I must use it all the time without realise it but I think it says something about me at another level too.

I have cross stitch software to take this into if I want to but like many of these things if I am given too many options I play all day with the design and don’t get to stitch it!

I reviewed the flower maker back in 2006 but Meggiecat’s post reminded me of this nifty program so I checked it out again. It seems to me that the Flower Maker is improved since I last looked at it. (I could be wrong as my memory might be playing tricks but I think it is better).


The flower maker is a free interactive site that as an online toy is a great design tool. It is simple to use yet capable of creating some really complex ‘flowers’.

You simply click to select various options such as the colour and petal shape and then drag in the window to scale and rotate the design component. You can also set the number of petals and the transparency.

I am sure the Flower maker will keep you busy creating so enjoy!

ning screenshot

Waving to everyone in very excited manner this morning! For l those with very sharp eyes. Last night a little bit of text appeared in my side bar which reads “Visit stitchin fingers a new community site for stitchers.” Well for anyone who noticed great work!

I have finally got around to doing something I have meant to do for ages and that is create a stitchin/textile community site over on Ning.

For a long time I felt that the community needs a hub that can act a depot to spread news of events etc. Ning is a social software site that helps people build communities. I think may provide the service the textile folks need. Ning looks to be good place to make announcements, share news and photos hang out online etc.

I have called the network Stitchin Fingers So far I have put a forum on there, and since Ning has an RSS feed so you can subscribe and new activity will appear in your reader. It is an ideal place to act as a hub for all sorts of news and activities that the whole community can make use of. So all are welcome to use it and be as active as you choose on the site.

It is free and looks like members can have up to 100 photos. Members can load their own photos, create albums, share them etc. This feature alone would have made it ideal for any of the challenges I have run. It means people who don’t have to have a blog can join in on activities and for those that do have blogs they tell us about them there! But its more than simply that. As I say its a community site - or I see it as that and I will keeping pure self promotion at bay . People can use it to spread the word about textile related events but I don’t see it as an avenue for business to peddle their wares.

Last night I spent far too long trying to decide on a theme and I will organise some sort of image in the banner. I don’t want to spend an age designing something only to find not one is interested. Basically I will polish it the more people join and use it.

Since its free you have nothing to lose head over to Stitchin Fingers, sign up, join and leave a hello message and we can see what develops from there. Bloggers and those on lists please help spread the word because it will not work if people don’t know about it. This is a community site so lets hope it builds!

I have described it as “The group is open to all who are interested in textiles both contemporary and historical. Since many textile practices cross or inform each other all areas are welcome “
Actually I will reshape the description when
figure out how to describe the group as I am sure it will shape itself!

If you are not sure what a Ning site is take a look at the fiberarts mixed media group as you can see it is for anyone who is interested in contemporary fiber arts and its a good example of what a group site can look like

This is what prompted me to finally get this network site going as Tricia of Lets Create contacted me as she is establishing a group for people who are interested in challenges. Go and check out her blog here This is the sort of news that is ideal to spread on the Stitchin Fingers site.

On another note I thought I would bring this link to Designer Bookbinders to the top as
kimsarahtillyer left a comment point me to it. Designer Bookbinders was founded over fifty years ago and is a society devoted to the craft of fine bookbinding. There is some delicious eye candy in their gallery so do go and gobble some up (after you have checked out Stitchin Fingers that is)

Virginia Spiegel dropped me a line to remind me that Collage Mania is Monday and Tuesday, in other words May 5 and 6.

I think it is going to be 2 days of total crazyness for Virginia as all you have to do is choose an artwork, e-mail Virginia and make a donation and that is that. So over the weekend I took time out and toddled off to check out the site. It was fatal as I spent hours browsing the gallery. Literally half a day was spent looking at one piece or the other so for eye candy don’t miss this site! The images here are just a bit of a taster. (Please see the image credits at the bottom of the post)


There are hundreds of collaged pieces to browse and delight the eye. So if you enjoy collage of either paper or fabric you will have hours of satisfaction browsing these images.

Do pop over and take a look and remember that all proceeds are donated to the American Cancer Society through Fiberart For A Cause.

While I was on Virginia’s site I checked out her blog. Apart from details about Collage Mania a few posts back I stumbled upon a very thoughtful post on “What Makes A Series Work” which is worth thinking about. The other project I delighted in is Virginia Spiegel’s personal challenge the Garbage Day Project. Do check it out as it had me wanting to reach for a camera and join in

Image Credits

Image 1 Collage by Karen Bettencourt
Title: e onziéme étourneau (the eleventh starling)
10″h x 8″w Old papers, acrylic paint, image transfer on canvas.

Image 2 Collage by Jennifer Black
Many Gatherings
7.25″h x 5″w Vintage sheet music, photo, envelope, and other papers; tissue papers; spine of an old book; paint, thread and old buttons.

Image 3 Collage by Susan Lenz
Remains of a Quilt
10″h x 8″w Leftover snippets from a silk painted quilt, paper, thread, acrylic gel.

Sketchcast is a new fun service which allows you to record a drawing with or without you speaking. Then you can embed the movie on your blog or website for people to see. It is great for explaining something with a ‘back of the envelope sketch’ like for instance you could recored steps on how to do something

It is browser based so there is no software to download. It is easy to use so it is not a steep learning curve and best of all it is free.

You have to register an account which took me a few moments. Next log in to the site and click the “Create” link on the top menu.

Click the “start recording draft” button, and draw with your mouse. If you want to stop and delete your work you can at any time by simply clicking “pause the recording” then clicking restart.

Preview what you have done by clicking “pause the recording” then selecting the play icon at the bottom of movie.

If you are happy then click publish. Done! It’s that simple.

For anyone spending a portion of our time in a studio podcasts are a real pleasure. The BBC have podcast a radio program which teases out the notion of ‘true’ skill. In other words a lifelong engagement with a skill or craft that results in  a high level craftmanship and asks if  there still a need for the craftsman’s ethic.

So next time you are working in your studio perhaps this BBC podcast will stir your thoughts a little.

Another podcast site which is really interesting is the podcasts from Museum of Modern Art in New York. These are discussions with artists, and curators who talk about their reactions to works of contemporary art

Virginia Spiegel of Fiberart For A Cause, has started a series of giveaways of her online book, “Art, Nature, Creativity, Life.” as part of a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society. If you want more information about this see her blog here

And I just had to share this as a treat …

I love podcasts. I can listen and stitch at the same time and yesterday while poking around the postcast sites I discovered a blog Sew Chick. It looks as though it was started and then discontinued. This interview with a psychologist on creative personalities and dealing with procrastination, self doubt and envy is a very interesting 10 minutes or so.

I was set on a trail this morning as I received an interesting email this morning from Lynne Braga who sent me three links on synesthesia which is a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled. In other words someone with synesthesia may hear a colour or see a sound.

Here is part of definition found in Wikipededia

Synesthesia (also spelled synæsthesia or synaesthesia, plural synesthesiae or synaesthesiae)—from the Ancient Greek σύν (syn), meaning “with,” and αἴσθησις (aisthēsis), meaning “sensation”‘—is a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled. In one common form of synesthesia, known as grapheme → color synesthesia, letters or numbers are perceived as inherently colored, while in ordinal linguistic personification, numbers, days of the week and months of the year evoke personalities. In spatial-sequence, or number form synesthesia, numbers, months of the year, and/or days of the week elicit precise locations in space (for example, 1980 may be “farther away” than 1990), or may have a three-dimensional view of a year as a map (clockwise or counterclockwise).

The Wikepedia entry is comprehensive with extensive links at the bottom of the page. So do explore it further. An interesting site that Lynne pointed me to, is the Synesthetic Experience hosted out of MIT. The site provides information, individual anecdotes, and interactive activities which simulate synesthesia.

I found this transcript of an interview on the ABC site which also explains the experience.

As an art teacher I have met two students who said they had synesthesia one saw letters as colours and the other saw sounds as coloured. Needless to say they were both creative people!

Anyway before I get too heavily side tracked here are the other two link Lynne sent me. The first is Art and Synesthesia and the second is an interesting project Synesthesia: Metaphors in Motion-Combining Poetry and Multimedia

I am often asked how I manage my time. Not everything I do would suit everyone but for what it is worth I have started to untangle the topic here.

To be honest I don’t think I do a lot. I do relax and I don’t see myself as someone who is always in frantic ring of activity. I am busy but rarely frantic.

For me a key thing is to clearly figure out what it is I want to achieve and define it. It might be make a quilt, or write a course for joggles.com or join a challenge. Before I embark upon something I do think about it. I don’t think about the size of the project but weather I really want to do it. I ask myself, If a doctor told me I had three months to live would I still want to do this? That’s a crunch question because when I ask myself that question I realise that what ever it is not so important. I had a close call when I was young and now value every single day. I am acutely aware of time and how precious it is.

Once I decide that it is something I want to achieve I set it as a goal and clearly define it. For instance if I decide I want to make a quilt. The goal is not I want to make a quilt but the goal is I want to make a diamond block quilt made up of 69 diamond and 6 half diamonds. In other words I define what ever the goal is very clearly.

I then prioritise the project. Sometimes I have two or three goals that I am working on at any one time but I mentally rank them as to importance. Sometimes the ranking changes. For instance early in the year I was working quite a bit on the diamond quilt but since I have another goal to write lessons via joggles I changed the ranking about a month ago in order to write them. Once this is done I will return to the diamond block quilt. So I prioritise.

Mile by mile, life’s a trial.
Yard by yard, life is hard.
Inch by inch, life’s a cinch.

Next I break any task down into smaller tasks. I am a chipper meaning I chip away at things. With any large project I don’t think of the size of the project too much, as that would put me off I simply set the goal, break it down into smaller chunks and do it bit by bit. For instance the diamond blocks on my quilt are all pieced that was the first step, next I have 69 blocks to embellish. I just focus on one block at a time.

I shape my goals in a way that I can see them being done. For instance with blogging my goal is to keep a blog that I enjoy and connects with people. I don’t really sit down and think of it as one big project. I think of it blog post by blog post and bit by bit it has built into this! I just do it consistently and because it is a routine in my life I don’t feel it impinges on other things I do. If when I started to blog I had thought about how big it now is, with (number of posts) it would have felt an immense task that was too big to take on. I would have had to work myself up to face a huge goal like that. But I do not think of it that way. I think of it and just about everything I do in little bits.

Someone once said to me “Set a major goal, but follow a path.” It was good advice. The path is a series on small goals, the big goal was broken down into do-able chunks. For instance with the TAST challenge my goal is to provide a stitch week for a year. Since it is a weekly challenge it is already broken down into 52 stitches. Each week on my to – do list I break it up further into three tasks. Stitch the samples is one task, photograph them is another and write the post is the third. Each of these tasks are listed on my to- do list and then checked off as I do them.

I have a sign pinned to the design board I face in my studio. It reads

A dream is a dream
A goal is a dream with a plan and a deadline.

I don’t fall into the trap of thinking what will I do now? I make full use of calendars and organisers but by far the best method is a cheap paper office diary and daily to do lists. Every night I take five minutes to plan and jot down what I will do the following day. I try and keep it to about 5 things and that way no one day is overloaded.

First thing in the morning I attend to email and blog post but aim to be off the computer by 9. I am reasonably strict about this as there will always be one more interesting site to check out or one more email to answer but the world wont fall apart if I answer it tomorrow. In this time I prioritise what is important and get that done first. So important work related email gets answered before chatty email. I write my blogs and then browse. With both blogs I always have a couple of draft posts written so that if I do not have time for some reason or other I still have something to post.

Some tasks need to become habits. These are the regular repetitive things in life like doing the dishes, washing or tasks like attending to email or other activities like blogging. For me a regular routine ensure that I get things done. If a task becomes part of my daily routine it becomes a habit. So I have times of day that are routinely taken up with habits. Before 9 in the morning is breakfast email and blogging time. Fortunately Jerry my husband keeps a blog and also attends to his email over breakfast. It is companionable as reading newspapers as we talk about news, incoming mail, stuff we have read online etc. Jerry is out the door by 8:30 and if it is a Uni teaching day for me so am I. We have one car so he drops me off on his way to work. If it is a studio day for me then usually by 9 I have whipped around the house for a quick tidy up, dishes done and shower had, then I roll up my sleeves to do what ever is on my to do list.

My point is that some activities can be part of your daily routine others like making a quilt or writing lessons you need to find blocks of time to do them in. I set a routine commencement time for these things. During these blocks of time I don’t have the computer on its too easy to get side tracked checking mail and RSS feeds. I take between half an hour and an hour for lunch a break to do something different. In good weather I am often out in the garden pottering about (not lately its winter here and its cold) I set a timer though I have a cooking timer and I set it for an hour. If I am not in the garden, I sometimes read a book over lunch, other times I do hop online and approve comments, do email and read RSS feeds but when the timer goes I get up and get back to it. The net can be a terrible distraction for me and if I am not careful hours will go by without me realising it (the garden is the same) hence the timer and it works!

Women are particularly good a multitasking and often during the child rearing stage of life they have trained themselves to be so good at it that they forget is how to focus. There are times to multi task and times to focus on getting what ever it is you want to achieve done. Some things are easy to multi task such as putting a load of washing in and letting it run while I attend to mail but other things are single task activities such as designing something. This sort of task requires me to focus on the task at hand, in a sustained manner in order to actually get it done. Sure some stitching can be done in front of the TV but there are tasks associated with that stitching that requires me to focus. For instance in crazy quilting when I am in the block piecing stage I need to focus where as stitching (for me) does not require so much thought.

I segregate activities into ‘must dos’ and ‘should dos’. The essential tasks or ‘must dos’ are those that if not attended immediately, would result in more time and energy to deal with later. I like to get the most important task on my to do list out of the way. I do it first while I am fresh and try not to get sidetracked. Also later on the day there are often interruptions but if you have the main task check off already interruptions do not seem so bad. Mornings, for me, are the quietest time of the day yet I am at my most energetic so I make full use of them. Some people are night people and they get a lot done then but I know my body clock and take advantage of its peak time.

After lunch I work in the studio or write lessons until about 4.30 which is when I get dinner on as Jerry gets home between 5:30 – 6:00 and I like to cook. Often while dinner is cooking I will check my mail but mostly I unwind as I have been working most of the day. We eat dinner while watching the News then usually turn off the TV. Evenings are spent reading, stitching or online but they are relaxation time not work time. Jerry often plays music as he plays the violin. My point is that it is what I call unstructured pottering time. In summer we might be in the garden or sitting outside with cold beer, or in winter inside with my nose in book. Evenings we also go out to dinner, take in a movie, or have friends over.

So as you can see (I hope) I put in a work day but that is it. I focus when I need to and slop about relaxing when I need to as well.

Goal setting is easy but staying on the path to meet those goals is always harder. One tip I picked up somewhere is to regularly review progress towards a long term goal. Doing this consolidates in your mind what you have achieved and motivates you to push a little harder towards a particular goal. Both keeping a blog or a visual journal helps as looking back on a visual journal or a blog you realise just how much you have done.

I have tried to develop a habit of completing what I start. It does not always work but friends do describe me as a ‘finisher’. This habit is not simply to complete projects but it nurtures a sense of achievement. The habit consolidates a sense of working towards larger goals in my life.

One of the ways I keep myself motivated is to socialize with people who are also what I call ‘makers’. In other word they are people who like creating something. Mutual support is motivating. Blogging is just an extension of this. In checking out what everyone else is doing I am motivated to swing into action. The best part about it is that there are enough blogs online that there is something fresh everyday.

Crafty tips and tricks

Before I start any project I make sure I have all the materials and tools to hand. You can waste a lot of time looking for that essential tool that you thought was there but is not.

I organize everything by colour because usually when you want something it is by colour. I think to myself I need a bit of blue here and then go to blue threads, beads or what ever I need. Everything, fabric, threads, beads is organised by colour. I have a post about how my workroom is organised and a post about my bead and thread storage system.

I have a clean up as I go policy. For instance as I cook, I clear away as I go and this means the final kitchen clean up is not that large a task. I have found that putting things away as I go means that I am not living in constant chaos. This applies to the studio/workroom too. At the end of a project I clear the decks and put away everything before I more on to the next.

In the house I do the same thing. I put away stuff as I go as this keeps the place generally tidy and its amazing how much dust in the corners you can get away with when the place looks tidy. I also believe that housework will expand to fill the time available. You will never be remembered for the floors your cleaned or the dishes you washed. I spend about 30 minutes a day doing one thing or another and that is it. Every now and then its blitze time and I use the timer again. When I was working 5 days a week Jerry and I would turn the timer on for an hour and clean like crazy once the timer went that was it down mops, buckets, cleaning agents anything that did not get done did not get done. (We prioritise housework tasks too so areas like kitchen and bathroom get done first) It is just the two of us now so there is not a heck of a lot of housework and usually in a 30 minute block of time. For me life is too short to spend too much time on house work but I do start from a tidy base.

I often work in multiples. For instance I never drag everything out to piece one block. I piece a batch of crazy quilt blocks at the same time. This means I always have blocks to hand which I can pick up but all the faffing about is over in one hit. Another example is I drag out the dyes about twice a year and do a really big batch of threads, lace and the like. This stuff accumulates through the year. As I see stuff at swap meets, sales in craft fairs etc I collect them and I have a plastic crate they are all put way in. When it starts to look as if it is filling I purchase some thread to dye and then away I go for a day or so and it’s all done in a day or so. If I dyed these pieces in dribs and drabs I would be for ever dragging out the dyes, dyeing them then cleaning up after myself.

Time management online

I make full use of RSS feeds as I get through a heck of a lot of reading as you can see here I used to use Bloglines and was happy with it for years but early this year I tried out Google reader and it won me over.

Other than that my method is to get up from the computer and turn it off as I explained above. It can become a great time sink if I am not careful.

Well that is all I can think of that I do. I hope readers have enjoyed the post. What time management tips do you have. Leave a comment and share them!

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