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  • Noreen 2:55 pm on September 25, 2017 Permalink  

    A Busy Day on Stauffer 

    Today was the day of installation of our basement windows.  Dennis needed to head to Mankato for an appointment and I welcomed the two-man crew.  I tried to catch a camera shot when I knew I would not be in the way.  They were in the patio porch having a good old fashioned lunch so this was my chance.  At this time of the afternoon there is mortar being mixed and the area around the windows is being made “nice” inside and out.  The Watson boys moved the central AC for the fellows.  In days of old whoever thought about where the best place was for an AC, if not right in front of a window.  Dah!

    Dennis is now home and we are happy that even with the rain, the long awaited job will be finished at the end of today.  I am so not thinking beyond this work of today.  Well . . . that thought will go only so long and I’ll be down in the sewing room with rulers, graph paper and doing a “what if” for a floor plan.  They have been extremely careful with the mess of the work and I know that I will be doing the Lena type cleaning first and foremost.  The first thing the fellows did was put down a mat to cover the entry floor and the steps as we have had a half of an inch plus of rain today off and on.

    Home 5

    Home 4Home 6

     
  • Noreen 2:01 pm on September 24, 2017 Permalink  

    This was the first morning that I was taking my walk before the sun was up. As I walked east I was amazed how quickly the bright apricot colored sun did rise. I may have beat the sun up but the mosquitoes were at it full barrel. I was happy when I was out of town far enough that there was a breeze to ward off the buggers.

    Today was weird. The bugs were outside, the basement is tarped off with plastic . . . there was no where to go but the main floor of our home. Oh my gosh! My home is so small!

    What better time to work with photos in my HP Notebook. Getting albums put together was something I had not done since I have been loading photos these months. The many thousands of photos I have on my old Dell laptop is totally cataloged by individuals’ folders. I know it may seem redundant to have two separate computers. The Dell was purchased in 2006 with Windows 7. Kevin advised that the HP Notebook should come on board with Windows 10. Perhaps having the Dell laptop crap out on a Tuesday and needing to becoming accustomed to Windows 10 on a Wednesday could very likely throw me into a loop that I might not recover from. Kevin was right. It was an adjustment.

    It is very handy to have the Dell in the sewing studio. You never know when a YouTube Video might be needed when a question comes up with quilting or even a Bernina sewing machine question. The HP has a spot in the living room. Dennis’ computer is in the west porch . . . yes he likes his own space as much as I do and he has his own Facebook account and has multiple card games loaded to enjoy.  No online card games, just good ones that have been downloaded as gifts.  It does speak to Dennis’ ability to adapt as he can slide into the chair next to either the Dell in the sewing studio or the HP in the living room to access his many card games. All around, the two older ones on Stauffer Avenue can learn just enough to keep up with what is available without being on the phone begging someone for help. Grant it, I do fly a question by the kids every once in a while. O.K. I admit it, nine year old Nicholas just rolls his eyes.

     
  • Noreen 3:48 pm on September 23, 2017 Permalink  

    Ready For Worker Bees 

    On my walk this morning, I mentally worked through what I wanted to accomplish today.  The primary target is covering up with what I would not want to get dust on in the sewing studio when three worker bees show up on Stauffer Avenue to put in new windows.  I had been doing some stitching in a small area I had carved out and of course, there were supplies to tuck away.  I think it has been over twenty years since the ironing board was folded up and tucked away.

    By pushing everything into the center it has meant many of the seek and search items I have wanted to access this last month have been buried or packed up.  I have held up well, all things considering.  Being accustomed to going down and whipping out a stitch or two and having my wings clipped hasn’t really hurt me any.  If anything I have given a lot of thought on how to configure it after the new windows are in and we can again spread out.  Oh how I will appreciate the end result of this upheaval next month at this time.

    Dennis has been battling a head cold of huge proportions for the last two weeks and has been left out of the sewing studio project.  We finally got a prescription for five days of antibiotics.  Dennis has plans coming up and the last thing he needs is to have them delayed or canceled if coughing and chest congestion causes him to be out of the loop.

    Home 2 (Mobile)With four of the 9′ x 12′ poly throws, I sat on my sewing chair in the very vacant sewing studio and surveyed how to go about hitting as many of the highHome 1 (Mobile) spots as I could to prevent concrete dust or leaves blowing in as windows are removed and the prep work for the new windows is underway.  All electrical devices needed to be unplugged.  I can only imagine the circuit breakers popping if items overheat under plastic.  Not to worry.  Dennis’ television set will remain plugged in until Monday morning.  

    This project is the most anticipated since Kevin redid our kitchen and bathroom.  The poly purchase came about as I recall, you can’t get the job done and done right without a mess.  No pain, no gain.  I am totally prepared as I have a noon lunch planned for the three worker bees to enjoy in the patio porch for Monday’s noon lunch.  My mom, Lena, always feed those who had to come and do work down on the farm.  It shows appreciation of their skills and . . . if the worker bees don’t have to leave the property to find a place for lunch, they are more apt to return to the project at hand sooner and not get waylaid.  Thanks for the tip, Lena!

    Oh my gosh.  I am ready!

     
  • Noreen 5:07 pm on September 22, 2017 Permalink  

    Time well spent. With book in hand, I found the most comfortable chair in the waiting room of our home town clinic. Dennis was in for a 10,000 mile check up. Aside from getting some reading done, I do enjoy watching people. There was no shortage there. I sent a prayer of thanks upward that I was here as an observer and not as a patient. Dennis came home, not the worse for the wear. He was sure he was a quart low after all the blood tests were completed. Silly ole cowboy.

     
  • Noreen 4:01 pm on September 21, 2017 Permalink  

    This has been a tranquil day on Stauffer Avenue. The temps were great this morning and now are a bit sticky. I just finished wrapping an item for the post office. Tomorrow it will be out and away. The counter gal thinks I don’t catch her “eye roll” in regard to my packaging prowess. Too bad. I have money and I have the right address.

    Dennis’ cold is getting better and I am clanging the pots and pans almost to the same decibel as previous. Small homes . . . noises travel fast and furious.

     
  • Noreen 3:57 pm on September 20, 2017 Permalink  

    I Didn’t Seek and Search in the Right Places 

    November of 2015 is when we purchased my new sewing machine.  Guaranteed lessons could be given at any time by appointment.  With it being a 120 miles round trip, I haven’t as yet asked for a lesson.  I easily learn by reading and by trial and error.  There have not been very many projects that hit the circular bin due to operator error.

    Just yesterday I was sharing the time I spent on getting conversion printout charts for my files in regard to the best thread colors to use when embroidering.  Obviously, we would be traveling back and forth to the sewing machine shop for the machine to have regular checkups and have the firmware updated, so I began using the brand of thread that the shop sold.  Isacord it is.

    Embroidery 1 (440x330)

    PES is core-spun threads by the Mettler manufacturer.  This chart can be scrolled through until all 14 colors have been shown and ideally identified by a code.

    Sometimes in the homes of retirees, it gets quiet.  It gets really quiet when Dennis is under the weather. It is no more than right that when he is resting in his recliner that I keep the noise and commotion down to a dull roar.  As I was cleaning up some fuzz and threads in the sewing studio I picked up the huge manual that came with the sewing machine, mainly to dust it off.  In the quiet of the house I sat down and began going through it, page by page by page.  Hump . . . I don’t ever remember seeing that little symbol on the sewing machine.  What?  It does what?  At the time the embroidery unit is ready to begin stitching there is a panel of the colors as it works its way through the design from the first to the last color.  The colors represent the code number of choice from the origination of the design pattern.  For 22 months I have been needing to take the time to look up conversion charts for each and every embroidery project that was not a product of Bernina and then having to find the Isacord color closest for a match.  Apparently Isacord is “in like” with Bernina. 

    Embroidery 2 (440x330)

    There in all its glory is the correct code and the name of the thread color for my Isacord thread.

    Well, shucky darn.  I put my pointy little pencil on that semi-circular design and there is a built-in conversion chart for 35 different brands of thread.  It was a good thing I had my mouth shut or I would have dropped my teeth.  I felt elated, I felt embarrassed and I felt a bit ashamed.  So . . . .why can’t this sewing machine wash my windows? The saving gift of hours of time that sometimes made the difference of “do I really want to stitch it out when I could find an easier design?”  I love reading.  Why hadn’t I read the manual from cover to cover to begin with.  In all honesty there was, and is, so much detail in this machine, I learned and dealt with the situations as they arose.  Today felt like Christmas.  Yesterday I was at a point that the color charts almost had me whipped.  Today was just the right time for me to get better acquainted with my purchase.  

    There are some things in the horizon with the embroidery aspect of the machine that I will attend a class or two.  It will involve software that will enable me to choose any pattern that I currently have and add script.  It will all be laid out on my laptop as a total project, loaded onto a flash drive and then loaded onto the sewing machine.  Currently, I have had to measure once, measure twice to make sure the script is centered above the design while the hoop is on the embroidery module.  Currently I have limited fonts and can only do one line at a time.  The number of fonts in the new software is endless and the number of lines of script will only be limited by the size of the hoop that I choose per project.  There was a trial that I could download for a month.  I worked with what they allowed and it was pretty amazing.  

    I enjoy pushing my limits in life.  I enjoy trying for new adventures . . . and I do mean try hard.  This has been another satisfying day in the life of the retirees here on Stauffer Avenue.  It would be better if Dennis could just shake this summer cold before the weather becomes colder.

     
  • Noreen 5:24 pm on September 19, 2017 Permalink  

    Ya, it was a bit cool this morning so I wore long pants for my walk. My knees felt like they were smothering. The walking shorts are not done for the season, I’m just picking and choosing on a day by day basis.

    A challenge with machine embroidery comes about when companies that you purchase designs from have multiple brands of thread they may favor to use in their creations to obtain the finished product. The design is downloaded and as the embroidery unit begins sewing, a coordinating color is requested. I spent some time this afternoon on the computer printing out color charts from various companies. Nothing like having some prep work before it’s needed.

    I have started a shopping list. White cotton socks for myself is “major” on the list. In a time past I bought socks. Hmm, it was a good buy. Yup, they were white and in the shopping basket they went. Ugh! They were a poly/cotton blend. No cotton socks on my tootsies this last season. No matter how you try your very best of the Martha Stewart laundry tips, they are not going to come out white. I admit I may be out on the patio in stocking feet. Who has time to put on shoes every time you turn around. Wearing shoes that are not high tops lets in all sorts of dirt while gardening. Bleach and poly blend fabrics come out yellow. I want my socks coming out of the laundry as white as Dennis’.

    Oh for challenges. It sure keeps my days interesting.

     
  • Noreen 1:55 pm on September 18, 2017 Permalink  

    Seek and Search 

    Junk Drawer

    All I was looking for was some small brads rather than going uptown. Obviously this meant several locations of this type of mess got tidied. A good job on a rainy day. BTW . . . no small brads in the garage, the basement or this kitchen junk drawer. The brads went on the list for the next time we head out.

     
  • Noreen 5:39 pm on September 17, 2017 Permalink  

    Today was a very quiet day here on Stauffer. Dennis has caught himself quite the headcold and I am running as far and as swiftly as I can to stay ahead of it. I must have not been fast enough as the head feels a bit stuffy. I did play around in the corner of my sewing studio that I can get at. Trying new things should keep my head too full of ideas to allow the cold to set in for a long visit.

     
  • Noreen 3:42 pm on September 16, 2017 Permalink  

    Today I had the best of the day during my walk this morning. It has since been gloomy, with rain every once in awhile. I came back from the grocery store a bit ago and it was quite cool. I still had my walking shorts on but a few of the other older folks had jackets, and I mean real jackets that I might drag out in December.

    It was a good day to work with my embroidery files. There are just a few too many flash drives on the shelf by the sewing machine. It was time to tidy them up onto the Bernina Flash Drive. Tidily named files makes it easy to scope out what I am looking for.

    When Lorraine was here I had downloaded some embroidery pattern that she wanted to share with me. At the time I had loaded them on the SanDisk flash drive. Today was the day to get them on the Bernina flash drive. I was making great headways. A file for the “7 Days of Dishtowels” and a file for embroidering recipes on towels called “Recipe Towels.” All was going well. Just one more file and it was called “Cut Work.” Sitting at the computer in the living room, something distracted me and I looked up not realizing my left hand was hovering over the palm pad. I had opened a file from the SanDisk and all the EXP files were ready to move over to a document file and after that the Bernina flash drive would be loaded with them. As I looked up it took me awhile to realize what was blinking like crazy. Talk about speed. Wham . . . they were gone. Honest to God, I have yet to figure out just where the hand hover needs to be to initiate the deleting.

    Needless to say there was a huge lesson learned for the remaining computer work. It has happened to me when typing for the daily blog that somewhere in that left hand hover, I would lose everything. I did ask the Geek Squad about disabling the palm pad 100% but that didn’t happen to be addressed at the last visit.

    Live and learn. When walking, keep those steps high. When typing, keep that arthritic left hand high . . . or AWAY from the palm pad.

     
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