Still on that different tack....
I have been subscribing to the Birchwood Club from Robin & Shaun Betterley, through Judith Dowden of 'In Some Small Way'. So far I have received the 'taster' kit and the first five installments. There seems to be a hold up with the sixth and final kit.
This kit came complete with a lovely little badge, which I think I might attach somewhere near the cabinet when it is completed.
Each and every kit comes beautifully packaged, the taster kit with Percy's wagon coming in a brown paper bag with string handles, and a little story sheet giving some background of Percy and Edith.
The pieces are laser cut and the kit includes everything you need, including the Betterley's lovely artwork. All that has to be supplied is paint, glue and varnish.
I wanted to wait until I had received more of the pieces before I started to construct anything, and they wouldn't start arriving until January this year. So I put the little bag aside for several months.
The next installment was delayed by quite a long time. When it arrived it had stickers all over it saying it had been opened by Australian Customs. There was a note inside to say nothing had been removed, but they hadn't been any too particular when they packed it up after inspecting it. This one had been packed in a paper bag, with a sweet sticker and tied with two colours of embroidery floss.
I could see why it had roused some interest - it contained all sorts of things: some pebbles, landscaping materials, wire, water clay, beads, pins, fabric, lace - so many little bits that will be used for all the parts of the project. The pieces for the mannequin were in this kit. That is standing in the right side of the cabinet.
When kit #2 arrived, I realised just how badly
re-packed the first one had been by customs - everything simply bundled back into the paper bag and the crumpled mess that it now was shoved back into the envelope and re-sealed and tagged with the customs tape. This one is really plain - the plainest of them all in fact, but it is still packaged beautifully - so neat and the label giving it a really special touch. And with each parcel being different there is the novelty of wondering what the next one will be like. It is like receiving a gift, opening each one an adventure.
I was tempted to start the project at this time but again it was delayed, and by then it was late March, and the Sydney Fair was approaching. I had lots of things I wanted to prepare for the Fair and all my mini effort was devoted to that. So the large box joined the small packages in the 'Birchwood' container on the shelf.
Below is a photo from the Betterley's site of the Birchwood cabinet, showing the rooms all furnished and completed. The artwork is their usual high standard and having looked at the trimming in the cabinet kit, it is so delicate and beautifully done.
Isn't the bed gorgeous? And there are bolts of lace, fabrics, boxes and bits that decorate the room as well.
That photo doesn't show the details very clearly, so here is a close-up of the picture at the top of the bag. But I wanted to show you how beautifully it was packaged.
If you visit Robin Betterley's Miniatures you can see how each of the four rooms on the left are decorated, and the exterior area on the right with the mannequin as well.
The final installment that I have received thus far, #5, is the Keeping Room/kitchen.
I said in my last post that I did the Birchwood Secret Book in an effort to get back my mojo. I was blown away by the comments people left. And you are so right, we don't have to apologise at all for our miniatures or the relief from stress that we can obtain from doing them.
I also started the mannequin, and have done quite a bit on that as well. Bit of an accident though - it dropped on the floor when it had the tree branches in the top and one of them broke off. I tried gluing it back on but it didn't take so I have to buy some super-glue and try again. I also need to get some more varnish. I have satin and gloss but no matt - and of course that's the type I need.
I'm not concentrating very well on it all. I become distracted very easily and just go back to the computer and start doing a jigsaw or puzzle game, but at least I've started it. And knowing that I want to share it with you gives me motivation to do it :) So thank you! I might not have my mojo back, but at least I can think about something else than worrying. For that I am grateful.
Absolutely lovely, Sandra! I love it.
ReplyDeleteI thank you for your "comment" on my blog. You do have me beat! Oh my goodness.
We have much in common! I too was a special ed teacher. I have a daughter with Down Syndrome and I wanted to know what was available for her educationally, so I went back for my fifth year and went through the teaching program. Spent 2 1/2 years in the classroom after that. That was a real education beyond my training! I would leave every day thanking God that I only had to deal with Down Syndrome in my own life, and was amazed when I met the parents of the other children. They didn't seemed to be phased by what they were having to face each and every day. Bless them! We truly are not challenged beyond what we are able to handle.
Sydney is so far away, and yet the internet makes you feel like a neighbor.
Thank you for your kind words and I look forward to watching all of your many "projects" materialize before my very own eyes. : )
Hugs, Sandra!!!
Sandra, my heart goes out to you. Just take your time and be extra kind to yourself and that mojo will return. The cabinet is looking great and I'm so looking forward to seeing the finished item as I've looked at this series of kits before but just couldn't afford to splash out on them myself.
ReplyDeleteBy the way ... it doesn't seem to matter how much stuff we accumulate, the one thing that we don't have is exactly what we need for a new project. Judith x
A Hug for you {{{{{{{{{{{{{{Sandie}}}}}}}}}}}}}}
ReplyDeleteBless you all, you wonderful friends! I too think of you all as neighbours, even though you are all over the world. The internet is a wonderful thing in that way. I am blessed by having a wonderful family and wonderful RL friends, a caring Church family, and now a network of friends I never would have had without this great hobby - thank you!
ReplyDeleteSandra, the more I get to 'know' you the more we have in common! I too went back to uni as a mature age student, having dropped out of uni many years before. I did Special Education and socio-cognitive psychology as my majors for my first degree, thinking that they would 'come in handy' as a classroom teacher. Then through a variety of circumstances I was approached by a Principal to please take over a difficult Sp Ed class on a temporary basis.... over 20 years later I retired from Special Ed! After I had been teaching for a while we had a 'surprise' for my 40th birthday - our son Nathan. He was born at 27 weeks gestation, strong and perfect. Then - bleed in the brain at 3 days - klebsiella meningits from his first shunt - 17 1/2 weeks in NICU and 7 surgeries on his brain - many complications, near death repeatedly. He is our miracle child, and around 40 hospital admissions in his first 10 years, 25 or so (lost count) surgeries on his brain, cerebral palsy and retinopathy of prematurity, intellectual disability - all the result of insult to the brain through the bleed and the surgeries - he is an absolute joy to us and dearly loved by his sisters.
I taught many children with Down Syndrome, sometimes had four at a time in my class, so truly understand from both sides of the fence the challenges you face.
Hugs to you all and again thank you for caring,
Sandie