When you are 1/8th feline you hang with the cats. (Ok, the DNA test was undetermined for that eighth, but I have a growing body of evidence for cat genes.)

When you are 1/8th feline you hang with the cats. (Ok, the DNA test was undetermined for that eighth, but I have a growing body of evidence for cat genes.)

I tried another hatching weaving with smaller squares and lots more colors.



Things I like: The color play and overall look of the piece. Still a big fan of splitting the ends before weaving in, I had trouble telling the front from the back.
Things I learned: Keeping long lines straight needs work! When twining the bottom and top with multiple colors, I need to connect the strands.
Details: approximately 8”x8”, 100% cotton weft, warp suspected cotton (from stash), woven on an 8 sett frame loom. First and last pass twined. Warp drawn through piece to finish.
Little Miss Missy is a frightened wee beastie. She barks at what frightens her, and that is any one on walks, someone coming in the front door, a moving laundry hamper, and loud unexpected noises. I’ve been reading on how to help her (and have consulted the vet), and so we are trying to avoid what frightens her (not possible all the time, but we have managed a reduction), and teaching her calm.
The trouble, I think, is her amazing hearing, and her not so great sight, coupled with enough brains to know she is small and there are many things bigger than her. With what I’ve been reading, the idea is to slowly introduce the “scary” things starting at distances where they aren’t scary. Well, she can hear farther than even I can see, so that raises some challenges. One of the things we are trying is a Happy Hoodie which is used by some groomers to help muffle the sound of the blow dryer. She is not a fan. Her initial reaction was very cat-like: just hold still or tip over. It also hides her magnificently quirky ears and makes her look like a little old lady with a hair scarf (and a beard, I guess we all have different mental images of little old ladies). Still, we will continue to try it when there are scary noises.


We have also put on a pheromone based calming collar, and are using a Thunder shirt and calming treats. Walks have stopped until she chills some. And when we know something scary is coming (laundry hamper), we put her in her crate (and she loves her crate, sleeps there every night). We are making some progress; upon hearing unexpected fireworks she was able to calm with assistance (we said “calm” and pet her gently), and about 50% of the time she can greet my husband coming home with no barking (but lots of wiggles).
This weaving had a two fold inspiration. My sister loves bees, and my daughter recently has been drawing the cutest simple bees. I did ask my eldest if it was OK that I borrow her bee style!


Things I like: My eldest suggested the bee abdomen have thicker stripes, which really turned out well with the thinner hatching stripes on the wings. Steaming also helped smooth things out.
Things I learned: I need to work on consistent angles. I used a cartoon (pattern), but decided to do the angle mathematically, up two over one, rather than follow the line. Or maybe I need to adjust my math.
Details: approximately 8”x8”, 100% cotton weft, warp suspected cotton (from stash), woven on an 8 sett frame loom. First and last pass twined. Warp drawn through piece to finish.
What a nice gift for 2021: Texas snow. We haven’t seen snow since we moved in, so the kids were pretty excited. The puppy was not having it at first, then thought it was grand! She does like eating ice, and as Texas snow, what we have is really ice (very similar to snow cones). She really doesn’t mind being wet and muddy, and likes getting rubbed down with a towel. She is not a fan of getting her paws washed off, but if you dig in the mud, there will be washing.

