Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1980-03, Page 13r 1 f MEI d e e y g Mrs. Marg Garniss, Brussels. feels her interest in woodworking was fostered by her grandmother. Mrs. Moe Sharpin who made wooden chests for her and her sisters when they were children. Now, her husband works away from home quite often and she found she needed to know how to repair things and how to use tools properly. Her first efforts were bird feeders and wren houses. such as the one in this picture. She .a currently making a coffee table from a slab of black walnut which she acquired when she spotted a large walnut tree being cut down in Brussels. photos by Bev Brown Seen above is Mrs. Aileen Davies, Wingham, who is fitting back together the legs of a used, standard -sized butcher table for her kitchen. She acquired the table from a local butcher and has taken it completely apart, sanded it down and is now fitting it back together again. "So many things / would like to do" Dear Sirs; In November issue of "Rural Voice", the title "Winter Doldrums" caught my eye. I think your term "productive" in more meaningful than just "pass the time." Each winter 1 have so many things I would like to do, some I get done and some not. I make quite a few quilts the tops of which are pieced from sewing scraps or cut from used clothing that is out of fashion or outgrown; making crocheted and knitted articles also fills in spare moments waiting for family to come for a meal, etc. Things gathered from outdoors can be used for dried arrangements, such as corn husks, pine cones, birch bark, acorns, large bean pods, also grasses, cattails and some things I don't know the names of them. Also save peach pits and walnut shells, cherry pits note paper decorated with small pressed leaves and flowers are attractive as gifts or personal use. I made rag hooked rugs also. 1 can't seem to buy any more stamped burlap so hope to design more this winter on plain burlap sold for general craft work. En;pty pop cans can be covered by a scrap piece of cotton so that they can be sewn together by hand to make a hassock (toot stool). Home made soap doesn't take a lot of time to make but certainly is economical as laundry soap. And one can make use of fat also collected from cooking beef. I have made women's work gloves from a man's worn out leather jacket. These are very good for gardening and other ouside work. These are highlights of my work through the winter, besides ordinary homemaking work. Hope this will be helpful to you and others too. Yours truly, Mrs. Lloyd Alexander RR2 Cargill, Ont THE RURAL VOICE/MARCH 1980 PG. 11