I guess it's time to report on the Pesach Seder(s). The first Seder we hosted family: Savta Charna and Auntie Ethel, Devora and Noam, Yunkie, Mindy, Alana, Jeremy and Michelle, Alissa and Mel (Matty wasn't feeling well and couldn't make it), Charles aka Chaim, Josh and Jennifer, and Janice. So we were 17 at the table. We have a dining room table which, with leaves inserted, comfortably seats 13. Add our kitchen table to it and we can seat another 7. The dining room, though,is a little narrow so once you're seated, you're seated. The sore point in chairs -- our dining room table only has 3 chairs left (we inherited the set from my parents who bought it second hand). And of the six chairs which were part of our dining room table set purchased in 1980, only two remain and those chairs have seen better days too. So we use folding chairs, some from my parents and the rest purchased on sale at Canadian Tire. They're quite comfortable but the vinyl on some is giving out. I'm thinking of making slip covers to cover the vinyl bits (backs and seats). Right now my thought is to use a different quilt pattern for each chair. But I digress.
The Seder was nice and more importantly, the preparations leading up to it were relaxed. No anxiety. The meal was delicious -- We started with Menachem's gefilte fish and a roasted vegetable clear soup with knaidlach. Then we had three entrees: Charna's veal roast, Mindy's meatballs and Menachem's chicken. Devora made her salad, and Menachem made roasted vegetables, roasted potatoes and yams, and eggplant salad. We finished off with my mother's compote, a gorgeous fruit platter by Menachem and a medley of baked goods from Alissa. It was a lovely evening but ran later than the 8 p.m. bedtime I am used to so yesterday I was exhausted.
Last night, we were invited to Mintzy and Rafi's Seder. More of the same, only louder... Mintzy and Rafi have a Seder which is part traditional Jewish, part kibbutz seder and part, well, Mintzy and Rafi. It helps when you have a musical family (not that ours isn't musical but theirs is participatory musical). Some of their traditions are different from ours but I am always blown away that Jews everywhere are sitting down at the same time for the same purpose. It was festive, of course, and when Stephen and Dee announced that "they" were pregnant, even more so. Another late night for us.
And since I worked yesterday and will work again today (Josh is going to Vancouver tomorrow, there's a closing today and we're trying to tie up loose ends before he goes), no recovery time until the weekend.
I am hoping to finally get around to shaving cream marbling this weekend and will let you know how it goes.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Tanach Book Cover


At the local Associated Hebrew School, there is a ceremony in third grade, coinciding with Shavuot, when the kids receive their bibles. It is a tradition for the parents/family to decorate a fabric book cover. At Jeremy's pre-bar mitzvah Shabbat dinner, his aunt Susan (my sil's sil) mentioned that she had to do the cover, had missed the school's how-to suggeston session and didn't know where to start. I offered to help asking only that she give me some idea of what her son, Mitchell, wanted. Mitchell wanted two images: Noah's ark and Mose's tablets on Mount Sinai.
Susan and her daughter, Julia, came over a few weekends ago and we started with Noah's ark based on an image from the internet. The ark had no animals which is a good thing -- I'm not THAT good at representational... It was an image of an ark on water but with a rainbow in the background. I explained to them about fusibles. They chose the fabric combinations from my stash and then we cut and fused and did a little stitching to hold the design together. It was not yet attached to the cover.
This past weekend, Susan returned with Mitchell to work on the second image. This one was almost totally Mitchell's design of Mount Sinai. He chose the fabrics, we ironed fusible onto them, he drew the elements onto the back of fusible, and Susan cut them out. We made the tablets by printing the Hebrew letters onto freezer-backed fabric run through the laser printer and heat set them by ironing. Once Mitchell had arranged the composition on the book cover background, I fused it down and added some stitching to hold it. Same goes for Noah's ark, to which we added a dove with the branch in its beak.
I had a thoroughly enjoyable time sharing my stitching know how. While I may have experienced some discomfort from letting go the reins, any imperfections perceived by me were overridden by the happy look on Susan and Mitchell's faces. (Susan also brought me a lovely gift which I will used at the Seder).
At the FAT meeting, Christine's challenge piece for "spring" was an image of coils, done in a holographic style. I am quite taken with the idea and may try to duplicate it. My great grandmother's Shabbat candelsticks come to mind.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Spring
Tomorrow is our FibreArts Toronto meeting. The challenge is "Spring". In the end, after comtemplating spring rolls, spring fever, watch springs, and a whole list of other springy items and concepts, I decided to go with green. So I used a background of green silk from a dress of Carmit's detritus, spelled out the word "spring" in green fabrics, added green flowers from a fake Hawaiian lei, beaded in green, stitched in green, et voila "Green They Say" (from the lyrics).
I had it hanging in my office exhibit last week (including the 17th where people thought the flowers were shamrocks).
Anyways, back to spring. Today I got a little spring cleaning in. After all, Pesach is coming. I have two fridges in my kitchen, from the days when the kids lived at home and one fridge and certainly it's freezer weren't enough. So when we redid the kitchen, we bought another fridge and I insisted that they both be in the kitchen, side by side. It worked out well when the kids lived at home. Since they're gone, the only time we really need both fridges is the holidays when we get the entire family together. So today, I cleaned the "empty" fridge, transferred the food to it and cleaned the other fridge so now we're ready for our holiday shopping which we'll do at the end of the week and our holiday cooking which we'll tackle next Sunday & Monday. Of course, once you clean one thing, you see how the other things need it as well... So I will do the oven overnight and soak the stove elements overnight and finish them tomorrow. When the urge to clean comes, I mustn't repress it becomes it comes so infrequently.
Anyhow, off to watch TV and veg.
I had it hanging in my office exhibit last week (including the 17th where people thought the flowers were shamrocks).
Anyways, back to spring. Today I got a little spring cleaning in. After all, Pesach is coming. I have two fridges in my kitchen, from the days when the kids lived at home and one fridge and certainly it's freezer weren't enough. So when we redid the kitchen, we bought another fridge and I insisted that they both be in the kitchen, side by side. It worked out well when the kids lived at home. Since they're gone, the only time we really need both fridges is the holidays when we get the entire family together. So today, I cleaned the "empty" fridge, transferred the food to it and cleaned the other fridge so now we're ready for our holiday shopping which we'll do at the end of the week and our holiday cooking which we'll tackle next Sunday & Monday. Of course, once you clean one thing, you see how the other things need it as well... So I will do the oven overnight and soak the stove elements overnight and finish them tomorrow. When the urge to clean comes, I mustn't repress it becomes it comes so infrequently.
Anyhow, off to watch TV and veg.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Undecided
Tzedakah Box
This is the Tzedakah Box I made for the Pomegranate Guild's upcoming exhibit.
It is made using flexi-firm to give it body, the base fabric is duppioni silk, overlaid with organza. The roof appears thatched -- it is made using a ribbon with a cross-hatch and sequins (that's the way it came). It is embellished with stone from a deconstructed belt and the door handles are from deconstructed jewellry. The money goes in through the peak of the roof and the bottom comes out for easy emptying.



It is made using flexi-firm to give it body, the base fabric is duppioni silk, overlaid with organza. The roof appears thatched -- it is made using a ribbon with a cross-hatch and sequins (that's the way it came). It is embellished with stone from a deconstructed belt and the door handles are from deconstructed jewellry. The money goes in through the peak of the roof and the bottom comes out for easy emptying.




Monday, March 15, 2010
Exhibit Up
Saturday, March 13, 2010
After Hours
I decided to show my work in any venue available so I am mounting an exhibit next week in my office cubicle...
I have room for approximately 12 12" wide pieces. I have approximately 15 pieces which meet the size requirements.
In preparation, my first task was to decide on a name for the exhibit. I decided to call it "After Hours" because my office colleagues know me during the work day and my art work is done after work hours. And then to decide how to define my work. I am calling it "fibre art compositions". I made flyers to hang in strategic locations in the office. Then, I made name tags for each piece. Now I just have to gather enough courage to actually carry through and hang the exhibit. The cubicle walls are upholstered so I can attach the pieces by pinning them to the wall. It shouldn't take any time at all.
I would like to sell the pieces on exhibit. So how do I price them? I think I'll be really underpricing at $54 a piece, but that's where I'm leaning. Decisions, decisions.
I finished the FAT "spring" challenge. For me, spring means green. So I made a composition spelling out "spring" in different greens, embellished with green silk flowers, green beads and quilted with green variegated thread. Quite simple in appearance but I'm hoping that less is more.
I also cut out and fused the pieces for an upright matza holder. Hopefully I'll sew it up tomorrow.
My muse is sort of on vacation so I hope it returns soon. I want to make a "quiet book" for Amit before I head to Israel in May.
I have room for approximately 12 12" wide pieces. I have approximately 15 pieces which meet the size requirements.
In preparation, my first task was to decide on a name for the exhibit. I decided to call it "After Hours" because my office colleagues know me during the work day and my art work is done after work hours. And then to decide how to define my work. I am calling it "fibre art compositions". I made flyers to hang in strategic locations in the office. Then, I made name tags for each piece. Now I just have to gather enough courage to actually carry through and hang the exhibit. The cubicle walls are upholstered so I can attach the pieces by pinning them to the wall. It shouldn't take any time at all.
I would like to sell the pieces on exhibit. So how do I price them? I think I'll be really underpricing at $54 a piece, but that's where I'm leaning. Decisions, decisions.
I finished the FAT "spring" challenge. For me, spring means green. So I made a composition spelling out "spring" in different greens, embellished with green silk flowers, green beads and quilted with green variegated thread. Quite simple in appearance but I'm hoping that less is more.
I also cut out and fused the pieces for an upright matza holder. Hopefully I'll sew it up tomorrow.
My muse is sort of on vacation so I hope it returns soon. I want to make a "quiet book" for Amit before I head to Israel in May.
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Big Purge
The Bar-Mitzvah is behind us and I decided it was time to do a little spring cleaning. Granted, it's not really spring but when the urge to clean comes, I try to obey because it doesn't come all that often... This time, it had nothing to do with my workroom. I needed to get paperwork ready for taxes. Our current files are kept in a filing cabinet beside the computer desk. At the end of the year, I open files for the new year and put the previous year's files aside so we can cull any information required before I put them in the "keep for 7 years" boxes. I also pull out the oldest year of the KF7Y box and shred it. While I was at it, I asked Menachem to review his computer print outs (i.e. the stuff we all download from the computer because it looked interesting and relevant at the time). We threw out at least a tree or two. At the same time, I asked Menachem if any of his computer books/manuals had passed their "best by" dates. Quite a few. So we ended getting rid of those too. And the assorted cables, chargers, 3.5" disks, etc. which no longer have any relevance. I was able to consolidate what was left into less space and better organize it. So, good on us.
I did get some sewing done of Sunday. Susan came over so we could work on Mitch's Siddur cover for his class' Siddur ceremony. We didn't finish it, but we made substantial progress and I got an email from Susan that Mitch like it so it's all good. If she comes back, the next part should be much easier and go more smoothly.
I still have to do "Spring" for F.A.T. but I think I will go with the colour green and try my hand at Dorset buttons using found washers, plastic and metal, in varying sizes. I still have 3 weeks to figure it out.
I did get some sewing done of Sunday. Susan came over so we could work on Mitch's Siddur cover for his class' Siddur ceremony. We didn't finish it, but we made substantial progress and I got an email from Susan that Mitch like it so it's all good. If she comes back, the next part should be much easier and go more smoothly.
I still have to do "Spring" for F.A.T. but I think I will go with the colour green and try my hand at Dorset buttons using found washers, plastic and metal, in varying sizes. I still have 3 weeks to figure it out.
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About Me
- Chaya Erez
- Daughter, sister, wife, mother, grandmother, friend, me.