Christmas in September?

Cross this one off the list...
Here are the stockings that my SIL, Carrie started, and I finished yesterday. They went together faster than I thought, after I figured out how to do it. The instructions were rather cryptic, so I just did my own thing. They are dark red velvet on the back and are fully lined with red satin. I also included a couple of close ups so you can see Carrie's amazing counted cross stitch work. She did such a beautiful job with these. I was a little nervous that I might wreck them sewing them up, but it all worked out and I think they turned out nice.





How disturbing is it....

that I woke up at 3:30 am this morning, (business to take care of, you know) and while I was awake for those few minutes, I had an idea for a little girl's top. I thought about it more at work today and it spawned about 4 more ideas. SOMEONE HELP ME!!! LOL, there is not enough time in the world for all the ideas.

Besides having ideas I have no time for, LOL, I have been working on the FA quilt. I had started one with a rather complicated block, and it just wasn't working for me. Too tedious, it was driving me bonkers. So I scrapped that one and started over. This one is a nice, easy, quick railfence. LOL. I got half of the blocks put together last night. I will have to lay this one aside for just a few days, though. Hopefully I will get back to it on Monday or Tuesday. I am really pleased with it so far. I measured my blocks really carefully and they are going together beautifully, so far. :)

The reason that I have to put it aside for now, though, is because I have a project that I need to get done within the next couple of weeks. My sister-in-law, Carrie, started Christmas stockings for her girls, Claire and Mady after Mady was born 3 years ago. She just finished the counted cross stitch fronts this past spring. They are lovely, she did a fabulous job with them. She didn't trust herself to sew up the rest of the stockings, so she asked me to do it. So that is what I need to get done. My MIL is going to visit them in Texas on Oct. 10th. I hope to be able to send these stockings and Claire's birthday present with her. We will see if I can get them done by then. I basted the seam lines and measured the seam allowance and cut them out this evening. I need to go out and find some gold braid for the edges tomorrow, and then I can cut out the backs and the linings and get them sewn up. I don't really think they will take all that long, it is just a matter of sitting down and doing it. I bought lining fabric, and a gorgeous deep red velvet for the backs a little while back. I found some gold braid that I wanted at Joann the same day, but they didn't have enough of it, so I didn't get any. That is my mission tomorrow. Hopefully I can find some at Joann or Hancock's. The only suitable braid I saw at Mill End was $27 a yard! I don't think so! I have never sewn with velvet before, so this could be interesting. It's not like you can press it, you know? I'll definately post some pictures when they are finished. Her work is really wonderful.

The tutorial is up...

I'd like to say thanks to everyone at Sew Mama Sew for including me in the girls clothes tutorial round up. I am honored to be included with so many talented people! Check out the tutorials here. There are some really great ones! I am thinking about trying some of them out.

International Ataxia Awareness Day

I know this is supposed to be a craft blog, but this is something near and dear to my heart. Today is International Ataxia Awareness Day. If you don't already know it, my niece, Allison, who is 16, has a rare genetic disease called Friedreich's Ataxia (FA). It is a degenerative neuro-muscular disease in which the person afflicted with the disease loses their ability to balance and coordinate movement. It also usually has an effect on their heart and often causes curvature of the spine. Usually this is diagnosed in children between the ages of 5 and 15. Most are wheelchair bound by the time they finish high school. Often these kids live only about 20-30 years after diagnosis. Treatment is very limited, and there is no cure.

Let me tell you a little of Allison's story. In August of 2000 my sister took both of her girls in to the doctor for their annual check up before the beginning of the school year. A very common, routine trip, or so they thought it would be. While listening to Allison's heart, she noticed that it didn't sound quite normal. She said it sounded like a murmur, but in skinny kids like Alli, sometimes it was hard to tell. They ordered an EKG. When that came back, the results were not normal. Other tests were then ordered. The results were that she had an enlarged left ventricle and a thickening of the heart wall. What on earth could cause this in a nine year old? The search was on to find an answer. The answer was found in her genetic code. She had Friedreich's Ataxia. Life turned on a dime for my sister, her kids and the rest of our family as well. Personally, I cried for a week straight. I can't even begin to describe how helpless I felt. I read things on line about the disease that filled me with horror. The words that stuck out most in my mind were "no treatment" and "no cure". I prayed and prayed for God to rearrange her genetic code and take this awful thing from her, I prayed for God to miraculously stop this disease where it was and that she wouldn't get worse. But God knows what He is doing and has used this in our lives for good. People have been drawn closer to God through our experience with this disease.

Finally, after beginning to come to terms with the fact that my niece was going to have this illness no matter what, I came to the conclusion that I could either be "reactive", meaning that I could just wallow in the fear, pain and sorrow I felt, or I could become "proactive" and do what I could to make a difference. The day I came to that realization I said to myself, "ok, I'm not a doctor, I'm not a scientist, I don't understand all of the medical and scientific mumbo jumbo, but there is something that I can do. I can talk about it to other people, and I can try to help raise money for research so that the doctors and researchers who DO understand this disease can try to find a treatment and maybe someday even a cure." You see, the thing about rare diseases is that few people know about them, therefore funding for research is limited. It might take a lot longer to find a treatment or cure simply because the funds aren't there and the researcher's hands are tied. From the day I made that realization, I have made it one of my goals in life to try to raise awareness of this disease and point people to where they can donate to help research.

Allison is now 16 years old. She is a very sweet-natured, tenderhearted, shy girl who loves babies and animals, dogs in particular. In July of 2006 she had surgery to help straighten her curved spine. This past spring she got her first motorized wheelchair. Typically, those of us who have the use of our legs would think how limiting it would be to be in a wheelchair. Let me tell you how Alli sees it. Allison found a new sense of freedom in it. She no longer had to have help to get across the room. She didn't need someone to push her in her chair. She could zip down the sidewalk much faster than she has been able to in years. Funny how perspective changes. Her heart is significantly weakened by the FA, and she is easily tired, but other than that she is doing fairly well.

In the 7 years since Alli was diagnosed there have been great advancements in FA research. There are some really exciting things happening that may eventually lead to a FDA recognized treatment with a certain drug called Idebenone. Allison has been taking this experimental drug almost since she was diagnosed. It is supposed to help slow the progression of the disease and help her heart to not sustain as much damage. This drug currently costs about $300.00 a month. If this approval goes through, it will be available as a prescription and would qualify for insurance coverage. This would significantly reduce costs for the families of kids with FA. Some families have more than one child with FA and you can imagine the impact of this on those families. There have also been discoveries made in possible gene therapies and tricking the body into thinking that the genes are normal by bypassing the incorrect portion of genetic code. This is really exciting as it has the potential to literally stop this disease in its tracks and give these kids a chance at a much more normal life. The next best thing to a cure.

I had planned to have a quilt finished by today to raffle off for FA research. I didn't manage to get it finished yet, but look for that coming in the future. I have decided to place a button in the sidebar of my blog. This will link to FARA (Friedreich's Ataxia Research Alliance). FARA is dedicated to helping families with FA and making grants specifically for FA research. Stop by and check them out sometime and if you are so inclined, you may make donations there. There is a wonderful video there that I would encourage you to watch.

I appreciate all of you who take the time to read my FA posts. It means more to me than you can imagine.

This picture of Allison was taken the day after her 16th birthday back in May of this year. Her dog, Sadie, is her constant buddy.

Finished the set!

I finished the blouse to go with the "Charming" little skirt. I just listed them at Etsy. The blouse was really a fun challenge for me. I had to draw pretty much the whole pattern from scratch. I used a commercial pattern for a dress bodice as the base for the shape and the armhole and the top of the sleeve. Everything else I winged on my own. I am really pleased with how it turned out. I might make an adjustment in the length of the blouse, I'd make it just a tad longer, I think. But other than that it went together really well and was fairly easy to sew up. I had a hard time deciding what color to make the blouse. I couldn't decide whether to make it dark red or the brown, but I think the brown worked out nicely. I saw some beautiful creamy ecru silki dupioni which would have been luscious to have made this out of, but... at $14.99 a yard, it was a bit spendy. This will be much more practical anyway. Much more wash and wear, and much more economical. I could really get into this pattern designing thing. I really need to look at buying some slopers.




How was your day?

This is what the sky looked like for a good portion of the day yesterday.

This is what it did in my town. Along with several trees down, and a traffic light on Highway 15 (the one right by Hennen's Furniture, if you are familiar with the area.)

This was in Sauk Rapids which is only a few miles from us.

The wind was absolutely unbelievable! It ripped a sign by where I work right out of the ground and blew it away. I have no idea where it went. Thankfully we didn't sustain any damage at our house. I talked to a customer yesterday afternoon after the storms were pretty much over. He said he had a tree down and I asked him if it hit his house or anything, and he said "Nope, missed the house, missed the hot tub, hit the fence." I said at least of the three things it hit the least expensive to fix! LOL
I love storms, so it was all an adrenaline rush for me. LOL Beats sitting around work staring out the windows like most days.
How was your day?

A not so bad knock off...

Remember this sweet outfit from Bug and Belle?



Well, here is my take on it. I basically redrew a commercial pattern and added sleeves to it. Then I took a pants pattern, cut it off to cropped length, widened the leg a little and added elastic at the bottom. I have to say that I am very pleased with the results and it was a wonderful challenge for me to try to recreate something from just a picture and only a vaguely similar pattern. My niece, Clair will get this for her birthday next month.

Here is the detail of the embroidery. I cut some of the flowers out of the fabric and made sort of appliques out of them, and then hand embroidered the rest of it.

I took my inspiration from the pants fabric. I absolutely love this "celebrate spring" line of fabric from Moda. The colors remind me of cotton candy.


Finally the back.

Happy weekend to all! I plan to be busy sewing this weekend, trying to get one or two more things ready for Etsy.

Ok, I know.....

I change blog backgrounds all the time. The truth is, the pink and brown just wasn't workin for me. So.... I made some new backgrounds for fall. Whatcha think? This is much more "me" than the pink and brown was. That was my stab at trying to be "hip". LOL I'm not such a "hip" kind of gal. Much more a traditionalist.

I am really excited, my little tutorial is going to be included in Sew Mama Sew's Kids Clothes Month for Septemer. It is scheduled to be listed later this month. I am very honored to be a part of all the fun goings on this month at Sew Mama Sew! I also just wanted to say thanks to all of you who have responded to the tutorial. I would love to see the skirts you have made. If you make one, send me a link to a picture if you have one so I can see it. You can email me at ljlehn@charter.net I also want to say thank you to Randi at I have to say... for linking to the tutorial as well.

I finished Claire's outfit this afternoon. I have to wash it out and dry it and get it ready to go. I'm really glad that I have October's birthday gifts finished already. Now I feel like I can work on some other projects without having them hanging above my head.

Just found these...

Oh word how cute are these! If we wind up being able to adopt from China, I think that I will have to have them! They are a bit spendy, though. But sooo cute!

Where in the world...

Could Spot be going! I'm certainly going to miss him! Take care, Spot!


Exciting news!

I was looking online last night at stuff for the MDA Telethon which is on this weekend. The disease my niece has is one of the diseases targeted by MDA. I found an article from last August (2006) that knocked my socks off! I realize that the information is a year old, but this was the first I have seen of it.

First let me explain as best I can how the disease seems to work. If you think of DNA as genetic code all stretched out in a big long line (it is typically represented in letters, T G A etc.), in Friedreich's Ataxia patients there is a section of that code that gets repeated over and over thousands of times. Way too many times. If you were to read the code left to right, then to the right of where the repeats of that section of code are, there is more coding. This is the coding to tell the cell to produce Fratxin which is a protein. Fratxin's role in the body is to transport iron out of the mitochondria of cells. If it is not present, then iron builds up in the cells and causes the damage that you see present in Friedreich's Ataxia. Nerve cell damage, heart cell damage and some skeletal anomilies as well. So what happens with FA is, the body starts at the left and is going along reading the code and all of a sudden it hits the section where that piece of code is repeated too many times and it essentially short circuits, so it never gets to the part of the code that tells it to make Frataxin.

Now, the exciting part is this... researchers believe that they have found a compound that will change this for FA patients. The compound is called HDAC inhibitor 4b. What this compound is supposed to do is essentially block the body from reading all of those repeats of code and send it on to read the rest of the code to where it can read the part that tells it to make Frataxin. Preliminary tests have been done with cells taken from 12 FA patients. In all 12 the cells began to produce Frataxin, the article said at least to the point of those who are only carriers of the disease. Most carriers do not exhibit symptoms of the disease and lead normal healthy lives. Essentially the thought is if they can find a way to introduce this compound into FA patients, the disease could essentially be stopped in its tracks, or at the very least, very significantly reduced. There is much more testing that needs to be done to be sure that it is safe and doesn't cause cancer or isn't toxic in some other manner, and then clinical trials can begin, and then maybe, just maybe, there will be an answer when a parent of a newly diagnosed child says "What do we do now?". Maybe there will even be hope during Allison's lifetime which I never dared dream. When she was diagnosed 7 years ago, it just seemed like there wasn't much hope to offer us. I hope and pray that the testing and trials go well and that this treatment will keep other kids and families from living through the very frightening things that this disease can do.

So, all of the nickles and dimes for research, they really do add up and they really do make a difference. From one family member of an MDA/FA kid to those of you who have ever given even one penny to MDA throughout the years, THANK YOU. From the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU!!!
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