Now, my folks recently moved out of the family home (where I and my three siblings were thrown up), into a lovely house down on the South Coast. The house is a 1920’s period property and they are faithfully restoring and decorating and renovating and rebuilding and renewing and disconbluberating and de-wallpaperifying it in the Arts and Crafts style, which inspired its architectural design. So, anything I make for my mother’s birthday has to be in keeping with the colours and patterns of the period.
Gulp. No pressure there then.
Add to this the fact that my folks are obviously quite ancient by now, like at least, ooh, sixty something-or-other, and have everything they need, and I’m beginning to get a bit hot under the collar trying to think of what I can make. A tea-cosy? Nah – she’s just got that Battle of Hastings Bayeux Tapestry one which has taken ownership of the tea-pot. A peg-bag? Nope – spotted one she’d already made last time we were there. A knitting bag? No no, I tried to steal the one she has, it’s so cool.

So, do you see?
I was beginning to get tiny pangs of performance anxiety. I am thinking to myself, blimey, I’m going to have nervous palpitations as I insert my fabric into the sewing machine, and shaky-fingered, begin to sew a line of shoddy zig-zag...
Now look, I realise she’s my mother and she must have uttered the wo

When anxiously enquiring of my father what he considered their colour scheme in the dining room would be, he said “Erm, well, I don’t think it will be blue. Or green. Or it might be green. But I don’t know. It definitely won’t be yellow. There might be some red. Or maybe orange of some kind. Maybe. I don’t know really, your mother hasn’t decided.” So you see, I’m a little bit all of a dither when choosing what to make. But I do land eventually upon placemats, napkins and napkin rings, because you don’t only need one set do you – have a few; they will dress up a newly stripped, painted, papered and be-fireplaced dining room beautifully.
Amongst my stash of goodies I found some lovely classic bits of furnishing fabric, and these placemats were born. Look at that little lovely in the middle – isn’t it luscious fabric? It is courtesy of a bag of leftover fabric goodies from ‘Er Nextdoor, whose mum made her some delicious enormous cushions resplendent in the stuff, topped and interspliced with reds and turquoises. Yum. The placemats are very stiff and starchy, because they
have heavyweight interfacing in them, so once the guests have eaten their meal they could use them as wobble-boards for a bit of post-prandial musical entertainment; someone on spoons, someone on placemats, voices oiled by booze.
Anyway, so my mother has now received her goodies, and luckily thinks they're lovely. Of course that could just be a big fat lie, and she's actually grimaced and shoved them down the back of the dresser with the enamelled butterfly brooch made at a Brownie Jamboree, the clay egg-cup, and the varnished clothes peg mini rocking chair. But she said they were lovely, so I'm going with that. Happy Birthday, Mum!
1 comment:
I think you just decscirbed my mother perecftly!
I only got my staple gun last week but already over the weekend it was amazing how a couple of little jobs popped up that needed a staple gun!
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