Taking it easy all around

Ding!

light through through thicket...

Wineberry, considered invasive here in New York State.  But you know me...  I manage them as best I can.  And morning is a great time to catch them spreading.   The stems are covered in red hairs.  Very easy to identify.  Me and the birds, we love the fruit,  But the birds usually get to it first.

food

Parsley grows anywhere really.  I scattered the seeds. Everywhere.  It's amazing how easy this kind of gardening can be.  Watching for the first signs of dandelion and plantain.  I left the leaves this year, like all of them. Many blow off over and down the hill during the windy days.  Yesterday there was literally a carpet of ground bees. They just emerged and there are little bee volcanoes everywhere.  Earth Bzzzz.

just radiating

I could not find a clear direction for this one, so it is just growing.  Maybe berries were on my mind. Thread Beads can be so many things.

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42 comments

  1. Cj

    Always thankful for your glossary video links as I guestioned my beads and think I’ll push for more strokes next time. They are “just the berries” over French knots!

  2. Marilee

    I love the wheel, and the little red berries. Very bright and cheery.
    In Oregon we deal with blackberries, which I think is great. Ordinarily I would just stand there and pick and eat, but we have so many birds at the feeders near them that I think it’s best to wash them first. We trim back the male branches. Those monsters are aggressive and grow a foot a day. I think they are trying to make a path for the female branches to spread.

  3. hermosa

    What a delight. Your creations blow me open. I smile at this simple and precious continuation of how you follow your own lead, one stitch at a time.

  4. Judith

    A pie for pi day; yours will last longer than ours did. Finally sunny days and happy squirrels prancing around the roof. Who knew such little critters make such a clatter. Scooter and I love watching them.

  5. Heather S

    I also saw a wheel. And I’ve noticed you color palette change with the season. Just going without knowing is a new way to work for me. But why shouldn’t Art be like life, right?

  6. Beth O

    A whole new layer of beauty emerging on this block – beautiful! Our Spring is not here yet, but it is so nice to be able to share yours. Enjoy!

  7. Jana

    I saw these bee mounds at a local park this week and had no idea what they were. Thanks for that. I love the combination of fabrics on this piece. That alone speaks to me of your deep connection to cloth.

    • jude

      these blocks are being lovingly cobbled from the nothings basket, which really holds a lifetime of cloth leftovers. I am connected to each piece that surfaces.
      Ground bees are gentle and hardworking. No honey but great early pollinators.

  8. Sarita

    “ Yesterday there was literally a carpet of ground bees. They just emerged and there are little bee volcanoes everywhere. Earth Bzzzz.”

    How spectacular to witness such a marvel of nature!
    A lovely image of spring you share.
    To be expressed in ones own imagery, we are changed.

  9. thank you for prompting the memory of gathering wineberries on Shelter Island back in the 1960s … using a dented blue spatterware berry bucket with a wood and wire handle … easily the best berries ever (although too often found next to poison ivy)

  10. Elizabeth Godin

    I always marvel at your creations. Oh how I would love to have your talent. Such a gift you have been given and how amazingly openly you
    share your creative ability.

    I know these beautifully stitched soulful displays keep you grounded.
    Peace..

    • jude

      Yes, it did become a wheel… nice thoughts…
      Yeah it’s biennial and reseeds and I get less parsley worms when it is mixed in with wild plants. Grows right through the snow.

  11. Nancy D

    What a joyful stitching! It radiates Spring! I, too, have left much of the leaves, allowing the insect world to get its bearings. I am not a fan of sculpted lawns. Have a lovely Saturday, Jude.

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