Thistledown pillows


As a follow-on from my 'Foraging' post, here are the first little pillows I've made using the thistledown. I have to say it works a treat, and I thoroughly recommend it as a stuffing filler, though you do need quite a lot as it squashes down. I went collecting again on Friday, but it is now really past its best after the rain last week. 



I've had this threadbare patchwork quilt for ages, but decided to rescue what patches I could from it to make the front designs on these. Unpicking each patch and then re-stitching them together by hand was a bit of a labour of love, but I got a lot of satisfaction from saving even the tiniest piece that didn't have a hole in it! The scrappy bits of quilt left won't get thrown away though; I shall use them to decorate labels and business cards.



I really enjoyed taking part in the first Decorative Living Fair last wednesday, and a huge thank you to everyone who visited my stand. I only saw a small portion of all the loveliness that was on sale in the Chelsea Town Hall, but I could easily have spent a fortune!



I met the lovely Lucy from "Love Lane Vintage' with her beautiful handmade clothes, and she asked if I would like to take part in her fairs. So along with the Eridge Fair in May I think a business trip/come holiday in my van to Sussex will be on the cards.......already looking forward to next year!


The Decorative Living Fair!


The Decorative Living Fair is coming to Chelsea! On Wednesday 18th September Chelsea Old Town Hall will be full of decorative antiques, vintage textiles and unique handmade items from over 40 different sellers, and I shall be one of them! Here are some of  the latest makes which will be on my stall.....



I haven't made cushions for a while: it was so good to get creative with beautiful fabrics again. 




I've also been playing around with old maps.....Little fabric sailing boats and bunting on the front of the cards....


open up to reveal real old photographs of family beach-time fun in the 1920's and seashell scraps


There is a tag in each pocket on which to write your message



Some of the cards have butterflies and flowers inside, like a memory of a countryside walk.


If you are interested in coming to the Fair, to save you queueing on the day tickets can be purchased in advance by clicking here. Entrance is £5. 



The Fair runs from 11am to 7pm. Hope to meet some of you there!

Foraging

 

J and I share an interest in botany and entomology, and where J lives on the Cornwall/Devon border we are very lucky to have a plethora of natural landscapes to explore: woods and streams and fields. Last week I discovered a new meadow which hasn't been grazed for well over a year, and wading thigh deep through the long grasses I found all sorts of delights.......


the dainty lilac Tufted Vetch with its minute climbing tendrils, and the creamy froth of Meadow Sweet scenting the air




Hemp Agrimony (above) and grasses galore, so pretty




a Small White butterfly feeding on Common Fleabane, and fine spider's webs covered in the glistening droplets of morning dew.


Marsh Woundwort.....


and Creeping Thistle.....


This thistle has small purple flowers, and I've never really paid it much attention before, being rather plain and prickly, but on seeing its fluffy seeds at this time of year I suddenly had an idea.....


The seeds are as soft as down, and easily come away in the hand when teased.....I fetched a bag from the van and started collecting it with earnest. I'm going to use it as a natural filling and mix it with lavender when I stuff my little handmade pillows! I've always hated using that horrible polyester filling, and now I have found a completely natural alternative. 


Quite a few seed heads had ladybirds nestled in the fluff, so I left those be....they obviously know a good thing - it must be the perfect warm place to spend the night now that autumn is upon us.



Whist I was wading from thistle to thistle I suddenly noticed this beautiful moth had crawled onto my hand. It remained motionless, so I ignored it and carried on collecting. Presently it crawled up onto the lapel of my cardigan, and seemed completely oblivious to my movements. Two hours later it was still there! I think it must have taken my mottled cardi for a suitable piece of bark on which to camouflage itself. It's these unexpected little surprises of nature that so delight me.


My bag of thistledown.... oh if you could only put your hand in there and feel how soft and warm it is!


At the bottom of the sloping meadow a thick band of mature trees borders a stream. Sycamore and Hazel Nut.....


I found evidence of broken nuts on the ground and even saw a squirrel, but there were still plenty of Hazel Nuts to pick. Although not fully mature and brown yet, they can be eaten whilst still green; and I will show you what they are like near the end of the post.


Underneath the canopy of trees were sprawling brambles, laden with blackberries just begging to be picked......




and what absolute whoppers!


 It didn't take me long to fill my bag.


On the way home I stopped at the stall at the side of the road and bought some local apples to make a blackberry and apple crumble, something I haven't made for ages!


I thought the Hazel Nuts would make a nice addition to the crumble, so with a couple of stones I cracked them open to reveal the creamy-white kernel inside.


Eaten green like this they don't have an awful lot of taste, but are deliciously fresh and crunchy.


When the crumble was cooked, I just scattered the kernels over the top along with a generous dose of double cream, and tucked in! Such an autumnal treat. I love to forage in Nature's larder and gather food for free.
                                                  x x x


(I can't wait to go to the meadow in spring and summer next year and see what flowers and insects are to be found then. I saw the dried seed cases of bluebells. I just hope that whoever owns the land doesn't decide to put a herd of cows in there. It is so rare these days to find an undisturbed meadow. There were grasshoppers and crickets everywhere, but as you can imagine, as soon as I approached for a close-up with the camera, they were off! I also found a kind of snail that I have never seen before: it looked like a pond snail, but was in the middle of the field. I shall try to identify it. J went there a few days ago, and a deer suddenly bounded out of the bracken in front of him.)

Chastleton



I went up to The Cotswolds on Thursday last week so that I could enjoy the area for a day before the vintage fair on Saturday, and decided to visit a house that I had last seen over 20 years ago. Come with me on a little tour of this fascinating place, which has essentially remained unchanged since the early 17th Century.....



Chastleton Manor, near Moreton-in-marsh in Oxfordshire, was built between 1607 and 1612 by prosperous wool merchant  Walter Jones; the Cotswolds at the time was a region famous for the quality of its wool.


Today there are still sheep grazing in the field as you pass the honey-coloured dovecote and approach Chastleton through the stone archway......



A rare gem of a Jacobean country house, Chastleton was owned by the same increasingly impoverished family until 1991, when the National Trust took it into its care. For nearly 400 years the interiors and contents gradually succumbed to the ravages of time with virtually no intrusion from the 21st Century.
 I spent four memorable summers in the Cotswolds in my late teens/early twenties, exploring the area by way of quiet lanes and footpaths, and it was in 1990 on one of these walks that I first saw Chastleton, and wondered who lived there. The last private owner was in fact a widow called Barbara Clutton-Brock, who lived on in the huge house for 15 years after her husband's death. For the last five years she lived completely alone save for a myriad of cats, until forced to leave due to ill health. Alan Clutton-Brock had inherited Chastleton in 1954, but the expense of maintaining the house was just so immense that only rudimentary renovation was ever done. In fact Barbara boasted that she installed wiring to part of the house herself, providing the first electricity supply. She opened Chastleton to the public on certain days, and you can still see her handwritten signs as you walk around the house. The National Trust has been cautious not to spoil the atmosphere of this remarkable place, and has only carried out essential repair work, most notably the roof. Its strategy has been to preserve Chastleton as it stands, and as a consequence you see the peeling wallcoverings and the wood-wormed windowsills and the dirty ceilings; and cobwebs! 


In the entrance porch are these lovely geraniums,




and some of Barbara's homemade signs. (Incidentally, 'yer tis' is the Cornish way of saying 'here it is', and is a reminder of Barbara's roots; her father was a Cornishman.)



 In this cosy parlour the wood panelling has unusually been painted a soft grey





The little door in the wood panelling led into a small room lined with shelves of books....(notice the one that has been left upside-down)




A table laden with found objects....garden plant labels and clock numbers



Two glimpses of the garden through an upstairs window




Barbara's bedroom still has an old-fashioned hot water bottle on the eiderdown and fashion magazines from the 70's. Barbara Clutton-Brock described Chastleton as intensely cold and told the National Trust on leaving that she had never felt warm in her life.






This bed has a hand-stitched quilt dating from 1710, with matching pillowcases. It took the lady who made it fifteen years to complete. It was made as part of her daughter's wedding trousseau, but the wedding never happened and so the quilt remained at Chastleton. Such awesomely tiny stitches!





After quite dark and dingy rooms it is an unexpected delight to emerge on the top floor of the house into this long gallery, complete with intricate plaster ceiling and floorboards polished with a thousand footfalls.....




The 'museum room' holds a motley collection of household objects: saddles and tin baths.....


an old hand loom.... these fantastic mannequins!....


 some dashing scarlet uniforms.....



and a cabinet containing all the things that have been recovered from beneath the floorboards and behind the walls of Chastleton. This is in a way the most fascinating collection to see, because it is the objects of everyday life that fall through the cracks in the floorboards: coins, playing cards, children's alphabet letters, marbles, scraps of paper and fabric....things that we are familiar with today but of course back then were hand-made of natural materials, no plastic toys here!






A hallway staircase, left as it would have been during Barbara's time in the house.



This lovely arrangement was on a table in the main dining room.




layers of peeling paint and plaster on one of the walls....




The old dresser and cast iron range in the kitchen; no modern conveniences here!



Cobwebs and an old bicycle in the cellar.....




The garden is a lot fuller than when I saw it last; flowers for cutting and lots of fruit and veg.....



 The team of volunteer gardeners were just packing up for the day 





Bees on the sedum.....



plums and apples ripening in the orchard.....



and a mulberry....



The box topiary shapes in the circular garden have been neglected over the centuries and have assumed random rounded forms. I rather like their waywardness; a reminder that it is only through the neglect forced upon Chastleton by the poverty of its inhabitants that we are able to step back into a place forgotten by time..... 







x x x

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