Saturday, January 21, 2012

I understood that

I was talking to Mama about my problems with my machine.  She said she still had hers.  We had taken a sewing class at Singer together way back when.  I asked if I could have it.  She said I could.  She said it is unused, but old.  I said I didn't care. I could take it to a Singer store and they would explain how to get the tension right on the bobbin, but I didn't think I could take a Brothers machine to a Singer place and I wasn't sure about getting somebody at WalMart to give me sewing lessons...that's where I bought the Brothers machine.
She said, "I have a lot of stuff that goes with it, too.  Well, it's not much, but it's a lot."
OK.
I'm making a sewing spot in my playroom.  I unpacked my ironing board.  It's one I found in a rental house we moved into.  So I don't know how old it is, but it wasn't new when I got it about thirty years ago. I had to buy a new cover for it because the foam part of the other cover had disintegrated.  So I spent the morning messing with the antique ironing board.
Then I decided a wallpaper table would be perfect for laying out material and patterns on.  So it took me a while to clean it up and put it together.
But the sewing area is coming along nicely, at a cost of $5 for the ironing board cover:)
Recycling is green.  Being a tightwad is big on recycling.  So I may be green because I'm cheap...wait, thrifty:)

2 comments:

  1. Last week Jonathan asked me to define thrifty, then he asked me if I was thrifty. I thought about it and went with reality and told him no. He looked at me and said "it's because of the yarn and the shoes isn't it?"

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  2. That was an astute observation. But being thrifty in some areas allows us to indulge in other areas. So I think you are selectively thrifty:)

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