Thursday, January 31, 2019
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Make Homemade Fabric Valentine's Day Cards - Tutorial Tuesday
Learn how to make your own handmade Valentine's Day cards from your scrap fabrics!
For this project you will need:
- Fabric strips, 1” to 1 ½” wide in varying lengths
- 8” x 10” piece of muslin for foundation
- Cardstock
- Iron
- Pinking shears and scissors
- Sewing machine
- Matching thread
- Envelopes
- Heart template – make your own or download HERE or HERE
Disclosure: Deb's Days is a participant in affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to affiliated sites. This means that, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. Your purchase helps support my work in bringing you new sewing and crafting content.
Find the how to video for making these fabric scrap handmade Valentine's Day note cards project right here:
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Sewing for Good Sunday
I have to confess.
Sewing for Good Sundays are turning into Sewing for Good Sundays and Mondays and Tuesdays and even Sewing for Good Wednesdays. Once I get started I just can't stop sewing!
Today I finished piecing together three more quilts tops for the Quilts for Kids organization.
Add those to these others I put together this month:
Sewing for Good Sundays are turning into Sewing for Good Sundays and Mondays and Tuesdays and even Sewing for Good Wednesdays. Once I get started I just can't stop sewing!
Today I finished piecing together three more quilts tops for the Quilts for Kids organization.
And I now have eight quilt tops done. And I'm not finished yet. I used up some of the scraps to make scrappy blocks:
I'm also working on some other blocks (not pictured). Whew. I just might be sorry I'm doing so many tops at once. While I can just zip through putting them together, once I hit the cutting batting and backing stage and then the quilting stage things will slow way down. And I'll probably feel more like the turtle than the rabbit.
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Disembarking a Cruise Ship
While you’ve been able to spend several days with no responsibilities
there’s nothing like directions on how to disembark the ship to bring you back
to reality. A day or so before the end of the cruise you will receive
information about the disembarkation process.
It encompasses a multitude of end-of-cruise details:
Settling of Accounts
All accounts must be settled before leaving the ship. If a credit card has
been left on file there is no need to check out as you would in a hotel. Cash
or check accounts may require a visit to the passenger services desk the
evening before departure to settle up. In some cases any beverage purchases on
that last morning will have to be paid in cash because the account has already
been closed out. On other ships cruise cards may be used for purchases up until
the moment you are scanned off the ship.
Times for Vacating Cabin and Departing Ship
The same day you are getting off the ship the next set of passengers will
be getting on. Before anyone can leave, the ship has to wait for clearance from
local authorities and customs officials. Sometimes customs are ahead of
schedule and sometimes they are behind. Be ready to be flexible. Because
getting everyone off the ship at the same time is as impossible as boarding
everyone at the same time, passengers are assigned disembarkation times. The
assigned time is dependent on flights, post-cruise tours, and whether the
cruise line will be delivering your luggage to the cruise terminal or if you
are carrying off your own bags.
The cabin stewards start prepping cabins for the new passengers right away.
Most likely you will be required to leave the cabin earlier than the time you
are scheduled to leave the ship. For example, you may be asked to be out of the
cabin by 8:00 a.m. yet not scheduled to leave the ship until 9:45 a.m.
Meeting Location
You may be assigned a meeting place to wait at until your disembarkation
time. We prefer to wait in a quiet spot, usually by the pool, and then go to
the assigned lounge a few minutes before our scheduled time. Why rush, having
your mind already racing back home when you can sit in the warm sunshine on a
lounge chair, squeezing in another hour of vacation time?
Breakfast Hours
Usually room service isn’t available the last morning and the buffet can be
super-busy with everyone eating at about the same time. There have been
occasions when we ordered cereal and fruit from room service the day before and
saved the food to eat on that last morning. Beats the craziness found in the
breakfast locations on disembarkation day.
Luggage tags
The procedure for getting your luggage off the ship is different than any
you may have experienced before. You are assigned color-coded luggage tags that
control the flow of passengers off the ship and assist you in finding your
luggage within the cruise terminal. Attach the provided luggage tags to your
bags and place the bags outside the cabin door on the last evening of the cruise. Crew collect luggage from
hallways all throughout the night and organize it based on the tag's color. You
will not see your bags again until the next morning in the terminal. Keep your
carry-on with you. Be sure to have the obvious items like medications and
passports in the carry-on, but don't forget the clothes you'll be wearing the
next day. Don’t be caught in pjs because you forgot to pack clothes to wear off
the ship! Take everything out of the safe and leave it open. Hold onto your
cruise card because you will need it for one last scanning off the ship.
When you collect your luggage in the terminal it usually will not be on a carousel
like at the airport but placed side by side grouped by the luggage tag color.
There may be several hundred bags in your luggage tag group so double check the
bag carefully before leaving with it. There are porters available in the area
for passengers needing luggage assistance.
If you can manage all your luggage on your own you may have the option to
take it off the ship yourself. For those driving home from the port or with an
early morning flight this walk-off disembarkation can usually get you on your
way earlier. But if you plan on carrying all your luggage off the ship, think
very carefully about the logistics of it. Multiple large suitcases and
carry-ons being dragged down a carpeted hall. Fitting into super-busy
elevators. Finding a place to keep suitcases during breakfast. Rolling those
suitcases up or down the gangway. Down another even busier and slower elevator
in the terminal. Are you nimble and fit and patient enough? Are your travel
companions?
Customs and Border Protection
When returning to the United States passengers report to Customs and Border
Protection in the cruise terminal where passports are presented to officials.
As border security regulations fluctuate other screenings may be instituted. If
disembarking in another country additional requirements may exist.
Comment Card/Survey Information
Comment cards and online surveys are frequently used by cruise lines to
assess the service received. Positive comments are a way for personnel to
receive raises and promotions. If someone went out of their way for you, use
the comment card to let the cruise line know. Comment cards can be filled out
at any time during the cruise with online surveys typically happening
post-cruise.
Arrangements for Passengers with Disabilities
Passengers needing wheelchair assistance may be asked to be at the meeting
location a few minutes before the assigned departure time. If you think you
need this service, use it. Staff will wheel you off the ship, through customs,
and to your transportation. My husband frequently uses this service and has
been pleased with the attentiveness of staff and speed of the process.
Disembarkation Tips
The morning you leave the ship can be hectic. Remember to:
·Pack your patience along with
your carry-on.
·Keep medications and
documentation with you.
·Remove items from the safe.
·Be out of the cabin when
requested.
·Enjoy the last of the cruise ship
meals.
·Wait in a nice location before
going to the assigned lounge.
·Have your cruise card ready for
scanning.
·Collect your luggage in the
terminal.
·Have passports ready for customs.
·Be on time for arranged
transportation and allow plenty of time to get to the airport.
Take one last look at the ship.
Think about the trip.
Are you in for another one? If so, maybe I’ll see you there.
Excerpt from CRUISING WITH CONFIDENCE: HOW TO BE A FIRST-TIME CRUISER WITHOUT LOOKING LIKE ONE
Excerpt from CRUISING WITH CONFIDENCE: HOW TO BE A FIRST-TIME CRUISER WITHOUT LOOKING LIKE ONE
Friday, January 25, 2019
The Friday 15
I love that our library checks out eBooks. I don't even have to go into the library. I can just sit at home and check out the book and read it on my iPad. Easy peasy. This month I've been reading a new book called The Year of Less by Cait Flanders. (Actually the full title is The Year of Less: How I Stopped Shopping, Gave Away My Belongings, and Discovered Life is Worth More Than Anything You Can Buy in a Store but I went with, well, less.) Reading books like this one provides motivation to keep going.
Motivation to keep purchases to a minimum.
Motivation to keep donating/discarding 15 items each week.
This week's pile is a hodgepodge of things. Mostly they are things I had stuck in the bottom drawer of my nightstand. Basically another pile of junk I don't need.
Motivation to keep purchases to a minimum.
Motivation to keep donating/discarding 15 items each week.
This week's pile is a hodgepodge of things. Mostly they are things I had stuck in the bottom drawer of my nightstand. Basically another pile of junk I don't need.
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Sew Quick and Easy Homemade Potholders - Tutorial Tuesday Flashback
In the spirit of simplicity, for the month of January I am re-sharing some of my most popular YouTube videos. Today we have a quick and easy potholder tutorial from seven years ago, almost to the exact day. It's also the tutorial where our kitty thought she needed to provide her own commentary at the two minute mark.
Disclosure: Deb's Days is a participant in affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to affiliated sites. This means that, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. Your purchase helps support my work in bringing you new sewing and crafting content.
Click on the step-by-step tutorial video to learn how to make your own quick and easy fabric potholders in minutes:
I really do miss my kitty.
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Sewing for Good Sunday
I just don't get it. How can I love two things that are so completely opposite of each other both so very much? So much I would never be able to choose between the two.
Cruising and crafting are my loves.
When I'm cruising I love each and every day. I love sea days. I love port days. I love visiting new ports and I love visiting some of the same old ports. When I'm on a ship I want to stay there and never come home. (I guess that's why we sometimes are away for months at a time.)
But when I'm home I love the time I spend sewing and crafting. I love cutting fabrics. I love the machine humming as I chain piece fabrics with a straight stitch. I love the calming meandering stitching I do when I'm quilting the top. (I guess that's why some days I can be found at the sewing and cutting table for hours and hours and hours.)
But when I'm cruising I sometimes have a pang of homesickness. Not for my home itself or my bed, but for my sewing machine and fabrics. But then when I'm home I sometimes have a pang of homesickness for the ship. Maybe because the ship is like our second home. Actually, now that I think about it, the ship IS our second home.
So how does that play out for me each week? Let's take these last couple days as an example. I spent yesterday trying to find a way to get back on a ship in the next couple months. It's always exciting when you start putting a trip together! Then that planning went on the back burner for today's sewing for good projects.
Just look at all the quilt tops for the Quilts for Kids organization that are now complete:
And this one from last week:
That gives me five quilt tops made for charity just this month. Yahoo! I still need to cut backings, batting, and baste them together. Then they will be ready for me to quilt. Or I may make a few more tops and then quilt them all at the same time.
And guess what? After getting everything done today I ended the day without caring about cruising. Plop me in front of this machine every day for the rest of the winter and I'll be good.
But tomorrow I'll probably be back to planning a cruise. Ugh. Why can't I just pick one and go with it???
Cruising and crafting are my loves.
When I'm cruising I love each and every day. I love sea days. I love port days. I love visiting new ports and I love visiting some of the same old ports. When I'm on a ship I want to stay there and never come home. (I guess that's why we sometimes are away for months at a time.)
But when I'm home I love the time I spend sewing and crafting. I love cutting fabrics. I love the machine humming as I chain piece fabrics with a straight stitch. I love the calming meandering stitching I do when I'm quilting the top. (I guess that's why some days I can be found at the sewing and cutting table for hours and hours and hours.)
But when I'm cruising I sometimes have a pang of homesickness. Not for my home itself or my bed, but for my sewing machine and fabrics. But then when I'm home I sometimes have a pang of homesickness for the ship. Maybe because the ship is like our second home. Actually, now that I think about it, the ship IS our second home.
So how does that play out for me each week? Let's take these last couple days as an example. I spent yesterday trying to find a way to get back on a ship in the next couple months. It's always exciting when you start putting a trip together! Then that planning went on the back burner for today's sewing for good projects.
Just look at all the quilt tops for the Quilts for Kids organization that are now complete:
That gives me five quilt tops made for charity just this month. Yahoo! I still need to cut backings, batting, and baste them together. Then they will be ready for me to quilt. Or I may make a few more tops and then quilt them all at the same time.
And guess what? After getting everything done today I ended the day without caring about cruising. Plop me in front of this machine every day for the rest of the winter and I'll be good.
But tomorrow I'll probably be back to planning a cruise. Ugh. Why can't I just pick one and go with it???
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