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Quick Halloween DĂ©cor Sewing, Quilting and DIY IDEAS

I love fabric and here is a playfully bright quilt that I made with fabrics collected through the years. I just love my antique cloths pins that this quilt is hung on. Can you see the pumpkins that I long arm quilted into the layers!

It’s time for the Eerie Nights Blog HOP!!!!

Eerie Night Blog Hop

Halloween is the favorite holiday of my 20 year old son, Luke.  I have collected Halloween and Fall décor for years.  In fact, last year, there were so many bins that I donated a huge bin to his school.  I wanted to share with all of you some of our Halloween staples that have become part of our family tradition to pull out and arrange.

I also wanted to share with you some amazing playful outdoor home décor that I see around our neighborhood!

I love fabric and here is a playfully bright quilt that I made with fabrics collected through the years.  I just love my antique cloths pins that this quilt is hung on.  Can you see the pumpkins that I long arm quilted into the layers!

I love fabric and here is a playfully bright quilt that I made with fabrics collected through the years. I just love my antique cloths pins that this quilt is hung on. Can you see the pumpkins long arm quilted into the layers!

I enjoy sewing Halloween Trick or Treat Bags for my kids and have lots of extras for their friends too!  All of the trick or treat bags are interchangeable and were sometimes made to coordinate with their costume.  I had lots of fun taking these photographs!

II enjoy sewing Halloween Trick or Treat Bags for my kids and have lots of extras for their friends too! All of the trick or treat bags are interchangeable and were sometimes made to coordinate with their costume. I had lots of fun taking these photographs! Setting up tables with Halloween settings that include bright Halloween fabric table runners. This table runner was so simple to make with basic squares and actually has no batting in it so it is sewn like pillow case and then turned inside and out.

 Setting up tables with Halloween settings that include bright Halloween fabric table runners. This table runner was so simple to make with basic squares and actually has no batting in it so it is sewn like pillow case and then turned inside and out.

This is our dining table room table decorated!  The table runner is simple, just small scraps of fabric squares stitched together and bordered.  Halloween decorations are out for such a short time of year so why make something too complicated?  Upright in a glass sundae cup are table triple dipped pretzel rods in caramel, chocolate and then green dipping chocolate with an almond slice as a fingernail for a witches finger!  My kids and I love making and eating these!  The Halloween platter closest to you has double dipped caramel apples!  There is nothing like enjoying apples in the fall!  What recipes do you enjoy?  We have several and one of our favorites is caramel and chocolate dipped apples!  This year we dipped the caramel apples in expensive Peter’s Caramel and then grocery store purchased caramels.  What a difference the block of caramel from Peter’s made!  The melting point was lower so the caramel during the night didn’t slip off the apple like the inexpensive caramels.  But to tell you the truth after we dipped both sets of caramel dipped apples and then dipped them in chocolate, we really couldn’t taste much of a difference.  Just chill the apples with the dipped caramel before you leave dip them in the chocolate!  YUM!

 

This is our dining table room table decorated! The table runner is simple, just small scraps of fabric squares stitched together and bordered. Halloween decorations are out for such a short time of year so why make something too complicated?

What about right outside your dining room door!  Here are some great ideas for outdoor FUN!

Here are some great ideas for outdoor FUN! What could be more fun than a witch's legs upside down?How about just decorating your lovely gardens with some Halloween embellishments!  It doesn’t take much!  These are some old pieces of wood cut and simply painted.

How about just decorating your lovely gardens with some Halloween embellishments! It doesn't take much! These are some old pieces of wood cut and simply painted.

Hallo RIP 1600

Just add some pumpkins or gourds here or there for some Halloween Glam.

Just add some pumpkins or gourds here or there for some Halloween Glam.

These pumpkins are ready for a masquerade!

These pumpkins are ready for a masquerade!Your Halloween yard art can be as simple or complex as your imagination!

Your Halloween yard art can be as simple or complex as your imagination! Skeleton pirate with skeleton dog.

Then there is our fireplace mantles, this year I decided to go a bit smaller and simpler.  Well my boys and great nieces decorated the house this year.  They love when I say to get the orange and black bins from the garage and I love to see where they put everything!  That is some kid fun isn’t?

Then there is our fireplace mantles, this year I decided to go a bit smaller and simpler. Well my boys and great nieces decorated the house this year. They love when I say to get the orange and black bins from the garage and I love to see where they put everything! That is some kid fun isn't?

But back to the stitching, I sure had a lot of fun stitching together Rosie the Zombie in Zombie Love Fabric designed by Emily Taylor for Riley Blake Designs.  Over three feet tall she it was a blast seeing her come together.  There is a tutorial on how to construct Rose the Zombie here.

Fun stitching together Rosie the Zombie in Zombie Love Fabric designed by Emily Taylor for Riley Blake Designs. Over three feet tall she it was a blast seeing her come together.

Zoe the Zombie and Bones the Immortal Dog were also a lot of fun to create from Zombie Apocalypse Fabric Panel by Emily Taylor Designs with Riley Blake Fabrics.  Before I assembled them, I long arm quilted the panel which gave such shape and form to their personalities!

Zoe the Zombie and Bones the Immortal Dog were also a lot of fun to create from Zombie Apocalypse Fabric Panel by Emily Taylor Designs with Riley Blake Fabrics. Before I assembled them, I long arm quilted the panel which gave such shape and form to their personalities!Halloween is a time for family fun and to bring neighborhoods and communities together!  What are some of your favorite Halloween items that bring that playful feel to your family?  Remember enjoy the moment and find delight!

Zombie Quilt Fabric Ideas

The next Halloween items that I am making for my home will include a Immortal Zombie with a bit of Zombie love quilt and table runner!  Check out the fabrics that I will be using for this project!  My husband is excited to have these items completed!  Won’t they be fun!  My husband wants it to look ripped up and fun!  Any piecing or quilting suggestions?

 

Now how about a giveaway…
A beautiful thread set from
Aurifil.  Go to the Sew Incredibly Crazy to enter the Giveaway!

I hope you enjoyed your stop here
and please stop by the rest of the
hoppers for today.

Best Wishes for Lots of Eerie Playful Stitches!
Deanna Stitching Through Life

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Strengthen Parents of Special Needs Day 1: People feel just like YOU!

31 Daily Steps to Strengthen Parents of Special Needs Children

Strengthen Parents of Special Needs Children

Day 1: People feel just like YOU – We have each other!

Parents of Special Needs Children are some of the strongest people that I know.  We are a breed of people that are different from others.  We are tired, exhausted and spent being pulled in many directions.  There is enormous responsibility because no one is going to take this path with our child.

Disappointments began when we noticed that our child’s growth or development just wasn’t quite right and then more disappointments to follow when least expected.

We celebrate and appreciate moments that parents of typical children may never even notice.  We grow in ways that we never imagined, developing abilities beyond our foresight.  Being consumed taking care of others, we may not even know who we are anymore.

We may feel nervous asking ourselves are we doing too much, too little, the right thing, or are we focusing on the completely wrong thing?  We try not to step on anyone’s toes as we advocate for our children.  How do we network to figure out what is right for our child to reach their potential?

We juggle the impossible of raising our child/ren to their fullest potential, accessing resources for their development, their siblings, our spouse and finally ourselves.

I remember when my son was diagnosed with a disorder that would most likely cause significant development and medical issues for him.  I was stunned, numb while activated to search everything to learn what I needed to do to help him.  How was I stunned, numb and yet activated to a higher level than I have ever been?

During that time in our little family, our life revolved around his diagnosis.  Time passed with his disorder became just a part or appendage of our family that was a part of us.  Later we got in the rhythm of existing as a family but taking care of the specials needs when needed.  Occasionally there would be unexpected hiccups that we hoped wouldn’t impact our son.  Naturally we shifted our routine to mobilize but then those hiccups became routine.

Somewhere though I think on this path we tend to lose part of ourselves taking care of critical along with other needs of the family.  Larger life ordinary events creep in, we lose a spouse, death of a parent, divorce, remarriage, step-children, more children, etc..  We once again shift our family unit and the needs of our unique family into these unexpected events.

Something happens to us as we drive and push the momentum of caring for so many others that we sometimes stop feeling or at times feel too much.  We disappear, become invisible and our needs …. well our needs – we don’t even think about our needs anymore. That is when I have seen us lose something deep within us.

Then we become so strong and caring for a chronic disorder that people don’t come around to help anymore.  We are long forgotten and even avoided.  When someone asks us how we are doing or how our child or family is, they are being polite but don’t really want to know and truthfully couldn’t even imagine what our world is even like.

We need less strength at time and allow ourselves to soften to feel parts of the world that we don’t even notice passing by us.  It is then that we begin to reach out and participate in them again.

I will be writing for the next 31 days in the month of October about strategies that can enable us to avoid chronic dullness or burnout as caregivers of long term disorders.

I’ve been a parent of a special needs child/ren since 1996 and I may have another 50 more years ahead of me.  As parents of special needs children, we can relate to each other in ways that our own extended family members can’t possibly understand.

We are all in different stages of this journey.  Let’s break those stages down and when a stage might return we can understand what we need.  I want to help identify those stages, feelings to empower ourselves with strategies to get through those stages in the healthiest way possible.

I want to learn from all of you too, your comments and shared journey is important.  I learn from my experiences and other caregivers I know with special needs children and what strengthens them.

I want you to know that I know you are out there and even though what I may speak of in a particular stage may not be you, I want to learn how you get through it.  I have crossed paths with many exhausted  caregivers that just didn’t know where their next drop of energy would come from.  We spend a couple hours sharing and I think we both go our separate paths strengthened.

I will share the deepest part of my heart with you and I hope that you will feel comfortable sharing parts of yourself.  I have been through a lot; have seen a lot and I am certain that you have too.  Share your story… share your heart and what has helped you during different parts of your journey.  We will all grow together…  you can comment below or email me personally at deanna@stitchesquilting.com  For this first post please know that there are many of us that feel different but similar things at different times and find comfort that we are not alone.

Let’s start this journey together and identify more strategies for our future.  Let’s not just exist but live uniquely as we navigate the windy paths.  Each day will have a message and then printables that you can print off and write down how your unique path has carved you and how you have carved out your own journey.

All the BEST!

Deanna

For the 31 post summary of Strengthening Parents of Special Needs Children click here.

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Are You Worried About Your Children? Boundaries, Motivation, Anxiety, Pornography?

Worried about children Uplift Families

Are You Worried About Your Children? Are you overwhelmed not knowing what the best thing is to do?  Or completely bewildered how to raise children in this day in age.

The climate of raising a family has completely changed from raising my 22 year old son to now my 14 year old son.  My girlfriends and I are just stunned at how different it is!  Need a new way to look at the challenges of raising a family then allow Matt Townsend (Setting Boundaries), Brad Barton (Resilient Kids), Carmen Rasmusen Herbert (Kid’s Self-esteem), Clay Olsen (Effects of Pornography), Lucy Delgadillo (Money Talks) with a Special Musical Guest of Joshua Creek INSPIRE YOU!  You will not be disappointed and NEED this Parenting Evening to get you going!

Last Chance to purchase a couple’s date night or individual tickets with dinner for this Saturday, September 19, 2015 for the 2015 Uplift Families Parenting Conference.  With Stitches Quilting Coupon $5.00 off Code of Stitches2015  your couple ticket will only be $20.00 and an individual ticket $10.00.  Click above to purchase your ticket now before it is sold out!

2015 Uplift Parenting Conference

 

Buy Ticket Now Uplift Parenting Conference

There will also be resourceful exhibits at the Thanksgiving Point, Show Barn set up for you to obtain additional community information available here in Utah.  Don’t miss out! Remember not only can YOU do hard things but YOUR kids can do hard things too! We can raise better children, families and communities together!

Deanna Stitching Through Life

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Reading to a Child Wrapped in a Quilt of Love – Increasing Literacy with Quilting Works!

Quilting for Literacy


Quilt Reading What could be better than reading to a child wrapped in a kid friendly quilt?
Reading couldn’t be more important to instill in our children; so making reading warm, friendly, and cozy in a kid friendly quilt just couldn’t be more ideal!  They feel your love and warmth as you read to your children or grandchildren wrapped up in a quilt together.  Not only can the quilt be used to cover eyes with anticipation, but the reading draws you and your child closer together.  There are so many fantastic books to read!  There is reading to babies, toddlers, grade school children, middle school and even high school teens.  Maybe by that time we will need two quilts, one for us and one for the teen!  The books to choose from are just endless in each of these age ranges.  Each of our children have had their favorites and for Christmas one year we purchased a copy of their favorite childhood book, signed the front of the book with memories of reading the book with the child and how the book ties into the beauty of their individuality.  What a great way to make your children feel loved and important to you than setting aside the time to read with them and enter their world with books that interest them.

Another way to help a child feel loved and appreciated is to make them a child friendly quilt to read those books in! TIP 1: Fancy quilts are not necessary; they will appreciate anything!  TIP 2: A great way to learn how to quilt is to make a quilt for a child.  That is one of the ways that I learned how to quilt was to quilt for my children along for my nieces and nephews.  I love to do the quilting of the quilt with them right along side me.  No surprises because I want them to see the way steps to build a quilt and constructed.

Quilt Reading Set 2TIP 3: A child loves to watch a loved one make something extra special for them.  Children playing along aside you as you piece the quilt top together is ideal. They can help in whatever way they can.  My children loved to see me make a quilt for them.  TIP 4: My children loved to help with picking out fabrics, designing a pattern, cutting pieces, ironing and sometimes piecing bits of the quilt together with guidance.  All the children that I have done this with have enjoyed every aspect of the project, although when they tire of things and get distracted with other items, that gives me the time to get some real work in.  TIP 5: Sometimes I involve them in the initial process and then as I build the quilt together, I continually show them it as it grows into what you designed together.  They are just marveled…. marveled that you would do something like that for them and feel loved as you do it.

TIP 6: Now we don’t want to make the quilt too difficult and keep the pattern simple so the process goes quickly and it gets finished never becoming a UFO.  TIP 7: The other reason we want to keep things simple is we want to get to the reading part of snuggling up with that child and read a book!  We dayQuilt Reading Set 5dream that possibly this quilt will be the quilt that they drag everywhere feeling that safe loved feeling when they are sick, traveling, or creating good memories with.  TIP 8: Do we really need to hand stitch the binding?  No, we don’t because if one of those hand stitches get worn out with use, then that binding is going to start to unravel.  Can’t you just picture those cute little fingers irresistibly fingering a worn spot with the binding not attached to the back and the batting now showing!  Do we really want unraveling quilts?


Quilt Reading Set 3TIP 9:
Some tips with piecing the quilt…. too many things to come apart and become vulnerable with time.  Kids appreciate the memories that these quilts bring and treasure them so keep it simple so they stay intact.  TIP 10: Thinking of hand quilting that project? No, resist the urge, the quilt is small but once again we really dream of them wanting this quilt when they are sick and washed properly without jeopardizing the construction of it.  TIP 11: So use this opportunity to try a new machine piecing, machine binding, or machine quilting technique that we have been curious to try.  AND for goodness sake…. please let’s just domestic machine quilt the quilt.

TIP 12: Don’t send the quilt to a long armer for months waiting for completion.  TIP 13: I promise you can quilt a child’s quilt.  Easy peesy and you will love it too – so lower those feed dogs on your domestic sewing machine.  Quilting three layers together is NOT difficult – I will teach you just how to do it.  TIP 14: Now we have to resist the urge to fuss over perfection, remember ladies we are NOT submitting this to a quilt show or entering it into the county fair.  This quilt is for the beloved child in your life and you know what…. I bet if you are a great lady then there are probably lots of beloved children you have around you that you want to give a quilt of literacy to.

Literacy Message to NickTIP 15: So let’s keep everything simple because the point of these quilts is to make those kids feel loved and to read to these kids we adore!  You need time and money to run to get a book that you will to read to this child with this quilt.  TIP 16: Don’t fuss over quilting details because you really want to sign the front of the book with a personal message that the child can read emphasising how important reading and the child is to you.  Below you can see my 21-year-old son’s favorite book was Good Night Gorilla, and you can see the message I wrote for him in the images.  I not only tell him that I love him, that reading is important but I also share why I think that book was so important to him because he had the same mischievous snuggly spirit as the Gorilla in the book, wanting everyone included and part of the party!  TIP 17: An extremely shocking tip for you, please hand print the message in the front of the book instead of cursive.  Kids are no longer learn how to read cursive in schools…. yes one of those lovely cut backs.  It’s okay…. just be aware of it so that your adorable child will eventually read the book and your message too.

TIP 18: As you work on the quilt, think of things to jot down for front of the book that is unique to the child and your love of reading – Post It notes are handy in my sewing station for this.

Quilt Reading Set 6TIP 19: Now picking out the fabric…. find out what the child’s favorite colors are…. dive into your stash… I know you have those colors in there somewhere.  TIP 20: You probably don’t need to spend any money whatsoever.  TIP 21: If you are new to quilting, be sure to go to a quilt shoppe or visit an online quilt shoppe to purchase fabrics.  The fabric dyes are stable and the fabrics shrink together.  TIP 22: Have a special fabric that is a family heirloom then incorporate it into the quilt!  I promise… you don’t need to follow a pattern.  TIP 23: Design your own and sweet ladies out there quilting is just about math and it is simple math – you can do it.  I have an entire series of videos that I plan to create to help you through every ounce of this process and then I’ll be learning from you.  I LOVE to learn from other quilters!  They are the best ladies in the world – gentle spirits, always willing to share.  TIP 24:  I know this is controversial… but you do not HAVE to pre-wash your fabrics!  I don’t saving loads of time with every single one of the quilts in these pictures never pre-washed.   Guess what?  That is more time reading than washing and then ironing those fabrics.  Let the fabric, batting and everything else shrink together after you complete the quilt. TIP 25:  You do not need to wash the quilt prior to giving it as a gift.  I never have and guess what… every quilt that I gifted was loved and then washed many time.  That saves you more time and I like the way the sizing in the fabric feels.

TIP 26: Now what could be a family heirloom – grandpa’s ties or handkerchiefs.  There are so many items in your home to cut up and put into a quilt making your gift even more special than you ever dreamed.  Remember when you were newly married or a new mom and you just had to get creative.  TIP 27: Pull yourself back to that creative place and pull out things that you would like to see become an heirloom within an heirloom.

Attached are pictures of many quilts that I have made for my children and the books I LOVED to read to them.  TIP 28: Notice the quilts are simple – I made them fast and I wasn’t worried about them being perfect.  TIP 29: The purpose of the quilt was to get it in the hands of the child I loved.

Quilt Reading Set 2TIP 30: I think my children, my nieces and nephews sincerely felt valued when I made a quilt for them.  I’ve made quilts for the friends of my children to comfort during difficult times they faced for instance, a parent passing away to cancer in 6th grade to have something special representing memories.  TIP 31: Giving a quilt is more than giving a gift of love it is giving part of yourself to that child permanently.

May we all celebrate the opportunity to quilt for loved ones or just special kids out there that need a little extra love.  TIP 32: Let’s combine those quilts with a book to read because quilting truly can increase literacy.  Right now I am enjoying curling up at night reading Jonathon Living Seagull by Richard Bach with my 13-year-old son.  TIP 33: Not all children are natural readers but as life changes and my 21-year-old son is a now a ferocious reader and even though he isn’t living in my house, I know my quilts are with him in his apartment at college and that dreamer of a son of mine is curled up in the quilts I sent with him to college reading those books.  The reason I know is that I’ve seen him time after time reading in his room with several quilts propping him up and covering him to make him comfortable in his reading positions.  TIP 34:  Make the quilt kid size friendly.  It doesn’t need to be a crib size or a twin size…..  there are other sizes… you just make it up!  I like to think the size of the quilt is a Reading size…. something they will drag around the house with them.  That size to me is maybe around 40 to 50 inches wide by 60 to 70 inches in length.  Just wing it – you don’t have to be precise!  TIP 35:  Remember after you give the gift, you can always read to your children or grandchild via FaceTime or Skype.  Learn how to use the technology that is available so that reading becomes a past time that goes away.  We can still read to our loved ones even if they are far away!

May we enjoy the process of creating quilts and sharing our quilts with loved ones.  May our quilts support our families as they grow up and then as our children launch in life knowing we did our very best at balancing being a good mother and parent to them with all the needs of life.  Most of all…. my motto… may the work of your hands in every way delight the souls of others to help them grow the ways they need to.  More than anything kids in the world need to feel loved and accepted – the kids in the world today face more than you can ever imagine.  I’m dedicating this blog to affirming that the quilts we make for our loved ones make a difference and they really can improve literacy when we let them know how important the individual is to us along with how important reading is to us too.  Let’s not allow reading to become a pastime with all the distractions of the world but use our cozy quilts to actually read with our loved ones and increase the self-worth of those we love.

Please share what are some of your most cherished books or quilts that you want or have shared with you loved ones!  Let me know if you want a pattern or some fabrics for the quilts above.  I can do any tutorials for you on my YouTube channel of making any of these quilts or a particular skill you want to build.  Just let me know and I can’t wait to hear from all of you!  Please I am very respectful to all quilters and their desire to pre-wash fabrics or wash quilts prior to giving them away.  We all have different styles and please don’t let any of my time-saving tactics turn you off from quilting with literacy.  It is always up to you to decide your style of quilting.  I’ve always been a busy mom with kids everywhere and very often quilt for my love of others and to relax and unfortunately at the time of life with many demands and have to get to the hands on of parenting.  So many seasons of life and we must enjoy each and every one of them!

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Quilting is Therapy!

Quilting is Therapy Stitches Quilting

Quilting is Therapy Stitches QuiltingQuilting is Therapy!  When I had my storefront quilt store in Yuma, Arizona, I featured a local customer as Quilter of the Month and showcased her quilts in the shoppe.  It was an absolute delight to see the gorgeous quilts come out of the closets and drawers to hang them beautifully around the store.  I couldn’t wait each month to see the unique style of each quilter unveiled each to learn more about her.

One gal that I approached for Stitches Quilting “Quilter of the Month” having her quilts showcased in a future month was hesitant.  She said that she loved piecing quilt tops together but that she rarely quilted and finished them.  I told her it did not matter, that we wanted to see and display all her work.  She said she didn’t care about finishing them because each quilt top of quilting was her therapy!

I agree 300% with that.  Quilting is therapy!  There is nothing like being discouraged in life and thoughtfully pause with beautiful fabrics, and threads to execute something your mind has envisioned.  There have been many times that I have felt so downtrodden not knowing what to do, but in this confusion I would quilt and create while thoughtfully considering how to react to an event in my life.  I remember those quilts so vividly and I am so deeply attached to those stitches.  It was through those stitches that I decided how to rise above a situation that was challenging.  Often I made quilts for other people at those times and I think that by serving another through my stitching, I was able to put my troubles into perspective.

I remember quilting while I was expecting my second child knowing that he had severe special needs (tuberous sclerosis) and wanting to wrap this child with my love when he arrived.  I remember making a quilt when my little brother died to comfort my mother the first Christmas that he would not be with us.  I remember making my mother an intricate quilt and so lovingly picking out fabrics and designs when we learned of her diagnosis of Lou Gehrig’s disease.  I made that quilt to manifest my love for my mother; that quilt laid over her as she progressed through the disease and I cared for her until her death.  I cherish that quilt now in my home representing the bond of our mother daughter relationship.

I remember being bewildered at the thought that I was quickly going facing a divorce with three small children to care for.  The youngest was three months old and the second oldest with very severe special needs.  The thought of the challenges ahead overwhelmed me, but what did I do?  I quilted.  I quilted a simple quilt for my special needs son and as I stitched I knew that I would have the strength, dignity and resolve to face the challenges ahead.Simple Quilt for Luke

I recall quilting in times of joy and anticipation to celebrate moments.  I remember vividly creating quilts with carefully selected fabrics for people who I loved.  I remember thoughtfully selecting fabrics to make a quilt for my fiancé and current husband.  I wanted him to know how much I cared for him and appreciated his love.  He was so delighted to see me come off an airplane with a quilt tied in a bow hoping that it was something for him.  It was for him and how I enjoyed giving him something I created with my hands to represent my devotion to him.Quilt for my Fiance

Quilting is Therapy…  there are so many challenges that we may face quietly stitching away while deciding our resolve or approach.  Quilting is Therapy… in the friendships that we create as we stitch, share and dream together.  I am so grateful for such a beautiful healthy hobby to embrace that helps me become a better person while doing something positive.  Whether we stitch alone or with others, pull out a sewing machine, let it hum and sooth your troubles to become peace within your soul.  Allow yourself to lay fabrics on the floor next to each other for hours deciding upon a beautiful combination that will express what you need to share.  Give yourself the permission that no matter what you will face in life that you can still create and feel joy.

Stitch, find peace and be happy,

With Love,

Deanna