Post Comment Love 21 - 23 April

Hello there, and welcome back to this week’s #PoCoLo - a friendly linky which I co-host with Suzanne, where you can link any blog post published in the last week, please remember this, posts which are older will be removed from the linky.

I hope you had a great Easter and were able to take some time out with family and friends and recharge. We know you’ll find some great posts to read, and maybe some new-to-you blogs too, so do pop over and visit some of the posts linked and share some of that love. If you were here last week it was great to have you along, if you’re new here this week we’re pleased you’ve joined us.

This weekend it’s the London Marathon, which is a really great event which goes right past my front door. It’s a weekend we look forward to, and I’m glad it’s back to its April slot in the calendar after a brief sojourn into October to accommodate the changes due to the pandemic. Since when the runners are more spread out, understandably, but it means that the time it takes to get half the competitors through is much, much longer.

This photo is from a pre-pandemic race with a couple of the entrants making their way to the start line. We don’t get so many of the fun runners in costumes coming past, though we do get some, on the whole we’ll expect to see the elite runners, followed by club runners as well as fun runners, which as a term is a complete misnomer for me at this distance!

Let’s hope the weather works out for them, and doesn’t affect their preparations too much. And if you see me on the telly, I’ll give you a wave!

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Words, text and script

I don’t usually struggle for words, but when I’m making cards they’re the one of the things I think I can improve on. And often as they are one of the final elements to be added, it can be make or break, so I’ve been looking at different options. I’m a big fan of brush lettering, but need to practice more to improve both my confidence and the finished result, and honestly it doesn’t work on all cards. I’ve die cuts and stamps for greetings, salutations and even numbers and letters of varying sizes and these work well, but again not for everything. And the longer the phrase or word the more time consuming it becomes.

I’ve tried stickers with mixed results, as I’m less keen on it being such an obvious sticker and the metallic lettering available in packs from well known craft shops again, only takes me so far. I’ve created my own text in Word and printed that, but doing this every time isn’t sustainable and I’m still working my way through a batch of greetings from a good number of years ago!

I’ve been watching the multi-media Instagrammers and admiring the phrases they use on their art, as to be fair this is a fair step up from where I currently am, and then inspiration - or rather Etsy-spiration - struck. And I found there was so much to choose from, so spending a few pennies over a pound for a download, I was off. I’ve included a snippet of the download from PixieDustFiles on Etsy below, so you can understand why I was so pleased with my (now obvious) discovery!

From the cards I’ve made recently I know that I prefer the text to be raised slightly, to stand out and add texture. Yes, I could use the sponge adhesive blocks, but I’ve also realised I can add craft foam to the whole piece and use a glue stick, which is a lot less tricky than trying to get the backing paper of such tiny adhesive blocks I can tell you!

Weighted down with a variety of boxes

So with a patchwork of saved-from-other-projects craft foam stuck on the back of my printed sheet I was almost ready to go. All I needed to do to test my theory was to make sure they’d stuck - hence the random pile of boxes - and to cut them up. I started off with the scissors, and that worked well but was, as you can imagine, slow. So I tried with my guillotine and had some success with that. In the end though I reverted back to the scissors as there was something really mindful about creating these little adornments.

Scissors on my craft mat alongside a pile of words/phrases cut into strips

And a tip for cutting things out - which I know sounds obvious - but use the whole length of the scissor’s blade, not just the tip. The less you open and close the ‘jaws’ means the less scope there is for changing your cutting line, so you’ll have straighter, cleaner lines, assuming you position the scissors correctly. And of course this goes for whatever you’re cutting, it really does make a difference,

The words/phrases are ready to use and stored in a black Charbonnel & Walker 007 Dry Martini Truffle (round) box

So now I have a box of ready made adornments for cards and collages, and along the way I spent some time mindfully fully focussed on the task at hand, so a win-win all round.

I’ve learnt too, these used standard paper and printer settings, I’d be keen to try this on card, or even photography paper to see how that works, and I’m also thinking about creating my own text files, so I can get exactly what I want. And not surprisingly the section of foam that was less ‘patchworked’ worked better, and was easier to cut the individual phrases even though I’d tried to make sure the joins were carefully aligned.

A little bit of inspiration goes a long way doesn’t it?

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Looking ahead to the Gardeners' World Spring Fair and more

* I have been provided a pair of tickets to the Gardeners’ World Spring Fair, and also for entry to Exbury Gardens & Steam Railway from Gardeners’ World and Exbury Gardens respectively, therefore all posts from these visits will be marked as 'Ad’ though as usual my views and opinions are very much my own.

All of a sudden, it’s next week. I hope those that are exhibiting are a lot more on top of things than I am, otherwise it won’t be much of a show at all…

I’m fully expecting to return with many, many photos and information to share - and I can’t wait. It’ll be good to visit a part of the country we haven’t been to for a while. We used to have a favourite place with self-catering lodges just outside Ringwood that we went to a few times, but things change, and the small independently run spot closed. I think we last visited the New Forest back in 2011, before I even started blogging, but not quite in the physical photo era. I’m sure lots has changed, but I’m also sure lots will have stayed the same.

At the Spring Fair

It’ll be my first time visiting the Gardeners’ World Spring Fair, I’ve been to Gardeners’ World Live in Birmingham a couple of times and it’s always a brilliant day out, so I’m expecting this one to be just as good, and just as inspiring as well as tiring. I’m especially looking forward to:

  • The Hillier Secret Garden: inspired by The Secret Garden, a walk-through garden enclosed by high hedges and containing colour-coordinated plants and shrubs portraying the movement of the sun during a spring day. It already sounds magical.

  • Paul Stone’s showcase garden Theatre of Greens: the garden will be packed with veg and edible plants, alongside a programme of daily talks hosted by Chris Bavin and feature ‘grow your own’ gurus. I do like a spot of edible growing, though have done very little of this since our house has been on the market, which makes admiring someone else’s work even more enjoyable.

  • All of the Beautiful Borders which offer inspiration for small gardens and challenging spaces, the theme is ‘My Garden Escape’, and as I said before this is the part of the shows where MOH despairs of me, I like to see them all and can be quite methodical about making sure I have seen everything. And I mean literally everything.

  • Budget-friendly gardens: I’m looking forward to seeing the budget-friendly gardens the horticultural students will create under the expert eye of mentor Cherry Carmen, the award-winning garden designer, a Gold Award at BBC Gardeners’ World Live.

I’m sure we’ll also spend some time time checking out the talks and information available from the Gardeners’ World Live Stage. I know that Frances Tophill is due to be at the show on Friday, so I’ll be looking out for her, and of course the BBC Good Food Market is also taking place, and we’d be foolish to resist that.

Plus two new-to-me gardens to visit

As well as all of that, the Spring Fair is held at Beaulieu so all of their attractions are available too. Hopefully we’ll have the time (and energy) to see the grounds and gardens - at the top of my list is the Victorian Kitchen Garden and Alice’s Adventure in Wonderland Topiary, as I am rather partial to both of these. No doubt, we’ll try to visit as many of the gardens as we can, and make time to see the National Motor Museum. It seems I’m also a closet petrol-head, as we’ve also visited motor museums in Munich (BMW World) and in the Lake District (the Lakeland Motor Museum), both of which are fantastic. For some reason, neither of those visits have made it here, I’m not sure why - maybe I’ll do something about that at some point!

The other new-to-me garden is Exbury Gardens & Steam Railway which celebrates ‘more than 100 years of horticultural excellence’. The gardens were created by Lionel de Rothschild in 1919 and still managed by the family today. It’s famous for its displays of rhododendrons, azaleas and camellias, so hopefully we will be able to see them starting to bloom, as I suspect they may not be quite as advanced this year with the chilly and wet spring we seem to be having.

I also hope to check in on the wisteria in the Sundial Garden but I’m not sure if we’ll get the full wisteria experience, we may be a month too early. And while I’m a closet petrol-head, MOH likes a railway or two - we brought home track, engines and all sorts from his childhood railway adventures, which he assures me will be on eBay at some point. So he's especially interested in the Steam Railway, the Rhododendron Line (let’s hope he doesn’t spend the day calling it the RosieDendron Line, though I’m not holding my breath), with its three engines and ten carriages all named after the Rothschild family. The railway meanders through the garden, and steams through a tunnel modelled on the famous Gothic folly, the Clayton Tunnel is West Sussex, which MOH seemed knowledgeable about when I shared this info, I told you he liked a railway or two!

So while there’s plenty on our list already to be keeping us busy, what else would you add? It doesn’t have to be garden related, I think we might be in garden overload if we add more! And I know the New Forest has plenty more to see and visit.

* With thanks in advance to both Gardeners’ World and Exbury Gardens & Steam Railway for providing entry tickets to your event and gardens.