
Author: Janet McKee
Portrait of My Husband
A serious reader
Making an 18th Century Hussif (Sewing Kit)
A Housewife, or Hussif, is nothing more than an 18th century sewing kit. Women used them at home, and soldiers used them when serving in the military. A few years back, I made one for myself, and use it mostly at re-enactments and museum programs. It’s a very handy thing to carry, and a very easy thing to make. All you need is some appropriate cloth, and simple directions. Here’s how I make mine.
Materials
Several 1/2 yard lengths of period appropriate cloth, in various patterns. I like checks. Alternatively, you can use a single color, if you prefer.
2 yards of seam binding or bias tape, or you can make your own.
Matching thread and sewing needles.
Plastic cover from a 15 ounce margarine container.
Instructions:
Cut the following:
A. Plain color lining piece – I generally use muslin. Cut to 4″ x 11″.
B. Backing piece: fabric of…
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Postcards from my Storage Box


Lower Manhattan
A Post From My Laptop

My mother and her sisters and their dad. Omaha Nebraska? 1920’s
Textiles in Fiction: The Gown, by Jennifer Robson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This novel piqued my interest following the two recent royal weddings in England, which must have required prodigious feats of planning and organizing. Queen Elizabeth II’s own wedding took place seven decades ago, when she was still a princess and her country was grappling with the myriad deprivations caused by WWII. Discovering that the story was told from the points of view of the embroiderers of the wedding dress clinched the deal, and I raced through this fascinating book, enthralled by the details of the experiences of the ordinary women who created this most important gown. The narrative unfolds in two far apart years and places, London during 1947 and Toronto in 2016.
Norman Hartnell functioned as couturier to the royal family during the 40’s and 50’s, and he and his army of seamstresses and embroiderers would create Elizabeth’s top secret wedding dress, with…
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One More Photo
On board my son’s boat treaty to go – Essex Connecticut This is the time of year for all things nautical.
Postcard – Accra Ghana
Here’s a card of Kwame Nkrumah Avenue in Accra. It has a Ghana stamp and is postmarked Accra. It is also postmarked Lagos. It is addressed to someone in Kentucky U.S.A. There is a message saying it was missent to Nigeria. This card travelled a roundabout was to its U.S recipient. Presumably it got there sometime in late summer or autumn 1965.


Still Struggling
I seem to have no control over the order in which my photos are stored. So I just can’t find the ones I want. Nevertheless below are a few images Which I found quite randomly.
I
This looks like a Hopper painting Tables for Ladies
Royal fashion? Elizabethan?
One of my handsome neighbors
Struggling With Chronological Order

This postcard was added to the photo file on June 28 2019. I had to scroll to the very bottom of my photo file. This makes me think that the photo file is in reverse order to what I want. I consider this discovery progress.

