Friday, October 10, 2014

Cheesemakers of Canterbury

At the Restaurant Show in London in October 2014 I tried cheeses on the Cheesemakers of Canterbury stand including cheese from goats' milk.


"Why do you have such a cumbersome name?" I asked George Ward, whose business card says he is a cheesemonger.

"Because if you type into your search engine Canterbury Cheese you get cheese from Canterbury in New Zealand, not Cheese from Canterbury in England."

Later I went back again and I tried another piece of the Goats cheese and the Brie. I asked :
"Can I eat the hard rind?"
I got the surprising and amusing reply:
"Why not? It saves the cost of buying crackers!"

Their leaflet actually states that the Chaucers Camembert is made with edible rind.

Their cheeses include:
Ashmore Farmhouse cheese (An award winning cheese handmade from British Friesian cow's milk.)
Bowyers Brie (Taste of Kent awards 2013)
Canterbury Cobble
Chaucers Camembert or Gruff
Kelly's Goats Cheese
Kentish Brie

Kelly's goat cheese is sold in Selfridges Department store, Oxford Street, London.

Lamberhurst Farm, Dargate, Faversham, Kent ME13 9ES
Tel: 01227 751741

www.cheesemakersofcanterbury.co.uk
Facebook cheesemakersofcanterbury
twitter @cheesesofkent
Here's their card.

This picture shows the huge selection of cheese at The Goods Shed, Station Road, Canterbury, Kent CT2 8AN
www.thegoodsshed.co.uk (market)




Chaucer's tales of the Canterbury pilgrims and Canterbury cathedral are other historical associations with the area.

Angela Lansbury writes on travel, food and drink and public speaking and English. See other posts and blogs and books and poetry by Angela Lansbury on
Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube.




Canadian Salmon served on a plank for your party or dinner date

Cedar Planked Atlantic Salmon
I tasted it at the Restaurant Show in London. Delicious. I regret not ordering it at the time. it comes in three flavours, Maple & BBQ sauce, maple and Hickory sugar and spices, or Maple and Hickory.
The cedar boards are from Canadian renewable forest. Their maple surer is made in Nova Scotia.




DJM also bring salmon burgers and salmon rissole appetisers. They sell to the public and to chefs, for grilling and barbecuing. You can buy the salmon on the plank from Ocado frozen and use it later, e.g. for Xmas dinner.

It arrives frozen. The cooking instructions I saw include for fan-assisted oven, or barbecue or combo-steamer.

Distributed by
DJMFood Solutions Ltd
68 South Lambeth Road
London SW8 1RL
info@djmfood solutions.co.uk
www.djmfoodsulutions.co.uk
cedarbaygrilling.com

www.Ocado.com
At the time of writing (Oct 2014) Ocado are offering £20 off your first order and free midweek deliveries for a year.
I checked in again straight to the salmon on a plank page and got free anytime deliveries for three months. Minimum spend £80.
I read the reviews on Ocado. Some buyers thought it was wonderful. One thought the plank was too thin. Another thought it was a great novelty for a party.

Check out the Ocado website for the latest deals in your area.

Finally, if you can't yet wait for these to be delivered, and can't be bothered to cook because you are too busy working, try Waitrose Sticky BBQ kiln roasted Scottish salmon fillets. Look for special offers. If they are too dry, eat them with beetroot and the beetroot juice.



Angela Lansbury is an author who writes about travel, food and drink; also an award winning pubic speaker and speech trainer and English teacher. See more about Angela, her writings and travels on Lulu.com, YouTube, LinkedIn and Facebook.  

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Washing silk - the results

I hate buying anything which says dry clean only and normally buy washable items unless they are very cheap so that if I wore them once and then ruined them in the wash it would be no great loss financially.

I recently dyed a matching top and skirt. They were a dull grey-green. I decided to try just the top first, and tie-dye it. I did not like the new colour which was simply a darker grey-green. The top was too tight on the arms after washing.

So I wore the skirt. Then I looked at some cotton I had dyed navy blue and really liked the navy. I decided to dye the top, and try to stretch it - failing that cut the back vertically with pinking shears and wear it under a jacket.

Still fearful of spilling the colour or shrinking the skirt, I dyed the wider skirt hem to match the top, with a bit of tie-dyeing. As I progressed, it looked as though the skirt was shrinking faster than its lining. I pulled on the skirt to try to bring it below the lining.

Then I looked in Wikipedia at the article on silk and it said that silk shrinks 8% when washed, only 4% if dry cleaned, and can be steamed to expand again.
I pulled the fabric as I hung it on a hanger. I thought of wearing it as it dried, in the hope that my body would keep it stretched, like stretching shoes. I might have ended up encased in it unable to get out.

What's the worst that can happen? It shrinks and I have to cut it.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Find A Grave Tee-shirts, Caps, Bags and more

I looked up the grave of Crosse & Blackwell on Find A grave and then started searching and browsing through their pages.

I found this interesting link to their merchandise.
Their logo is a question mark on a gravestone.

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=storeChoices

The link takes you to the pages of Cafe Press.

Friday, September 26, 2014

What can you buy displaying a Union Jack? As a souvenir - or speech prop.

Union Jacks

Clothing
Hats.
Socks.
Teatowels.
Tee shirts for adults - men and women.
Tee shirts for children, babies, toddlers, teens.

Novelties
Cushions. Flags - ranging from tiny cake toppers, through hand-held flags, up to large ones to carry on stage to illustrate speeches or show in parades, to giant ones to hang on flagpoles for front gardens or outside hotels, tourist attractions and sports centres.
Phone covers. Posters.

Buy from where?
Kiosks on central London near stations such as Green Park which is on Piccaddilly towards Buckingham Palace.
Shops at motorway service stations.
Supermarkets, especially allied to seasonal events and one off celebrations.
Online.

Tips
If buying a tee-shirt, note whether it is cotton and washable for frequent use, or cheaper plastic or synthetic to wear once at a fancy dress party or event.




Which silk pillowcase?

I'm looking at silk pillowcases. You can get them in white, cream, red or black. Different qualities of silk. Or silk on one side, for the top, cheaper cotton underneath.

I've also looked at cushions. Cushions and pillows with embroidery look good but I find you need a flat surface under your face. So you could have the raised pattern on top during the day, turn over to the plain side at night. Or use the cushion or oversize pillow merely for decoration in the daytime, perhaps on top of a white cotton pillowcase on a second pillow.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Silk clothes, silk pillows - what sort of silk?




Glossary:

brocade - patterned thick silk used for upholstery

charmeuse - lighter than satin, one horizontal thread woven over three weft, creating shiny front and matt back, can be silk or synthetic, lighter weight than satin, often used for linings, too light for skirts because it clings to the body and is hard for amateurs to sew.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charmeuse

chiffon - ultra-thin, semi-see-through, wafts around, looks sexy and floaty, not suitable for rough wear nor sheets you will pull and kick in the night

crepe de Chine

Dupion - thick, used for upholstery

faux - French for false

habotai - light from 5 mom me to 12 momme, sheer, used for dress linings and silk painting, less expensive

Indian silk

Jacquard - threads weave in and out to make alternating matt and shiny to create a repeating picture or pattern, very common on tablecloths, napkins and upholstery

Jasmine

Jim Thomson - usually very heavy shiny silk, used for stiff jackets, expensive. You can buy it at the shop in his former home in Bangkok, the capital city of Thailand, also in Singapore in department stores and probably by mail order

momme quality/weight

mulberry - silk worms fed on mulberry leaves, so it's silk from silk worms

noil - rough thick silk with nobbly thread, soft in the sense of flexible, but not a flat surface, matt not shiny

Sand-washed silk, matt but very soft and fine or thin, feels and looks almost like suede

satin - a kind of weave with three weft or verticals, whilst the thread goes horizontally in and out, with the silk or false silk (e.g. polyester?) on top over three threads creating a smooth silky or shiny look on top, with a rougher matt look at the back

shantung

slub silk
http://vintagefashionguild.org/slub-textured-fabrics/

taffeta

Thai silk - Thick and can be shimmery with gold patterns such as the national symbol elephants, with different patterns used by different hill tribes.  Although much of the Thai so-called silk is synthetic it is so glamorous. You can see the different patterns at ebay stores online. Wraparound skirts are one size fits most and come with matching tops, sleeveless, short sleeved, long sleeved, upright Mandarin collar or Western collar, ladies blouse or gents shirt. Also similar cushions, purses, tablecloths and cloth. Scarves to match with fringed edges. Plain colour can be bought in markets such as Pat pong.

thread count

tussah

Explanations on the internet:
ebay

http://www.silkgifts.co.uk

wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charmeuse

http://www.wikihow.com/Determine-if-Silk-is-Genuine

http://www.lilysilk.com/uk/page/faq_page/identify-real-silk
Shows you how a lighted match affects real silk and synthetics.

http://www.feelingpampered.com/faqsonsilk.html

http://www.jacobsenrugs.com/silk-rug.htm

A real silk rug usually has a fringe made from the material of the rug extending, not an edging braid sewn on afterwards.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Cutprice coffee for machines, luxury at home

Nespresso
Great machines, great after ales service and huge range of coffee pods delivered fast.

If you are ordering in bulk for your home, a group of families, a club or business, you might like to do a calculation like this using current prices to check what you spend:

Coffee Pods

Nespresso 29 p
(stronger varieties 11 and 12 are 33p)
Lungo which make a longer coffee are 30p

Amazon
Cafepod £9.99/40 = 25.0p (-13.8%)
Caffesso £16.49/60 = 27.5p

Waitrose
Cafe Direct £18/40 = 45.0p (not our preferred flavour)
Smart £13.98/50 (not tried - see online reviews or judge for yourself)
Smart Decaff £14/60 = 23.3
Smart Roma £10.03/ 60 = 16.7 + £3.97 pp £14 = 23.3p

It all depends which brand you like and which deal you are getting.
For example, make up the price of your order and you might get free delivery.

See my posts on my travel blog on visiting vineyards.
Books by Angela Lansbury on lulu.com


A Nespresso machine label.

Our list to help us identify colour and strength in a hurry.




You can label the inside of the boxes if you keep them in the delivery carton.


I love the colours. Here's decaff in red capsule. 


Caffepod boxes look like you could re-use them for something - pencil holders on your desk?


It seems a shame to throw away the little foil wrappers. Maybe I could use the wrapper to carry just one chocolate, or a sugar lump, with me for a treat when travelling and eating out.

Also follow Angela Lansbury author on other blogs and Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube

Friday, September 19, 2014

Shopping In Garden Centres - Gardening gloves, Santas, Cookbooks

The Squires Garden Centres offer all sorts of goodies. They are already stocking Santas for Xmas and even gifts for next spring.

I can vouch for the Ispy books, at least the one on Trees which I use constantly when walking or on a day's outing as a passenger in a car. I think I'll go for birds next. 
I'm sure some little of big boys would like football cars or car badges. 

I loved the books, especially the tractor shaped book on the Tractor.



The cafe is popular with a queue at lunchtime.

You can book afternoon tea, £7.95 for one, £14.95 for two - but with a non-refundable £5 deposit.


Books and boot-scrapers.


Pets and fish to look at and maybe buy. If you need information on pets, their website has information on all sorts of pets such as rabbits. (But not chickens.)

Calendars and diaries for the Xmas stocking.


All kinds of j gardening gloves. I want thorn-free gloves for picking roses - must look next time.


Want a stop as well as a shop - disabled toilets.


For the keen gardener, a kneeling pad.
 For the husband who has everything, a copyable watering can.

If you can't get there, they send to catalogues and emails and offers. I got a pair of gardening gloves just for joining up and giving them my email. The last catalogue had a voucher for free bulbs to lure you in for a visit.
Their garden centres are in Stanmore, Twickenham, Windsor and other places. 
www.squiresgardencentre.co.uk



Monday, September 8, 2014

Bra sizes: band, cup, American, International, Australian

Bras on ebay come from countries around the world showing different measurements.

Here's a chart which covers International, French, Italian and Australian.

http://www.blooberry.com/bformfaq/sizeconversion.html


The next one covers American and European sizes:

http://www.sizeguide.net/bra-sizes.html

A good measuring guide for yourself:

http://www.wikihow.com/Measure-Your-Bra-Size

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brassiere_measurement

Friday, May 30, 2014

Personalised Products

What can you personalise for yourself, your business, a gift to clients, family, friends, clubs, wedding guests?
Some of the business items require a minimum order of, for example, 100.
Not practical for a birthday gift, but still feasible for a club.

In alphabetical order:

Address cards
Baseball caps
Birthday cards
Birthday cakes
Book labels (ex libris/borrowed from)
Books for children at Xmas
Clothing/Dress labels
Invitations
Key rings
Magnets
Mugs
Nametapes
Newspapers
Notebooks
Pencils
Pens
Polo shirts (with collars)
Songs for children at Xmas
Tattoos (stick on)
Umbrellas
Tee-shirts with short sleeves, sweatshirts thicker with long sleeves, heavyweight hoodies with hoods
Towels
Wine labels

ADDRESS CARDS AND LABELS:
Able label
Vistaprint

BIRTHDAY CAKES
ebay.co.uk/Cake-Top-Shop-UK
  1. Next Day Birthday Cakes - Bakerdays.com‎

    Adwww.bakerdays.com/Birthday_Cakes

    Huge range of cakes available Order online from £14.99
BIRTHDAY CARDS and e-cards
123greetings ecards
birthday.com UK cards

WINE LABELS
Your own wine labels:
http://www.spottyspoon.com
www.grogtag.com/wine-labels

See ebay and amazon.
Every few months I go back to Vistaprint for new labels or address cards and I'm amazed at the number of new products they offer. Under marketing in May 2014 I found bottle openers, can cookers, flash drives, key rings with flashlights, letter openers, rules, magnetic clips, mouse pads, stress balls and tape measures and tote bags.

A great personalised product for a member of your family, especially an elderly person who dotes on grandchildren, is their life story in a book with photos. I published a book for my auntie.
Also see my books published on lulu.com Angela Lansbury

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Goji and Acai berries

I was looking for pomegranate seeds in Morrisons, to make a Waitrose recipe for crunchy rhubarb after a previous shopping trip to Waitrose. In Morrisons I ending up buying a fresh pomegranate and was pleasantly surprised to find that pomegranates, which I had not previously liked, provided lovely seeds when mixed with other soft cooked fruit. But while looking for the pomegranate seeds on the nuts and seeds rack I discovered goji berries.
   The goji berries were small pink things the size of a pumpkin seed, or your little fingernail if you are petite. I wanted to try something new.
   I was confusing the unfamiliar name. I thought I was buying berries which supposedly helped slimming, which I'd read touted as a miracle food. Later I'd read that when you sent off for them at inflated prices to foreign countries you did not receive any goods, so I had never ordered.
  When I went on line to find out about Goji berries I discovered my mistake.
 Meanwhile I'll tell you about the Goji berries in this post.

They taste like salty sultanas.





Eat neat, probably better. We also tried them in porridge.

I'll buy Acai berries next and report on that later. 

Friday, May 23, 2014

Rolling pins with your name! Or animals/motifs

The most amusing idea I've seen. I found it on Etsy. Not cheap, about £24 plus packing, from Poland, if you want a cat or dog, fox or dinosaur, more if you want your Made by ... (and your name). Add cost of postage. valek rolling pins.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Norfolk Pure Apple Juice

My family sampled several varieties of apple juice given away free at the stand. We bought apple juice.
Varieties include Cox Orange Pippin, sweet, Cox/Bramley, Pear and Apple, Bramley - dry, Apple and Strawberry - sweet.

They also make cider vinegar.
Their farm shop has vegetables, chutney, honey, free range eggs, cakes and biscuits. Local stockists you will see on their website include Jarrolds department store in Norwich and several cafes, shops and a brewery.

You can visit their farm shop at Ashill Fruit Farm, Swaffham Road, Ashill, Thetford, Norfolk IP25 7DB.
They exhibit at local Norfolk Farmers Markets. They were offering a couple of bottles in a jute bag for a special price.
On line you can order a case of one sort of juice or a mixed case.
Their website is www.norfolkpureapplejuice.co.uk

Packing Clothes - Repairs/Disasters Oops - on holiday/weekend away and your dress split?

Making a tight item larger
   Cut the seam at the back. Or remove back zip. Link garment with two ribbons which you tie together.  Or make three loops either side and use lace up ribbon in a corset effect.
  Cut an oblong patch and sew it to the now separate sides of the old seam. (Wear a jacket on top if the patch does not look neat but is just there to stop the garment falling off.)

Making a co-ordinating outfit
   Buy matching ribbon and sew a strip to both the skirt and top to make a matching set like a suit. Sew extra ribbon on a tote bag and plain baseball cap. Wear matching shoes and bag.
   Have two sets of matching jewellery, e.g. one red necklace, red bracelet and red ring, one similar blue set. Buy from the same shop matching colours. Travel wearing one set. If away for the day or evening or on holiday, you can keep the second set for alternating days or for evenings.

Brightening a dull outfit
 Wear brightly coloured belt, shoes, scarf, cravat, hat, rings, necklace, bracelets, large shoulder bag, headband, tank top, jacket.

Covering a Shouting Pattern
  Pick a plain colour from the pattern such as white or black. Wear a black or white jacket. Wear a tank top. Wear a tunic. Wear a wide belt. Wear a coat. Wear a vest (waistcoat). Wear a large plain colour scarf or cravat. Wear a long blouse over a bright skirt. Wear a long skirt pulled up over the bust like a dress.

Covering a stain
  Remove the stain carefully. Try cold water. Warm water. Blot from edges. Lemon juice, vinegar, bleach.
   No luck? Cover with a button.
   Sew on a patch. Cut a co-ordinating piece of fabric from the hem. Make a large patch using a strip of fabric from a hem for an edging, or a stripe across your circular or oblong patch.

Covering a hole
  Darn. to prevent the hole getting better and ensure the fabric hangs right, cover the hole with a patch from the back, using any fabric.
   Iron on a patch on the front. (Many department stores sell iron-on patches.) 

Fixing Secondhand Clothes So They Fit, with buttons, hooks, zips and more

England is full of charity shops. The internet sells items on ebay. Now the shops have sales. So tempting to buy an item which is a size too large or small, missing a button and you knew it, or you get home and find the zip doesn't work. How do you fix the problem?
My parents saved string, buttons, zips, pillows and sheets to turn into patches, hankies, dusters, anything which could be re-used. My mother always had a button box and zips. She lived through World War II. I was astonished when I went to Australia and lost a simple shirt button off a blouse that my hostess could not replace it instantly with a button from a button box. I always save sewing kits from hotels so at least I have a needle and white cotton and a small shirt button or two, or twenty, or maybe two hundred - if I could only find the other box - I have at least five button boxes.
   Both my grandmothers were seamstresses. Grandmother on my late father's side sewed the button holes for the suits her husband made (he was a master tailor, like his father). My late mother's mother was a milliner and her wedding photo shows a huge hat which I like to think she sewed herself, unless it was a gift from her mother?
  My parents lived through World War I. If you are either a sewing fanatic or a clothes fanatic or a hoarder, it's a good idea to heep a button box and a zip box. When you discard garments, check for useful zips, buttons, and spare buttons inside hems and attached to seams. For less than £10, $20dollars US or Singaporean, you can buy sewing kits and bags of buttons from haberdashery stores such as Spotlight (Australia, New Zealand, Singapore).

Replacing Zips
  You may wish to add a zip for security to a cheap tote bag, or replace a broken zip in a bag or item of clothing. Cut out the old zip. Consider replacing with hooks and eyes or button and loops. Buy a new zip which is long enough. Or a long zip from discarded items. A white zip could be dyed to match a bag. or dye both bag and zip in same dye. Or buy two identical items from a rummage sale to get the zips. Two short zips can be used, fitting the two zips with pull tags meeting in the middle. Pin your zip so the pull tag is in the right place. If the end is too long, it can hang inside or be lightly sewn down the seam of the bag. Try to use matching thread and sew the zip below the top edge for a neat look. But if your bag is very small and you want it to hold larger items, sew it as high as you can. Seam your zip it with running stitch along both edges.

Moving Buttons
If you have a machine which makes button holes, you might be able to sew together button holes and make new ones. But if the garment is too tight and you are hand sewing you can move the buttons more easily than making new button holes.
   Find the place where the button(s) should go and mark with a safety pin. (Less likely to drop out or scratch you than a pin.)

Adding Buttons
   Check for spare buttons inside the garment. Sometimes large buttons have smaller buttons at the back.
   If you have spare buttons, you can sew them onto a belt or scarf or headband or the hem of a skirt or black trousers (what Americans call pants) to make a matching set.

Replacing missing buttons
  Find a button the right colour and size. If you are one short, make the top button a fancier, larger button in the same colour. Or find another similar pair to sew on the cuffs and use one of those to replace a button on the front.
   If you have a large number of buttons and one or two missing, but you have another set, sew them alternating. e.g. red green, red green, red green.
   Or have the odd button at the lower hem of a blouse and tuck the blouse inside to hide the odd button.

Making a hole in a large belt
  You can buy a hole punch from China online e.g. through ebay. In the UK you find large craft shops selling through out of town stores and on the internet. An alternative or temporary measure is to make a hole with an awl, or even a pair of scissors. Turn the scissors end slowly and gradually to make a round hole, not a straight one which might split. (However, some people make a round hole with a small slit to one side to allow room for the larger buckle thong.

Extending a belt
 Extend a belt by removing the buckle and adding ribbon to both ends to tie in the middle or back. Or cut the belt and add the extra non-matching leather patch at the back hidden by a shirt worn outside.

Make your own belt
  On ebay I found shops which sell belt lengths in all colour to which you add your own buckle. The belt fastens with a heavy round press-button. the only problem is that the double thickness of belt makes it hard for the buckle to lie flat.

Re-using a belt
  You can cover an old belt with fabric cut from a hem to make it match. Or change the buckle.

Re-using a buckle
  Buy a new belt. Or use a strip of wide ribbon. Or hem up a piece of spare fabric. Or seam up a spare tie. (Ties are sold cheaply in charity shops - in the USA called thrift shops.)

Lining a bag
   Easier than you think. Take any fabric such as an old pillowcase. If you like, dye the lining to co-ordinate, or dye bother the bag and lining. Or dye a white blouse, and white bag and white lining to match, e.g. blue or pink. If you are not very meticulous, the bohemian tie-dye effect is easier.
  You could try making the lining bag using a piece of newspaper. Or even a paper bag or plastic bag from a supermarket cut to size. Allow room for the seams. The top could fold over. If you use a fancy fabric such as strong satin, the lining can come up to make the bag larger, and be fastened with a zip or a draw-string. to make a draw-string, choose your co-ordinating colour ribbon draw string. Fold over the top hem of the inner bag twice much larger than the ribbon. The bag must be inserted inside out to hide the sewing seam which looks neater and ensures you don't catch keys or sharp items in the seam and pull it apart. you might wish to insert an oblong base at the bottom of the bag, either on top of the lining using extra fabric to cover it, or underneath the lining.  You might try this first time on an old discarded bag just to see how its done.
   Another system is to use the lining of one bag and the outside of another. If you need a pocket for a phone or coins or tissues and make-up, create pockets with a concertina fold, or add on a pocket made from spare material. Or use a pocket from a discarded bag. Or buy a cheap coin purse and sew it inside.
   Or take your existing coin purse and attach it to the inside of the bag by sewing in a ribbon attached to the bag at one end and the mini-purse on the other end, to be sure you don't leave your purse behind. You can also pull it out in a hurry.
   Do you have spare key rings? Sew one inside your bag so you can find your keys easily. If the inside pocket is large and can take the weight of keys, that's a handy place for a key ring.

Replacing a shoulder strap
  Replace a shoulder strap with a wide ribbon, an old belt with the buckle removed, or the shoulder strap from a kit bag. You can save the slider mechanism or a couple of D rings and double the length of the shoulder strap to make one which extends.

Turning a cushion into an evening bag
   I was looking for a plum coloured shoulder bag and could not find one. Then I saw plum coloured pillow cases, long or square. All they needed was a length of plum coloured ribbon and I had a shoulder bag. You can sew in a black zip along one side.

Shortening a dress or skirt
   Cut it short. Use zig-zag scissors.
   Leave the end showing. Or fray into a fringe. Cover with ribbon. If it's too short, wear a lacey slip underneath. Use the spare material for a matching belt, a scarf, or wind into a rose, attach to a safety pin and wear it like a brooch.
   In the olden days you needed to crawl about measuring hem level with a ruler resting on what you hoped was an even floor, or down from what you hoped was an even waist belt. Now the fashion is for uneven hems. Up at the front and down at the back. Up on the right and down on the left. Wobbling all around. Zig-zag. If it's too short on one side, sew on a patch or some lace.


Etsy and ebay buying, postage and feedback

It took me a year or so to try buying from ebay which friends recommended; then when hunting for brand name suits I found Etsy.
 
ANTHONY SICARI
Anthony Sicari clothing was what I searched for. His outfits fit my top heavy figure so well. The leg of mutton sleeves hide large upper arms. My large bust disappears, instead of the two melons strung on a tightrope look from the usual blouse. The stretch material comes in at the waist restoring my once elegant hour glass figure.

ETSY  
I found another item on Etsy but didn't know what Etsy was and hesitated to join. Now I'm delighted with Ebay and Etsy. Etsy seems to have more international sellers, individuals and craft shops, hard to find items. This time I was searching for outfits, blouses or scarves with a grape or vine pattern for a wine tasting or wine dinner. I had failed to buy a very expensive wine pattern silk scarf in Rioja, Spain winery - it might have been the Muga shop. I was sure that a winery in California must have sold some. I found a wine pattern blouse (which I bought), and even a dress.

EBAY FEEDBACK
  On ebay you can send in your feedback straight away. The sellers are always anxious to know that the goods have arrived. You can order from China tiny items such as a dress ring which can go in a small padded envelope and many sellers even include postage. Ebay allows only one sentence of feedback. You can save space by resorting to abbreviations and deleting the space between sentences.

ETSY POSTAGE & FEEDBACK
  You could save a lot on postage if you have family, friends, colleagues in the USA and can post to them and collect from them when visiting the USA or ask them to bring over your items. (Your family member in the USA will have to remove packaging to check the item has not been sent wrong colour or damaged in post. Also going through both customs and security they want to know what they are carrying.) You might even order items to be sent to you at a hotel before travelling there on holiday.
   An extra cost on some items sent from the USA could be tax.
  On Etsy, however, if you order from the USA to send to the UK, the system won't let you put feedback (in the UK) for about a week after the item has arrived. The system seems to think your item may still be in transit. The time lag means its hard to remember the packaging. But it does allow time to wear the item and find out if there is a problem.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Wishlist - Rothschild wine bottle label poster



A friend of mine has a poster of the Chateau Mouton Rothschild wine labels. Famous artists who designed wine labels over the years have included Marc Chagall and Pablo Picasso. My friend said he bought the poster at Waddesdon Manor. I looked on their shop website and could not see the poster. I have written asking if they still sell the poster or know who does so. If you know, let me know. Meanwhile, enjoy. If you go onto ebay you will find offers to sell individual labels.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Sugar sticks - buying and making

   I was first excited and impressed by sugar crystals on sticks at Friends Restaurant in Pinner. Then they stopped making the sugar sticks.
  I was looking for wooden flat toothpicks on the internet when wooden sticks brought up ads for sugar crystals on wooden sticks. You can buy readymade sugar sticks at about £20 for 100 for dinner parties or events from Galloway.co.uk.
   The internet also has instructions on making sugar crystals. You basically bring sugar to the boil in water and then let it cool to 50 degrees and dangle into the cooling sugar mixture something non-toxic. Add food colouring or flavouring if wished.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Colours On Ebay

   I buy a lot on ebay. Colours are always guesswork.

   I recently bought an item described as blue. The picture looks bright slightly mauve cobalt and fuschia in the picture, arrives as dirty slate grey-blue with dull red.

   Could I dye the item? Send it back? Probably the seller would claim that my laptop colour was at fault.
    However, my husband liked the matching jacket and scarf.

   But this is a common problem. The picture doesn't match the item described.

  You get a lot of bargains from China. But sometimes items from China are pictured one colour described another and if not careful you click to buy wrong colour.

    I feel there should be some way of giving a standard for colour, as with paint, colours have standard numbers. Or to adjust your screen until the colour shown matches the number given to get an accurate picture.

  One day somebody will solve this. Maybe you will be supplied with a rainbow colour disc with numbers. You as buyer will turn your colours on your screen to match the numbers. The seller will have turned their screen to match the item to be sold.

   What if the fault is the lighting under which they took the photo? Or their camera? Then they should be able to adjust the colour after loading, as I can with my photo editing program. But instead of just editing the picture to look what they consider a pretty or popular colour, they should hold the item photographed against their screen to get a match.

   The problems with colour and fabric or material and size always used to be a problem with catalogues. In the old days customers were very wary of buying from catalogues. Now big catalogue companies offer free returns.

  But the problem of co-ordinating the sellers and buyers' screens remains.  Help - somebody must be able to solve this problem.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Umbrellas with hearts, butterflies, for weddings or just for fun

  I found some wonderful umbrellas. Not cheap. But great colours and designs. I'd like to show you the pix but I think they are copyright. They would probably give me permission as it's good adverting for them but I don't have the time this week. Meanwhile I thought you'd love to take a look.

loveumbrellas.co.uk

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Slate Tablemats & Coasters

I saw a slate used to serve butter at Hawtrey's Restaurant in The Barn Hotel, Ruislip.

You can buy at set of four coaster slates for only £2.99. If you like, to match them, a set of placemats at £10.99. You can click and collect. The Dunelm Mill site give you reviews. The table mats are heatproof to a certain temperature (the Dunelm site tells you).
www.dunelm-mill.com