This tealight candle holder is likely the replacement for my Advent Wreath which is broken parts.
I bought it for $5 at a Thrift Store between Christmas and New Years. I like the lines, the fact that it holds 5 candles, and that there is space below to add decor for occasions throughout the year. It will stay out all year long. At a thrift store on Tuesday I found these beautiful tealight holders in green, red and amber glass. Gorgeous blown glass holders. They are Christmas colors.
I have a year to find other candle holders. I would like to have crackle glass ones again, crystal would be nice, cut glass as well. What I want is the shadows on the wall which I had with the other one. I recognize that my lifestyle is going for downsizing so this will be smaller than the other one.
I bought this Stampin Up punch recently. I think I will be making watercolor ornaments for Christmas cards and this was a good price.
It is from the Gleaming Ornaments Punch pack which included 2 punches and a stamp set.
I will be designing my own images to trace onto the watercolor punchies.
You can see I was working of the lines for the hanger on the right hand one.
I was looking for a small scissor sharpener for my embroidery scissors. I visited a couple of fabric stores and found this one.
I would say it is not the top quality but it has improved the sharpness of the blades so I can cut embroidery thread reliably.
The price was not as high as the Fiskars one I was looking for but the same basic design.
It has improved my experience so for that I am grateful.
It is dangerous to go into a fabric store.
I did come out with 3 small remnant pieces for about $1 each. Check out those flowers on the lace! I hope I can dye them, we will have to see.
The other two pieces are 100 cotton so they will dye nicely. Gauzy fabric to create texture easily on my big embroidery project.
I did buy heat and bond hemming for quick basting of my embroidery projects.
Another World War II story. The Lost Girls of Paris by Pam Jenoff.
I love strong female leads and Eleanor Trigg is no exception. This story runs in 2 time lines - 1944 London and Paris during the war and 1946 New York just after the war.
She works for the Special Operations Executive in London for the British Forces. Their male agents are being captured. There is the language and they don't fit in as well as needed. Eleanor is "just a secretary" but she proposes using women which would be less visible. Once the project is approved, she recruits female agents who will be working in occupied France assisting the resistance forces. Radio operators, couriers, and as it turns out much more dangerous tasks.
Marie and Josie are 2 of these women. They are sent to Scotland to train in the highlands. Combat, firing a gun, repairing radios, endurance training, learning cyphers to code messages being transmitted and received.
Grace finds a suitcase at Grand Central Station one day and inside finds photos of 12 young women. She is compelled to take the photos and she is not sure why. She eventually learns the suitcase belonged to Eleanor who was killed that day just outside the station. When she returns to the station to put the photos back the suitcase is gone.
She does eventually learn the names of the girls most of which perished in France just before the D-Day battle. She learned who Eleanor Trigg was and her purpose for being in New York that day.
Very good book.