Creating, collecting & recycling textiles & papercrafts. I love preserving the past for the future.
Showing posts with label rusted garden ornaments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rusted garden ornaments. Show all posts

Friday, 22 June 2012

Twelve months of blogging and I missed the anniversary

                                
I thought I'd share some winter photos with you.
We're in the middle of winter here in Australia.
These photos are a couple years old
& were only taken on my old samsung mobile phone
but
certainly capture the frost in the garden.
By the way the above plant did not handle
the frosts here on the Darling Downs.
This was the 1st year we had lived here & weren't sure what would survive the bitter winters.
Who would have thought that snow peas love the frost?
(Maybe their name should have given us a hint)
We got a bumper crop that year!
These photos were taken at 10am so I was amazed
that the icicles were still intact,
even with the sun on some of them.
I love this shot with the white frost on the log
& the rusted garden ornament.
I love this photo too.
I have an old hollow log in the garden & here you can clearly see the cat's paw prints in the ice.
Thanks for visiting me.
Please leave a comment
I'd LOVE to hear from you!
To all who have supported my blog in any way in the last 12 months
Thankyou!
I started twelve months and 2 days ago.
I have loved every minute of blogging.
Meeting new friends with similar tastes and interests.
Being inspired etc
It's something I'd been wanting to do for years
and when I finally found Google Blogger I knew I was ready to start blogging.
Apart from the time I got a new 'Smartphone'
and
it decided to commandeer all my Picasa photos
and then delete,
my time in blog world has been such fun.
Anyhow thanks once again.
Hopefully another 12 wonderful months lie ahead.




Monday, 30 April 2012

Freshly laundered vintage aprons, tablecloth and doileys.

Recently I purchased four vintage gingham aprons.
Three were chicken scratch embroidered.
I also purchased a chicken scratch table cloth.
Someone had put a lot of time and effort into embroidering it
and
the four aprons 
and
had never used them.
I washed all my purchases and ironed them,
and
they looked so lovely on the clothes line
I thought to photograph them.
I also got the 100% cotton lace in a pennant design from the same seller.
I have never seen cotton lace like this
and
I paid just $6 for it
and
two lovely little vintage embroidered doileys.
I'm quite impressed with my little purchases.
I think that makes about 30 aprons in my vintage collection now.
This unique garden ornament was given to me by my SIL.
He knows I love quirky rustic bits and pieces for my garden.
He found it somewhere and immediately thought of me....
LOL
Anyhow I added the rusted horse shoe
and
thought I'd leave the white fungus insitu,
because it looks like a white bunny rabbit profile.
Leave me a comment,
I'd love to hear from you.


Wednesday, 14 September 2011

Our scottish terrier, Liza, would like to show you around our garden.



Bee on Lavender


Plum Blossoms


More Plum Blossoms


Goldfish pot with wire lid,
no more stolen goldfish...
To all you cats & birds, sorry...
NOT!


Hoping to replace these crooked
stepping pavers soon,
they were here when we bought
the house 2 yrs ago


Bought these Australian Magpie garden ornaments in Canberra a couple of years ago, they are made from pre-loved corrugated iron..I just love them & when we 1st got them our dog actually thought they were real...
funny story!


Our outdoor area,
Aussie rustic style.


Bench style seat made by DH
a couple of weeks ago.
We got this timber from the end
of the street where a neighbour
had dismantled an old cattle loading ramp.


Bird Cage with ornamental bird
I could never cage a bird, even feel guilty about this fake one being caged.



Hope you have enjoyed the tour
of our spring garden.
It's a lovely time of year.
Still cool days and cold nights
but all around
the plants are blooming.
We take full advantage of this type of weather because soon the long days will be hot & rapidly becoming hotter....
YUK!

So for now it's goodbye from us
and our scotty,
Liza.

The fruit of the spirit is in all goodness.
Ephesians 5:9



















Monday, 5 September 2011

Happy 27th Birthday Dear Daughter and Father's Day in Australia




My daughter celebrating her 27th Birthday one day early.
No doubt she will be spoilt by her DH when she arrives home today.
He might even make her a cake as well.

My one and only DD has been staying with us for the last week.
She wanted to visit us and then travel to our home town for a few days and catch up with relatives and friends but the dreaded morning sickness really took hold and she spent the entire time with us, feeling sick.
Not a good way to enjoy a holiday but she did get a lot of rest which is great as she never lets any grass grow under her feet and a good self imposed rest is probably just what she needed.
Here in Australia, yesterday was Father's Day.
 My parents travelled one and half hours to my place on The Darling Downs, mainly to see my daughter as she was not able to get to see them so we spent a lovely day together.
They had not seen her pregnancy bump before either.
We have always lived no more than 30 mins apart and in the last two years my DD and SIL
moved to Gympie
and
DH and I moved to The Darling Downs so it is rare for all of us to get together anymore.
Anyhow DD set off for her home this morning bright and early because her morning sickness is really more like afternoon sickness.
Therefore feeling fresher and chirpier in the morning was the wisest time to set off for an approximately 3 hr trip to Gympie.

DF & I, Father's Day 2011


DH, DD and me.
Sadly our son lives 6 hrs away and was not with us for DD's birthday, I think for the 1st time ever.


Dear Daughter (& her 17 week old baby bump) with her Dad  
&
me with my Dad. 


My DM, DD & me
We spent quite a lot of time walking around the garden.
Mum and Dad love gardening and always enjoy looking around at our new plants,
 especially here on The Darling Downs
as the seasons are so pronounced 
that we have had to learn to adapt to the very different gardening conditions,
especially what plants will survive the successive harsh frosts we endure in winter.

Gazanias, salvias, petunias, sweet peas, diosma, coastal rosemary
and
 primulas are just starting to either bud up or flower.
Spring has sprung!!
The 1st of September is the first day of Spring in Australia.
Rusted garden ornaments are from my parents and some even from my grandparents.
My parents lived on a beef farm until 6 years ago
and
there was always plenty of garden art to be had.
DF calls it junk....how hilarious!
It's win win for me and him.

Bought this at the plant sale on Saturday....a faux tap plant stand.
The petunia and dianthus were free as we bought a lot of plants,
for every $50 spent we received 2 plants.



Ornaental garden wheelbarrow made by DH years ago
and rusted wheel courtesy of my cousin
who used to work at the local dump....how exciting for me!!!!
I got lots of treasures from him over the years.


Bought this beautiful little lavender on Saturday at a garden sale at Kingsthorpe.
It's so sweet I put the bird cage over it as I did not want to risk it being dug up by my dog or a stray cat that has been hanging around.....


SO
   anyhow....
Dear Daughter

Happy 27th Birthday
for
today
5th September 2011. 

Love you lots
xoxoxoxoxox

God Bless You Always!








Saturday, 6 August 2011

Recycling old timber and starting new gardens.

Winter Gardening
on
the
Darling Downs

My DH really outdid himself today.
We recently acquired some beautiful old timber from a neighbour who pulled down his old termite ridden cattle loading ramp.
He had it sitting in his paddock for quite a few weeks and I plucked up enough courage to ask him if he didn't want it for firewood etc could we please have some???
'Sure', he said, 'only happy for you to take as much as you want'.
I was thrilled, DH was a bit 'ho-hum', but anyhow it was his idea to make a lavender walk garden a few weeks back, so I knew we could use this old timber.
I have ideas for a garden seat, a mock post and rail fence, sleeper type slabs in the gravel path and who knows what else with the left overs.
One beautiful piece of iron bark hard wood alone is eight feet long and 8 1/2" x 4 1/2 ".
Way too good to become firewood or go to the dump.
As soon as I saw it I knew what I wanted to do with it. It will make a great low bench type garden seat.
This project will come to fruition in a few weeks I would think.
DH is thinking of how to make legs to suppport it atm, it's extremely heavy so he has to get it right.
DH and Gordon, our 2 yr old Manx cross filling the posthole

Completed post and rail fence with rustic garden ornaments

DH, Edie on rail and Gordon on colourbond fence

Edie, our two year old Manx

We used this concrete lizard garden ornament as part of the garden rock edge.
It's a bit faded so it's getting a paint face lift.


Start of where the gravel path will go.
This timber is one of the old iron bark pieces from the neighbour.

This is the newly laid garden for our new lavender walk
Gravel to be added to path & planting still to be done.
DH hand collected all these rocks from a farmer's paddock.
The farmer has SO many he can't plough properly.
He said we can gather as many as we like!!
All for FREE!
DH is the one doing all the hard work and his back is still holding up well.
He's a good bloke.

Winter primulas just starting to come into flower....
Things are slow up here on the Darling Downs, it's just too cold.

The alyssum does not mind the cold, even successive frosts!
This yukky white border is being painted or replaced with rocks.
More rusted garden objects, collected over the years.

Stay tuned for more photos as the paths are gravelled & plantings occur.
Late winter is the best time to garden so you should see the next stage soon.