Friday 27 October 2017

Sheryl from Sewing After Seven

We are off to another part of Europe for our Blogger of the Week this week.  She has been a great participant in a number of my Blog Hops now and Gifted Gorgeousness too.  She does a variety of crafts as well as cross stitch so there is always something beautiful to see on her blog.  I've added a link at the end to a recent post of a gorgeous book she made for her granddaughter.  Please welcome Sheryl from



1. Please introduce yourself – name, where you are from, family, pets etc.

My name is Sheryl, born in Kent U.K. and now living in Gijon on the north coast of Spain. I have a son who lives nearby and a daughter and three grandchildren who live in Madrid. I retired from ESL teaching last year.


2. How long have you been stitching and how did you start?

I remember learning embroidery stitches and making a samper while still at Primary School and my mum taught me how to knit, crochet and sew. I must have been a super boring kid as I can remember taking my knitting to school and in the photo below I´m sporting my first Fair Isle sweater made when I was 15.



3. How long have you been blogging and what inspired you to start? Is there a story behind your blog title?

I started my blog three years ago with the idea of just creating a permanent record of my needlework as other girlfriends were doing but I got caught up with the fun of meeting and chatting to other crafters about our shared hobby, seeing what they were making and enjoying the wonderful tutorials and SALs available. I pondered about my blog name for ages endevouring to conjure up something ingenious and memorable but everyone had got there before me and so I opted for `Sewing After Seven´ which is when I do most of my stitching.


4. How would you describe your stitching style? Are you a serial starter, a rotator, a OAAT (one at a time), highly organised, random and eclectic, etc.?

Organised and eclectic. I jump from one technique to another as I´m interested in everything fashioned with a needle, whether hardanger, whitework, crochet, applique, knitting or patchwork. I always have two projects in the making, embroidery which I do in the evening and sewing at any other free moment during the day. I very rarely work on a pattern without knowing what I´m going to use it for and have a dangerous tendency to adulterate patterns and change them to add my own touch of beads, lace, applique, crochet or somesuch with the sometimes disastrous consequences that result from such deviations from the original and result in the entire project being abandoned and banished to the Dreaded Drawer aka UFO cemetery.






5. Do you have a favourite designer or style of design you are drawn to?

No favourite designer. I love embroidery in general but Hardanger, whitework, reticella and schwalm embroidery always draw my attention, as with samplers including speciality stitches and crazy quilting stitches and stumpwork. Also I love fine crochet work.




6. Which piece are you most proud of in your collection?

A quilt I made for a grandson and based on the illustrations by Petra Steinmeyer in the story book The Bremen Town Musicians. I felt very proud when Petra complimented me on my work and asked for more photos of the said quilt.



7. What has been your worst stitching disaster?

Not exactly mine but while attending patchwork classes years ago, I was making a cushion cover when the teacher said my little applique houses needed windows and doors but not to bother with embroidering the tiny details as they could be done with a permanent marker pen which she then procured from out of nowhere and proceeded to draw on my cushion making what I considered a horrible mess. Although the cushion is very old and faded you can still appreciate the disaster in the photo.



8. Which new technique would you like to try, either stitching, finishing or another craft?

Definitely whitework, reticella or schwalm embroidery which would make a nice challenge or bobbin lace making. I also need to learn free motion quilting.



9. Do you have a box of finished-but-not-fully-finished pieces? Or is everything FFO'd? What's your favourite way to fully finish a project and what do you do with them?

The aformentioned Dreaded Drawer contains mainly completed patterns which for some reason or another lost favour during their execution and where a lot of the considered substandard experiments have ended up. Sometimes I look at that drawer and rescue something like the tiny design below which when stitched a couple of years ago I found annoyingly unsymmetric but which just this summer I made into a pincushion that I now really like. I don´t have a favourite way of finishing a project but prefer to make a design or pattern into something original or useful and not just framed.



10. Which of your projects most represents "you"?

Perhaps my little embroidered pouches. I love working with rich fabrics, velvets, silks and satins etc, and mixing applique with speciality stitches and a splash of beads, sequins etc. perfect.




11. Tell us a secret about yourself. Or a joke. About anything!

It taken me a week to think about this question and I still can´t think of anything intriguing. But rather curious, I suppose, both my children were born the same month, the same date and the same day of the week although born five years apart.


12. Anything you would like to add?

I have found that the stitching community is very friendly and if you are stuck with a particular project or technique, there is always someone to ask or a tutorial to follow. I´m grateful to Jo for including me as a Blogger of the Week and to those who visit my blog and take the time to leave a comment.



Jo recommends that you start with this post - Claudia's Book






15 comments:

  1. What talent you have!!! I am blown away by one project after the next...the book you have done for your granddaughter is simply amazing and the quilt for your grandson, I'm speechless.....you are a true artist!! I just followed your blog by email till the follower glitch is corrected...I am going to enjoy reading all your past posts. Mary@stitchingfriendsforever

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  2. Your work is incredible. I have an almost identical story with my children! They are a day apart though but both born on a Thursday and with times ending in 48 mins!

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  3. Glad to meet you. Your work is beautiful!

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  4. Hello Sheryl! It is so nice to meet you. I have just gone through most of your blog and I'm delighted with what I have seen. You are such a talented stitcher and seamstress. Your projects are simply gorgeous. What a delight to find your blog. Thank you Jo. RJ@stitchingfriendsforever

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  5. Hi Sheryl,
    Although I have been following your blog for some time it was lovely to learn more about you and the stitching you love!
    Hugs,
    Barbara x

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  6. Yay, hi, Sheryl~ :D I know your blog and I think your other amazing talent is taking splendid photos of your projects! I don't remember seeing all of your hardanger pieces before. Love "LOVE", that's beautiful work.

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  7. Hello Sheryl. I have thoroughly enjoyed reading about your lovely crafting.Your grandson’s quilt is amazing and I love your passion for so many different techniques.

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  8. Like Rosie I really like the "Love" piece, it's exquisite. I can't believe you were such a talented knitter at 15! That's a lovely photo of you modelling it too.

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  9. You are very talented Sheryl, such a lot of beautiful things you have shared here.

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  10. I have been following your blog for a long time now and I always love to see new posts from you. Your work is so full of creativity, you're such a talented needleworker. Nice to learn a bit more about you through this interview.

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  11. Great to meet you, Susan! How annoying of the class teacher to draw on your work! Beautiful pieces - the Petra quilt must have taken you ages! x

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  12. I have been enjoying reading your blog for some time now but still it was great to read some more details about you!AriadnefromGreece!

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  13. Hi Sheryl, how nice to meet you! You have some amazing finishes, I'll make sure to follow you in the future to hopefully see more of those :)

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  14. So enjoyed reading about you, Sheryl! I had no idea you were a retired ESL teacher! The variety and detail in your beautiful needlework always amazes me--you are a true needlework artist!

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