If I had a dime for every time I come up with a great new plan, I'd be a rich woman! :)
One thing for sure - I cannot be a monogamous stitcher! I started America - 250 on February 15 and planned to stitch right through until it's finished. I'm 34.2% complete - which means if I stuck with it, I'd finish it probably by mid-May but I just cannot stick with it. I try to stitch at least 400 stitches per day. The last four days I've stitched 143, then 190, then 154, then 124. I find myself looking for anything to do other than cross stitching.
I had to come up with a new plan.
I pulled out about 15 projects I want to get finished . . no deadline except I would love to get America - 250 finished and framed by July 4. We'll see. If I don't . . I'll get it done eventually.
For me the hardest part of getting back to an older project is finding the chart, the floss, my notes and whatever else I need to find to get back to it.
Today I pulled out the projects, and for all of them, I put the chart and the floss in a project bag, put them all in a bit with the bag right behind the frame.
Here are the projects I pulled out to work on.
1. This is the Day by Plum Street. There's not much left to be done on this one.
2. These are in no particular order as to how/when I intend to work on them. This is G. Leger by Reflets de Soie. There's a LOT left to be done on this one.
3. And God Saw by Teresa Kogut. Another one with a lot left to be done but it's so pretty!
4. Live on Little by Plum Street. This one also has a lot left to be done. The original verse says: How great the blessing and how vast the art to live on little with a thankful heart.
I changed the verse to read "How great the blessing and vast the art to live every day with a thankful heart." We aren't wealthy by any means but when I think of "living on little", I would feel a bit weird saying we live on little, especially compared to how many are struggling these days.
5. Prairie Life Sampler by Heartstring Samplery. Still lots of stitching to do but at least the border met up! I LOVE the verse on this one: The real things haven't changed. It is still best to be honest and truthful, to be happy with simple pleasures and have courage when things go wrong. That's where I would have failed being a prairie wife - I don't have much courage!
6. This one is Mary Ellen Turner by Fox & Rabbit. There's a lot left to be done on this one too. See a pattern here? Lots to be done! But, again, the border met up. Considering the border outline is stitched, I may be close to one-third or more done on this one. It is stitched on a beautiful pink linen by X-Ju.
7. I've done a ton of stitching on this one but still have a ways to go. It's Let Freedom Ring by Lila's Studio. It will not be finished before July 4.
8. Next is Seeking Refuge by The Scarlett House.
9. And Be Kind to One Another by Needlework Press. This one is kinda narrow but long (about 5" x 21") so maybe it will go quickly.
10. Forever & Ever by Brenda Gervais.
11. Winter Rose Manor by Brenda Gervais. I started this one quite a while ago and I hope to finish it this year.
12. New Year Sampler by Owl Forest Embroidery. There's a lot to be done on this one but these individual motifs are fun and fairly fast.
13. Noel Sampler by Brenda Gervais. This is one I started when I was a beginner and there are quite a few mistakes I have to work around but once it's done, it should look fine.
14. And Heaven & Nature Sing by Kathy Barrick.
15. And, here's America - 250.
Here's how I plan for this to work:
1. One day a week I stitch with Debbie and I have a 36 count project that I work on those days. I usually keep the same project and work on it just that one day a week so it means that project will get four days per month of working on it and I usually stick with it until it's finished so that project kinda isn't in this plan but it does reduce my stitching days for this plan to six days per week.
2. I can pick any project I want to work on but when I pick it up, I have to work on it at least five consecutive days AND I have to work on at least four different projects per month. So, in a 30 day month, take out the four days I'm stitching on something different with Debbie, that leaves 26 days. If I work on four projects for five days, that's 20 days so I can go back to one of the four projects and work more or those or pick up a fifth project and work five or six days on that.
3. I can't work on the same project two months in a row except projects that have REAL deadlines (America - 250, a Blessing Sampler in January, a challenge every now and then).
4. New projects can be started but they are discouraged. :)
This plan sounds like it may be challenging enough to keep my interest. We'll see. If it doesn't work . . I'll come up with a new plan!
I'll keep you posted on how my plan works.



















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