Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Work In Progress Wednesday

A little progress on the House



A little progress on the bead nutcracker



I pulled out the sumo sashiko piece, made and added quilt blocks to both sides, and turned a sumo move tenugui cloth into backing. I sandwiched the two pieces with thin batting inside and started quilting it. It's kind of rough, but I think I can make it into a table runner.




I started adding buttons to the cross stitch square



New Start - Durene Jones snowman design


Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Sunday Stitch Group

Our stitch group met on Sunday. I'm always happy to get together with my stitching friends.  


First, some show and tell. Here are a couple of finished projects. 




Some progress since our last get together on the stumpwork projects.

 





Working on our projects.  We all like twisted cording, or guru guru, as it is also known.






Tea Time


We'll be back in a couple of weeks with a new start.

Monday, April 24, 2023

Monday Morning Star Count

This week I made additional solid color hexagons and began attaching them.




I'm also making more shapes for my colorful kitchen project.  Slowly it is coming along.


Sunday, April 23, 2023

Tanaka Castle

One day recently, I took the train to Nishiyaizu Station and walked to Tanaka Castle. The English signage was minimal, but the admission was free so you can't complain.  Actually, it was much better than I anticipated.



From the JCastle website:

The history of Tanaka Castle begins with a fortification built by the Isshiki family under the orders of the Imagawa around 1537. The moats and modern castle fortifications were built after Takeda Shingen conquered the area in 1570. After the fall of the Takeda, the castle came under the control of Tokugawa Ieyasu. Ieyasu liked to use Tanaka Castle as a getaway when he was in nearby Sunpu castle. In particular, he used it for hawking. Through the Edo Period, Tanaka Castle saw a succession of of fudai daimyo (hereditary vassals of the Tokugawa) move into the castle. The castle was mostly dismantled and destroyed during the Meiji Restoration. Some of the buildings were sold to individuals and survived until the villa garden and park were restored in 1992.








Footman's House with Stable










Tea House





There was a couple getting wedding photos taken at the castle.



The Garden




The Back Gate





Tanaka Castle Turret





There isn't a sign, but you just know that this is a shoes off building.



First Floor




Steep Stairs



Second Floor




Views from the top




Then, back to the train station.




If you are interested in Japanese Castles, you can find links to other castle visits I've made on my Japanese Castle page.