WORDS!

Moving right along, and answering questions.

I’ve finished the first panel. I’ve drafted out the motto and it’s obviously in process, too. What you see here is just the second half of the phrase. The first half will go above the completed strip, but I have room to add this part without advancing the scroll, so I am doing it first. And here are some details which should help folk looking for more info.

I am using a combo of two alphabets available on the Patternmaker Charts blog site, established by Ramzi, and apparently now maintained by helpers as well. The bolder upper case letters are from Sajou Booklet #004, but I tweaked them slightly for greater twinkle and depth. I am after all honoring yet another science fiction book by my Resident Male is currently writing. Starlight is appropriate. The lower case alphabet does not line up exactly with the upper case one in terms of spacing and ornament, but again, it has twinkle. It’s from the same site, but appears in Sajou #007. The site has been up for a very long time, and the interface is clunky to navigate but the content is priceless. Booklets indicated by asterisks contain line drawn material. No asterisks means the content is charted.

How did I know to use these together? Guesswork, and reaching way back to being a little kid. My grandfather owned a contract print and engraving shop in the pre-photocopy era. He produced catalogs, advertising material, magazines, books, stock certificates, menus, and lots of other printed matter. While it’s obvious that I didn’t follow him into the family business, I was a curious little thing, and he was happy to show me the fun of type faces, font sizes, leading, kerning, and the way that different typesetting choices and physical presentation can change the way a message is perceived. With his paper samples and layout guides, I always had the wildest written report covers in grade school.

Maybe a little bit stuck from those chats, and from going through his printed examples because I still quest for just the right thing when I compose my motto-bearing pieces. Sometimes I hit the mark, sometimes not. But to this day I always learn from the hunt and the exercise.

What’s the next panel after the words are completed? Something totally new. I’m web-walking looking for Azammour Cluster pieces I haven’t seen before. There are more than there were just three years ago, because the fragments in museum and private hands are being re-evaluated, and the turn-of-the-1900s identifications as Renaissance era snippets sold to collector/tourists are being updated. I’ve found a couple of very interesting ones featuring motifs other than the usual meandering repeats or birds. Charting now. Slowly. Reveal when I have more to show, of course.

And what is the full text of the motto?

Anything Could Happen
Anything Often Does

This can be read in a few different ways. First and foremost is that it is a direct quotation from The Hungry Judges, the novel currently in development, and central to the plot stream.

Yet at the same time, I can see it as a summary statement of my former professional career in engineering/high-tech bids and proposals. That was an endless parade of short term crisis containment and contingency planning – managing overburdened teams striving to meet unrealistic deadlines, spiced with technical requirements that were not always feasible within performance constraints. But I never missed an on-time submission in 42 years, had an enviable win rate, and emerged without ulcers.

And lastly of course, it does echo my current medical predicament. My malady is not something pegged to known statistical associations with genetics, environmental or exposure factors, stress, or lifestyle. Chordoma is so rare that triggers are not understood, yet appears to be a totally random reactivation of the extremely small number of dormant stem cells that everyone retains along their spinal column, going back to our embryonic origins. What wakes them up is a medical mystery.

With my typical attack optimism, I am planning on outlasting this wack-a-mole recurrence, and with radiation and other modalities, continued vigilance and via several promising avenues of targeted antibody and other “lullaby” treatments, return them to secure slumber.

4 responses

  1. Elaine in Oz's avatar
    Elaine in Oz | Reply

    You have stitched that much in 8 days since your last post? You are amazing.

    Hanging around your grandfather’s printery would have been a wonderful introduction to design and good training for any design work. I’m sure he would have been proud of your school projects. Did he live to see your ability to design embroidery as well?

    Patternmaker is a treasure trove. Much gratitude to Ramzi, and to you for introducing me to it.

    1. kbsalazar's avatar

      Voiding in long arm cross stitch is quite speedy. And after years and years of working at 42 to 74 count, this 28 count is gigantic – easy to see even now.

      The only things slowing me down are slimming the reeled filament silk and redacting the next panel.

      I’ve gone rogue – I am stripping down the four ply separable structure of the Allori Bella even further. I take each of those four plies intended for use, and separate it further into its two constituent strands. I have only limited and irreplaceable stock of a few 20 yard hanks. Separating into four strands yields 80 yards per hank. Splitting each strand in two gives me 160 yards per hank. But it’s tricky to tease the cut lengths apart evenly, withdraw what I need, finger spin with a bit of moisture, set the spin with the barest hint of beeswax (I don’t want to dull the sheen but I need the cohesion to resist snagging). And sometimes I have to further divide and head-to-tail my working strand because the dye process wasn’t always even, and I want to disguise uncolored white spots where it didn’t penetrate.

      The charting is what it is. Vision isn’t at 100% and my precision on this one is a bit more “conjectural.” But the end result will be credible and recognizable, if not stitch on perfect.

  2. sillyc87157369e's avatar
    sillyc87157369e | Reply

    I’ve been reading what you write since RCTN, and mostly lurking since I switched to your blog, bar a few contributions to wiseNeedle. I never fail to learn things! I’m currently dealing with long covid, and that motto struck a chord. If I go back to stitching, may I have the Resident Male’s permission to borrow it?

    1. kbsalazar's avatar

      Sure! Please feel free to use the motto on your own piece. He wrote it to resonate and is happy to provide that comfort to you. If you like, if ever you share a photo of the finished work I would be happy to include it in a gallery page here at String (with as much or as little identifying info as you care to share). Or if you post and his book becomes available, a tossback link to point of origin would be much appreciated. And thanks for being a long time follower! Glad to know 26+ years of scribbling has not been in vain. 🙂

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