Monday, December 01, 2025

Documenting the process (or am I just creating content?)

 Hello there fellow creatives! 

Scrap thread in a mesh pocket with felt surround.

Felt shape with mesh window, stuffed with yarn scraps.


We have reached the tail end of 2025. The calendar has just ticked over to December, and it's now that those of us who leave things until the last minute, really start to panic about the lack of organisation for Christmas day. As the years roll on, I'm less and less enthused by Christmas and all of the expected trimmings. In fact, I don't care for Easter, Mother's Day, Father's Day or any other day that I once viewed as nothing more than a day off work, but now view as a time when my inbox is flooded with marketing campaigns from corporations big & small. As others on the interwebs have noted, if you can't remember the name of that obscure company you bought that thing from 10+ years ago, just wait for Black Friday, Cyber Monday of the pre-Christmas/Boxing Day sales, because sure as shit they still have your email on file, even if you opted out of receiving email marketing.

But I digress. There has been quite a bit of creativity happening this year, and I've documenting it a bit more. Mainly for my own benefit, as I'm trying to document the time it takes to make things as well as understand any hurdles in the process I may have encountered. I also find it a useful tool for spring-boarding other ideas off.

The Summer was spent working on the needlepoint project. What began as random shapes stitched in the wool colours I had on hand, blossomed into a larger scale project with some thought put into the colour palette as a whole. My meagre stash of op-shop acquired wool has grown to a large hamper full of colour sorted zipped bags. 

A needlepoint design that needs a backing and edging to be completed.


A larger scale needlework canvas, stretched onto a timber frame.  Still in progress.


I actually worked on it for most of the first half of the year. I had to pack it away for a while, because I was getting pins and needles in my hand from overuse.

In March, some very dear friends of ours got married. It was possibly one of the warmest Labour Day weekends we'd had for years, but honestly, the day was perfect, the setting was lovely and it was just an all round special day.  It's not often I put on make-up and a dress nowadays, but I was happy to do both on this occassion. 

Me.

I had an idea to create some Comfort Cushions, as an antidote to the sad state of the world and the constant anxiety that had taken over my days. The Real Job™ cash flow was very unstable, and it was causing me quite a few sleepless nights. I hadn't managed to sell any of my own crafty wares in the hope of easing our financial woes, and I needed a project that would, A)keep my mind occupied on something, and B) maybe generate some quick cash, as I planned to sell these at a lower price than my wall hangings. 

I was unsuccessful with the selling part, but really enjoyed the creative part. I'm fascinated by talismans and symbolism, and loved coming up with the imagery to go with the feeling I was trying to evoke.






Six Comfort Cushions in a small cupboard. The front cushions show the back with the token pocket.

If anyone is interested in buying one or more of these cushions, they're still available. You can find them here. 

As with most of my projects, once something is done and photographed, it's packed away and I move onto the next thing. Surprisingly, this time around, instead of starting on something completely new, I picked up a project I'd started on a whim , roughly 12 months earlier.  I figured it would be quick and loose, but of course, halfway through, I JUST HAD TO source some new (old) materials to create the vision I had in my mind. And then make some new hanger designs to display the finished piece from.





The finished wall hanging. Complete with hand painted timber hanger.

Other completed projects this year have been the stripping back and repainting of a small dolls cupboard, into a display cupboard to showcase my wares. And to hang behind that, an abstract fabric artwork, sewn onto linen and stretched over an Op-shopped canvas.







Abstract artwork behind display cupboard.

October rolled around and talk on the MadeIt socials turned to Christmas products. I'm not usually one to make things specifically for "Hallmark Holidays" as I like to call Christmas, Easter, Mother's Day, Father's Day, Halloween etc. To me, they're days in the calendar marked by how much overpriced stuff we can have pushed on to us. But I'd really enjoyed making the Ugly Christmas Jumper cushions last year (which I can't believe I forgot to share on here,) so I thought I'd expand on that a little bit. 
Ugly Christmas Jumper cushions that I made in 2024. Made from fabric remnants, felted wool jumper scraps, beads, sequins, ric-rac & embroidery.

Whilst flicking through a book on A-frame cabins, I was struck with the idea to make a gingerbread house cushion, as an A-frame house.  I hunted through my fabric stash for some brown fabric that looked close to gingerbread, but didn't have anything suitable. I ended up finding a length of cotton flannelette at Spotlight on sale, and despite my better judgement about buying new fabric for my craft projects, I knew that if I didn't get this cushion made, it would haunt me. So I threw it in my basket and got to sewing once I got home.  It didn't come together quite how I visualised it, and it's not as bright and cheery as the jumper cushions. 
Gingerbread house A-frame cushion made from new cotton and remnant fabric, trims, beads & embroidery.

Because of this, I only made one. I was also struggling to reconcile creating Northern Hemisphere Christmas imagery for a Southern Hemisphere Christmas. Despite this, I have since seen an absolute glut of gingerbread house themed Christmas decorations in stores. I listed these cushions at the higher price point on the site, because quite a bit of work went into them.  I've since sold 2 of the jumper cushions (surprisingly to warmer states of NT & QLD) but have not had much interest in the newest one. I don't think I'll make Christmas themed decor next year. Unless requested by friends or family.

I'm actually having a big rethink on my craft practice in the future. I keep having big ideas, but then get derailed by the thought that I have to make things that I think people will buy. And then they don't, and the big idea has drifted away and I start another untethered project just for the sake of keeping my hands busy.  Or I start the big idea, do a deep dive on Pinterest or Instagram or even my vast library of craft books and magazines, only to realise that the influx of visual stimulation has thrown me off course completely, or knocked the wind out of my sails because I don't think I'm as good as other creatives.
So I'm going to go back to making things that make me happy or teach me new skills. (Gotta keep the brain active! Old dog, new tricks etc!)
I want to finish the wall hangings that I made the relief hangers for. I've got six hangers with no artwork that keep staring at me from my WIP board. I don't have the wall space to display them when they're finished, but that's a bridge to cross on another day. For now, it's all about the rush to get Christmas organised, buy presents, work out where we're having lunch on Christmas day and then breathe a big sigh of relief when Boxing Day rolls around. And we're back to that weird, in-between time when the days blur into one.