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Yard sailing: went to one sale, a massive moving sale held at a nearby church. There were no prices, you just picked up the stuff you wanted and gave them however much money you felt like giving them. I ended up with:
A large rectangular lap weaving loom, already strung for a placemat (which I will probably re-purpose for other sorts of fiber arts, possibly sprang, because, um, I find almost all lap weaving ugly. Probably due to the prevalence of scratchy, coffee-stained brown-and-orange exemplars at my grandmother's house.)
An old-fashioned rectangular embroidery stretching frame.
Two small jars of even smaller nails (for nailing medallions to my hiking stick)
A mini spiral notebook of heavy drawing paper.
How To Make Paper Flowers from the Dennison Publishing Company, 1922. Because one day,
kyabetsu is finally going actually throw a wedding with that guy who she agreed to marry, and on that day, I will give her a bouquet made out of comic books. Even if she doesn't want it any more by then. :P
Campcraft ABCs by Catherine T. Hammett, 1941. This seems to be a different recension of the 1950 Campcraft paperback I was looking at earlier, only published in a larger and more DIY format by the Girl Scouts of America. And since the little paperback is falling apart, and also full of neat stuff, I grabbed this one up.
Nature Crafts by Ellsworth Jaeger, 1949: I don't usually pick up nature crafts books, because they almost always consist of "creative ideas" like putting pinecones on a cardboard wreath or gluing googly eyes on a pebble. And the front cover makes this one look like more of the same. But no. You open it up, and the first 'craft' is how to make a hexagonal thatched hut as as your workshop. Then it moves on to stools, benches, and tables to furnish the hut, how to lash together a frame loom to weave grass mats as wall-coverings for the hut, and an old design for a folding portable chaise lounge made of willow-shoots. And just keeps getting awesomer, ending with several designs for temporary wilderness pottery kilns and how to make inks, paints and dyes from gathered materials.
I have to be honest, I am kind of in love with this book.
I threw in $5 for that lot, which was probably too much, but I combined my load with Mom's and she had an armload of Sunday School teacher books, so it more-or-less came out right.
A large rectangular lap weaving loom, already strung for a placemat (which I will probably re-purpose for other sorts of fiber arts, possibly sprang, because, um, I find almost all lap weaving ugly. Probably due to the prevalence of scratchy, coffee-stained brown-and-orange exemplars at my grandmother's house.)
An old-fashioned rectangular embroidery stretching frame.
Two small jars of even smaller nails (for nailing medallions to my hiking stick)
A mini spiral notebook of heavy drawing paper.
How To Make Paper Flowers from the Dennison Publishing Company, 1922. Because one day,
Campcraft ABCs by Catherine T. Hammett, 1941. This seems to be a different recension of the 1950 Campcraft paperback I was looking at earlier, only published in a larger and more DIY format by the Girl Scouts of America. And since the little paperback is falling apart, and also full of neat stuff, I grabbed this one up.
Nature Crafts by Ellsworth Jaeger, 1949: I don't usually pick up nature crafts books, because they almost always consist of "creative ideas" like putting pinecones on a cardboard wreath or gluing googly eyes on a pebble. And the front cover makes this one look like more of the same. But no. You open it up, and the first 'craft' is how to make a hexagonal thatched hut as as your workshop. Then it moves on to stools, benches, and tables to furnish the hut, how to lash together a frame loom to weave grass mats as wall-coverings for the hut, and an old design for a folding portable chaise lounge made of willow-shoots. And just keeps getting awesomer, ending with several designs for temporary wilderness pottery kilns and how to make inks, paints and dyes from gathered materials.
I have to be honest, I am kind of in love with this book.
I threw in $5 for that lot, which was probably too much, but I combined my load with Mom's and she had an armload of Sunday School teacher books, so it more-or-less came out right.

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So now I feel that I do actually remember things, so that's good.
I bet you could sell them at cons.
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Assorted people keep telling them to just do a registry wedding (I would totally do paper flowers for that one, too) but so far they're holding out for the whole kafoozalum, and I don't suppose I can blame them.
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(And a bouquet made of comics sounds AWESOME.)
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