Tuesday's plans got moved around a bit. Michael the Marvellous Maker, installed the cabinet and the door keys.
Then we had a ceremony of carefully keeping the new keys, tossing the old, and I tossed all the old then later had a thought. The top lock, for which I had several keys, was the original builder-installed one. As is the lock for the outdoor storage.
I vaguely remembered there was a key for the outdoor storage, too. I never lock it but, in case any kind neighbor turns the inside knob and carefully locks it, locking me out, I'd better find the key.
So I retrieved the two old keys for the top lock and, clever me, they fit the outdoor storage. So now they're labeled and saved.
I thought about the neighbor possibility because years ago in our first house a visiting friend followed us out to the garden, to drink tea, locking the door after her.
I was too late to stop her, and pointed out I didn't carry house keys out to drink tea in the garden! And the only other door was the front porch, which only locked and unlocked from inside. Windows were too high for any of us to force. Very expensive locksmith visit ensued. The friendship was a bit dented by this incident.
Back to the present, Gary buzzed in and out, admiring, making me accept potato bread, he's deglutenizing his kitchen, retrieving the plants I minded for him, and Billie barked along.
After all this I thought I'd rest a minute, after lunch, before my Tuesday knitting group. I woke when it was half over. Oh. But I did make the planned delivery to the food pantry, ahead of their Thursday distribution.
Then it was a pot of tea on the deck, crowds of shouting birds, and my kindle open to
Late summer deck reading, very niche.
Textiles and Tea was a revelation about making, farming, dyeing and working with silk.
I made the crunchy tofu for supper, this time as dice, with more seasoning -- umami mix, cayenne -- in the batter.
It used up the rest of the batter from the fish, and the panko. I thinned the batter a bit.
This worked fine, in the toaster oven, not much oil, and it still crisped up, about 40 minutes at 400°f, or what the toaster oven claims to be that.
Foyle in the evening. Nice day, despite detours.
Happy day, everyone, may your detours be fun ones.
That first photo for the textiles is intriguing and fabulous - well they all are and I'm inspired to research Katwn Selk online. That work is quite mindblowing
ReplyDeleteShe's lovely, and intrepid in her research in India, where the silk farmers she met were pleased she wanted to learn from them and honor their skills.
DeleteAh, keys....I have found several bunches of old keys....I think that if I can't identify any I'll make moulds and stamps from the best and donate the keys to the artist blacksmith to have fun with!!
ReplyDeleteI've used old keys in artwork, but always been uneasy in case any were vital.
DeleteI locked myself out once, and the only person who had a spare key had moved to the other side of town, but he came out and unlocked my door and I have never left the house without a key in my pocket since then.
ReplyDeleteYes, one experience stays with you!
DeleteI imagine you'll be pleased the whole saga has reached an end, with things better than they were before.
ReplyDeleteSo much this. Back in July I was in despair of ever getting to normal, whatever that is. Now we're there.
DeleteThe new old kitchen cabinet looks perfect. I love all the Karen Selk silk.
ReplyDeleteYesterday was good, despite missing bits of the plans.
DeleteIt's good to have everything back in its rightful place. I smiled at the 'helpful' friend locking you out. I can understand a slight cooling of relations.
ReplyDeleteShe never acknowledged her mistake, one of those people! Classic eldest..
DeleteMs. Selk's name is almost too perfect. What beautiful work she does with such a lovely medium.
ReplyDeleteI thought that about her name, too. As if preordained!
DeleteI love the understated phrasing: ‘ The friendship was a bit dented by this incident.’
ReplyDeleteYes! Translation: I'll never know how I kept my hands off the fool...
DeleteThose silk artworks are gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteAren't they lovely! Such skill, and she's a happy person, though very aware of the threats to the environment. She does her bit to be in the solution.
DeleteI love silk...and that little worms produced it kind of skips my mind! But the feel of it is so nice when wearing it. I just realized I don't have anything silk any more. Mmm, something to think about. Glad you have that cute little cupboard that's useful now. I've two of those on each side of my stove...but this is an apartment, so no structural changes.
ReplyDeleteThe origin of silk is strange. So many processes needed to create fabric, you wonder who thought it up first.
DeleteThis cabinet is so much more useful now.
Nice to get reorganized. The silk painting is beautiful I have seen it before but nothing like that!
ReplyDeleteCathy
She's so talented, at every level with silk, all the way from worms to clothing.
DeleteGorgeous work by Karen.
ReplyDeleteShe's a wonderful maker, as well as gardener and dyer and writer!
DeleteThat silk quilting is so fancy and pretty. I've been watching The Great British Sewing Bee and they always mention how difficult it is to work with silk.
ReplyDeleteGlad you are happy with your new cabinet.
Silk is tricky, but silk thread is so fine and so strong, it's great to work with.
DeleteYay for completed work in the kitchen. The silk work is gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteI keep going back to look at that last piece. I'd love to touch it.
DeleteThe refurbished cabinet is quite the upgrade.
ReplyDeleteThe silks are beautiful!
Have a wonderful day. :)
I'm having a great day. Kitchen complete, cabinet and locks paid for, wheeee!
DeleteI really like this silk art. Your cabinet is now fully useful. Several years ago I thought I was gluten intolerant and lived that way for 2 years. Then I found it was something else. It's not difficult to avoid gluten these days but I sure was happy be to done with that!!
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping he will get testing now he's home with his own doctors, to be sure just what's up.
DeleteOh very smart regards the keys. I think that the reason many of us have a key stash of unidentified keys is you never know! I once sorted over 100 keys in a government department that had been put into a basket before the key register was a thing. There were over 50 still unidentified when I left but nobody had authorisation dump.
ReplyDeleteI expect future archaeologists will surmise these "keys" as early man called the objects, were gathered as a form of religious observance, to be kept carefully in a sacred container.
DeleteThe cabinets look great. I like how you said, the friendship was dented. Good way to put it. The silk art is just amazing.
ReplyDeleteFriendship seems like a sort of vessel filled with memories and feelings so it can be dented even start leaking, with a blow!
DeleteThat silk work is wonderful. Good for you for retrieving the keys. Our front door locks automatically when we close it, so I never, ever step outside even for a moment without my keys.
ReplyDeleteIt takes only one distracted moment to learn this!
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