Welcome Aboard

We would like to welcome you to Cathy and Chuck's blog. We try to make at least twice monthly entries but sometimes get lax and neglect our blog. BUT we try to make up for it with hopefully interesting and informative articles. Happy Reading

About Us

My photo
I'm Cathy, a 67 year old retired Navy wife. Spent 24 years as a Navy wife until my husband retired after 27 years of service. We traveled all over from Washington D.C., to Puerto Rico, St. Croix, St. Maartin, Martinique, Japan and Korea. We re-located to this beautiful state of TN from Central FL. We live in the mountains on 5 acres with our 10 cats (5 indoor). I'm Chuck, the Other Half of the equation. I'm a 68 y/o sailor at heart. While in the Navy I was a Cryptologic Tech (Intel type). My most memorable tours of duty were in Submarines (Scorpion, Skipjack, Triton & Ray), as Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Deputy Director National Security Agency (RADM C.F. Clark), and my last tour as Operations Chief at NSGA Homestead, Fl during Hurricane Andrew. It was a good time to retire. We have been looking for this home since 1965 and thank the good Lord that we're finally here.

Monday, January 23, 2012

 Of course ya'll know who this is.  Why it's Cathy and her loving hands are crocheting an afghan for some lucky someone.
 Don't know how she does this so fast but she's really quick and watches TV at the same time.  I can't even walk and chew bubblegum at the same time.  She started crocheting just before Christmas and is now working on number six (6).
 She's making this one from a lot of yarn that she had left over but it looks good altogether and these things are really warm.  She's made baby receiving blankets and the kids are still dragging them around when their older.
We always keep a couple draped over the couch and loveseat and we have another at the foot of our bed.  Believe me they sure come in handy.  I had made a couple of other pictures for the blog but Cathy wouldn't let me put them on.  She was crocheting at the kitchen table and was wearing her housecoat, plus, I got her when she stuck her toung out at me.  Totally in character for her but HEY - it's her blog.  ENJOY!!

Friday, January 20, 2012

TWO 'N ONE

Simply amazing what you can do when you're bored.  Anyway - thought I'd post pics of Cathy's purse and wallet while I was at it then I'm gonna go catch her at work and photograph what I can and put it on here too. 



This is the picture that I used for Cathy's purse and wallet.

 This is the design I put on one flap of her purse.
 This is a pattern that I had from a previous project that she always liked.  They're Maple leaves - so I put them on the other flap.

CABIN FEVER

Well - Christmas and New Years was here and gone and winter has definately set in here on the mountain. Cathy and I been hunkered down for the most part dodging cold and rain, not so much snow, yet. I had a few days work helping construct a 24' x 48' storage barn which kept me out from under Cathy's feet but now I'm home again full time. We're both coming down with cronic cabin fever. Cathy has started crocheting afghans, her usual winter keep-me-busy thing and I took up an old hobby of leather tooling. In fact, the gal we built the barn for commissioned me to tool a leather chair bottem for her. I'm still working on that but thought both Cathy and I would share some pics of our hobbies. Here goes.

      This first pic shows me carving a pattern of a
wild rose on a piece of leather.  You can free hand draw a pic onto tracing paper and transfer it on to the leather or trace an existing pic.  I've done it both ways.  You have to wet the leather first and let it partially dry for the knife to cut right.
 This shows the pattern after it has been cut into the leather and is now ready to be tooled.  The leather has to be dampened again and allowed to partially dry before the tooling process begins.  This process continues throughout the tooling.  I only used 10 tools for this pattern.  You have to hammer the leather down around the design to make it look embossed.  This process also burnishes the leather around the pattern making it standout even more.



This shows the final product and the pattern that I
that I used.  The knife you see in the lower left is the swivel knife used to cut the leather.  Of course there's more to it than just hammering, you have to learn what and how to shade, what to cut and what not to cut, and lastly are the freehand cuts that you make with the knife to make the object look realistic.  The edges of the leaves are an example.  I tooled Cathy a purse and wallet for Christmas.  I transferred a pic I found of Jim our old horse onto leather for her.  I'll post a pic of that next.  I also want to get Cathy making herafghans.  She's super fast and watches TV whiledoing it.  She was thinking of having the neighbors in for a quilting bee while she crochets her afghans.  I thought it would be a super idea .                                                                                     

Back Porch View

Back Porch View
Eastern view off our back porch