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Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Sat hello to Veronica...


It’s been a weird month for me. Aside from my looming deadline for Harlequin Mills & Boon book ten, I’ve been preparing for the Historical Romance Retreat in Spokane in September where I am thrilled to be one of the featured authors.

I’m in some illustrious company- Julia Quinn, Eloisa James, Elizabeth Essex and my good friend and fellow Harlequin Historical author Nicole Locke to name but a few.


Billed as the Comicon for all lovers of historical romance, there is a tradition of dressing up in period costumes at the Retreat. To that end I have been sewing. In total I have made, or am still making, a genuine bonnet and three Regency dresses. The most impressive of which is ‘Veronica’, my red satin gown for the Grand Ball.

Being a larger lady, I’ve had to adapt the dress patterns. The easiest way to do this is to invest in a dress form. Mine is wearing one of my old bras stuffed with eight pairs of socks (yes, you did just read eight!) to ensure that my costumes fit my overt bosoms properly.
Here is a little montage of the stages of Veronica.

Virginia Heath writes raunchy, Regency romantic comedies for Harlequin Mills & Boon. 

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Kristina Knight: Taking a Break to Sew

The Bears Project
By Kristina Knight

This winter instead of frigid temperatures and a lot of snow on the ground, we've had a lot of gloom and rain and cloud cover. Now, don't get me wrong, I like a good rainy day. Rainy days are great for reading or bingeing on a favorite TV show. They're great for movies, and they're also great for writing.

But 67 of these days in a row? Can get a little daunting...to the point you need to head to Home Depot or Lowe's for one of those 'happy lights' to chase the winter blahs away. Which is why, on day 54 - when bebe had a day off from school - I decided to brighten the day with fabric.

bebe is always up for a little craft project - three years ago she helped me pick out fabric for a book quilt for our new nephew and a couple of summers ago, we made a raggedy jelly roll quilt .

What I like about sewing is that it frees my subconscious to think about other things. I'd just received a revision note on my next SuperRomance from Harlequin, and I've been trying to figure out the basics for a new series I want to start, and I'm waiting on edits for another of my SuperRomances, and I need to figure out the conflict elements for the book I have in draft...so there are a lot of characters vying for attention. They don't all talk at once, but invariably when I start thinking about one project the next wants more attention.

Quilting gets me out of the cacophony of characters talking in my head - because I need to concentrate on how cutting the right dimensions, and where I want the seams to go, and which thread is going to add dimension to which fabrics. The characters have to settle down, and invariably while they're settled, my subconscious goes to work.

By the time I had all the squares for this project cut out and put together, I knew what I wanted to do with those conflict elements, and I had a better grasp on the new series...and I still didn't have edits for that other book, but I thought I had a better handle on the revision note, too. Which led to another a-ha moment for the book in draft. And I got all of that when I wasn't actively thinking about any of them - I was focused on seaming and thread and how to arrange each square...and on and on.

I also had a great conversation with bebe, and I won't hear from my editor for a little while yet, but I'm eager to hear her thoughts...all because of a super simple quilt pattern, some fabric and thread.

Do you sew or quilt? When you're not writing, what kinds of creativity inspire you?



Kristina Knight's latest release, Protecting the Quarterback, is available now from Harlequin Superromance: 

This is more than just a game … to her.

Sports broadcaster Brooks Smith has always been more involved with the game than the players. But after she shares the spotlight at an awards ceremony with tabloid sensation Jonas Nash, one night of letting her guard down around the infamous quarterback spirals into many heated days and nights together when she gets assigned to the story of the year…

The hottest player in professional football is hiding a secret that could end his career for good. Now Brooks is caught on the sidelines between the job she loves and the man she is falling in love with.

Amazon  B&N  KOBO  iBooks  Harlequin

You can find out more the book and Kristina on her website, and feel free to stalk follow her on FacebookTwitter or Instagram

Thursday, February 09, 2017

Stitches in time – Kandy Shepherd


These past few days I’ve been helping my daughter with a sewing project. I’m not allowed to say what it is, as it’s a surprise gift for someone special. Suffice to say it’s a craft project of something decorative and lovely and involved quite a deal of machine stitching.

I went shopping with my daughter for fabric and trim. She’s very creative and it was great fun. All the while I was reminding her that I have a deadline for my next book and I would be able to help her with it but not actually do it. (Not like all those school projects that kept me up late at night…)


My daughter chose some lovely colors for her project

 Suffice to say, I ended up doing much of the machine sewing. Not because she wasn’t willing, but because her own deadlines were catching up with her and I sew so much faster. Of course, I loved working with my wonderful daughter. She’s in her early twenties and in the final year of a long health-professional degree. I know she’ll be flying the nest only too soon. Such special shared moments will become rarer and are to be cherished.

Sewing is a skill I don't think you forget!

 As I dragged out my ancient sewing machine, I realized that I’d bought it when I was about the same age as she is now. It’s practically an antique! The various threads and trims and pieces of equipment in my sewing box brought back memories of the many items I’d sewn using this machine. Clothes, cushions, curtains. Not just because I enjoyed sewing and being creative but because of financial necessity. In those days it was much cheaper to sew all those things than to buy them. If I wanted them, I had to make them myself.

That’s not to say I didn’t enjoy sewing. I loved it. My grandmother and mother were both trained dressmakers and I learned so much from them. My grandmother gave me an old Singer treadle machine for my eleventh birthday so I could learn on that before I hit the electric machine. (Now those machines really are antiques!) 

This is something like my first machine, given to me by my grandmother

I made clothes for my dolls before I went on to make my own. I didn’t have much money but my wardrobe as a teenager was always much admired!

I marvel that my own trusty machine I saved up for so long for is still going strong and did a great job for my daughter’s project. Of course one of the reasons for that is that it is so rarely used these day so it’s still in good condition. I stopped sewing many years ago. I didn’t even make little outfits for my daughter when she was tiny—something I’d always thought I’d do. Time, or lack of it, was part of it. But maybe I also just lost interest.

My great interests as a young person were cooking and sewing—as well as reading and writing. The reading and writing have never stopped and it’s a dream come true that I’m a published author! I’ve kept on cooking too, still interested in trying new recipes and cooking for my family and friends.

But the sewing has gone by the board. Something once such an important part of my life just doesn’t happen any more. Until my daughter asked for my help. I remembered instantly how to use the machine, what to do to get her project the way she wanted. But I felt a little sad too, maybe remembering the young person I used to be when I did all that sewing and suddenly realizing how many years had passed since then.

“Let’s do more of this,” my daughter said, thrilled with the gorgeousness of what she’d made.

“Yes,” I said, hugging her. “I’d love to.”

Do you have a hobby or interest you once enjoyed but don’t do any more? Or something you’ve kept on doing and can’t ever see giving up? Please make a comment, I’d love to hear about it!



Another of my ongoing interests is gardening which made my Harlequin Romance, Hired by the Brooding Billionaire such a book of my heart to write. The heroine Shelley Fairhill is a gardener who brings back to life not just the neglected garden of the reclusive billionaire Declan Grant, but also his heart.

Hired by the Brooding Billionaire is on sale for just $0.99 between February 9 and February 20 as part of Harlequin’s Billionaire/Valentine price promotion. The special price is only available in the US ((Amazon, Nook, Apple, Kobo and Google) and Canada (Amazon, Apple and Kobo), as well as on Harlequin.com.











Kandy Shepherd is a multi-published, award-winning author of contemporary romance and women’s fiction. She lives on a small farm in the Blue Mountains near Sydney, Australia, with her family and a menagerie of four-legged friends.

Visit Kandy at her website



Connect with Kandy on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and Instagram


Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Ripping It Apart!

In most any DIY project, mistakes are made. You step back, look closely and realize that you missed something or overdid something or something just isn't right. And in that moment, people (ahem...me!) take one of three approaches -- they look away and continue DIY-ing, they go back and try to fix it or they rip it out and start over. 


I've been crocheting and sewing since I was a girl and I've had teachers of both taking different approaches. Some were flexible -- oh, that's not too bad, just do ___ to compensate). Some were rigid -- that's wrong, take it/rip it/pull it out. Some were more critical - and not in a bad way. They could assess how the mistake or misstep would affect the overall finished project and recommend which path to take whether to rip or to ignore or a mix of both.

And I grumbled and complained my way through it all! But I learned as I went. . . or so I thought! Fast-forward from sewing and crocheting to now - writing.....



Over the 34 books I've written and are working with almost a dozen different editors at 5 publishers, each of my editors has taken a different approach to the writing version of rip/pull, ignore or that mix - revisions. Now, I'd love to tell you that I am the bestest writer you've ever read, but sadly, that is not the situation. And, from what I can tell about the publishing and writing industry, there just aren't any? many? authors who don't need to revise their work at some point. 


Some editors love to pull things apart - to move scenes, reimagine characters and plot, to tear it all apart and piece it back together in a completely different way. Some delicately apply their skills, creating a new thing out of the old with a light touch. Some do both, depending on the story and the writer. 

And I've worked with them all! And yes, it's painful. And yes, I complain. 



But, it's a critical part of the process of a writer putting their words and story into a readable form. An editor cleans things up. A good editor picks up on errors and issues. A great editor clarifies the writer's vision of their story and helps mold it into a great book. 

Right now, I'm in the middle of revising not one, but TWO different manuscripts with two different editors from two different publishers and I'm writhing in pain! LOL! 

BUT - I know it will all work out. I know the finished projects AKA the books coming out next Spring will be stronger and better for the pain. I know I'm learning more about my strengths and weaknesses as a writer in working with great editors.

So, how about you? What's your latest DIY project? Do you rip it out when you've made a mistake in your DIY projects? Do you ignore it and move on, hoping for the best? C'mon - be honest - we're all friends here! 




Terri's next book, RISING FIRE, will be the first book in her new WARRIORS OF DESTINY series from NAL/Signet in March 2015! Visit her website or her FB profile or page for lots more info about everything! 

***Terri's winner is Luanna Stewart!  Please email totebag@authorsoundrelations.com with your mailing details!***