Feb 26, 2011

Lady Marmalade

I'm a big fan of going out for breakfast.  Most of the time I order a simple two egg breakfast, since I'm a simple pleasures kind of gal.  Going out for breakfast is a great way to catch up with friends before the day gets busy and its especially great because it is so inexpensive.  I recently moved to Victoria, BC and have slowly been checking out the various breakfast places in town.  A couple weekends ago I went to Lady Marmalade with a friend.


I had heard mixed things about L.M. - good food, poor service and I decided to check it out myself.  In Victoria going out for breakfast can mean long lineups, which really sucks when you're hungry.  My friend and I are morning folk, and we arrived early enough (8:45 AM) that we had lots of choice for seating.  This is what it looks like inside - a bit eclectic, but in a homey (homy?) way.
I ordered (of course) the two eggs breakfast and my friend ordered the huevos rancheros.  I had been excited to see breakfast poutine, but then had those hopes dashed when the server told me no poutine on weekends. Here is my breakfast:
The presentation is super.  Overall I'd say that the ingredients were great: real butter, crunchy bread, real eggs (look at that yellow), good temperature, and decent portions.  The potatoes were a bit grrrrr, by which I mean tough.  The salad was a nice touch but the pieces could have been a bit smaller and therefore easier to manage.  Here is my friends breakfast:
He was a bit more disappointed.  His comments included the following: the beans tasted like they'd just been dumped out of a can with no flavouring added, the tortillas were sitting in the salsa and getting soggy, and overall it just wasn't easy to eat, unlike other huevos rancheros he'd had in the past.  Again though, great ingredients.

We both agreed that while L.M. was decent, neither of us would make it a favourite for breakfasts.

Feb 9, 2011

Fun Fish Patched Jeans

I’m always happy to find projects that allow me to use my sewing and creative skills in new ways.  Some time ago, I noticed a friend’s jeans – they were old, softened and well worn.  He’d already put a couple of patches on them with his sewing machine (I know – a man who owns a sewing machine, awesome!).  I offered to make him a patch to cover a slit in the knee.  This picture shows the patch I made (the fish) and his patch (the red square).



Up close you could that the pants still needed a lot of love.  Really, they were so worn that a lot of the fabric needed to be shored up.  Thus began a minor labour of love.  I quickly realized that I wouldn’t be able to access many of the areas with the legs intact, so I split the jeans down each outside seam.

I wanted to somehow blend my fish patch and his red square patch, since red squares and fish don’t usually coexist!  You can see in the next photo how I did a mock up of what I wanted to do.  I went online to find different types of fish to use.  At least one was inspired by a photo from National Geographic.



To make the patches I used an unbleached cotton as a base and sewed coloured fabrics onto it with a zig zag stitch.  For a couple I also did some hand embroidery.  Here’s the beginnings of the flying fish patch.  You can see the pencil outlines of the other patches.



Here is one of the fish where I did some hand embroidery for the eyes and the gills.



I made up some squares in red to match the original red square.  Here I’ve tacked them onto the jeans before I sew them on using my machine.



Here is the finished look of the front of the pants.  Under some of the areas I also sewed in a reinforcing layer of jean harvested from another soft old pair of jeans he gave me.  I didn’t want to go to all this work only to have the thighs rip open.



Having done all that work I decided that the back needed some attention even though the fabric wasn’t very worn out there.  I was at a loss about what to do fish-wise when I came up with the idea of a school of fish crossing across both legs.  Here is what it looked like before I sewed down my school.  You can see the split side seams.



This is a close up of the little fish.  I used some leftover slinky silver fabric and sewed it on with rainbow metallic thread.  [Side note: I think I was a bird in my past life and I love sparkles, so my sister bought me this spool of metallic thread even though I wasn’t sure what I’d ever use it for.]



Here is the back once it was completed. 



My friend has worn these jeans.  It takes a strong man to wear jeans covered in fish patches, but he’s got the personality to pull it off.  Unfortunately he’s a bit concerned to wear the pants in case they get damaged.  I guess he’ll just have to treat them like the work of art they are.