I actually made some sawdust in October! Even though I’m retired from Open Studios events and traveling to shows, once in a while I need to breath in the scent of cut wood.
The main items I created were several pieces for my wife’s rigid heddle looms. I made boat shuttles, stick shuttles, tapestry bobbins, ski shuttles, and rag shuttles. Since I have so much wood in my stash, and way too many scrap pieces I’ve saved over the years, much of it is long enough for my wife’s 20″ loom.
One item I made for myself was a new outdoor side table for our patio chairs to replace an old one made from a slice of tree trunk that broke from age. It’s salvaged maple coated with an outdoor UV protecting varnish. It’s just the right size for a couple of wine glasses and a small plate of cheese and crackers. Of course, with the time change, colder weather, and potential rains, it won’t get much use until we warm up again next Spring.
Other than tinkering with wood, I’ve been constantly writing up a storm, working on three novels. One is done and going through multiple edits, and the other two are moving along okay. Not great, but okay. (Too many life-associated distractions.) The one being edited is my one-off novel, Murder at the Commune. It is what is often called a modern historical novel, taking place in the late 1960s. Another novel I’m working on is the fourth in my Charles Blue Paranormal Mysteries, A Warlock in Provence. These are also modern historical novels, taking place from the 1960s to the 1980s. Now, the third novel I’m working on is, hopefully, the first of another series I call The Jonas Shaw Mysteries. It’s about an ex-policeman who is a luthier, a builder of stringed instruments, who attends craft shows around the country. Of course, murder happens.
Well, until next month, keep warm and enjoy the upcoming Holidays.





