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Weavin’ Wicker Woman Blog on Kindle

January 20th, 2012 · No Comments · Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog

Weavin’ Wicker Woman Blog is once again available on Kindle! so when you are away from the Internet and/or your smart phone you can still read the posts and not miss a thing!

Weavin Wicker Woman Blog on Kindle

Get your dose of this chair caning, wicker and basketry blog, Weavin’ Wicker Woman on Kindle today. Keep in touch so you never miss a lick!

Artist Cathryn Peters Signature

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Tuesday Tips–Leaving your mark on rewoven chair seats

October 4th, 2011 · 4 Comments · Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog

TUESDAY WEAVING TIPS — Whenever you get the chance to “leave your mark” on a chair seat that you are restoring or reweaving, be sure to do it. Here I’ve inserted my business card between the cardboard triangles used for stuffing a paper rush chair seat.

publicity-biz-card-rush-chair

Don’t pass up the opportunity to get free advertising for your caning business and at the same time, leave a bit of history for the next generation. You can also write the information on the flat side rails as a more permanent way to leave your mark.

sign-date-repairs-paper-rush-seat

If you are weaving a porch cane or wide binding cane seat, where the weaving goes around the rungs and is both on the top and bottom of the seat, you can either insert your business card in the “pocket” or you can write your name and date on one of the rails.

Over-the-rail or wide binding cane footstool

All will be covered up by the weaving, so only the next weaver will be aware of the information, but it’s been a real treat for me to make these discoveries after removing a seat that was last woven in say, 1945.

Depending on the type of chair seat you are working on and the type of material you are using to stuff the seat, you might want to consider also inserting a recent front page of your local newspaper that has the date and location for posterity also.

Another thing you might consider is applying a small return address label on the bottom of the chair seat, in the case of a rush seat for example,  or even on the front inside rail of a hole-to-hole cane chair.

biz-label-cane-chair

On the hole-to-hole cane seats, I prefer to adhere the label to the front inside rail, so they are not visible as you look at the chair seat. Sometimes if you put the label on the back inside rail, it can be seen and is a distraction.

wicker-woman-cane-repair-label

I didn’t trust the adhesive on the back of this mailing return address label, so I also applied a bit of carpenter’s yellow glue to the back of the label to make it stick better. As you can see, I rewove this cane seat when I was still in Zumbro Falls, MN way back in 1995 and the label is still there!

Well, I hope these Tuesday Weaving Tips have given you a little help in your chair caning business and that you’ll come back soon for more! What creative ways have you found to “leave your mark” on chair seats that you weave or reweave? Please leave your comments below.

Enjoy and Happy Weaving!

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New page added TheWickerWoman YouTube Channel

August 8th, 2011 · No Comments · What's New

There’s a new page right here on WickerWoman.com so now you can watch and subscribe to The Wicker Woman YouTube Channel without leaving the site!

Peters-willow-moose-basket

You’ll find some very helpful chair caning hints & tips of the day, antler basket photo gallery videos, how-to chair caning and other seat weaving instructions, gathering and processing cattail leaves and much, much more!

Gathering Cattails for Hand-twisted Rush Class

Take a look today and be sure to subscribe to TheWickerWoman Channel so you don’t miss any newly posted videos, don’t miss out.

chair-caning-by-baby

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Chair Caning in Hickory, North Carolina

August 8th, 2011 · 2 Comments · Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog

Traditonal hole chair caningMONDAY MENTION–Chair Caning

We just added another chair caning expert to the National Furniture Repair Directory™ in the Seatweaving section on WickerWoman.com!

Dick Knotts, owner of The Seat Doktor, has been weaving for over 10 years and will be more than happy to repair any of your chair caning projects! He’s also a brand new member of The SeatWeavers’ Guild, Inc. and we’re so glad to count him as a member of the guild.

“I’m weaving up a storm here, catching up after the Gathering. I thoroughly enjoyed meeting all those folks and I learned a lot. Thanks to you for all you have done for the Guild these four years and for your website and terrific marketing ideas.” Dick Knotts

It was a pleasure meeting Dick and learning tips and hints from him, too at TSWG Gathering in Noblesville, IN and to now have him on the Furniture Repair Directory™ here on WickerWoman.com

Give Dick a call today and get on his appointment repair schedule for all your chair caning needs. Check out his chair caning blog to see all the projects he’s writing about.

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Updates to WickerWoman.com

June 18th, 2011 · No Comments · What's New

There have been so many updates made to the website that I hardly know where to begin and have not been very good about telling ya’ll about them, sorry!

I’ll start with the new blog header so you can catch up on all the great chair caning, wicker, and basket making posts that have been made this year and over the past seven years, too!

As you might already know, at the first of this year I discontinued the old blog on Blogger.com at http://wickerwoman/blogspot.com and moved it over here to my own website domain on WickerWoman.com as a WordPress blog.

Weavin Wicker Woman Blog Header

Old Blog Header for Weavin' Wicker Woman

I kept the same name  “Weavin’ Wicker Woman” for my chair caning blog and basketweaving blog as before,  to avoid any confusion and keep my followers.

Also managed to transfer over all the posts, going back seven years to the very first post made on July 17, 2004!!! How’s that for cool? Find them at the bottom of the right hand sidebar under “Archives,” listed by dates.

2011-Weavin Wicker Woman blog-header

2011--New Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog Header Graphic

The “Weavin’ Wicker Woman Blog” can be found at this URL http://www.WickerWoman.com/blog or you can click on the navigation bar to the left on most pages of the website, or find it at the top navigation menu on other pages.

We’ve kept the same great social network icon buttons of Google Friend Connect and NetWorkedBlogs and have both RSS Feed or Email Subscription so you can sign up and follow the blog, and not  miss a single post!

But we’ve also added ways to connect to The Wicker Woman (that’s me), through some other popular social networks like  Facebook Fan Page, Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube channel! Find all the icon buttons on the right sidebar on the blog for easy reference.

Well, that’s all for today’s post on the “What’s New” site update blog on WickerWoman.com! Enjoy and Happy Weaving!

Hope to hear from you soon either in the comments here below or on the Weavin’ Wicker Woman blog itself at http://www.WickerWoman.com/blog

Cathryn Peters signature

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Loss of a Loved One

June 10th, 2011 · 23 Comments · Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog

Jack Jungroth and daughter Cathryn Peters 2011

Dad and Me June 1, 2011

As some of you know, my father, Jack Jungroth from Oklahoma City, OK passed away on Tuesday, June 7th around 10 p.m. He died peacefully sitting in front of his computer watching a slideshow of family pictures I had just downloaded to his computer, at the age of 81.

Thankfully I was able to be there visiting with him from May 28th until June 7th. I had just flown home that afternoon, landing in Minneapolis around 7 p.m. and was planning a visit with our son, daughter-in-law and the two grandsons before driving the rest of the way home to Angora, a four hour drive.

Then at 11 p.m. one of my brothers that lives near Mom and Dad, called to say dad had passed. We were all very, very surprised and shocked with the news. He requested there be no funeral or memorial service, but that he be remembered at the next Jungroth Family reunion!

I am so grateful that I was able to be with him and visit for one last time and also solve some computer problems he had, download and organize some pictures on the computer and to visit with him and an old friend of his that I had only communicated with by email. My oldest brother from California was also able to spend about a week there in OKC last month, so that was good too.

On that Tuesday morning, Mom, Dad, one of my brothers and myself had been to Dad’s doctor appointment, where everything seemed alright. He was not in the best of health with congestive heart disease, kidney failure, thyroid problems, pneumonia and high blood pressure. But even the doctors were shocked when they heard about Dad’s death, not expecting him to die so soon, especially since the GP just saw him that morning.

After the appointment we all went out to lunch at a Mexican restaurant and enjoyed a really nice meal, then they took me to the airport to see me off to Minnesota and went home themselves. Dad and I had been sitting in the back seat during the ride to the airport so he was telling me about all the new construction going on all over Oklahoma City, pointing out some of the familiar places that I frequented while living there in the late 1960s.

Dad’s normal evening routine was to check his emails and surf around a bit on the Net before watching the evening news and then going to bed. So at around 10 mom went into the computer room to tell him to come watch the news. But dad had already passed away sitting in front of the computer in the chair with his hands folded in his lap, looking like he was simply sleeping.

This was exactly the way he wanted to leave this earth, quickly, quietly and peacefully without lingering in a hospital or nursing home and without enduring pain. I like to think that it was simply his chosen time to depart, especially since he had tied up all loose ends financially and health-wise, had visited with old friends and had seen all his four kids within the last few days of his life.

His cardiologist was suggesting aortic valve replacement surgery once the pneumonia was cleared up, but Dad didn’t want any part of more surgery, especially after quintuple bypass in the 1990s. So this was a good way for him to go.

My dad’s passing was very similar to the way his own father passed away, sitting in a beach chair while salmon fishing from shore. Fishermen down the shoreline thought Grandpa was just tired and went to sit down in the chair, it wasn’t until later on that they realized he had died. But he was doing something he really loved, fishing–what a nice way to go, don’t you think?

God bless you and keep you Dad, you will be sorely missed by your family and friends. There’s no one that can take your place, and thank you from the bottom of my heart for all the lessons learned, good and bad.

You always encouraged me to be the best at whatever I loved and to follow my heart. You instilled in me a love and confidence to perform in front of an audience, no matter how big or how small, whether through singing, teaching or speaking engagements.

It’s also because of you and the “tricks of the trade” lessons you taught me that I enjoy public relations and promotion as much as I do. Knowing that I can do anything I set my mind to and to go after it, is a wonderful quality to pass on to your children.

I sure will miss the almost daily early morning phone calls from him asking, “Anything new up there?” and in the winter, “What’s the weather like, is it cold enough for you yet?” and on Sundays, “Are you watching Sunday Morning, they have a really great segment coming up?”

Big highlights in my father’s life were his love for and performances in barbershop quartet singing, the Scottish Clans of Shaw and Campbell, border collies, horses, Oklahoma Horse Council, the OKC computer club and genealogy. I’m sure I’ve forgotten some, but these are the really big ones I remember him enjoying for years.

Thank you, thank you, thank you dad I’m eternally grateful to have chosen you as my father! Please greet all those family members that have gone before you, we will all be reunited soon for another round!

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Weavin’ Wicker Woman Blog Changes

January 9th, 2011 · Comments Off · Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog

Old blogger.com headerAfter six years of blogging on the free Blogger.com platform, I am pulling the plug there next week and will only be blogging from my own domain website, WickerWoman.com

I’m keeping the name, Weavin’ Wicker Woman, as you’ll see on the new header. And just so you can find me again, the new URL is http://www.WickerWoman.com/blog

Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog Header

What this means is that all you Networked Blogs followers and the Google Friends followers will most likely have to subscribe again, just to make sure you don’t miss any new blog posts. The widgets for both are on the right sidebar of my new blog.

Thanks to the immense efforts of website designer and webmaster Christine Knowlton from New York, we’ve transferred all the old blog posts and have them listed in the Archives on the right sidebar. So you can look through ALL those past years, any time you want.

Although Blogger.com has a lot of really great features, it was cumbersome for me to make the updates, jumping back and forth from my website to the blog all the time. I will miss the fellowship of that tight Blogger.com community, but will keep in touch and follow all your blogs myself, just as before. Hopefully, you will do the same with mine.

And then too, there were some blog followers that never knew I have had a domain website since 1999! They thought I only had the blog thing going, go figure!

Will keep the same topics of chair caning, wicker repair, basketry, rustic twig furniture and related fiber arts and will also be “branching” out into even more wacky, weavin’ wonders! Happy Blogging ya’ll… Until next time!

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Weavin’ Wicker Woman Blog Changes

November 20th, 2010 · 2 Comments · Weavin' Wicker Woman Blog

blog header graphic

Well, we’ve almost finished moving my blog from Blogger.com to WickerWoman.com, but are still going to do a bit of tweaking.

Haven’t really decided whether or not to keep the same name as the old blog of Weavin’ Wicker Woman or just call it “blog” or the way it is now, Wicker Weaving Blog. And undecided on what header graphic to use also. Should it be the old blog header or just be the website header?

This migration and name change will also affect the followers on the feed and those that are Google Friends.  What do you all think?Please leave some comments and help me out, here! Thanks.


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