Archive for the ‘Garden For Victory’ Category

Free Victory Garden Ensignia Embroidery Patterns

Part of my Summer of organization includes decorating parts of the apartment that have been barren since we moved in a year and a half ago. One of these areas is the kitchen. So far the whole thing has just been plain white. It’s painted white with white appliances and I have white tie shades on the windows. It’s a small kitchen, but we do have a little dining nook where we eat dinner. I’m getting so tired of looking at blank walls! Because Hubby is the main chef in the house, I don’t want to go too feminine with the decor. We’ve been planning on replacing our cookware with something green (in color) but I still love the vintage white look. I didn’t know what to do for a color scheme because sometimes I come across objects for the kitchen that only come in one or two colors and none of them are green or white… so I needed an idea that could accept a rainbow of possibilities if worst came to worst. Since We are both big history buffs and love our heirloom garden, we decided to go with a WWII Victory Garden theme. I LOVE Victory Garden stuff, and that allows us to pretty much include any veggie or farm related aspects we would want.

I’ll expand on some little additions and the overall plan at a later date, right now I am focusing on Chef’s towels. I LOVE vintage needle work and tea towels. I have a TON of cute vintage veggie themed patterns, but I wanted to incorporate a few of my own. My biggest inspirations for this whole room are the WWII Women’s Land Army and Victory Garden posters. If you are unfamiliar with what I mean, you can find examples Here and Here. The second is a great exhibit called Beans Are Bullets that even has period videos. From looking at these posters for a while I found a few emblems and logos that really caught my eye and I turned those into embroidery patterns for my own use and have decided to share them with my readers. Just right click and save the images to your hard drive and then print them out or trace them onto wax paper and pin it to your fabric and embroidery away!

The Food For Freedom image was taken from a U.S. Dept of Agriculture poster and the C is from the U.S. Crop Corps (Women’s Land Army) campaigns.

The V for victory with the basket of produce is from an ad for the National League of Wholesale Fresh Fruit & Vegetable Distributors. I did a quickie job embroidering this one on a hankie just to show you what it looks like in thread. I hope you enjoy the patterns!

Have A Victory Garden Part 5


With today’s posting of part 5, all of the vintage WII Have A Victory Garden booklet have now been posted! I hope that you all enjoyed it and found it useful! I know I have!

  1. Cover, Title Pages & 1-13
  2. 14-28
  3. 29-43
  4. 44-63
  5. 64-78, Index & Back Cover

Have A Victory Garden Part 4

Sorry it took me so long to get this weeks PDF file posted, I had to rescan several pages, but here it is! The fourth part of the booklet for download!

Have A Victory Garden Part 3



The third part of the Have A Victory Garden booklet is now available for download HERE.

Week in Reflection: Week 3|5.11

This week (end) has been sort of busy for us, between soccer and trying to reorganize our home, we didn’t have a lot of time for other things. We’ve decided to rearrange and redecorate our bedroom. It still feels like we just moved into it and we’ve been here almost a year and 1/2. I’ve been inspired and I can’t wait to get some of the larger projects underway so that I can share them with you! We’ve been doing some Spring cleaning, trying to get everything ready for our vacation that is only 40 days away. There is nothing like coming home to a completely clean house after a long trip! We had to turn on the a/c for good this week. It gets so hot in here in the evenings that it is almost unbearable! I finally received my gift certificate to the NBC store that I won in the NBC contest a few weeks ago. I used it to buy a pink Biggest Loser t-shirt for me and a Dwight bobble-head (The Office) for hubby’s desk. I sold several items in the store this week; the proceeds from which I used to purchase some items for my bedroom project. I bought a pattern to use to start making my summer wardrobe. I tried to pick one that would camouflage my tummy, but still be light and cool for the hot weather. I figured that I could customize it by doing my own thing with the sleeves and necklines and just using the pattern as a basic guide. I am always in need of leggings, so being able to make my own is a plus. I also think that the over-blouse can be easily adapted into a bolero, which I love!

Everything on the garden front is coming together. I recently separated the plants so that we only had one per “pod” so that they could grow better. While they are still on the windowsill, they are doing great! Especially the watermelons. I can’t WAIT to get them outside, which it looks like we might be able to do next week! I did find this odd occurrence above this weekend. We bought these tomatoes earlier in the week at the Piggly Wiggly and when I went to use it I noticed something green trying to pop out of the side of it (above left). I’m terrified of bugs, and of course that was my first thought! LOL. When I got up enough courage to cut it open, I found that the seeds had sprouted INSIDE the tomato (above right), inside my house and were trying to get to the light!!! I’ve never seen anything like it before! I had to take photos to show you. It tried so hard to survive, I gave it a little corner of the garden where we shall see if it produces anything!

As I’m sure you’ve heard, no one was raptured this week. We’ll we still have December to look forward to I guess, lol. Hubby decided to rapture prank (above left) the neighbors across the street… they thought it was pretty funny. He ran into a guy at the grocery store who had a dog (above right) that looked an awful lot like our Brooni, although she is a lot prettier! We have no idea what Broon is, so finding any dog that looks like it could be the same combination is exciting; this man didn’t know what his dog was either unfortunately. We did manage to work in a good bit of TV in the evenings, so this week’s review section is long!




I had kind of wanted to see A Christmas Carol when it came out, but we never did. I like Jim Carry and it also has Colin Firth in it as Fred! I thought the animated Gary Oldman was a little creepy though. It was a really good version of the story, no Mickey Mouse cameos or anything like you’d expect from a Disney film. I saw the first several episodes of Colonial House when it originally aired on PBS. I had to stop watching it though because I became so disgusted with the Governor (Waco, TX preacher Wyers) who insisted on trying to turn the place into a religious “city on a hill” by forcing non-Christians to go to church, etc, etc and completely ignoring all of the other aspects of the project that they were there to accomplish. They had mediocre corn yield, the food was rotting and they weren’t producing ANYTHING to repay their parent company back in England under his watch. In the episodes that i hadn’t seen I was glad that he went home early and left the colony to achieve a little bit of progress. While he appointed a wishy washy governor that was more worried about doing whatever his wife told him to and about wording everything he said like an affected ninny than making sure the colony could survive the Winter, they still made it in spite of that. The company sent their own man to help them and the freemen, the servants and the Vorhees family really shined at the end of the project I thought. Great show if you can get through the first half of the episodes before the Wyers are gone for good without pulling your hair out!

Dinner for Schmucks was funny and cute. I love Paul Rudd and Steve Carell. The little mouse dioramas are adorable too! Get Him to the Greek was funny, but not as funny as I was expecting it to be. Maybe I would have found it funnier if I had done heavy drugs in my past. LOL. P.Diddy freaking out was hilarious though. I found Inception to be WEIRD! DiCaprio has become a phenomenal actor, but this movie was strange and somewhat depressing. Red was pretty awesome. I love most of the cast, especially Helen Miren and I had been wanting to see the film for some time! The A-Team wasn’t all I had expected it to be, but it was what it was. Nice cameos though. I’m not a huge fan of Channing Tatum, but The Eagle was pretty good. It had a pretty cool ending I thought. The Last Exorcism pretty much sucked. Low budget, boring, predictable. The Other Guys was hilarious in True Will Ferrell style! Mark Wahlberg has become a great comedic actor after all. “I’M a PEACOCK, LET ME FLY!!!!” The Rite is another movie that we wanted to see when it came out, but someone told us it wasn’t any good. They were wrong, it was pretty good. Anthony Hopkins was great and there is even a small part played by Ciaran Hinds, one of my favorites! We wanted to see The Walking Dead when it premiered back in October, but I don’t think we get AMC. WHY it is on AMC I’m not sure really. lol. We finally got to see the whole series at the beginning of the week and we loved it!  like zombie flicks and this one just goes on and on. The beginning is very similar to 28 Days Later, then it turns into something more like BBC’s Survivors. It’s a little bit better thought out than most zombie movies and I can’t wait for Season 2 to start in October! The Expendables was funny because they are old and they used a lot of cliche’s in the film. I saw Arthur a couple decades ago, but hubby had never seen it before. We saw the promo for the new version and hubby was inspired to watch the old one even though he hates Liza Menelli. Hubby likes Roman history so we watched Centurion. We enjoyed it, it was pretty good.

Now onto my two favorites! Extreme Archaeology was an 8 episode series that aired on BBC4 a long time ago, it’s part of the Time Team family. The people on the show do things like go into acid filled caves and hang off the sides of cliffs in order to retrieve samples and document sites that are being eroded, collapsing or just disappearing from the face of the Earth in general. It’s really amazing to watch. If you can get your hands on a copy, I recommend it. Filthy Cities was a three episode show on BBC2 that took you back in time to when three of the world’s biggest cities were wallowing in their own filth: New York, London and Paris. We loved this show! It was funny, witty, informative and very well made. If you lived in the UK, you were also able to acquire scratch & sniff cards that went along with the show, making it the first attempt at “Smell-o-vision” to date!

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This has been a long reflection this week! I’ll TRY to keep the Blogland update short, but you know it’s hard for me to do so!

Have A Victory Garden Part 2


The second fifteen page installment of the WWII Have A Victory Garden booklet is now available for download HERE.

Have A Victory Garden pt 1

Last Fall I happened on a pair of WWII Victory Garden publications at a local estate sale, so of course I snatched them up! We love historic (and there for usually more natural) methods of cleaning, cooking, gardening, etc. making these a definite addition to the BUY pile! I think I paid $6 for both booklets, which is more than I would normally pay, but they were in really good shape and I rarely see them anywhere. I think maybe these booklets and others like them were very common and so no one thought to save them or figured they weren’t wanted anymore? I remember my husband telling me that his Grandma Bertie had left him her ration stamps when she passed. He put them in a box in the attic with the rest of his keepsake belongings and went off to college. Then he came home to find that his older (insert expletive of your choice) brother had thrown them away with everything else hubby owned. The victory garden movement was HUGE in the United States and Britain during WWII. They were everywhere and almost 1/2 of the vegetables consumed in the US were home grown from what I understand. We have always been interested in Victory Garden style growing, Heirloom varieties, organic food production and historic farming methods. Now that it has become sort of popular, it makes it much easier to find information and products to assist you.

I’ve decided to share the Have A Victory Garden booklet with the world over the next month or so via a series of 5 PDF files consisting of 15 pages each. I will post a new segment every Saturday for the next 5 weeks. After that I will start with the next booklet, which tells you what to do with some of your harvest: Health-For-Victory- Home Canning Special Feature published in 1943. Below is a sample of the downloadable PDF of part 1.

Small Plot Gardening Article Scan -April 1975

As a frequent renter of small homes or medium sized apartments and as the owner of a home that sits on a limited supply of land, small plot gardening is very close to my heart. Although I’d love a BIG plot of clean, well irrigated land someday on which to have a small personal farm, the likelihood of that at the moment isn’t 100%. In the meantime, I need to make due with what I’ve got! Often all I have are a few large planters or a strip of dirt only a few feet square. So far we’ve done well with “mini-gardening” because we don’t really raise a WIDE variety of vegetables. We stick to what we eat, which immediately cuts out most peppers, squashes and cabbages. lol. I found a stack of old magazines at a Goodwill not TOO long ago and among them was this April 1975 issue of The Saturday Evening Post that you see to the left. I picked it out from the pile and bought it because of the article about the kind of gardening that we do. I found it to be very informational even though it’s only 2 pages long. I think it is neat to look back, even just 40 years, to see how people used to do things. All of the images in this post are property of The Saturday Evening Post and can be enlarged by clicking on them so that you can easily read them.

I hope to have more scans of vintage gardening pamphlets from the era of the Victory Garden coming in the future! I need to find the time to sit and scan them, so check back soon or subscribe!

Outdoor Dreaming

Spring is started to show her face around these parts and while I’m not an outdoors-woman by any means, I am starting to feel a little bit of the fever myself. We’ve started out tomatoes on the windowsill and are eagerly awaiting the time when we can put them in the ground. I’ve thought a few times about going out to ride my bike and I actually spent a couple hours outside this weekend taking photos of some items for the shop. Spring means so many things to me and apparently it does to other bloggers as well. I’ve noticed lots of cleaning posts and pastel crafts taking over on some of my favorite blogs! Every year at this time I am drawn back to my poor old house sitting all alone and empty with it’s blacktopped backyard and poison ivy overgrowth. We won’t be able to paint the house or reside in it or anything for a very long time. The Navy keeps us WAY more than a daily comutes distance away. For vinyl siding they want $17,000 to cover the house, and of course vinyl siding is the Devil in my opinion, but that is the CHEAPEST option. Even though it will be years before we can live in it, I figure that we can at least maybe get SOME of the outside fixed up this year. We did some repairs in the fall, and I would like to get at least the asphalt off the backyard before we leave for Summer vacation in New York.

As you can see from the diagrams below, we have a long way to go from what we currently HAVE, to what we WANT. The first diagram is our home and lot in it’s current state. The poorly blacktopped driveway needs to be redone. The steps to nowhere on the back right hand side (where there used to be a door 100 years ago) are an issue. The overgrowth of poison ivy and other nonsense on the right hand side is out of control. The gray circles represent the areas where I managed to get the asphalt up with a pick-axe and a shovel by myself, LOL, but really the rest of it needs to go, NOW! We have the old rusted black fire escape stairs to the second floor back door which we are going to close off and join back into the first floor like it used to be, so those can go as well. The tiny little eve over the back door and the skewed and ugly concrete stoop that is right there too can be disposed of. We have a temporary chicken wire fence that we need to take down so that the black top can be cleared out. Our front staircase is made from HUGE limestone slabs which are moving a tad bit askew, the front planter box is empty, the front retaining wall is pushing out, the limestone sidewalk on the right side is out of whack. The dirt-blar-mess in front of the porch where the huge bushes used to be needs to have the stumps dug out of it and grass seed and perennials put down. That is just landscaping stuff really. lol I haven’t even figured in what the exterior of the house itself needs. While it’s all cosmetic, it’s all still a pain in my butt!

What we eventually want it to look like is the second image above. I want the limestone steps in front and the limestone sidewalk to the right straightened up correctly. I’d like the front planter to have some flowers and the limestone mail box enclosure at the front of it constructed properly. I want the retaining wall fixed, the stumps and excess dirt removed from the front yard so it won’t push out again and some plantings put next to the steps.  I want new railings for the front steps too. I’d like a 4 ft or so black or dark red wrought iron fence enclosing the front yard with a gate at the top of the little side steps, then for the fence to continue down the right side of the house, stopping at the back corner of the building. Along that side I would like to have all the weeds cleared out and small fruit bearing trees brought in. I would do gravel around the bases for drainage. I want those stairs to nowhere twisted (they are limestone blocks so it will be hard) so that they can be used to go down the slight slope from the backyard to the side yard and the empty spot left filled with gravel for good drainage. On the left hand side of the house I want either a red-brick and grass or limestone-brick and moss driveway put in and the nasty old asphalt one taken out. I want the back corner of the left hand side (which actually belongs to the retirement home, but they don’t use it) to be cleared of the pile of torn up asphalt and to transplant my hollyhocks there. We need a 6-7 ft tall privacy fence around the property line enclosing the back yard (which needs to be sodded or seeded after the blacktop is gone).

There will be a gate in the middle of the left hand side of the fence and one at the steps to the side yard. When you walk into the backyard from the driveway, to the left, going around to the other side of the fence will be waist high limestone planters that will serve as raised garden beds. I hate having to kneel down and hubby has bad knees already and he’s not yet 30. lol. I think tall beds are the way to go. Since our home is in the limestone capital of the world, it won’t be expensive or difficult to find enough cast off stones to make these beds. We have plenty of gravel under the asphalt which we will use to fill the bottom  half of the beds so that we won’t need a million tons of top soil to do the job. This will allow us to plant many veggies! We can train vines up the fence and use vertical planters attached to the fence for growing our herbs too. If you turn to the right when you come in the same gate, you’ll be met with the completely fenced in chicken yard. I’d like to keep a couple of chickens for eggs. I’ve wanted them for a long time and I even checked with local animal control and we are allowed to have chickens, just no roosters in city limits. I want their yard completely fenced, even on top, so I don’t have to worry about wild birds getting to them. Next to that we’d like to place a small chicken house. I want a really nice one, not something that looks like a death trap! I plan to make the roof of it double as a raised bed with a removable cold box lid for growing salad greens even in chilly weather. This will be where the horrible fire stairs and concrete stoop used to be! I want to remove the little eve over the back door and replace it with a grape arbor type of structure that would have clear plastic on the underside to keep the rain off, but so that it would still have the look of an open trellis. I could plant flowering vines or climbing roses on it and put a nice flagstone patio under it where we would keep some outdoor seating, the grill and a counter that would double as a gas meter cover.


Again, we aren’t outdoorsy people, so a little bit of yard and enough space for our garden, some chickens and a few small trees is more than enough space for us. Less to mow you know? lol Like I said, I’ve noticed many other bloggers getting Spring fever too. Katy Elliot of KatyElliot.com featured this lovely patio set above from West Elm called the Dexter set. However for 2 chairs, 2 chair cushions, the table and the bench it is a whopping $1080 on sale. That does not include tax, shipping or the cushion for the bench, which must be sold out because I couldn’t find it on the site. I love the Dexter set and while it would be perfect for our old house, that is a lot of money for lawn furniture!

A few years ago Kmart had a lovely red iron set by Martha Stewart Everyday called the Aberdeen Collection (above). This set also featured 2 chairs with cushions, a table and a bench with a cushion. The chairs were spring chairs, so they slightly rocked and reclined. At the time we had just bought the house and I always tried to restrain myself from EVER thinking about or considering ANY of the fun stuff like decorating and landscaping until all of the drudge work on the house was done. This meant  they sold out, winter came, then another year and now Kmart no longer carries MS products apparently. I couldn’t find anything MS on their site when I went looking for the set last week. I did eventually find a set called the Rock Lake Collection (below) by Country Living which is absolutely IDENTICAL to the old Aberdeen set in every way! See for yourself! At $460 this set is less than half the price of West Elm’s Dexter set that I mentioned previously.

I also have to figure out something that I can do with the front porch. We have a 300 sqft limestone porch in the front with hand carved pillars and stone railing. Right now we don’t use it and it’s roof is only half fixed. lol We had to build a temporary roof over the top of the frame because we took it apart to repair it correctly, but the insurance company complained before we could get it back together the way we wanted it. The previous owners had concreted over the roof of the porch to make it a balcony, which cracked and held water in the cracks, rotting the roof itself. Most of the support beams are still good, but we would like to have the Amish or someone who does quality work, repair it correctly once and for all. Once it is done, I’m not sure what I would put out there other than maybe a porch swing. I’ve always wanted one of those bed-style porch swings like the one pictured below from the 2008 Windmark Beach Idea House. Usually I find porch swings to be so stiff and uncomfortable, but this one looks like a dream!

We Met The Beekman Boys!!!!

We started watching The Fabulous Beekman Boys after I saw them on an episode of Martha Stewart Living talking about their historic farm in Rural New York state. As you all know, I was raised in rural Western NY and miss it terribly. So of course I’m going to give any show filmed in the motherland a chance! We have been hooked on the show ever since! It’s a documentary style reality show that centers around a couple from the city who decided to buy a farm and turn it into a thriving business. There are so many reasons to love this show! The couple (Dr. Brent Ridge and author Josh Kilmer-Purcell) have their ups and downs like any normal couple; they aren’t painting the picture to be endless roses and sunshine, but they also aren’t having a knock-down-drag-out every 15 seconds. I honestly believe that what you see is them genuinely being themselves. I love their message about sustainable living and community, which we feel are two subjects that definitely need a spotlight shined on them in this day-and-age. This is all set against a dream backdrop and as an old house owner myself, how could I not love getting to see their beautiful home that even pre-dates my own by 110 years? I am also happy to see that they are demonstrating to the public at large that a gay couple can be just as in love and committed as any straight couple can be. I’m not sure they even realize what they are doing to help change the perceptions that many people have about the gay lifestyle. Not to sound cliche’, but we just think they are FABulous!

Aside from the show, they have several really cool products out right now orthat are  about to hit the shelves. Everything from handmade berry spoons to onion jam. Not only is their branding and the aesthetic of the products incredible, but I feel like I am being sold a piece of the past with my luxury. It’s hard for me to explain really… it’s the way you feel about buying Amish goods. Their products are high end and hand made. Last Fall we were in New York and wanted to drive out to their shop in Sharon Springs, NY to purchase some of their Blaack cheese that we’d heard so much about. Unfortunately, we didn’t make it that far (about 5 hours from my hometown of Chautauqua) before it was time to go back to Wisconsin. This summer we have two whole weeks at the lake cottage with very few pressing plans, so I am hoping that we will be able to make it over there before they are all sold out! You can share a little part of the farm yourself by purchasing items like their seeds and soaps at Williams-Sonoma; the soaps are also available at Anthropologie. Their Beekman 1802 Mercantile website carries their full range of products which can be delivered right to your front door!


I did mention that Josh Kilmer-Purcell is an author so you had to know that BOOKS were going to figure into this somehow! So far he has three books to his credit, two of which I now own and one that isn’t available yet (a cookbook) which I just pre-ordered today. At the moment they are traveling around the country doing book signings and we JUST missed them in Chicago a few weeks ago. Needless to say I was heart broken! Then last week they posted on their Facebook page that they were going to be in Madison, WI at the Williams-Sonoma! I immediately RSVPed that we were coming and called hubby at work to tell him. He loves them too and was really excited even if it did mean a two and a half hour drive one way. lol We really sympathize with their “year of sacrifice” where one partner is at home alone for a year while the other partner is off somewhere else working to provide for both. My husband has been on 5 deployments in the first 5 years were were together. I’m not talking about 3 monthers, I’m talking about 6 months+… sometimes just over 7 months at a time. Then in between we’ve had him gone 3 weeks to 3 months here and there. He deployed 3 days after we got married; the first year we were married I saw him a total of 52 days. We really feel for these guys when it comes to their “year of sacrifice” because we definitely know exactly what it feels like! Lucky for us, he is finally on shore duty and was home to be able to go with me to the book signing. We cut it close though because the Navy is shipping him off to Texas tomorrow, but only for a few days this time.


We arrived safe and sound to spite the snowstorm we encountered on our way. We found the Williams-Sonoma, bought our book and browsed for a few minutes while waiting for the guys to arrive. We are replacing our kitchen pans one at a time with the Le Creuset cookware and this was an excellent opportunity to look at the pieces close up and feel the weights and such since we are so far away from any WS stores that we will probably be buying them via the website. Finally they came out and started speaking, this only lasted about ten minutes. Next, they answered questions from the crowd and this lasted about another ten minutes. The book signing began by taking groups of fifteen by the numbers they were given when they purchased the books (we were #33). We just stood by and watched until it was our turn then we got in line and finally got our chance to get our book signed and to take a few photos. It’s hard to know what to say, we told them we identified with their separation issues and that we first saw them on Martha and that’s what got us watching. I’m a huge Martha freak, and the fact that Dr. Brent Ridge was formerly employed by the Queen of Domesticity herself gives me more faith in their products and work ethic than I would have if they were just “two guys off the street”, so to speak. I will cherish my book (The Bucolic Plague) and will keep it on the Bookcase-of-Martha where I keep my complete collection of Martha Stewart publications. I can’t wait to start reading it, I guess hubby’s trip to Texas will give me plenty of free time to get that done. I have almost purchased the book several times, but something kept telling me not to buy it yet. I have been #17 on the Paperback Swap list for it for months, but apparently people aren’t willing to part with the thing!


If they come to your area, I encourage you to go buy a book and get it signed. They are so gracious and personable! Unlike many people on TV, they look exactly like they do on the screen too, lol. We had a lot of fun, met some nice people, got our photos and our book signed and got to stand around in a WS for an hour or so; who is going to pass up an excuse to do that!? You can see The Fabulous Beekman Boys in action on Planet Green Tuesday nights at 10p.

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