Showing posts with label Ewe and Eye and Friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ewe and Eye and Friends. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

A Fledgling?

Design - "Summer Hive" (Black Sheep kit)
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 32 count Cream Graziano
Fibers - DMC
Started - 1 February 2003
Completed - 13 September 2003

This is another framed piece from my Bee Collection.  It first glance it appears pretty straight-forward, but it has several speciality stitches.  The entire skep is made up of "long" stitches rather than cross stitches.  The base has Rhodes and Smyrna stitches.  The center of the sunflower is stitched over one (rather than filled with French Knots).   

 

A female Flicker


A male Downy Woodpecker

It might be a fledging - in that case it could be either male or female.

Same with this "guy". I think it is a newly fledged Flicker.

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Summer Favorites

Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Design - "Fat Cat"
Fabric -32 count raw linen
Fibers - DMC - 2 strands over 2 threads
Started -15 September 2014
Completed - 20 September 2014

These guys are among my summer favorites.

Handsome

And a lovely song

They tend to "chip" as they are feeding.

And now the females have arrived.

This one is unusual with a yellow eyebrow.

A white eyebrow is more typical.

The Black-headed Grosbeaks like sunflowers, peanuts, and suet.
Thy are very easy to please.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Acorns

 

Design - "Wooly Hare" (Black Sheep kit)
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 18 count natural linen
Fibers - Shepherd's Silk (1 strand) & Anchor (3 strands)
Started - 23 March 2008
Completed - 4 April 2012


A couple of Acorn Woodpeckers showed up.

This is the female.


And this is one of the two males I've seen.


They're coming by daily which pleases me greatly.
Now, if only the quail would return.

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Who's Around?

Design - "Be Mine Valentine"
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 32 count Flax Belfast linen
Fibers - GAST - 1 strand over 2 threads
Started - 26 February 2013
Completed - 27 February 2013

A funky color for a heart - this used GAST's "Hyacinth".  I like it.

Who's around?

 

A Cooper's Hawk - that's who.

Also a female Flicker.

Her back feathers appear to have  bit of yellow on some of the tips.
I've not noticed that before.

She's enjoying the tail prop feature on the feeder.

A lone Pine Siskin.

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Birds Up High

 

Design - "Calendar October"
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 32 count Raw Belfast linen
Fibers - Anchor - 1 strand over 2 threads
Started - 2 October 2010
Completed - 4 October 2010 

Birds up high

Blurry Crow

California Scrub Jay



Lesser Goldfinch

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Molting Crows

I stitched "Doodle Bugs" a Blacksheep kit by Ewe & Eye & Friends back in 2004.  The kit provided a very small (5' x 7") piece of Sugared Ginger Lakeside linen.  So when I decided to have this framed, having enough linen to stretch and secure it was challenging.

Fortunately by framers were up to the challenge!  By using a wide mat we overcame the stretching issues.  The metallic purple frame picks up the colors of the two "Doodle Bugs" and that of the inside border.


Bigger Birds are featured on today's post.

Turkey Vulture

Red-tailed Hawk

Blurry photo of a 2nd Red-tailed Hawk

And molting Crows

Lots of brown instead of glossy black.


Both birds returned Saturday morning.

This one doesn't look too bad.

This one though...

Looks like a miniature Turkey Vulture!

Friday, September 13, 2024

2015 Flashback - A Great Bird

Design - "Curious Carrot"
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 40 count Sandstone linen
Fibers - Anchor
Started - 9 August 1998
Completed - 12 August 1998 

 Friday afternoon September 11th, 2015 while sitting on the Front Porch with Padma and Parvati Hufflepuff, a bird caught my eye, and as luck would have it, it was a New Bird! 

It was a Lewis's Woodpecker!  You know how I love native plants named for the explorers William Clark, and Meriwether Lewis.  Well, I'm also gaga for birds named for those two men.  


All About Birds notes,"On the expedition’s return journey across the Bitteroot Mountains (in 1805), the team was forced by winter weather to camp on the Kooskooskie River, near present-day Kamiah, Idaho. Here, Meriwether Lewis secured a new avian species he would name the “black woodpecker.” In 1811, famed bird artist Alexander Wilson used Lewis’s specimens at Charles Peale’s Philadelphia Museum to sketch and describe the holotype for the Lewis’s Woodpecker—which he dubbed Picus torquatus, the “woodpecker with a necklace.”

According to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, "This medium-sized ... woodpecker relies on flycatching during the spring and summer and store mast (like acorns) in the fall and winter. Formerly widespread in Oregon, it is currently common year-round only in the white oak-ponderosa pine belt east
of Mt. Hood. It also breeds in low numbers in open habitat along east Oregon river and stream valleys."

I even got to watch and document it catching and eating flying insects.

Yum!

The Lewis's Woodpecker stayed in the area for 30 minutes or more.  It is probably the only time I will see it close to my house as it prefers the more open forests of Central Oregon. I was just so pleased that I happened to be outside when this lovely glossy green/black woodpecker with the dark red head and rosy breast stopped by for dinner.