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  • Writer's pictureBeth


Happy New Year! It’s good to get back with you after taking two weeks off for the holidays. My family's Christmas was very quiet, but full of joy. Time to relax, watch Hallmark Christmas movies – way too many – and eat a Christmas cookie or two. Or, three. 😊 And then, quietly welcoming in a new year. I always wish folks a healthy and happy new year, but this year, those words take on a much deeper meaning.




Cookies by my daughter, Laura. Seriously, they tasted as good as they looked.


Are you taking down your Christmas decorations and trying to figure out what do you with your old Christmas cards? Stop – don’t throw them away, because I’ve got a super easy craft for you that makes great use of these holiday cards.

I found this craft via an email I received from the magazine, Midwest Living. It was part of a series they called “40 Easy Christmas Crafts.” It had several cute ideas, but this simple card wreath is the one that really caught my eye. I like the idea of reusing my cards rather than tossing them in the trash. Plus, it’s just so darn cute and easy to do. In case you’d like to check out the complete list of 40 ideas at Midwest Living, here’s the link to it:


Are you ready to have some fun crafting together? Let’s get started. 😊


WHAT YOU'LL NEED


Old Christmas cards – Look through your old cards and choose the ones you’d like to use. Cards with big, bold, simple graphics work well. Would you like to make a winter wreath that you can use now and throughout winter? Then chose cards with wintery scenes of snowmen, snowflakes, and snow-scapes; think whites and blues instead of reds and greens.


12x12 piece of cardboard – My wreath is about 11 inches in diameter, so I used a piece of cardboard that was 12x12. Make your wreath whatever size works for you or the space where you’d like to hang it and chose a piece of cardboard the appropriate size.


Plates – Or, whatever you want to use to draw the large circles for your wreath. I used a dinner size plate that measured almost 11 inches to draw the outer ring and a smaller lunch plate measuring 8 inches for the inner ring.


Adhesive to attach the cards to the base – I used my old stand-by from my scrapbooking days, a product called Hermafix. You could use tape, Aileen’s Tacky glue or any adhesive of your choice.


3D Pop-dots – Pop-dots are another scrapbook product. They are a double-sided adhesive that I used to attach the smaller circles on top. They are about 1/8th of an inch tall and add a "pop" of dimension to the wreath.


Pom-poms – I used red, green and white sparkle pom-poms in three different sizes, purchased from Amazon.


Aileen’s Tacky Glue – I used tacky glue to attach the pom-poms to the wreath. You could also use a hot glue gun if you’d rather.


Ribbon or baker’s twine – This is used to hang your wreath.


Circle-makers – You can use any method or tools you have on hand to make your circles. I used yet another scrapbook tool, a circle template, to make my large, 3-inch circles. I used a 1 ¾ inch circle punch for the smaller circles.


WHAT YOU’LL DO


1.) Create your cardboard wreath base. Draw the wreath using the two different sized plates. Cut the wreath out.


2.) Make your circles to decorate the wreath with. Have fun choosing the best parts of your cards to decorate with. I ended up using thirteen 3-inch circles and seven of the smaller 1 ¾ inch circles. Make as many as you need for the size of the wreath you’re creating.


3.) Place the larger circles on your wreath base. You’ll want to play around with them just a bit to figure out exactly where you want them to go. Overlap them somewhat, making sure the cardboard base does not show through.


When you have figured out how you want all your circles placed, begin to attach them to the base. As you move about the circle base, watch how you place and overlap them, trying not to cover up any cool parts of circles you want to show. Glue all large circles down.


4.) Place the smaller circles strategically on the layer of large circles. Attach them using two or three pop-dots on the back of each. If you don’t have pop-dots, attach using whatever adhesive you used for the larger circles.


5.) Figure out where you’d like the glitter pom-poms to go on your wreath. Glue them on. If you use tacky glue as I did, be generous with the tacky glue. Once you have glued them all on, allow the wreath to lay flat until the glue has thoroughly dried to ensure they are securely attached.


That’s it, the basic wreath is done. It’s very cool as is, but I decided to take it up a notch. Why? Because any excuse to use felt is what I’m all about. 😊 The wreath is real cute hanging on a door handle, especially one as beautiful as the antique bronze one shown in Midwest Living. (I’m guessing their wreath is smaller than the one I created, sized to fit said door handle.) But, that’s not where or how I would hang my wreath and that’s why I made mine bigger.

Once I did that, I felt the middle of the wreath looked a little empty. I decided I needed to fill it with something and settled on a felt heart with an embroidered snowflake topped by a sparkly button. I found the picture of what I wanted to add to my wreath via a quick Pinterest search. It was just a random picture with no instructions, but very easy for me to recreate.



THIS IS HOW I DID IT


I started by searching my felt stash for what I needed. I found some bright, Christmas green felt and got started. I drew a simple heart pattern about 3 ½ inches wide. I cut out the pattern, pinned it to two pieces of felt, traced and then cut out two hearts.



Then you want to pin the two hearts back together, matching edges up. To sew them together, you can use either traditional six-strand embroidery floss (on the left) or Pearl cotton thread for this project. I chose to use white Pearl cotton thread, as shown on the right. Using a simple running stitch, sew all the way around the pinned hearts, about 1/4 inch from the edge.



As you can see, the snowflake design is very simple; I embroidered it on simply by eyeballing the sample and then sewing. I back-stitched the snowflake, and used the lazy-daisy stitch to create the mini-ovals at the ends of the X portion of the snowflakes.




Final touch, sew on a button in the middle, if you have one, to bring it all together.


Using some green Pearl cotton thread I had on hand, I hung the heart from the top of the wreath in the middle. First, cut a piece of thread at least triple the length of the distance you want your heart to be from the top of the wreath. Thread the needle and then make one straight stitch on the back of the heart, at the top, in the middle, where it dips down; don’t pull the thread all the way through the felt. Check out this picture to see what I mean:


Slide and center the heart in the middle of the thread. Leaving one end of the thread free, carefully poke the needle and the other end of thread between the layers of circles and the cardboard base; pull the thread through and bring the two ends of the thread together. Tie a secure knot or two. And now you have a lovely felt snowflake/heart decorating the middle of your wreath. 😊


GETTING YOUR WREATH READY TO HANG


To hang the wreath itself, you’ll need to attach some ribbon or baker’s twine. If using ribbon, carefully separate a top circle or two from the cardboard base, slide the ribbon through, and then refasten the circles to the base. Bring the two ends of the ribbon together and tie a secure knot or two.


I decided to use baker’s twine to hang my wreath. Using the same method as for attaching the felt heart, I threaded my needle with the baker’s twine and carefully poked it between the circles and cardboard base. Bring the two ends of the baker’s twine together and tie a secure knot or two. Whether you used ribbon or baker’s twine, your wreath is now ready to be hung!


FREE GIVEAWAY OF SUPPLIES!


What do you think? Might you want to make one of these recycled Christmas card wreaths yourself? If you’re interested, but you’re saying to yourself, “I don’t have any glitter pom-poms or felt,” well, I can help you out! I am able to put together some of the supplies in a mini-kit that you can get from the library using curbside pickup. Kits will contain the glitter pom-poms, green or red felt and thread to match, white Pearl cotton thread, one button, baker’s twine, and a needle. All you have to do is email me at graib@cidlibrary.org and let me know you’d like a mini-kit. Please specify whether you’d like red or green felt, and what color baker’s twine you’d like. I have red & white, green & white, or red & green to choose from.


Please, I’d love to give these supplies away to some folks ready to do some winter crafting. Help me, to help you. 😊 It’s very cold outside and a great time to be indoors creating.


EVERYDAY READING BOOK LOGS

How’s your reading going these days? Have you set any reading goals for the new year? Do you need a little incentive to read more? I’m going to share with you a really cool reading log my daughter, Laura, found online. This is a great way to keep track of the books you read this year, as well as sneak in a tad bit of coloring fun.


Laura found the reading log at a website called Everyday Reading. It’s the website of a young lady named Janssen who loves books and also happens to be a children’s librarian. Per her website, she “shares reviews of her favorite books, makes suggestions for how to incorporate reading into your family life, and creates lists of the very best books for different ages and interests.” Janssen offers two different reading logs for 2021; the one above that Laura used, and the one below right. It's always nice to have choices. 😊


Here's the link to the Everyday Reading

website:


FYI, you can’t print the reading logs directly from her website. They will ask you for your email address and then send you an email with a link to the reading log. You can always unsubscribe from future emails after you get your reading log.


You can write the name of books you’d like to read on the spines and then color them in as you read them, or, you can write them in as you read. Either way, this a fun spin on adult coloring and ties in nicely with books and reading. Win, win.




That’s it for now. I always like hearing from you. Remember, you can reach me at graib@cidlibrary.org.


As I referenced at the beginning of this post, my wish for you this new year is good health and happiness. In actuality, I’m ordering up an abundance of both for you all!!


Take care. Stay safe. 😊

I found this card in my stash of old Christmas cards.

I think it's beautiful and just couldn't bring myself to cut it up to use in the wreath.

I've hung it up instead and intend to enjoy it's simple beauty

and message for awhile longer.


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  • Writer's pictureBeth


Are you ready to make some magic this holiday season? I hope so! I’m going to share with you now the craft I hinted at a few posts back. This adorable snowy pine tree snow dome pillow was the project for my December Maker Magic program. Thirty-six kits went out to patrons in the past few weeks. Not going to lie, that was a lot of work. 😊


FYI, there is no Maker Magic program in January. Pre-Covid – back when we did programs in the library – (oh, how I long for those days again) I never scheduled Maker Magics in January because I didn’t want to have to cancel due to snowy weather. I've stuck to my same schedule for 2021 and so, our next Maker Magic program will be in February. If you’re interested in signing up to get a kit, complete with all supplies, registration for the February program begins January 5, 2021, at 10 a.m. You can register yourself online or call the library, and we'll register you. The program fills fast, so don't delay.


I think by now it should be fairly obvious I love crafting with felt, and this cute pillow prominently features beautiful felt in cool, winter colors. If you decide to try this project yourself, I hope you enjoy creating this pillow as much as I did. It might look complicated, but it's really not. Working with felt is both fun and easy to do.



For this craft, two different types of needles were used. Each serves a different purpose and they’re not interchangeable. The chenille needle on the left is for sewing the felt. The eye of the needle is longer, making it easier to thread the the thicker Pearl cotton thread used with felt.


The needle on the right is called a “sharp” and is really a basic sewing needle. It will be used to stitch together the pillow. It is smaller and thinner and will slide through the cotton fabric easier. The eye of the needle is also smaller, but you’ll be using regular sewing thread with it, so threading the needle shouldn't be such an issue.


A little tip before we begin: when you cut your thread to use on any of the steps, please don’t cut too long of a piece. The longer length of thread you use, the more likely it is to get twisted or in a knot. From time to time, if it does get twisted, let go of the needle, hold your work up, and allow the needle to dangle; it will untwist itself using this process.



WHAT YOU'LL NEED


Cotton fabric for pillow, about 1/3 yard (I purchased my blue striped fabric online from a shop called Old South Fabrics, but you can certainly use any material you might have on hand that would look good.)


Felt (I used blue, aqua, white and three shades of green. You can see from the above photo the approximate amounts needed. For scale, the blue piece on the bottom measured 8 x 12 inches. As mentioned previously in a blog post, I buy my felt from an Etsy shop called Felt on the Fly. The owner of the shop is a local Clarkston resident and is great to work with. Wonderful felt!)


Thread for sewing the felt (I used Pearl Cotton, size 8, purchased online from dmc.com. I was able to coordinate my thread colors to the felt colors, but if you bought just white and used it for most everything, I think that would work as well. Except for the tree trunks; you really need brown for tree trunks.)


White pom-pom, ¾ inch


1 Button


Polyester Fiber Fill


All-purpose thread (something that matches your pillow fabric)


1 chenille needle and 1 sharp needle (as discussed above)


Straight pins


Scissors


Ruler and pencil


Note: I did all my shopping online for the materials used in my kits, but most of it, if not all, could be purchased from Jo-Ann, Michaels, Hobby Lobby, etc.


WHAT YOU’LL DO


1.) Download the templates below. Print and cut the templates out.

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Download PDF • 116KB
IMG_20201215_0001
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Download PDF • 58KB

2.) Using the templates, trace all your felt pieces and then cut them out.

3.) Place all the smaller felt pieces down on the blue background piece. Move them around to get a feeling for where you want to place them and where you’ll be pinning them, each in turn.

4.) Pin the white dome down. Set aside all the other pieces for now.

5.) Using the chenille needle, you'll sew the white dome down using white Pearl cotton thread.

  • First, thread your needle. For sewing on the felt, we will use the single thread method shown on the bottom. (The double thread method will be used later when we make the pillow.) Tie a knot at the end of the thread.


  • You will use the whipstitch to attach the dome and all the felt pieces. As in the diagram below, bring your needle up at A and then down at B, coming back up at C. The A stitch will be right at the edge of the felt piece you are attaching on the top. Try to keep your stitches neat and straight as shown in the sample to the right.


  • Continue sewing around the entire dome using the whipstitch, removing the pins as you go. Try to space your stitches evenly apart.

  • When you get to the bottom corners of the dome, your stitches should be placed as in the photo here. Use the same corner placement for the bottoms of the three trees.

  • When done sewing around, on the back side, tie a knot and cut the thread about ¼ inch from the felt.

6.) Pin the aqua felt base of the dome, overlapping the bottom of the dome by about ¼ inch. Sew the dome base using the whipstitch per the instructions above.


7.) Before sewing the trees on, place them again on the dome to get a sense where you want them to be. When satisfied with where you have them, pin down the biggest, dark green tree, setting the other two trees aside. Sew on the big tree.

  • Place, pin, and sew on the middle tree down.

  • Place, pin, and sew on the last, smallest tree.

8.) To add the tree trunks, first stitch a three-sided box at the base of each tree, using a single straight stitch per side. Hopefully you'll have brown thread for this step. Fill in the trunk using the satin-stitch. To satin-stitch, fill in the trunk area with straight stitches, stitching from edge to edge and placing the stitches side by side.


9.) Using a straight stitch and white thread, create a snowflake on the largest green tree as shown in photo.


10.) Now, what surely will be your favorite part of this project: making French knots for snowflakes. Actually, while I’m being sarcastic about them being your favorite part, do not fear them. 😊

  • Google “cutesy crafts French knot” and you’ll find a YouTube video that does a great job showing you how to make them; I needed a refresher course myself because I hadn’t made one in years.

  • And here are written instructions if you’d rather: to make a French knot, bring the needle up at A. Wrap the thread around the needle two or three times without twisting it. Insert the needle into the fabric at B, about 1⁄16" away from A. Gently push the wraps down the needle to meet the fabric and then pull the needle and thread through the fabric slowly and smoothly.

  • Do yourself a favor and find the YouTube video. I think it’s much easier to understand how to make a French knot watching rather than reading.

  • Now that you’re a French knot pro, scatter random French knots all over the dome and trees.


11.) Sew on your button. You can tie a knot on the back of the felt to secure the button in place, but don’t cut the thread as you’re going to continue right on with the lazy daisy embellishment stitches on each side.


12.) The lazy daisy stitch should be familiar to you if you made the “Embroider a Garden” project from the July 8 blog post this past summer. It was used on that project to make the leaves on the flowers. Here’s a quick tutorial on how to make the lazy daisy again:

  • Pull the needle up at A and form a loop of thread on the fabric surface. Holding the loop in place, insert the needle back into the fabric at B, about 1⁄16" away from A. Bring the needle tip out at C and cross it over the trailing thread, keeping the thread as flat as possible. Pull the needle and trailing thread until the loop lies flat against the fabric. Push the needle through to the back at D to secure the loop.

  • Using the lazy daisy stitch, add the embellishment stitches shown below.



13.) Sew the white pom-pom on at the top of the dome. Make as many stitches as you need until it feels sewn on securely. On the backside of the felt, tie a knot and cut the excess thread.


The applique portion of the project is now done. Time to cut the pillow pieces and then attach the felt applique to one of the pieces.


14.) You need two pillow pieces, each measuring 12 x 10 inches.

  • Cut both pieces at the same time by folding your fabric over.

  • Using a ruler and pencil, lightly draw a rectangle measuring 12 x 10 inches in the middle of the fabric.

  • Pin the fabric together along the inside of the rectangle and then cut it out.


15.) Place the felt applique directly in the middle of one of the pieces of pillow fabric, making sure the "right side" of the fabric is up. Pin it in place.


NOTE: in sewing, the “right side” of the fabric refers to the pretty or printed side.


16.) Again, using white Pearl cotton thread, whipstitch the applique onto the pillowtop. Finish on the backside by knotting the thread and cut the excess thread.


You’re now going to switch over to using the sharp needle and the all-purpose sewing thread. If you have a sewing machine, feel free to sew your pillow together using your machine. It would certainly be quicker. 😊


17.) Take the two pieces of pillow fabric and place one on top the other, right sides together. Pin them together, except for about a three-inch space at the bottom. You won’t be sewing in this area, as this is where you will turn your pillow case, right side out, when done sewing.


18.) You’ll be sewing a ½ inch seam allowance; that is, there will be ½ inch from the edge to your stitching line. To help you know where to sew and to keep your seam straight, lightly draw a line, with a ruler, on each side of the fabric, ½ inch in. Don’t draw the line at the bottom in the area you left unpinned.


19.) Thread your sharp needle using the all-purpose sewing thread. Again, don’t cut your thread too long. Trust me on this. This time, you will use the double thread method. That is, you’ll bring the two ends of thread together and tie them in a knot.


20.) When sewing the pillow case together, start on either side of the space at the bottom and sew all the way around the case, to the other side of the space at the bottom.



You will use the very basic running stitch in this step. Up at A, down at B, up at C, down at D, etc. Try to keep your stitches as small as possible so that your pillow case is sewn securely together. You can load several stitches on the needle at one time to make the job quicker.

When you’ve sewn all the way around to the other side of the space at the bottom, turn and sew all the way back around to where you started. You want to make sure your pillow case is sewn tight, because you don’t want it to split when you stuff it with fiberfill. When you get back to where you started, tie a secure knot and cut the excess thread.


21.) Clip all four corners at an angle as shown here, careful not to cut your stitching. This will help to make sharp corners on your pillow.


22.) Turn your pillow case right side out. Go slowly and carefully, so that you don’t tear your case apart at the opening. Make sure the corner points are fully pushed out, poking your finger into the corners.


23.) I suggest ironing your pillow case at this point. It will make the seams crisp. Also, this will allow you to fold in the unsewn edge and make it sharp, which will help you when you sew it closed in a step or two. In the picture here, there’s a little bit of gap in the seam at the bottom. That’s the unsewn seam, and now its edge is crisply defined.


24.) Stuff your pillow with the fiberfill. Be sure to poke it into each corner the best you can.


25.) All that’s left to do is sew the seam at the bottom closed. To do this, you’ll be using the ladder stitch. There’s a great how-to tutorial on a website called Melly Sews. Check it out.



Here are her written instructions:

1. Hide knot in seam allowance.

2. Take a stitch on one side of the fabric parallel to the edge.

3. Take a stitch on the other side of the fabric, parallel to the edge.

4. Continue across seam, forming a series of stitches that look like a ladder.

5. Pull thread tight to close seam and hide stitches inside.

6. Knot the thread by winding it around the needle a couple times and pulling the knot close to the fabric. Then push the needle through the fabric as if you’re taking one more stitch. Bring the needle out and cut the thread close to the fabric, and pull the tail inside the fabric to bury it.






And that’s it! You have just created a beautiful Christmas pillow that you can proudly display all winter long. Or, give it as a gift to a loved one. 😊


Can I tell you a funny story about when I was making my pillow? File this in the "do as I say, not as I do" category. Because I wasn't really thinking, I sewed my pillow case together before I sewed the felt applique on! Yup. And even though I have a sewing machine, I'd sewn it by hand because it only seemed fair that, if I was telling you to sew it by hand, I should as well. After spending all that time hand-stitching it together, there was no way I was going to rip it apart just so I could sew my felt applique on easily. So, I turned my pillow case right side out and preceded to sew my applique on, keeping one hand on the inside of my pillow case the entire time. It was a challenge, but thankfully I pulled it off. Please don't make this mistake. 😊


As always, email me if you have any questions, comments, or concerns: graib@cidlib.org

If you make one of these beautiful pillows, please send me pictures of your finished craft for use on the library’s Instagram account. I'd love to share you work with other patrons of the library.


With the busy holiday season upon us, I'm not sure exactly when I will post next, so I'm going to wish a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you all right now. So many wishes for the new year, but one at the top of of my work list is being able to gather again in the library in 2021, sooner, rather than later. But until that's possible, I will continue to blog right here for you, and we'll have fun together. 😊


Take care and stay safe. ♥

(In case you're wondering, that's a finger heart. Something I saw on Instagram. ♥ )





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  • Writer's pictureBeth

I hope you all had a great Thanksgiving. Chances are it wasn’t quite the same as Thanksgivings past, but we have to do, what we have to do, so that we will be able to celebrate our favorite holidays together for years to come.


One of the things that make holidays so special to us are our traditions. One of my families’ Thanksgiving traditions is a turkey stuffing recipe that came from my Dad’s Italian aunt, Aunt Vee. I wish I could tell you a grand backstory about the passing down of this recipe from generation to generation in Augusta, Sicily, but I can’t. What I can say, is this is the recipe my Mom always used to stuff the bird with when I was growing up. And, she credited Aunt Vee for having given the recipe to her. Aunt Vee was married to my grandpa’s brother and lived in Detroit.

My mom and Aunt Vee, 1954.


It’s a very different recipe with unique ingredients, and I love it! But I’ve never been able to sell my own immediate family on it. My husband has always cooked the turkeys in our household, and so he makes his own dressing. It’s a rather traditional stuffing that features both cornbread stuffing mix and sourdough bread as the central ingredients. I will admit it’s very good, and I enjoy it as well.


But for me, Thanksgiving is not Thanksgiving if I don’t have Aunt Vee’s dressing, so we make both dressings each year; my husband’s is used to stuff the bird and mine is used as a side dish. My husband and one of our daughters love the traditional stuffing and won’t eat mine. Our other daughter has gluten issues and doesn’t really like turkey dinner anyway, and so she eats neither dressing.


I make my Italian stuffing around noon on Thanksgiving Day, long after the turkey goes in the oven. After I’ve finished making my stuffing, I sit down and have my first bowl of this deliciousness. 😊 I consider it a snack, a little something to hold me over until we have our dinner several hours later. It’s a well-balanced dish, nutrition wise, so it does the trick there. And just completed, warm from the stove or from the turkey, is really when it’s at its best. And that’s why I indulge in my own mini-tradition and truly savor that first bowl of Aunt Vee’s dressing.


Hamburger. Hard boiled eggs. Rice. Celery. Onion. Salt and pepper. That’s it! Do you see why it call it a well-balanced dish? It has protein, carbohydrates, and vegetables. If there are leftovers, I’ll eat it for lunch in the days after Thanksgiving. There was a lot leftover this year. I even ate it for breakfast once. 😊 I always take it to winter events when my extended family gathers because my brothers and a couple of my nephews love it, too. No leftovers then.


This dish definitely qualifies as a tried-and-true, family favorite, and I’m glad to share the recipe with you now.


My original recipe from my mom.



WHAT YOU NEED

1 ½ pounds ground beef

1 cup celery, diced

½ cup onion, diced

1 cup cooked instant rice

5 hard-boiled eggs, chopped

Salt and pepper to taste


WHAT YOU DO

Brown the ground beef with the celery and onion. Remove from heat. Add in the cooked instant rice and chopped hard-boiled eggs and salt and pepper to taste. Stir well, mixing all together.



Oh, my gosh! That’s it. Could this recipe be any simpler? I don’t think it’s possible. I really like cooked onions, so I usually up the onion to 1 cup, same as the celery. Even if you don’t want to stuff your turkey with this dressing, it does make a good side dish. Or, serve it with a salad or vegetable and it’s a complete meal. Let me know what you think about it if you give it a try. Buon appetito!


P.S Dessert for our Thanksgiving dinner was made by daughter, Laura. It's Triple-Chocolate Pumpkin Pie, a recipe Laura found years ago via Martha Stewart Living.


BINGE-WORTHY TV!

Feeling the urge to laugh and escape reality, a few weeks ago I started watching Schitt$ Creek on Netflix. With six seasons out, I’ve heard about this show for a while. But it wasn’t until I watched the Emmy Awards in September – and they basically swept the comedy categories – that I decided I really needed to give this show a chance. And, I’m sooooooooo glad I did!


It’s the story of an uber rich family of four who lose all their money and end up living in a dumpy motel in Schitt$ Creek, a town they bought as a joke several years previously. Parents, Johnny and Moira, are played by comedy legends, Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara. Eugene’s real-life son, Daniel, plays his son David, and Annie Murphy plays their daughter, Alexis. Eugene and Daniel are also the creators and masterminds behind the show.


David is my favorite character, but the whole cast is great. I literally laugh out loud every episode. A lot. And, as an ironic side, the clothes they all wear are AMAZING! I truly think they never wear the same outfit twice. A neat trick for a family who came to town with nothing but a few suitcases and have no money for new duds. And Moira’s wigs! They all have names and personalities, and, sadly, she treats them better than her progeny. Backing up this crazy family is a town full of fun, wacky characters. They are a great cast and the mix of quirky characters played by very talented actors makes for binge-worthy viewing!


Schitt$ Creek is rated TV-MA: mature audiences only, due to language.


The Levy’s decided they wanted the show to go out on top, so its sixth season was its last, ending this past April. I’m happy to report the library has all six-seasons available on DVD. I highly recommend checking out this series. Go online or call the library, and we’ll put it on hold for you; curbside pickup only for now. BREAKING NEWS: as I write, I just found out our library has now been closed due to a Covid exposure. We are tentatively closed through December 9, to allow for a deep cleaning. Curbside pickup should resume December 10. Please watch our website for pertinent updates on the situation.


Thankful for past craft projects from the library used to decorate our home for the holiday.


Take care. Stay safe. Please wear your mask. 😊

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