My seam embroidery is now beaded so this is ready for larger embellishments:
I'll share close up photos of the embroidered borders when I complete this piece. I hope to have a few quality hours of stitching time later today.
I also thought you'd enjoy seeing this photo of my Simba:
As you can see, I put up a Christmas tree and wrap a quilt around the bottom so my cat has a comfy place to curl up and sleep! LOL!!!
In other news, my dad's surgery went well and it looks like he will be fine. The cancer was superficial meaning, it was on the surface. Let's hope it stays gone.
Finally, Scott and I suspect that our Lucy had a stroke earlier this week. Lucy is my little girl kitty in my blog banner. I got home late Monday afternoon and I couldn't find her. When I did, she was hiding in the corner under the bed. She didn't come out to sleep with us that night but I didn't think much of it. Tuesday morning, I woke up quite early at 2 am. I spent 10 minutes looking for her and finally found her cowering in the corner behind my rocking chair. She looked okay but wouldn't come out. When I moved the chair to pick her up, she ran under my sewing machine. I took her food and she did eat so I figured something just had her quite frightened.
The rest of Tuesday was much the same. She kept hiding under the bed but she looked okay. On Wednesday morning, she looked at me like she didn't have a clue who I was. She seemed disoriented and confused and terribly frightened. For the record, Lucy isn't afraid of anything.
Anyway, I was driving to WalMart on Wednesday and all of a sudden the word "stroke" popped into my head. When I parked my car, I called mom to ask her what the symptoms of a stroke were. She said that the symptoms where a little different in animals than in humans but the main signs are confusion and disorientation.
I looked it up on my IPhone and those were really the only symptoms that she had. Lucy wasn't walking in circles or leaning to one side. Just confused, disoriented and terribly frightened. The article I read did say that cats recover from feline strokes very quickly. Usually within 1 to 2 weeks.
By Wednesday night, I was seeing improvement. Thursday morning she was better and then more improvement by Thursday night. She's still hiding here and there a little bit but she spent most of yesterday sleeping in my rocking chair rather than hiding under it.
It's the improvements that are making me think it was a stroke. It took us so long to figure out the symptoms that she was having. Anyway, let's hope the improvements continue and that she'll be her normal self in another few days.
Sometimes I wish they could talk so they could tell me what's wrong. I have to take mom to the vet today with her dog so I'll talk to our vet about it. I at least want to know what to look for in advance if it happens again although from what I read, cats can have one stroke and never have another and go on to lead a normal, healthy, long life. Lucy is 12 years old. She my youngest kitty.
Isn't she a beauty? She the sweetest little thing. I took this photo about a year ago. Bubba rescued her back in 1999. She was 8 months old when he found her. Just a kitten. I hope she recovers and that this doesn't happen again.