Tuesday, April 14, 2015

More Fiddly Bits

It seems everything on this piece is fiddly bits.  There are so many partial stitches!  I am, at least, getting close to the halfway point.

Monday, April 13, 2015

Tired Of Browns

There are SOOO many neutral colors and confetti stitches in this.  I'm getting tired of them and need more color.  Can't wait to get to the tail feathers.

Chateau Migdal - Aging Area

Migdal uses both giant and normal sized oak barrels for aging.  They also have the metal chiller tanks for whites and roses.  Most of them are housed in a giant building toward  the back of the complex.  Also in the building is their largest tasting room, which overlooks the barrels.






Sunday, April 12, 2015

Still Marching

March is so close to being done I can taste it.  There's backstitching on this square, too, so it's not just cross stitch like the first two.

Chateau Migdal - Second Hall

 This is the entrance to the second hall.  In the anteroom, there's a display of all the different products Migdal sells.

More interesting ironwork and a hallway full of wine cubbies.




Saturday, April 11, 2015

Trying A Different Tack

I finished the first leaf, so progress has been made.  In looking at the pattern for the second leaf, I saw that it wasn't individual motifs like the last one.  For this reason, I decided to try the instructor's method of doing the whole piece as lines of running stitch instead of as motifs.  This is the start of that experiment.

Chateau Migdal - First Hall

 Chateau Migdal, also known as Chateau Cojusna, is an independent modern winery about ten miles outside of Chisinau.  They export mainly to China, the former Soviet republics, and Africa.  We went on a tour last Saturday.  Our tour guide was not a regular employee, as they have no English speaking guides.  She was a French teacher from the nearby school.  This means our tour wasn't nearly as insightful or in depth as it could have been, but it was still fun. 

There are huge wine aging vats, ceramic lined, in the front cellar hallway.  They're used to age whites and other wines that aren't oaked.

Lots of pretty ironwork throughout the complex.



And, of course, collections of wines in cubbies.