Tuesday, 30 December 2025

The 2025 Creative Round up.

This time last year I was writing my list for the Chookshed Challenge — ten projects I planned to work on through the year. They could be works in progress, UFOs, or even new starts. And right from the beginning… well, things didn’t quite go to plan. Let’s have a look at how that unfolded.

January was easy: make a start on my secret Christmas ornaments.
I did exactly that — three little ornaments stitched and tucked away. A good, confident beginning.

February was to work on an adopted project. I pulled it out, had a play, and very quickly realised it wasn’t for me. So I repackaged the whole thing and passed it on. Hopefully someone out there has turned that collection of fabrics into something lovely.

March was meant to be the month I quilted the Papaver Pizzazz top. I loaded it onto the frame… and it’s still there. Unfinished. I hadn’t realised it had been that long. I really should take another look at it — or pull it off the frame and get something else moving.


April was a two‑parter.
First: make a scrappy quilt top. Done.

Second: take my Down in the Garden stitcheries to Baradine and make progress. Which I did, completing one block and making progress on a second. I even kept working on those blocks after we got home.

May was supposed to be ruler work — practising what I’d learned in a class. I did do some… but not until June.

Which brings us to June, where the Chookshed Challenge was (again) to make progress on the Down in the Garden stitcheries. And I did. Those blocks got a surprising amount of attention this year, considering everything else that fell by the wayside.

By July, I rewrote my challenge list… and then abandoned the whole idea altogether.

So what did I do in 2025? 

Let’s take a look.

January

I started the year by preparing all of my Down in the Garden blocks, knowing they’d be coming with me to Scrub Stitching. I made a small amount of progress on a Winter Fairy cross stitch project. I also quilted and bound my Windswept quilt top. And I tried — with varying success — to sew or crochet for 15 minutes each morning, either before work or before the day properly began.

February

A very productive month. I quilted and bound the Blue Lanterns EPP top, put together two scrappy quilt tops, and even pulled out some orphan blocks to create a third. I made my swap gift for Scrub Stitchin’, did a little work on Celestial Stars EPP, and kept up my 15‑minute morning crochet ritual.

March

A milestone month. I completed the embroidery on the tablecloth my beautiful Mum began when she was just 11 years old. After all these years, it’s finally finished — I kept my promise to her. I also worked on scrappy hexies and continued trying to keep up with my 15‑minute mornings.

April

Scrub Stitchin’ month. I took my Down in the Garden stitcheries and made progress on two blocks. I also worked on my Celestial Stars EPP project — more pieces were added after we got home. A cosy scrappy crochet blanket grew under my hook, and the hexies kept me company too.

May

This month was all about heirlooms. With Mum’s tablecloth completed, I turned my attention to the other pieces I’d inherited. Gran’s doilies became pretty angels, giving them new life. I also adopted a partially stitched cross‑stitched bumblebee — about a third done — and got stuck in straight away.

June

The bumblebee was finished, and I returned to my Down in the Garden blocks, making more progress there. A quiet, steady month of stitching.

July

The knitting needles came out. I finished a scarf that had been lingering since last year, made progress on the latest scrappy crochet blanket, and knitted another scarf — this one for donation.

August

More knitting. A second donation scarf, and another scarf to gift. The scrappy crochet blanket grew a little more too.

September

The sock journey began. I cast on Voirrey’s boots and kept going. I also completed the scrappy crochet blanket — a satisfying finish.

October

October was mostly about failing to knit a sock. My high after completing Voirrey’s boots didn’t last long — the sock journey brought me right back down to earth. I did, however, make some progress on the mohair sweater I’d started earlier, so the month wasn’t a total loss.

November

The sock disaster continued. Eventually I saw the light and gave up.   I turned my attention to knitted washcloths instead. That didn’t go smoothly either, but I got there in the end.

November also saw the return of my sewing needles. I pulled out my neglected Christmas ornaments and finished them — just in time to catch the last international post. And the hexies came back into play.

December

A return to the sewing machine. I pulled out Christmas fabrics and used offcuts and scraps on paper foundations to make Christmas pot holders for my club Secret Santa, and placemats for the children to use for Christmas lunch.

My last finish of the year was a cross‑stitched cat for Tony — though I accidentally dated it 2023.

So as you can see, 2025 was a mixed bag.

The Chookshed Challenge was abandoned, the “15 minutes a day” was more miss than hit, and the great sock‑knitting adventure was… well, a learning experience. But there were highs too — lovely ones. The bumblebee was completed, the kitty cat was stitched, the ornaments were finished and posted in time, and somehow, in the middle of everything, a few quilt tops and two fully completed quilts made their way into the world.

So no Chookshed Challenge for me in 2026. Instead, there’ll be a simple list of works in progress that may or may not get a visit, depending on how the year unfolds. And alongside that, a very short list of must‑do projects — the ones that matter most, the ones I really want to see finished.

A gentler approach. A realistic one. And hopefully, a joyful one.

If you’ve made it to the end of this epic saga, congratulations — you deserve a cuppa and maybe a lie‑down. It’s been a year of triumphs, tangles, abandoned plans, surprise finishes, and the occasional creative meltdown, but somehow it all stitched itself into something worth celebrating. Here’s to 2026, whatever shape it decides to take.

12 comments:

Jo said...

What a year it has been for you. You have done some beautiful work though. Keep up your dreams and your projects will get done one day.

Ma Betty said...

Thanks Lou, you've inspired me to work on my 2026 list which is now up and running.

Maria said...

You have worked on and finished many different projects for 2025 and hers hoping your have a great 2026 creating.

Lin said...

You have had some lovely finishes along the way so I am looking forward to seeing what you come up with next year. I didn't think the challenge would work for me so I didn't join in the first year but actually it has worked really well for me this year. xx

Jennifer said...

You have certainly been busy, Lou, even if you didn't achieve all you wished.

Janice said...

You still managed rather a lot during the year. The Chookshed Challenge didn’t really work for me either. Setting an appropriate goal at the start of the month works much better.

Jenny said...

Such a wonderful array of finishes, you can be very proud of yourself. Sometimes we forget what we have achieved during the year, it's not until we look back and see what's on the blog.

Julie said...

Gosh what an amazing line up of creations Lou. I remember when you worked with your Mums vintage linens & how lovely everything was. I have some of my late Mums that I really need to do something with. Here's to a creative New Year ahead ♥️

dianne said...

you've made awesome/lovely treasures all through the year - and what is even better is your ability to Let. It. Go. when it doesn't bring you joy ... quite the inspiration is what you are and i've learned so much from you - thank you!

here's to 2026 - fingers crossed that it is a an improvement over this past year.

Narelle said...

A beautiful assortment of finishes and all progress counts too :)

Fiona said...

well done, some fabulous makes.... I like those lists that serve as reminders but can be changed when and if the need arises, and definitly not bother with something that is not being enjoyed..... I'm sure this next year will bring in some more wonderful happy squirrels!
Hugz

dq said...

Love those purple socks, Lou. I also enjoyed the angels and seeing your celestial star blocks.