Did you know the phrase "Cut to the chase" is a century old? It comes from the early days of silent cinema, in the USA. Film makers shot lots of film, but it was hard to make dialogue interesting. The rapid chase scenes were exciting however, so superfluous footage was excised- the editors phrase was "Cut to the chase". Now the phrase means "forget the trivia, get to the point"
The point of this post is a case. Specifically, a case to help you cut. I recently purchased some folding scissors, and was intrigued to realise they would fit perfectly into a square case - the same size as our TwoByTwo patches. I decorated two squares of lilac felt. One side with three Boteh motifs, and the other with a letter K [for Kirsten] The crimson K is decorated with running stitch and coloured seed beads - the other side has sparkly sequin embellishments. The squares are attached on three sides, open at the base. I threaded a ribbon through the scissors and then through a hole in the top corner of the case. And attached a pair of buttons at the top.
When folded, the scissors are inside the case. But they can be pulled out, unfolded and used. The little buttons retain the ribbon.
This should fit tidily in a sewing bag, and when folded, all the sharp points are safely enclosed. I included this as Kirsten's "Flat Gift"
I am becoming quite fascinated by the constraint of having to work on these little squares each month!



You are a mine of information Angela. I never knew that. Your scissor case is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI love finding out the origins of words and phrases, I'd always thought "cut to the chase" had something to do with foxhunting.
DeleteSuch a gorgeous idea!
ReplyDeleteUseful and beautiful
DeleteWhat lovely work and so useful. A really charming gift. Regards Sue H
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