The Toadstool Collection


Hiding toadstools by Lavender & lark

toadstool by Lavender & Lark
Toadstool by Lavender & Lark
Toadstool by Lavender & Lark

This little collection of three needle felted toadstools sit hidden away in antique sewing table drawers. They were inspired by the beautiful warm colours of autumn, and can sit on a table or be hung on the wall.

Materials ~ Hand dyed wool felt, silk roving, wire, antique sewing drawers


toadstool2a.jpg

Toadstool #2

11 x 4.25 x 4.5

Toadstool by Lavender & Lark

Toadstool # 1

10.25” x 4.25” x 4.25”

Toadstool by Lavender & Lark

Toadstool # 3

10.25“ x 4.25“ x 4“


They will be available in my shop this evening, September 20th, at 9PM ADT. Each piece will be sold separately, they are $200 USD (plus postage).

Toadstool Drawers by Lavender & Lark

Orla & Hazel

 

Orla & Hazel

Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark
Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark

The Autumn faeries are moving in. You can spot them on chilly mornings, going about the trees and fields of goldenrod, with tiny silk cocoon satchels slung over their backs, gathering acorn caps and other autumn treasures.

Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark

Today I met Orla, who shared with me that her name means ‘golden princess’, which seemed rather fitting as she sat their on the back of her Merlin, shimmering with every shade of gold.


Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark

And sweet little Hazel, with her chickadee, who gave me a beautiful twig of acorn caps to add to my autumn decorations. When I asked what they planned to do with all of the caps they had collected Hazel told me that they would be sanded down and used as dishes for their big harvest feast. Orla had gathered a rooster feather as decoration as well. I smiled as they both flew off in search of more acorns, autumn is definitely here, soon the trees will start to change. I’ve been sewing faerie jackets that I’ll leave out when the first frost comes, with tiny thimbles of honey so they might make some faerie mead to stay warm over the long winter months.


Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark

September

The goldenrod is yellow;
The corn is turning brown;
The trees in apple orchards
With fruit are bending down.

The gentian’s bluest fringes
Are curling in the sun;
In dusky pods the milkweed
Its hidden silk has spun.

The sedges flaunt their harvest
In every meadow-nook;
And asters by the brookside
Make asters in the brook.

From dewy lanes at morning
The grapes’ sweet odors rise;
At noon the roads all flutter
With yellow butterflies.

By all these lovely tokens
September days are here,
With summer’s best of weather,
And autumn’s best of cheer.

by Helen Hunt Jackson (1831 – 1885)


Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark
Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark
Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark
Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark

Orla & Hazel will be in my shop (separately) this evening at 7PM (ADT).

They’re one of a kind art dolls. They are entirely hand stitched from natural fibres (with the exception of their wings). Orla’s dress is made from plant dyed silk and vintage lace, her cap is made from a silk carrier rod. Hazel is dressed in a vintage cotton dress, hand dyed with Queen Anne’s lace. There acorn caps were lovingly collected from a huge old oak tree in England and are being carried in tea dyed silk cocoons.

Orla & her Merlin will be $500 (plus postage), and Hazel & her chickadee are $275 (plus postage).

Orla & Hazel by Lavender & Lark

 

The Blackberry Faeries

 

The Blackberry faeries 

As fall creeps in and the mornings grow chilly, the blackberry faeries are out and about amongst the bushes gathering the last ripe berries, but they’re always careful to leave enough for the birds and other animals. With baskets full to bursting they fly home.


The Blackberry Faeries
The Blackberry Faeries

 

 

Tuva empties her berries into a large cauldron where she boils it down with other herbs, turning it into a rich dark syrup, sustenance for the long cold months ahead. She has gathered blackberry roots as well and will make a tincture when the harvest moon is full. As she stirs the cauldron she sings a song of thanks.

The Blackberry Faeries

The Blackberry Faeries

Ulla and Bran are gathering berries for her grandmother’s famous blackberry wine. A special treat to bring out at midwinter’s feast when summer is only a distant memory.

The Blackberry Faeries
The Blackberry Faeries
The Blackberry Faeries

The Blackberry Faeries

Sorcha, the dyers apprentice, is stomping on her berries in an old barrel before pouring the juice into dye vats where they will turn the silk filaments that are soaking there a dozen shades of purple. Afterward she will hang them out in the autumn sun to dry before bringing them to the faerie weaver who will turn them into beautiful garments. 

The Blackberry Faeries
The Blackberry Faeries
 
The Blackberry Faeries
 

Kasja strings her berries out to dry before carefully placing them in boxes in the storeroom and stacking them away between the dried fungi and wild licorice root, and the other winter foods.

The Blackberry Faeries
The Blackberry Faeries
Kasja the Blackberry Faerie

This is the busiest time of year for the blackberry faeries, but they know that soon it will be time to disappear into their glowing halls beneath the hill, and wait for spring’s return.

The Blackberry Faeries

The Blackberry Faeries are one of a kind art dolls. They are entirely hand stitched from natural fibres (with the exception of their wings). Their dresses are all hand dyed with fresh berries harvested from the woods around my house. Their hair is hand dyed mohair locks. The will be in my shop this evening at 10PM (ADT).