Since you liked the Lobster Season rug, I thought I'd re-post a photo of the first pictorial rug I ever hooked (and my second rug ever), called Prospect Village. It was a finalist in Rug Hooking Magazine's annual contest, and was featured in A Celebration of Hand-hooked Rugs XI.
This rug started out as a project for a course taught by Marjorie Judson in Halifax in 1999. Here I am, happily hooking my rug, almost twelve freaking years ago. Where does the time go?!
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And here's the actual Prospect Village...
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Before we moved from Nova Scotia to British Columbia, our friends gave us a going-away party. One of our neighbours took this photo of Prospect Village and framed it for us as a gift. While we didn't live right in the village, we were still considered to be in Prospect.
The angle of this photo is a little different from the rug, but the red fish stage on the left is the one pictured in the rug.
Just a few months before we moved out west, Hurricane Juan hit Nova Scotia, on September 29, 2003. It was classed as a Category 2 storm, which is a pretty hefty hit for the North Atlantic! The eye of the storm passed right over our house and while Gordon slept through most of it (how? I have no idea!), I huddled upstairs with my cat, a candle and the battery-operated radio. We were without power for three days, but many lost electricity for a couple of weeks, so we were lucky. There was a lot of damage, but fortunately we only sustained a scratch on our car and a bit of damage to our dock. We lived right on the ocean, and the storm was very dramatic!
Prospect Village itself was less fortunate. It is very low-lying and exposed, and took the brunt of the storm...
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There's that red fish stage again, minus the dock.
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It was sad to see the damage to boats, homes, lobster traps and more, but as I recall, no one in the village was hurt. Sadly, six people lost their lives either directly or indirectly as a result of the storm, including a paramedic who was sitting in his ambulance when a tree fell on it and crushed him.
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But Nova Scotians are nothing if not resilient. They soon got to work and cleaned up the mess.
So there's a rug, and a story behind it. I have hooked many more rugs (wall-hangings; I don't walk on these!) since then, but the Prospect Village one is special to me.
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And here's the actual Prospect Village...
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Before we moved from Nova Scotia to British Columbia, our friends gave us a going-away party. One of our neighbours took this photo of Prospect Village and framed it for us as a gift. While we didn't live right in the village, we were still considered to be in Prospect.
The angle of this photo is a little different from the rug, but the red fish stage on the left is the one pictured in the rug.
Just a few months before we moved out west, Hurricane Juan hit Nova Scotia, on September 29, 2003. It was classed as a Category 2 storm, which is a pretty hefty hit for the North Atlantic! The eye of the storm passed right over our house and while Gordon slept through most of it (how? I have no idea!), I huddled upstairs with my cat, a candle and the battery-operated radio. We were without power for three days, but many lost electricity for a couple of weeks, so we were lucky. There was a lot of damage, but fortunately we only sustained a scratch on our car and a bit of damage to our dock. We lived right on the ocean, and the storm was very dramatic!
Prospect Village itself was less fortunate. It is very low-lying and exposed, and took the brunt of the storm...
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There's that red fish stage again, minus the dock.
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It was sad to see the damage to boats, homes, lobster traps and more, but as I recall, no one in the village was hurt. Sadly, six people lost their lives either directly or indirectly as a result of the storm, including a paramedic who was sitting in his ambulance when a tree fell on it and crushed him.
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But Nova Scotians are nothing if not resilient. They soon got to work and cleaned up the mess.
So there's a rug, and a story behind it. I have hooked many more rugs (wall-hangings; I don't walk on these!) since then, but the Prospect Village one is special to me.
I especially love how you did the lupins. Very nice rug!
ReplyDeleteIt's so nice to have something with meaning behind it, no wonder it's special to you.
ReplyDeleteI've been on a different computer lately and it only publishes my comments when it feels like it so don't think I'm ignoring you.
Ronna, Marjorie wanted us to put in various landscape elements: rocks, flowers, etc. I always LOVED the lupins in NS.
ReplyDeleteLittle Blue Mouse, I am getting lots of comments from you, not to worry! :)
LOVE the lupins in the foreground.
ReplyDeleteThey are my mom's favorite.
Your rug of Prospect reminded me of the fishing village by Peggy's cove I saw in the 90's.