Sewing Jenny (@dorcasneedle) 's Twitter Profile
Sewing Jenny

@dorcasneedle

Wife, mum, Nan & retired SCM Anglican priest who loves to sew, read, and garden whilst contemplating & reflecting on creativity & life in all its richness.

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calendar_today26-09-2015 19:57:54

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Erm Dea (@em_e_dee) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Finally found the secret local snowdrop path in the woods, and it was beautiful! I felt like a woodland fairy walking along it #midlothian

Finally found the secret local snowdrop path in the woods, and it was beautiful! I felt like a woodland fairy walking along it #midlothian
~ JJ ~ (@jnicolem) 's Twitter Profile Photo

While on vacation, this man took the time to help guide this confused swan back to the water below. The bird's reaction when he is back on the water is pure joy. 🥹

Jane E Hall (@clothofnature) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For Wildflower Hour. Petals before proclamations. Colour before certainty. Gathered in the rain — raindrops lending everything a quiet radiance. Above it all, the song thrush rehearsing the season. Spring — not declared, but approaching. #WildflowerHour #NoticingNature

Zero Context HQ (@0contexthq) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 1975, developmental psychologist Dr. Edward Tronick sat a mother and her baby face to face and filmed what happened when the mother suddenly stopped responding. First the mother plays normally, smiling, talking, making eye contact. The baby mirrors everything, laughing,

Pub Signs of Britain (@pubsignsbritain) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I need your help my friends. 2026 has been very much hard work on here. If you have the time then could you please like, follow and share my content and help me to reach new people with a subject I am very passionate about. As ever, I really appreciate all of your support. ❤️

A Cambridge Diary (@acambridgediary) 's Twitter Profile Photo

25th February 2022 A single ceiling light over the bar marks a favourite spot for a regular at the Champion of the Thames. Picture from my new book 'Cambridge - Light & Shade'. Available at cambridgebooks.co.uk/cambridge-ligh… and all bookshops.

25th February 2022
A single ceiling light over the bar marks a favourite spot for a regular at the Champion of the Thames.
Picture from my new book 'Cambridge - Light & Shade'. Available at cambridgebooks.co.uk/cambridge-ligh… and all bookshops.
Archaeology & Art (@archaeologyart) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Satsuma-style painted stoneware ceramic cat figure. Culture: Japanese, 1904. Medium: Stoneware. Collection: Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York. In early Japan, cats were highly prized animals, owned primarily by the imperial court and aristocratic circles. They

Satsuma-style painted stoneware ceramic cat figure. Culture: Japanese, 1904. Medium: Stoneware. Collection: Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York.

In early Japan, cats were highly prized animals, owned primarily by the imperial court and aristocratic circles. They
The potting shed (@gardenerfliss) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Before pulling up nettles in your borders, it might be worth leaving some behind, especially if you’re thinking about biodiversity. Butterflies love a nettle and will reward you with many a flutter around your garden to say thankyou ⁦⁩ ⁦BBC Gardeners World⁩ ⁦

Dr Charlotte Proudman (@drproudman) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Family courts ‘not good enough’ for women and children, minister, Baroness Levitt says. ‘Problem-solving’, child-focused courts to replace adversarial hearings, with earlier intervention to cut delays. Domestic abuse must be at fore front of policy. theguardian.com/society/2026/m…

Chapps (@chapps) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Peter Hitchens Lucy R. Fisher Dyes were inexpensive for the most part, made from plants available to the dyers in the immediate area. Even mushrooms were used for dye. Everyone could afford colorful clothing. Perhaps not as colorfast as the elite clothing, but colorful nonetheless, as seen below.

<a href="/ClarkeMicah/">Peter Hitchens</a> <a href="/richmondie/">Lucy R. Fisher</a> Dyes were inexpensive for the most part, made from plants available to the dyers in the immediate area. Even mushrooms were used for dye. Everyone could afford colorful clothing. Perhaps not as colorfast as the elite clothing, but colorful nonetheless, as seen below.
Church Times (@churchtimes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Music students are mystified, they say, by resonances recorded in Salisbury Cathedral and described by one of them as “a weird pinging”. #SalisburyCathedral churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2026/…

Jane E Hall (@clothofnature) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#StoryPlants #WildflowerHour Mares tail (Equisetum arvense) — older than our lanes, older even than the woods. I found them lit by sun along the verge, each stem held by the earth like a taper — not announcing spring, but witnessing it. Again.