About Treasures By Sandra

Sweat Equity for My Treasures

I may have been quiet this past month on the TBS Blog, but I certainly have not been idle! So many new products to introduce, so many new events coming up! First and foremost I am excited to announce that I have been accepted into the juried Vista Strawberry Festival http://www.vistastrawberryfest.com/ as a craft vendor. And not only into the main fair, this year the Vista Chamber of Commerce has decided to try adding a quieter area dedicated to wine tasting and a select number of artisanal crafters, and I have been asked to be one of them! This new area, the Wine, Artisan and Acoustic Court is meant to be a more intimate setting for people to relax, enjoy wine tastings from La Fleur’s Winery and Twin Oaks Valley Winery. This area is free and open to all festival attendees regardless of age, but they will be checking ID’s for age as you enter. On top of this the Vista Chamber of Commerce has provided me with 100 discounted wine tickets. At the festival these tickets will be $7 each and can be redeemed for a 4-oz sample of wine. You can get them from me for $5 each. I only have 100 of them, so email me right away if you would like to order some. I cannot tell you how excited I am for this event, and hope to see some of you there! If you can make it to the festival mention that you follow this blog and get 10% of any Treasures By Sandra Purchase. #vista #california #socal #sandiego #sandiegoliving  #sandiegoevents #strawberryfestival  #family #familyfun #californialiving #sd 

I have so many new products that I am excited to introduce! I have been busy doing research and experimenting with my recipes and have four new health and wellness products to unveil this month. They will be making their debut this weekend and I am very excited! I will do in-depth posts on the evolution of these recipes and why I have decided to tackle them, but for now I will just give a brief introduction,

Pain Relief Balm. This heavenly balm starts with an olive oil base. I add various herbs all known for their pain relieving properties to the oil to infuse into a strong herbal mix, then the herbs are strained out and the oil is added to beeswax and essential oils to make a wonderful feeling and moisturizing balm. I sprained my index finger a few weeks ago and it is still giving me grief. This recipe has been tested and modified repeatedly until I found the maximum relief, and I am very happy with the results.

Healing Salve. This salve is based on olive oil infused with comfrey leaf – traditionally known as ‘knit bone’ for it’s healing properties. I have left this recipe unscented, however I can accommodate custom requests for adding essential oils, if requested. Comfrey leaf has been used for centuries to promote healing of broken bones, sprains, strains, and skin irritations like poison oak or allergic dermatitis. The chemical components of the comfrey plant promote cell generation to speed the healing process.

Chest Rub. I have been making this chest rub for my kids since they are babies. They were born with environmental allergies and every spring have a hard time with sinus issues. This chest rub recipe has been made as a more environmentally friendly version of the vapo-rub many of us grew up with! Eucalyptus, lavender and other essential oils combine to help open up the airways and sinuses to help with comfort and breathing. My boys like this so much they still ask for it most nights and they are 9 and 7 now.

Laundry Whip. This is my newest creation, and I am loving it! My recipe takes common, concentrated laundry soap bars and mixes them with borax and washing soda to provide an amazing detergent with a very light, refreshing scent. This detergent gets all stains out, and my laundry comes out the softest I have ever felt it – even softer than when I used commercial fabric softeners! This is a super-concentrated formula that has to be tried to be believed. And the best part is that one tablespoon per load of laundry is all that is needed. It dissolves well in hot, warm, and cold water and because the soap bar has already been mixed into solution it rinses right out without leaving residue in your clothes fibers (hence the softness I mentioned). I have been using this soap exclusively for several weeks now and can honestly say that I will never buy laundry detergent again!

This is just a brief update on my happenings for the past month. I will be writing more later to provide additional details to the new products. For now though, I hope to see folks this Sunday in Vista for some wine tasking and product sampling fun!

About Treasures By Sandra

Treasure Hunting!

So…If you live in southern California and are in any way into sewing, costuming, or really anything involving fabric you have undoubtedly heard about the garment district in Los Angeles. It has the largest collection of fabric vendors in the United States – in about a 5-block area. This place also has the best prices on fabric north of the Mexican border. I have ALWAYS wanted to go there, but have never had a project big enough to warrant the 2+ hour drive, insane traffic, and a full day away from my family. This weekend was THE weekend. Accompanied by my friend Debbie, I made the trek to La La Land. It was like a pilgrimage.

I was certainly not disappointed. The sidewalks were full of rolls of fabric spilling from over crowded shops. The flashiest fabrics are put outside so that their sequins and sparkles can catch the sunlight, and it creates quite a spectacle! Add to that the endless array of street food vendors and hundreds of shoppers and the situation can quickly become overwhelming – especially for a small town girl, like me. The food vendors are an interesting mix. There are the typical hot dog vendors and taco carts, but there is also a wonderful array of cut up fruit and vegetables with south-of-the-border seasonings (Tajine, anyone?). I longed to buy a cup full of papaya spears, or munch on spiced watermelon, but I had my mind set on a goal: To find the elusive birds-eye cotton or flour sack cloth. I had been searching for these two items online and in every local fabric shop I could find, with no luck.

Since I had the luxury of the company of a seasoned Fashion District professional seamstress and costumer, I let Debbie lead the way. She had previously given me several pointers: 1) bring cash, 2) take the full day, and 3) be prepared to haggle. With my walking shoes on we set out from the car park and braved the chaos. After rummaging through the backs of six or seven shops with absolutely no luck I was beginning to lose hope. Some of the shops were starting to close up, and I was getting a little nervous. Then I hit the jackpot! One small, well kept shop. Cleaner than the rest, with a very nice Isreali fellow who had a kind look to him. I explained what I was looking for, and what I was planning to make out of it. He replied that he did not have anything like I was describing, but he did have a great selection of linen fabrics that would work very well. We went to the back of the store where there were rolls and rolls of fabric stacked in a corner. Most of it linen. In wonderful patterns. In wonderful colors. I felt like I had found the promised land! In total I purchased nearly 30 yards of linen in three different colors for $150.

Thrilled with my purchase, but still not giving up on my quest, we kept going. We stopped by another nearby shop. The shopkeeper was standing on the sidewalk and asked if he could help us. I explained my case and he replied sadly that he didn’t think he had anything suitable. Debbie had gotten lost in a section of embroidered cotton lace and was dreaming of the costumes she could make with it, so I started wandering to the back of the shop. The Fashion District is where designers go to find unique fabrics and notions. Because of this, most stores focus on glitzy showy things that might look good on the red carpet. Not too many shops really had any ‘utility fabrics’ like I was hunting for. But, in the dimmly-lit back of this shop were rolls upon rolls of plain cottons. After nearly 15 minutes of hunting in this area I found it. A large roll of birdseye cotton. Not pure cotton like I was hoping for, but a cotton/poly blend. The shop keeper cut off a patch for me to play with, and I tested it’s absorbancy. It was perfect. The 60-inch tall roll cumbersome, but we managed to get it out from it’s pile and down to a fabric roller. He asked how much I wanted. It was $3 per yard. My reply: “How much do you have?”. So I bought it. The whole roll. 35 yards of it. Our next mission – how do we get this to the car??!! We had nearly 70 lbs of fabric, half of it on a 60-inch tall roll. I managed to get the roll up on my shoulder, purse on the other shoulder and bags of linen in the other hand. Debbie carried some too, and also had her own things to carry. She walked behind me to make sure I didn’t take anyone out on the sidewalk during our four block trek back to the car. Fun Day, great company, mission accomplished. Can I ask for more?

Now, you may be wondering what I am going to do with this bounty of woven wonders. Oh, I have plans. Many, many plans. But this is a blog post for another time.

Send me a note if you have any requests for products. I am in research and design mode for the next couple of weeks and would love to tackle a new design for someone. Also, there are new items up in my Etsy shop! My new, homemade Lucious Lemon and Alluring Anise flavors are up for sale and there will be many more flavors to follow. Check it out! Etsy: TreasuresbysandraUS.