The Smalls SAL is hosted by Heather from Stitching Lotus
This year I have two Small Challenges:
For the Hallowe'en Blog I have done something a little different this year, I've chosen a band sampler by Just Nan called Counting Bats and each band corresponds to the monthly themes on the blog. For August we had Spooky Words and this band completes the Counting Bats rhyme:
The whole piece, nearly finished now:
For the Christmas Ornie SAL we had Christmas Clothing as the theme:

The only change I made was to stitch the pompom with satin stitch rather than cross stitches.
Christmas Cubes by The Primitive Hare
Christmas Cubes by The Primitive Hare
All six so far:

We had a Fifth Friday at the end of July so I started the second Byzantine Ornament by Teresa Wentzler and finished it for the Gold Day of the Olympic Challenge:
I used the same fabric, threads and bead as Byzantine Ornament I
I completed the Mill Hill Trumpet I started for the Olympic Challenge:
I substituted green Magnificas for the petite green beads and some red for the charted cranberry which I didn't have. I stitched this on 14 count Christmas Green aida rather than the perforated paper provided so I could use two strands instead of three,
One for the scrapbook
I continued with the 1862 Snowflake from JCS 2010 and started adding the beads. I am not sure I like the centre fully covered with beads and may just do the crystal ones and remove the petite white.
stitched on 28 Colonial Blue evenweave
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I've continued with the Daily Art Challenge on FB.
Day 23 - Abstract

Day 24 - Bed

Day 25 - Door

Finally, several people have commented on how organised I am and wonder how I ever keep up with all the SALs. I have a simple diary, one double page per week and I write down all the SALs in the notebook section at the end and then each day I jot down which projects I worked on. I do have the X-Stitch app on my iPad and I keep that up-to-date with all my charts and WIPs but it is easier to use pen and paper.
Why am I so organised though? I worked for an international insurance brokers for 17 years in the North European Documentation team. I had six major clients, each of whom had several fleets they were responsible for. Each fleet had 20-50 vessels with an typical value of US$ 20,000,000 each vessel. As well as the renewals for each fleet, things were constantly happening throughout the year - new additions, sales, values increased, values decreased, voyages into dodgy areas etc. I had to keep track of all of this and make sure the documentation was accurate and up-to-date, also making sure the client paid on time and we paid the underwriters on time too! If you are not organised you don't last long!
Of course when you stop doing a job like that, all that brain power has to go somewhere. When I gave up work I felt like my brain could suddenly do what it wanted to do, rather than spend all it's time working for someone else. It's so liberating not having to work for someone else and be free to think about anything you want. Now I work part-time so I still have the freedom to use my brain energy how I want to. Although, like most people I do find myself thinking about work-related things on my days off! Fortunately it's all about books now rather than Marine Insurance.
Just to prove it - here's some book art:
Please note - this was a proof copy not a real book. The pages are only folded, not cut or glued. No books were harmed in the making of this project.
Instructions can be found here - Instructables.com