Happy Sunday ladies!!!! As an extra treat you've got 3 numbers today which catches us up for the day I missed

Good luck!!!
#17: The Letter
This is just a chart that I simply love. It has an "aged" feel to it and I'm an old romantic really so this has to be a love letter imho. It reminds me of the
lettersKeats wrote to Fanny Brawne:
'Ask yourself my love whether you are not very cruel to have so entrammelled me, so destroyed my freedom. Will you confess this in the Letter you must write immediately, and do all you can to console me in it—make it rich as a draught of poppies to intoxicate me—write the softest words and kiss them that I may at least touch my lips where yours have been. For myself I know not how to express my devotion to so fair a form: I want a brighter word than bright, a fairer word than fair. I almost wish we were butterflies and liv'd but three summer days—three such days with you I could fill with more delight than fifty common years could ever contain.'
I love that it's sepia coloured and it's almost like a snapshot from her life - often it's the pictures that are taken without the subject knowing that tell the best stories or capture emotions best and I think this is a beautiful example of that and would look beautiful as a stitched piece.
#30: Last Look
I love this because it's different - it's dark, gothic, again slightly otherworldly but it's different because it's not the sort of thing I'd usually like to stitch. Something about it haunts me, and I can't quite put my finger on it. Do you have a piece that haunts you?
#14: Persephone
"Persephone is the goddess of the underworld in Greek mythology. She is the daughter of Zeus and Demeter, goddess of the harvest. Persephone was such a beautiful young woman that everyone loved her, even Hades wanted her for himself. One day, when she was collecting flowers on the plain of Enna, the earth suddenly opened and Hades rose up from the gap and abducted her. None but Zeus, and the all-seeing sun, Helios, had noticed it.
Broken-hearted, Demeter wandered the earth, looking for her daughter until Helios revealed what had happened. Demeter was so angry that she withdrew herself in loneliness, and the earth ceased to be fertile. Knowing this could not continue much longer, Zeus sent Hermes down to Hades to make him release Persephone. Hades grudgingly agreed, but before she went back he gave Persephone a pomegranate (or the seeds of a pomegranate, according to some sources). When she later ate of it, it bound her to underworld forever and she had to stay there one-third of the year. The other months she stayed with her mother. When Persephone was in Hades, Demeter refused to let anything grow and winter began. This myth is a symbol of the budding and dying of nature."
I believe that in Dahlig's interpretation of Persephone is when she is between states - trapped in the underworld and desperate to return to her mother, or it could be at the beginning where she's so grieved at the loss of her life on earth with her family that she yearns for the sunlight.
I started stitching this one a while ago, and I'm three pages in - I can't wait until she's complete
That's all for now.
xx