Showing posts with label knit and crochet blog week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label knit and crochet blog week. Show all posts

Sunday, April 29, 2012

3KCBWDAY7 - Crafting Balance


Crafting Balance 
Are you a knitter or a crocheter, or are you a bit of both? If you are monogamous in your yarn-based crafting, is it because you do not enjoy the other craft or have you simply never given yourself the push to learn it? Is it because the items that you best enjoy crafting are more suited to the needles or the hook? Do you plan on ever trying to take up and fully learn the other craft? If you are equally comfortable knitting as you are crocheting, how do you balance both crafts? Do you always have projects of each on the go, or do you go through periods of favouring one over the other? How did you come to learn and love your craft(s)?


 I am definitely a hooker.  Now, I'm not one of those people who think one is better than the other.  I do know how to knit.  I taught myself how to shortly after I finally got the hang of crochet.  My sister, not realizing that I didn't knit (some people don't know there's a difference between crochet and knit), bought me this book:




There was the cutest mermaid costume in the book and I took on the task of knitting all three of my girls mermaid costumes for Halloween that year.  Insanity, I tell you.


Not the best picture to showcase my work, but you get the idea.

Honestly, other than a scarf, that's all the knitting I've done.  I have tried a few other projects, but just never finish them.  Knitting doesn't feel as natural to me and I'm slow.  Yes, I realize the speed comes with practice, but I'm not a very patient person.

And, this is just my own personal thing... I can't keep up with needles.  My kids don't mess with my crochet hooks, but those knitting needles are irresistible.  When I started those mermaid costumes, I swear I started the first one 4 times because Zoe kept pulling the needles out.  I can leave my crochet projects out and if the hook disappears, I might loose a stitch or two.  But knitting... that has to be put up if I so much as leave the room.  I got better at putting the needles back in without losing much of my work, but it's still a pain.  Plus, they make good swords for my tomboys and we just don't need any eyeballs impaled on needles.


I do want to try more knitting projects.  I love trying new techniques and just expanding my knowledge so it does tempt me.  The girls are getting older and less likely to disturb my work.  The day is coming, but until then I'll be pretty monogamous to my hooks.

3KCBWDAY7

Saturday, April 28, 2012

3KCBWDAY6 - Improving Your Skillset


Improving Your Skillset
How far down the road to learning your craft do you believe yourself to be? Are you comfortable with what you know or are you always striving to learn new skills and add to your knowledge base? Take a look at a few knitting or crochet books and have a look at some of the skills mentioned in the patterns. Can you start your amigurumi pieces with a magic circle, have you ever tried double knitting, how's your intarsia? If you are feeling brave, make a list of some of the skills which you have not yet tried but would like to have a go at, and perhaps even set yourself a deadline of when you'd like to have tried them by.


Despite the fact that I've only been crocheting about 2 years, I honestly feel like I'm a fairly advanced crocheter.  I've definitely worked patterns classified as such.  I love learning new things and challenging myself, so once I got hooked I jumped in with both feet.  If I see a pattern with stitches I've never tried or that looks really complicated, I get excited. 

I picked up the language of crochet pretty quickly.  When I first picked up a pattern, I was just baffled by the abbreviations and terminology.  Charts are still a bit tricky for me, I prefer my directions written out.  With amigurumi, unless there is something unique about a row, all I need is the stitch count for that row.  I've condensed a pattern written out over several pages to just half a page before ;).

I am able to improvise my own patterns and figure out some patterns just looking at the finished product.  I've written and shared a few of my own patterns, and I hope to do more - possibly to sell. 

There are several techniques I haven't tried yet, such as Tunisian crochet, that I would like to try eventually.  Right now I want to get more into overlay crochet.  I'm finishing up a few projects and I think my next project will be something from this book:


Source: amazon.com via Jennifer on Pinterest


As for knitting, I'd say I'm an adventurous beginner.  I'd like to try another knitting project before the year is over.  Time is key, though.... there is just so much I want to try but not nearly enough time to do it all.

3KCBWDAY6

Friday, April 27, 2012

3KCBWWC - My Perfect Day


Craft Your Perfect Day
Plan your fantasy day with your craft, It might just take up one hour of your day or be the entire focus of the day, but tell your readers where you'd love to craft, whether you'd craft alone or with friends, knitting or crocheting something simple or spending a day learning new skills.


 It's a warm Saturday morning and when I wake up, the sun is actually up for a pleasant change.  The smell of coffee and omelets waft down the hall, as my husband decided to let me sleep in and has managed to keep our spawn quiet and has cooked me breakfast.  I get up and enjoy a peaceful breakfast where I don't have to get up 500 times to refill cups or wipe the Toilet Nazi's bottom.

My husband decides to take the girls off to the park for a few hours so that I can sew.  He's also arranged for a maid to come by to scrub the house from top to bottom and wash clothes.  My serger doesn't go all wonky on me and everything I sew turns out pure perfection.

When the family returns, we all go for a walk at the park and I take all sorts of fabulous pictures, showing what a perfect day it is and how we are all just so happy and carefree.

We go out to eat and the girls actually eat something other than cheese dip and no milk is spilled at the table.  Bottoms firmly planted to chairs and no embarrassing swear words slip out of the mouths of my small children.  Everybody who passes comments on what charming children we have.

The girls go to bed peacefully and quietly while I sit in my chair and read a few chapters of a well-written and engrossing novel.

I gather up my current crochet project and my husband strangely has found the time to get acquainted with Once Upon A Time and we watch the most recent DVR'd episode together while I work.  I remark how nice it is to watch something other than American Choppers or Fox News and he agrees that they are stupid and will never subject me to them again.

It's finally time for bed... my house is clean, the bed is made, kids in their own beds... and I drift off to sleep with a smile on my face....

3KCBWWC

Thursday, April 26, 2012

3KCWBDAY4 - Crocheting for all seasons?


A Knitter or Crocheter For All Seasons?
As spring is in the air in the northern hemisphere and those in the southern hemisphere start setting their sights for the arrival of winter, a lot of crocheters and knitters find that their crafting changes along with their wardrobe. Have a look through your finished projects and explain the seasonality of your craft to your readers. Do you make warm woollens the whole year through in preparation for the colder months, or do you live somewhere that never feels the chill and so invest your time in beautiful homewares and delicate lace items. How does your local seasonal weather affect your craft?


I've mentioned before that I think I am a seasonal crafter.  Of course, I've only been crocheting for two years, so I don't have a long history to look back on, but it seems that I tend to crochet more during the cooler months and sew more during the warmer months.  But while I will ignore my sewing machine for months on end, it's rare that I don't have a crochet project going no matter the time of the year.  I just do it more when it's cooler.

Thing is... this is Arkansas and it's never all that cold.  I make crocheted hats that my kids only wear for dress up.  I don't make scarves often... no one will wear them either.  I am too warm-natured to wear a sweater, so I don't make them.

Summer can get really humid around here, and it can be hard to crochet in the summer.  It feels like the yarn just sticks to me and it throws my tension off.  I definitely couldn't handle being covered by a big afghan or anything, so most of the blankets I've made have been granny square projects. 

I guess all of that is why I make amigurumi so often.  Any time is a good time for a softie =)

3KCWBDAY4

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

3KCWBDAY3 - My Crochet Hero!


Your Knitting Or Crochet Hero
Blog about someone in the fibre crafts who truly inspires you. There are not too many guidelines for this, it's really about introducing your readers to someone who they might not know who is an inspiration to you. It might be a family member or friend, a specific designer or writer, indie dyer or another blogger. If you are writing about a knitting designer and you have knitted some of their designs, don't forget to show them off. Remember to get permission from the owner if you wish to use another person's pictures
.

I haven't been crocheting all that long, relatively speaking.  I've read so many crocheter's bios where they'd been crocheting since they were 3, and that's not the case with me.  My mother tried to teach me when I was  young, but she's a lefty and I have what I like to call "directional dyslexia" (I can't tell my left from right half the time, seriously), so I just was never able to pick it up.  My mom, when she was crafty, was a dabbler at best in crochet.  She made a ripple afghan and a Pepto-pink sweater vest that my poor sister wore in a school portrait, but other than that I can't think of anything else she ever made.  Myself, I didn't "get it" until I was 34.  Two years ago.  That's it.  I do know how to knit, but I never have been able to feel really natural at it. 

I admire a lot of crocheters, especially those who design. I would say that it's really hard for me to choose a hero among them, but I have to admit that there is one that instantly comes to mind.

Melody MacDuffee.

Melody MacDuffee first caught my eye when I picked up this book from the book store:


Source: amazon.com via Jennifer on Pinterest


That's her Stained Glass Window afghan on the cover.  I bought the book and had to make it.

Finished!

It is, to this day, probably the project I'm most proud of completing.

Melody's "thing" is overlay crochet.  I'm so intrigued by this technique.  I've started another one of her patterns from this book:




Again, she made the cover, and she well deserves to, in my opinion.  I haven't made it far on the project, mainly because it is made with embroidery floss and working that small requires a lot of concentration (meaning it's not really something I can sit and do with the kids around or in front of the TV) and I let myself get distracted from it.

I don't buy many pattern books, I'd rather borrow them from the library if I can, but I made an exception for this book:


Source: amazon.com via Jennifer on Pinterest


Everything in this book is worked with sewing thread.  Sewing thread.  Can you imagine?  I have a few of the patterns in mind that I want to try on a larger scale with worsted weight yarn.

I'm just amazed at the skill and imagination she possesses.




I just can't imagine coming up with this on my own.  And it's just so perfect... it's really hard for me to work with embroidery thread, so I can't even begin to comprehend doing it with sewing thread like that.




So... there you have it.... my crochet hero.  Melody MacDuffee.  You really should try one of her patterns some day.

3KCBWDAY3

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

3KCBWDAY2 - Photography Challenge



Photography Challenge Day!
Today challenges you to be creative with your photography, and get yourself in with the chance to win the photography prize. Taking interesting photographs in this instance isn't about flashy cameras or a great deal of technical know-how, it's about setting up a story or scene in a photograph and capturing something imaginative. Your photograph(s) should feature something related to your craft, so that might be either a knitted or crocheted item, yarn, or one of your craft tools. One example of setting a scene would be to photograph a girl in a knitted red cape walking through the woodlands with a basket of goodies, as in the Red Riding Hood tale, or you might photograph a knitted gnome hiding among the flowers in your garden. Photo editing is permitted for competition photos. Here are a few examples of my own photographs to illustrate an imaginative use of photography, but you can do much better than these...


I don't anticipate winning any prizes for this post (or any other, for that matter ;) ).  I do love photography and I always have the intention of taking really nice photos of my work, but it doesn't seem to happen often.  I don't know how well this post fits the criteria today, but I'd just like to show off a few of my favorite photos that feature things I created.  Enjoy!

Babette fans


003

Untitled

Livi's doll

daisy afghan

OMG!  He killed Kenny!  You bastard!

Mr. Hankey

Cozumel fountain

Totally relaxed

3KCBWDAY2

Monday, April 23, 2012

K&CBW Day 1 - Color Lovers!


Today's topic du jour is color. 

Can you guess what my favorite color is?




A really grassy, spring-y green.  

I am drawn to most shades of green... not so much darker shades like hunter green (which is odd since I was completely into that when I was younger) but most shades of green just make me really happy.  I've noticed at times while looking at patterns that I take notice of those with pictures of them in a green shade more than any other color.  A pattern I might usually pass up will suddenly be far more interesting to me if they show a finished item in green.

My taste in colors do change.  Once upon a time I was very into dark jewel tones.  Deep, dark blue and blood red are just amazing colors.  But having a house full of little girls has influenced my taste.  I have never been much of a girly-girl, but I gave birth to three of them.  When they were little, I learned to love the soft baby shades.  Now they love fun, bold colors and I find myself drawn to hot pink and lime green more than ever.  I used to love silver above all else.  If you've ever paid attention to the web address of my blog, you'll notice "silvertears" in there.  I thought that was such a beautiful image... liquid silver drops. 


Source: flickr.com via stefano on Pinterest


Still do.  =)

There are colors that I'm not fond of.  Orange, for example.  It has grown on me somewhat... I do think most colors have their place and purpose, but I certainly don't gravitate to it.  There are shades of red that I don't like... mostly the orange-y ones.  My least favorite is gold.  I won't even wear yellow gold jewelry.

When I am working on crochet and sewing, I have to have good colors to work with.  I tried to make a Special Olympics scarf this past winter and just couldn't get into the color combination (royal blue and cherry red).  I'm picky about my fabrics, in fact, I don't really like a lot of the popular colorways out now.  I'm even pickier about variegated yarn.  I prefer solid color yarn and have found very few variegated yarns that don't make me a little nutty when I look at them.  I might feel differently if I made more clothing or used some of the more expensive yarns.  But I don't.  =)

I will leave you with a few of the projects I've pinned that I was drawn to because of the colors....


Source: etsy.com via Jennifer on Pinterest






3KCBWDAY1

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