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12-12 rohan pocket final
Somehow, deadlines always help in getting stuff done. The end of the year and being able to use the completed: 2012 tag on this project since all I had left was little stuff turned out to be just enough. I freehanded my initials and the year after cutting the slit down the middle. It wasn't the most efficient way of doing them, but I didn't know how much to allow for binding the slit so they had to be added afterward.

I'd say it's about 88% hand-work; the bias tape is sewn together and the inside of the seams are done by machine. 
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12-12 crocheted hotpads

This is what you get when you raid the scrap yarn basket and don't find the yarn you were looking for until after you're finished with your project...

The variegated is super intense. I went through several different pattern attempts before I settled on this design as not being insanely hard on the eyes.  

Pattern notes: chain 25 +2, three rows of sc or dc, sc variegated with fp triple or quadriple crochet to make design, repeat until symmetrical, sc around edges with variegated
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12-12 AG susan archerydress
This is a Christmas gift for a friend. :-)

So, yes, I took a short-sleeve knit top pattern and turned it into a long sleeve woven dress... I ought to have made the skirt flare on the side pieces a bit more dramatic, and I think the grain is a bit off in the side pieces as well, which would account for the puckering. I feel like I ought to have added a smidge more at the princess seams to make it slightly less fitted. The slits and neck V could have been a tiny bit longer. Maybe wider? They looked small in person, I thought.

The embroidery is freehand. 

My sister made the belt using the magic braid pattern and an old watch buckle. She did a fabulous job. 

And now if I ever want to make a Waterhouse-inspired doll dress...
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12-12 sweater snow 1 

Lo, I have finally procured photo documentation of my sweater (and its lovely 'buttons'). It was snowing to beat the band, and I think the photos are some of my favourites of any project so far. :D

12-12 sweater snow 2
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I finished my sweater last night!* It is lovely! The color seems to be fabulous, and compliment my skintone, unlike a certain gold top I bought... It even fits!** I am enormously pleased, just so y'all know.*** :D



* It needs buttons to close, and I did not even go digging through the button jar today looking for possibilities
** I am hoping the buttons will make it feel like I am not stretching it horribly when I pull it into the closed position
*** If I were a county fair knitting judge, I would give me a participation ribbon. However, I am not. So we will not speak of the mistakes I ignored. ;)
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My purse handles wore out after several years of frequent use, but the body itself is sound as ever. So I thought to replace the handles. Tablet weaving has been a fascinating idea for some time, but a great mystery. NarniaWebber wild rose kindly shared her expertise in a comprehensive tutorial that managed to demystify all the points I hadn't gathered from Card Weaving by Candace Crockett.

Read more... )
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I ran across this tutorial this morning:It just so happens that I could actually use a pincushion, and I thought I might have a few extra quilt squares hanging around (I didn't find them) so I sat down to whip one up!



Measuring Tape Girl* claimed to be interested in the process, enough to look through the tutorial and afterwards claim that she could only remember what the last step looked like. She certainly remembered that after stuffing it you were supposed to add a button to the top! (I wonder if it wouldn't have been easier to add the button before stuffing the cushion, though. One of those things one thinks of far too late.)

I ended up using 5 4.25" squares. I cut 4 of the squares in half on the diagonal which minimized fabric usage. (Possibly because of this I ended up with a gaping middle on the bottom which I cleverly covered with a diamond pieced from the scraps. If I hadn't whip stitched it in place with black it might not even be all that noticable!) Ironing the large square that forms the leading in the block is the most difficult part because the more precise your folds the prettier the finished square.

The only other noteable thing about this project is that I pieced the large square. 10"x10" is hard to find in the scrap bag! It's a fairly heavy fabric, so I may end up not being able to stab pins in deeply. 

Um, right. Back to those other projects I ought to have been working on...


*My youngest sister, so christened because she likes wearing measuring tapes around her neck and can usually find one if you need/want one
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That doesn't look difficult... other than getting the eyes right...


"I heard a loud noise... what happened?" )
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For his llama costume entry this year Little Brother #2 decided that he wanted to be Robin Hood and his llama could be Will Scarlett. Not surprisingly, the shirt from the Robin Hood costume I made him back in 2008 didn't fit him anymore. So I used the following links and a heathly dose of fudging to make him a new one. (I put more work into his costume than he put into the one for the llama. XD )
I used a light cotton in a dark green and eyeballed the measurements against one of my T-shirts. It is possible to rip nice squares and rectangles on the grain of the fabric, so that's what I did for most of my pieces. For the shoulder gussets I did right angle triangles instead of isosceles triangles. If I'd been paying close attention, I could have pulled the underarm gussets from the scrap ripped to square the edge of my fabric and used more exactly two-thirds of the 3 yards of 45" fabric... the little nibble out of the remnant piece makes me sad.

Friends and I had recently visited an exhibit on Nordic Lace and I noticed on the shirt from a man's wedding outfit that embroidery was used to hold the placket down. So I put my brother's initials there because I didn't have time to do the entire alphabet like on the piece I'd seen. I did two handworked eyelets to close the collar. The cuffs are currently loose. I don't know if they will eventually get eyelets and lace shut or hooks and eyes or a button and frog or... never be done at all. :p 
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I'm so proud of my pun. I kept wondering what to name the post, and all I could think of was There's an Owl in the Shower! But why would you put your hotpad in the shower? It would be the most confusing photo shoot ever. Putting your owl in the fridge or oven sounds cruel, not funny. 

I had grand plans to make a little family of owls, but as usual reality intervened. I'd seen a crocheted owl bib and thought it cute enough to put in my sketchbook (but was certain I didn't know anyone who'd put something like that on their baby). But a hotpad on the same design was much more likely to actually be used. I pulled out the scrap yarn and thought, "Oh! I could make a realistic looking owl! That would be less likely to end up kitschy..." and then spent a couple of hours perfecting my reversible technique. Should I attempt something like this again, I will probably chart it and make the eyes part of the design instead of sewing them on afterwards. 

Anyway, he looks nothing like the bib. 

There was just enough white yarn left to decorate the pot hat, which is decidedly useful for gripping hot lids. And maybe it matches the reverse of the owl. But... I made another white hotpad.  
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  • sport weight yarn
  • size 5 USA needles
  • 14 stitch repeat
  • in worsted weight, the repeat equals 2.75"x6" inches of knit fabric
Naturally, I started my swatch with the ribbing. Two purl stitches to one knit looked really good. But... ribbing stretches. That's what it's supposed to do. So the pattern is actually knit one, purl one. What you'll see when it's relaxed is all knit. That figured out, it was on to the fun part--reading knitting charts. You can see one of my sample eyelet lace patterns pulled from the set I pointed out in the previous post next to my screencap print-outs...

The whole over-under knit two together for the leaf edge took awhile to figure out. You need to have the stitch from the inside of the leaf on top to define the motif. Well, I noticed that about halfway through the first set of leaves. Trying to position the eyelets by eyeballing the pattern didn't work out so well either, but by then I had some idea of how the pattern was supposed to work. 



I started over with the ribbing and a neatly charted pattern. Hurrah! The failure/practice helped. It looks a lot better this time. And even though the eyelet at the top didn't quite work out (they need to be closer together) and there might be an extra knit 2 together, or knit 3 together, on my chart, it's fairly obvious while knitting when it needs to go. I'll have to mark it next time through the pattern.

I'm thinking maybe 10 repeats in the beret in the show? It seems to be knit in a lighter weight yarn, maybe baby or lace, which ought to put it in the 22" brim circumference territory. I just so happen to have a set of size 2 circular needles, and I hope I have enough yarn... I might be able to make a guesstimation by weighing the ball of yarn.    

The swatch folded itself nicely and suggested a hotpad. White or Ecru, of course, is not the wisest choice for a utilitarian item, but it is what it is.
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This one was also made using a kit from Herrschners.com. Like the other one, the gauge is off, but I compensated for it this time. So now I have some leftover yarn from the kit; possibly enough for a matching sweater.

Since I wasn't crocheting like a madwoman, it felt like it took longer to complete this one. I started at the beginning of February, and here we are at the end of the month. Something like 20 minutes a stripe of colour? So... 31 stripes, plus another forty minutes on the border... 11 hours? It feels like more, so I'd take the estimate with a handful of salt. I'm probably forgetting something.
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Using a kit from Herrschners.com I tested out the name of the pattern.

It took me about an hour per ounce for the main body of the blanket, and six three ounce skeins went into the pattern. That took a week. Then I spent another week doing the popcorn border instead of a fringe because fringe is bad for babies? There was a rumour to that effect somewhere... That was another three ounces of yarn, but more like six or seven hours of work.

The other thing is that the gauge on this pattern seems to be wrong.

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