Saturday 14 October 2017

Crochet Tiny Acorn

I had an awesome idea whilst unable to sleep one night that I can crochet myself some badges to wear at work. I work in a laboratory; there are many employees in said laboratory and we all have a lab coat each which, as you can probably imagine, all look the same. Due to this we decorate our lab coats with badges so that we can identify who's coat is who's. It also gives our attire a little bit of individuality.

The idea randomly came to me in the middle of the night that I can start crocheting my own badges. I have no idea why it took me so long to think of this. I immediately wanted to make a start but crocheting in the middle of the night, on a school night, is not a great idea.

At the minute is seems I have a thing for tiny crochet objects and I have been thinking about what objects I like that I can crochet small enough to wear as a badge. My first badge is relevant to the current season Autumn.


A little tiny acorn. I love it. Click Here for the pattern. 

I added a tiny green leaf just for an extra bit of detail. I made it the same way the stem is made and folded it over on itself. 

Hook off!


Edit:
Find other badges here-OctopusTriceratopsStocking

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Saturday 7 October 2017

Crochet Tiny Bat

I saw a ridiculously cute pattern for a tiny cute bat when I first started crocheting. This was 6 years ago! How time flies. It was so cute (did I mention it was cute?). I really wanted to make it but at the time I wasn't very good at crocheting. Then, as always, I completely forgot about the pattern.

Then the other day I came across the pattern again and HAD to make it. Quite a coincidence that it's so close to Halloween. Here it is:


Unfortunately I didn't keep it. I have given it away as a thank you gift to someone who loves bats. The pattern was not as easy or as quick as I was hoping. I struggled with the wings, but maybe that was just me having a thick day. Totally worth it though!

Click Here for the free pattern. 

Hook off! 

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Saturday 30 September 2017

Small Versatile Crochet Pouch

I had a request from a friend to make a pouch for her Switch Joy-Con Controller Straps as they didn't fit into the case she already had. So I made a very simple pouch. Out of all the lovely yarn colours I own she chose grey....grey, need I say more?

But here it is:



It fits small crafty things in too!

The pattern for this is very simple its just a sheet of single crochet stitches made to the size needed then sewn up the edges leaving a flap at the top. It's so quick and simple and really versatile that I am probably going to be making a few of these.

Other than a Switch Strap pouch or a craft pouch it could be used as a coin purse, a pencil case (which, come to think of it, may be handy for me as I start university again soon), a make-up case, hair accessories pouch...you get the idea. I plan on making mine in funky colours with interesting buttons.

Hook off!

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Saturday 9 September 2017

Soot sprite card

Just a quick post as I haven't been on here in a while. My life is so busy right now! 

I like to make cards; I feel like they mean more because they take time and some thought to make. Also they can be as personalised as you wish!

My friend and I love Studio Ghibli films and we adore Susuwatari (Soot Sprites). Therefore I decided to give a Susuwatari card a try. 


I think it's quite cute and the integrated card stand works really well, I am defiantly going to be adding that to my future cards. Also it's orange!

See more of my Studio Ghibli projects Here

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Saturday 22 July 2017

Chibi Totoro (small white Totoro) with Leaf

I made Totoro for a friend as a gift and could not resist making the Chibi Totoro too. Just too cute and small not to!

I found Chibi very quick to make, yet a little fiddly due to the small size. I am going to be making myself one too because I love it so much, especially with the little leaf!



(I went a bit crazy with the pesky Susuwatari.)

The pattern for Chibi Totoro can be found Here and the pattern for the leaf is at the end of this pattern.

Here Chibi is with friends: 

I am hoping to make a Chi Totoro and No-Face soon so watch this space.

Update: See other Ghibli projects Here.

Hook off. 

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Saturday 8 July 2017

Charity Blanket #3- 60 Million Trebles (first c2c graph)

I have completed my third blanket for Sixty Milion Trebles. (Find out more information about this charity Here).

I thought I'd give myself more of a challenge after completing my first c2c blanket. This time I tried a graph. I spent a while trying to decide on a graph pattern that was simple. I eventually decided on an elephant pattern as I like elephants and it looked simple enough.

However at one point I ended up with 8 balls attached to my blanket and kept getting them all mixed up and tangled. The amount of times I had to rip back my work because of made a mistake was silly. Then there were the ends, THE ENDS, weaving in all those ends took me nearly as long as it did to crochet the thing (I'm really selling this I know). But it was a learning curve. I learned how to carry yarn without it showing and how to design my own graphghan.

I am very pleased with how it turned out for a first try even if I did find it frustrating in parts.


This has added 21,778 trebled to the count. The total count is now nearly 46million which is fantastic!

Hopefully this blanket will bring comfort to someone. 

Hook off. 

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Saturday 22 April 2017

Wolf String Art


String art is getting more popular at the moment. I've been wanting to try it for a while now, I just needed an excuse to give it a go. A friend and I make gifts for each other each Christmas so this was my excuse. However I didn't get to see him until April so this post had to wait.

It took me a while to decide what picture I wanted to try with string art. I didn't want my first string art project to be something really complicated but I also wanted it to look good, as it was a gift. Trying to find something that my friend would like, that wasn't too complicated, was difficult. He loves wolves so I was determined to make a wolf.

I think I spent more time trying to decide on a picture to try than actually making the thing. I also spent ages trying to find some wood. So I ended up buying a chopping board... may not have been the best idea though as I will explain in a bit.

So what I used:
-nails
-poster paint
-thin string
-chopping board
-paint brush
-hammer
-sandpaper
-pencil
-paper

I drew the pattern on paper first so I knew where abouts to put the nails on the board. Then I painted the board with two coats of black (however as I decided to buy a chopping board I had to sand down the board first because it had a coating that would have affected the paint). After the paint dried (I left it overnight) I cut out the drawing so that I could use it as a template for the nails (again this was a mistake, I will explain later). I actually didn't hammer in the nails I gave that job to my partner... who struggled because chopping board wood is very hard, who knew?! So the nails had a tenancy to bend whilst being hammered into the wood. This is very annoying to a perfectionist like me so I'm very glad my partner was doing it...

The problem with using paper as a template is that paper sticks to poster paint. Again - who knew? So I had to try and peel the paper off between all the nails that had just been hammered into the wood, not an easy task I'll have you know. It ended up needing a wet sponge.

Eventually after removing all the WHITE paper from the BLACK background I started to add the string. I pretty much just made the string part up as I went along. I have never seen string art being made before so it was all just guess work on my part. Some parts of the design were very tricky, such as the legs of the wolf, but on the most part it was OK. I did find myself undoing chunks of it that I wasn't happy with first time round, but all in all I think it went quite well. I think the trickiest part of this was trying to make teeny tiny knots in the string invisible whilst keeping the string tight around the nails. If there is a knack to this I do not have it, I did find this very frustrating.

The end result, however, is pretty awesome, if  I do say so myself... even with the bent nails. I would happily have this piece of artwork in my home.



I want to make some more string art as I love the end result. Obviously now I have some mistakes to learn from and now I have more of an idea of how to lay the string out. Also as a gift for Christmas my Grandma gave me my very own handy and pretty hammer,without even knowing I was getting into string art.

What a perfect excuse to make more art!

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Saturday 15 April 2017

Crochet Calcifer


Who doesn't love a bit of Studio Ghibli? My favourite of them all being Howls Moving Castle.

I decided to make Calcifer for a friend after she got a tattoo of him on her (as she calls it)'Geek leg'.

If you don't know who Calcifer is then:

Boo!

I couldn't find a pattern for Calcifer that I liked on the Internet so I decided to give it a go myself, it seemed simple enough.

I started by crocheting a tear drop shape with yellow in the centre gradually moving to orange and then red to get the fire effect. The end result was a multicoloured teardrop which didn't really look like fire. Luckily I'd seen a few days before that brushing crochet projects makes them fluffy. Perfect. I gave it a go.

Brushing crochet (without a pet brush which is what your supposed to use apparently) takes a LONG time. So I sat for a while brushing this colourful tear drop, trying really hard to make it look even slightly like fire, until my hands ached and I had to give up.

The next day I picked it up again and spent another long while brushing until my hands ached and I gave up. Third time lucky it actually kinda, sorta looked like fire:


I added some white felt and beads for eyes and made a little Yarn mouth:


It's passable, I guess.

If your interested in my other Ghibli projects click Here.

The pattern for Calcifer can be found Here.

Hook off.

P.S. I have now purchased a pet brush for future fluffing up of crochet projects.


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Saturday 8 April 2017

Crochet Totoro

I've been looking forward to posting this for a while, I made it as a Christmas present for my friend however life has got in the way and we haven't seen eachother. This is now my favourite amigurumi that I have made! He is adorable! I may be biased though because I do love a bit of Studio Ghibli.


I think this is the biggest amigurumi I have made so far. It took me a while to make but I enjoyed every minute of it and as it's a gift I was thinking about my best mate the whole time :). The only bit I did not enjoy was sewing on the appendages but thats a personal opinion because I hate sewing and always panic that they are in the wrong place.

The instructions for this are very easy to follow and there isn't any complicated stitches. If you can single crochet, decrease and increase your sorted.

The size was a bit bigger than I expected and I ran out of stuffing half way through... here are the dimensions of my finished product:
Hight (Inc. ears): 9.25 inches
Width (Inc arms): 7.5 inches
Depth (Inc tail): 7 inches

I really want to make another one for myself but at the minute I just don't have the time. I'm too busy Crocheting for charity and making things for other people. Maybe in the future I'll treat myself.

The pattern for this a Totoro can be found Here.

I added some Susuwatari (soot sprites) just for fun! 

Then I added more! I'll blog about these soon, watch this space. 

Update: for other Ghibli projects click Here

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Saturday 18 March 2017

Charity blanket #2- Sixty Million Trebles (First c2c)

I have completed my second blanket for Sixty Milion Trebles. (Find out more information about this charity Here).

This is a 36x36 inch blanket made by crocheting corner to corner (c2c). After struggling with the first blanket being so heavy to handle and my yarn holding finger getting tired I used my DIY Crochet Accessories for assistance.

I have never tried a corner to corner blanket like this, I love it. It worked up a lot faster then my Charity Granny Square blanket. I love the colours and I quite like how random it is aswell.

As I have never made a corner to corner blanket before I didn't know what pattern to do. It would annoy me if the pattern didn't finish perfectly when I got to 36 inches. I probably could have worked it out, if I could be bothered, but nah. So instead I used a Random Number Generator to choose the number of rows of each colour for me. I think it turned out really nice, and no annoyance of a pattern not being perfect.

Anyway enough blabbering here it is:


This blanket has added 22,384 trebles to the 60 million trebles count. We are currently on 23 million trebles!

I am planning on making more charity blankets and I have some patterns in mind for even more. So much to do, not enough time to do it! 

Hook off. 


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Saturday 4 March 2017

DIY Crochet Accessories

The past few weeks I've been concentrating on making crochet blankets for the charity sixty million trebles and I am really not used to making projects this big. I normally make Amigurumi or other smaller type projects. So making larger projects is something new to me and it was putting a strain on my 'Yarn holding finger' which I have never really had much experience of before. Luckily I had already made a finger saver (find the pattern for my finger saver Here).

The finger saver has been a literal finger saver and after messing around with it for a while I realised I could change the tension with it! I am not the brightest spark so if this is nothing new to those who crochet then accept my apologies.

So weaving the Yarn through the finger saver once like this:


Gives very low tension which was not enough tension for my liking so I thought what would happen if I weave the Yarn through it more, surely the tension would increase, so I gave it a whirl:


Alas it worked, the tension was increased. This felt quite comfortable for this project but I decided to weave more to see what happened...again more tension, too much for this project but it could be useful later on. I'm quit glad I tried this out because now I can crochet for much longer with a nice tension without my finger wanting to give up.

The other thing I have just started to do is use a bowl with a bulldog clip attached to it as a Yarn bowl:


I have never needed a Yarn bowl before due to small projects but wow did this make life a lot easier.

So that's two accessories I am currently using to help with my bigger charity projects and I have made both from stuff I had lying around the house!



Hook off.

Update: see the finished blanket seen in this post Here

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Saturday 11 February 2017

Charity Blanket #1- Sixty Million Trebles

I have completed a 36x36" crochet blanket for the Sixty Million Trebles charity if you missed my blog with the information about this charity Click Here. I have never made a blanket before what's a better excuse than charity.

The blanket took me longer than I anticipated. It is made of all the scrap Yarn that I have. I've used up most of my scraps now which is great, I've already gone out to buy more Yarn!

The blanket is made out of granny squares. Instead of making the granny squares separately and sewing them altogether all the end I joined each granny square to the blanket as I went...anything to get out of sewing. All the squares didn't make the blanket to 36" so I made a border carrying on with the granny square theme. Lastly I finished off the blanket with a row of a simple crochet stitch for ease of attaching to other blankets.

15, 615 trebles have now been added to the 60 million count. We have just passed 18.5 million!


I am planning on starting my next blanket very soon. I think it's going to be a C2C blanket. Update coming soon.

Update: Charity Blanket Number 2

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Saturday 14 January 2017

Experimenting with blocking (Fortune's Shawlette)

Be warned this is not a very exciting post it was an experiment for my own benefit but I decided to share just incase, by chance, someone may find it useful (also if I make more of these I can read what I did...). If you don't care about blocking but want the pattern to these shawls Click here for a link.

I made 3 Fortune's Shawlette as gifts for Christmas. I really love the pattern and how the shawl falls ect. It looks gorgeous when it's finished. My only issue is that as I'm giving them as gifts I don't think my giftees will want to block the shawls after they have been washed. So I just wanted to see the size difference in the shawls after blocking/stretching and not doing any blocking/stretching.

I left one as it was without blocking or anything, I blocked one after wasing it and the 3rd one I washed and stretched with hangers... I used hangers as weights on the corners of the shawl (don't judge me).


The picture shows the purple one (the largest shawl) after blocking, the green one (the middle sized shawl) after being stretched with hangers and the blue one (smallest shawl) which I have done nothing with.

The size difference is obvious. The blocked one (purple) is definitely the better looking, the detail of the pattern is much more obvious, and will fit nicely on anyone. The stretched one (with hangers) looks alright the pattern isn't as obvious but Ok and the size is alright but may not fit/fall as well. The blue one that I left alone isn't the best as the pattern is hard to see and I struggle with it fitting me and I'm quite small, it does fit but it doesn't fall as well as the others.

After my little experiment blocking is definitely the way to go but stretching whilst drying is an alright alternative. Leaving the shawl as it is though with out any stretching encouragement may not be a good decision.

Tschüs

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Monday 9 January 2017

Sixty Million Trebles Charity

(Please read the important update at the bottom of the post) 

Just a quick post to shout out about a charity I'm joining in with. I think it is a fantastic idea so here's some info:


Fancy helping with a charity orientated humongous London Yarn bomb? Get involved. The aim is to make a blanket the equivalent of sixty million trebles out of handmade blankets that are 36x36". The blanket is to represent the amount of refugees worldwide. 

The huge blanket will then be spilt apart to provide charities with warm blankets throughout the UK and Hand In Hand For Syria.

I know the title says 'Trebles' but any stitch can be using including knitting, the stitches can all be calcualted into treble equivalents. There are also many drop off points for blankets dotted around the UK (and some other countries are involved too)

There is a really friendly and active Facebook page devoted to this charity event just search for 'sixty million trebles' on Facebook for loads more information. 

I'll be uploading pics of my blankets soon!

Update:

Update:
The charity organisers have apologised and realised that the 60 million mark will not be reached by the time they had anticipated. Therefore the blankets will not be sewn together to break the world record. 

Giving the blankets out to those who need them is more important than holding on to them for longer just to break a world record. I understand that being part of breaking a world record is a big motivator for people however remaining focused on helping others is the most important thing and it is a wonderful thing all these brilliant people are doing.  

Keep up the good work x


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