All posts in Crocheting

What I did on my summer vacation

I did crafting.

I did a few other things, but mostly crafting. I spent my vacation in the Twin Cities area visiting friends and family. I went to a birthday party, babysat my nephew, went to the Science Museum, the Children’s Museum, Como Zoo, the fall festival of the church I attended growing up, and the State Fair. Between those things was knitting, crocheting, sewing and my mom taught me how to can fruit.

My sister and her family live in St. Paul and my parents live just north a bit in Buffalo. We decided to get together and do a Pinterest Night where we would meet at my sister’s place and work on crafts or DIYs we saw on Pinterest. I wanted to sew a new lunch bag. I have a thing for lunch bags and boxes – right now I have two thermal bags, two bento boxes, a full Mr. Bento set, and a huge collection of plastic containers that fit together. I picked this pattern from JoAnn.com – Cute-Enough-To-Eat Lunch Bags and went to Crafts Direct in St. Cloud to pick out fabric.

Every time I drive by St. Cloud on my way to Buffalo I vow to stop at Crafts Direct. Well, this time I finally did it. Turns out it’s pretty much the same as Hobby Lobby. I ended up spending about an hour and a half in the fabric section alone. They had a really cool fabric selection. I got a “recycle, reduce, reuse” themed fabric for the outside of the bag, a green, leafy fabric for the lining and straps, and a blue flower button. They make an adorable bag for my lunch!

Lunch bag

Today it held yogurt, a leftover porkchop, a salad of tomatoes and cucumbers, a slice of tomato-herb bread, a Diet Coke, and cutlery.
So roomy!

On my drive to my sister’s house in St. Paul from Crafts Direct in St. Cloud (yes, I’m a crazy person) I stopped at a yarn store in Maple Grove I’ve wanted to visit for a while. At Amazing Threads I bought a skein of Malabrigo Sock in Ravelry Red and four skeins of Berroco Vintage DK in Lilac. I have special plans for the sock yarn, and the Vintage DK will probably be a sweater I’ve had my eye on.

Malabrigo Sock Berroco Vintage DK

Then I met my mom at JoAnn Fabrics a few miles away and bought more yarn. Seven skeins of Serenity Sock for a cardigan, and two skeins of Kroy Sock in a fun pattern which I suppose will probably be socks. They’re kind of manly; perhaps I’ll knit socks for some lucky dude.

Serenity Sock Patons Kroy Socks

My parents’ back yard makes a pretty backdrop for yarn photos.

The next day I went to Silver Creek Cabin for just an eensy bit more yarn shopping. I bought a skein each of Done Roving Frolicking Feet in Hot Pink and Blue Ridge Yarns Kaleidoscope in Ocean Coral for more sock making. I’ve used Blue Ridge Yarns Kaleidoscope before and I L-O-V-E love it. Very sturdy, very pretty colors.

Done Roving Yarns Blue Ridge Yarns

To round out my shopping I got three skeins of Queensland Collection Kathmandu Chunky for a vest.

Queensland Collection

My husband was unable to vacation with me, so he had to fend for himself while I was gone. When I arrived home he said “Don’t ask how much pizza I ate while you were away.” I responded with “Deal, if you don’t ask how much yarn I bought.”

Amid this shopping was some actual crafting. I crocheted an amigurumi bat for my husband. He’s an Alien Space Bat.

Alien Space Bat

He’s made from Red Heart Classic yarn in Pale Sage and Silver. He still needs some feet, and probably antennae (as he’s an alien) and a space helmet (as he’s from space), but we haven’t quite figured out how to do that part yet. The pattern for the bat is available through Ravelry.

I did some work on my rainbow knee socks, which have morphed to rainbow thigh-highs. I’m actually much further than this now – they’re up over my knees. I’d love to finish them by the end of the month, but it would take some serious knitting. That’s a lot of sock!

Rainbow Knee Socks

Now I know that I can knit to about three inches below my knees with a single 100g skein of sock yarn. I have short legs.

The last crafty thing I did on my vacation was making homemade applesauce with my mom. We got the apples from her neighbors’ trees. A half-grocery bag full made ten pints of applesauce! It’s very good. We boiled the apples with butter, cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves. I like to add a pinch of brown sugar when I eat it.

IMAG0310

I got so excited every time I heard a jar lid seal. Pop! My first batch of canning was a success!

A very good, very relaxing, very crafty vacation. Now it’s back to the real world for a while.

A year of amigurumi projects

Late last month I finished my year-long amigurumi-a-month project with a snuggly snowman for January.

Snuggly Snowman

I crocheted a little hat for him, too, but never got around to taking a picture. It’s the same hat pattern used on the March leprechaun.

When I started the project I thought for sure I wouldn’t need to buy any yarn to do it. I was pretty close, too! I ended up having to buy more just for this guy’s hat. It gave me an excuse to try a brand-new yarn by Knit Picks – an acrylic called Brava. The price for a huge skein (100 grams) is only $2.99 so I bought a rainbow’s worth to try it out.

Knit Picks Brava Knit Picks Brava Knit Picks Brava Knit Picks Brava

Knit Picks Brava Knit Picks Brava Knit Picks Brava Knit Picks Brava

It’s very soft and worked well for amigurumi. It can’t hold a candle to Berroco Comfort, but with a price that low it’s probably going to be my new go-to yarn for amigurumi.

So here it is – one year of amigurumi! A very fun project.

12 months of amigurumi

It’s impossible for me to pick a favorite. They’re all my favorite.

Christmas gifts

I wrote a post on January 1, 2011 and now here’s the post for December 31. It doesn’t feel like it was already a year ago that I wrote that post about my Viking socks and bunny amigurumi.

I hadn’t planned on knitting or crocheting any gifts this year, but as it turned out I made a whole bunch. The biggest one was a shawl I knitted for my mother. Seraphine is a really fun pattern to knit, and the resulting shawl is huge. The cables along the back panel are so pretty.

My sister-in-law is in a Hello Kitty groove right now so I crochet a fun cap for her. The basic ear-flap hat pattern is neat. It’s a very quick project and easy to customize. I’ll probably make it again sometime.

I got creative and transformed it into Hello Kitty.

Then I made a big batch of small gifts. We had an impromptu Women Gone Wild outing last fall where we went shopping at all the craft stores in downtown Buffalo. A lot of the shops were selling hand-knitted headbands, and my favorite ladies thought they were pretty cute. So I made nine of them for Christmas gifts (plus one more commissioned by a co-worker) – one each for Mom, Carly, Rita, Paty, Stina, Cheryl, Faith, Becky and Sara. My favorite Wild Women!

Cranberry headband Grey Tweed headband Chocolate Headband Navy Headband Mink Heather Headbands Forest Heather Headband Hollyberry headband Bittersweet Heather Headband Cobblestone Heather Headband

The pattern I based it off of is this one, but I made the back different. Mine has a wider, tapered closure rather than a small strap.

Cobblestone Heather Headband (back)

I made them with some soft, cozy wool I had in my stash. They keep your ears wonderfully warm.

Cobblestone Heather flowered headband

They were so much fun to make and even more fun to give!

I got some fun gifts this year for my favorite hobbies. My husband got me a sock knitting book. I’m really looking forward to digging into this one.

My aunt Paty gave me a bag of yarn, and my parents got me a beautiful cabinet to store my yarn in.

yarn cabinet

I saw the cabinet during the same shopping trip when we saw the headbands. I was totally smitten – I had no idea my mom would go back and get it for me! It’s absolutely perfect for my crafting tools. I also got some fun cooking things – cute measuring cups, a new Santoku knife, some silicone bakeware, a pretty green glass serving tray, and a chest freezer from my in-laws.

What a wonderful Christmas!

Deck the halls

Oh man, I let the whole month of November go by without any blog posts. My knitting projects have been pretty large-scale, but I have a few new amigurumi to share!

My November amigurumi is a turkey I named Dinner.

For December, naturally, Santa!

Santa is sitting in our entryway now, surrounded by presents.

I set him up there this morning, thus completing the holiday decorations for our apartment. Most of the decorating was done last Friday and Saturday. I went to Hobby Lobby on Friday. Everything was 50% off! How I managed to get out of there without spending every last penny I have was a miracle.

Even though I enjoy doing crafty things I feel like I’m not the most creative person. I need ideas, inspiration, tutorials, and examples – I can’t come up with any of this on my own. A few weeks ago my sister turned me on to Pinterest and I am hooked. There are so many neat ideas! My brain was full of inspiration when I went to Hobby Lobby and started filling up my cart. I knew I wanted to make an ornament mobile and some holiday shadow boxes for sure, and I also grabbed a few other things I thought were fun.

After all my Friday shopping I got down to some Friday crafting! I started with the shadow boxes. One filled with small round ornaments.

One filled with small gift ornaments.

One filled with ornaments and ribbon.

The cat gave the final inspection.

I hung the two small ones in our entry way and the big one in the living room. I think I may be in love with shadow boxes.

Then I got down to some serious crafting business to make the ornament mobile. You see, we have a cat. If you don’t have a cat then you probably don’t know that cats will deem your Christmas tree as a target to be eliminated.

2011 will be the year I decide I’m not cleaning up cat vomit sprinkled with fake tree needles. I saw a link to an ornament mobile on Pinterest by not martha (her blog is full of fun ideas). I won’t give you all of the how-it-was-done details here, you can read the instructions on not martha’s blog if you’re interested. It took a couple hours, but here’s my ORNAMENT EXPLOSION MOBILE!

OK, so it looks a little underwhelming all by itself there in my messy living room. The Christmasy effect is in full force, though. It’s just want I wanted!

I put together a few other small things in vases and bowls (really the extent of my creativity, hah) and gave the house a good hard cleaning. Our home is so full of Christmas now.

Living room – yes there is a cover on our couch. We’re old people, apparently.


Entertainment center in the living room – angels, candy canes, nativity, ornaments

Part of the dining room

Nativity


Dining room table


Entryway


Entryway

Man, those dollar store ornaments really went far! This is our second Christmas as a married couple, so we don’t have a lot of decorations yet. But I’m sure the pieces we really love will add up over the years and someday we’ll have all kinds of nostalgic Christmas decor.

Hope you’re all having fun decking your halls and sipping that eggnog!

Hooray for fall!

Aaaah, I love fall! Here are some spooky Halloween amigurumi!

Ok, so they’re not that spooky. Just a cute little Jack o’ Lantern and his batty friend.

I’ve been working my way through my gigantic stash of sock yarn and using up all my leftovers. With these socks I used up all of the Sock-Ease I had in Grape Soda and Snow Cone. The Grape Soda colorway made its way into three pairs of socks! Here are some striped gansey socks.

They have some texture created by purl bumps in the shape of diamonds. I wish I had been able to make them a bit taller, but that was all the yarn I had! The pattern is Wendy Johnson’s Diamond Gansey Socks.

I didn’t want to post about my fall hat/scarf/glove set til it was done, but oh well. Maybe once I finally finish the gloves (they’ve been set aside for a bit) I’ll get some nice pictures of the whole set.

The hat is a lacy beret. It serves well to show the wonders of blocking. Here’s how it looked right off the needles:

Blah.

Now here’s how it looks after I gave it a good soak, then stretched it over a dinner plate and let it dry:

Ta-daa! The pattern is called Wasabi, and the yarn was Knit Picks Stroll in Buckskin. Right now I’m working on some gloves in the same yarn to match. I’m on the fingers of the first glove right now.

Seeing as they’re lacy and fingerless they’re for decoration rather than warmth. The pattern is called Barberry Mitts. Barberry is a mitt pattern, but I’m converting it to gloves for a better fit.

To go with the hat and gloves is my first-ever shawl. I’ve avoided shawl knitting for a while because the patterns are crazy complicated and I was never really sure if I’d even wear a shawl once I’d made it. So I dipped my toes in the water with this small neckerchief style shawl. The pattern is called Fall of Leaves, and the yarn is Alpaca with a Twist Socrates.

It turned out to be not quite as complicated as I thought. I did have to read ahead and take my time, but it was worth the effort. Unfortunately on the very last row I ran out of yarn.

The space between the two silver needles is what’s left. So close! I found some other yarn that was a close enough match and finished binding off.

Then pinned it to a blocking mat.

And done!

I even have a pretty dragonfly pin to go with it.

The set goes really well with my fall jacket. I only hope I can finish those gloves before it gets too cold.