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January 31, 2006

felt organizer prototype

My craft desk drawer is a disaster area. I made this out of the thick felt I was looking for in a previous post. Anna from twelve22 came to the rescue with this felt she found for me. And here's the big news: Anna is also the editor of a craft book project in the works! This is going to be my submission. Well, a better version anyway. This was mainly to test the structural properties of a box made of felt. It's holding up well enough that I'm going to go ahead with the embellished version.

feltbox.jpg

And another big announcement: tomorrow's the launch for Whip Up, a new collaborative crafty blog. I'm as excited as anybody else since I can't read the other contributers' draft posts. I'm contributing a weekly-ish "Best Post Ever" where I find my favorite post on my favorite sites, plus I'll throw in some other stuff here and there. I'm still reeling from being asked to be part of both of these projects since I don't consider myself in the same league as most of the other contributers. Exciting!

Posted under Felting at 02:51 PM | Comments (8)


January 29, 2006

Denyse Schmidt Quilts and so can I

Here's the finished quilt top. It's not quite how I imagined it, but I'm still pretty satisfied. The colors are too contrasty for one thing (should've chosen a darker light blue) and the tan is drabber than I'd imagined. The size is all wrong too, since I oh-so-cleverly reduced the block size from 400% to 300%. This trick caused the seam allowances to also go off, which caused a cascade of size adjustments. The log cabin piecing really lets you get away with a lot, though, so I think I'm the only one who can tell just how screwed up it is. The not-square pattern also helps in this regard. I'm just praying it doesn't come apart when I wash it.

The back is a nice chocolate brown heavier weight solid, and I haven't decided about the binding yet. Depends on whether I have enough brown left at the end. Now, on to the quilting.

icepopstop.jpg

Does anyone else get really caught up in arranging the blocks? I'm thinking I might write a little program to help. It's such a logic puzzle to alternate the colors and the values and make sure no block is the same as its neighbor, plus keeping it all balanced but asymmetrical. I didn't think ahead when I decided which colors to make which blocks, so I think this particular quilt might not have a solution. For example, you can see that I have 2 dark greens and 2 light greens in the same column. This bothers me waaaaay more than it should.

Posted under Sewing/Fabric Crafts at 01:14 PM | Comments (16)


January 23, 2006

DSQ-Along

I joined the Denyse Schmidt Quilt-Along over at Hip to Piece Squares. I'm making Ice Pops as a baby quilt, in solids of aqua, tan, light blue, dark blue, green, cream, and brown. I got all the fabrics this weekend, washed and ironed them, made the piecing templates, and cut out about half the pieces. So far so good. Hopefully I'll get my first block pieced tomorrow. The due date of the baby is in May or something, so I should have plenty of time.

ds5_1.jpg

There are several free patterns from the book available at Chronicle Books, by the way.

Posted under Sewing/Fabric Crafts at 12:36 AM | Comments (4)


January 22, 2006

Drop stitch scarf

I've had this variegated ribbony type yarn for a while now, but I haven't been happy with any of the stitches I've tried. So, I finally just gave up and did a drop stitch. So fast, my kind of knitting.

dropscarf.jpg

Here's the "pattern" if you can glorify it with that term: Using larger needles for your yarn than you would normally use, cast on 21 stitches (or more or less to make different widths, as long as it's an odd number). Knit 6 rows. Knit one then yarn over twice (or once or 3 times depending on how long you want the drapy bits) over the entire row and ending with a knit. Knit 6 rows. Etc. Add fringe as desired.

Posted under Knitting at 04:32 PM | Comments (14)


January 21, 2006

Bazaar Bizarre

Got Bazaar Bizarre at the library this week. It's a book spinoff from the Bazaar Bizarre craft fairs. I had high hopes for it, but ended up underwhelmed. Way too much hipster irony crafting going on in this book. Honestly, isn't it getting a little old yet? Craft patterns can be modern without the whole "punk" act. OK, end rant.

If you can make it past the obnoxious writing, it's not a bad book. Each section is devoted to a crafter and a project. The profiles are OK (what's your favorite craft ever, etc). The broad range of projects are explained in depth. There's a lot of detail, so even if you've never done that particular craft you could do it just from the chapter. I wasn't terribly impressed by the projects, mainly because I've seen most of the ideas elsewhere already. Marble magnets? Are you kidding me?

Posted under Crafty Book/TV Review at 12:08 AM | Comments (10)


January 17, 2006

shoplinks update

Massive update to the shop links page. I added almost 100 sites!

One other housekeeping thing I've been meaning to mention, I get tagged by people every now and again. I'm just not so into memes, so I hope you won't mind if I don't participate. Thanks for thinking of me though!

Posted under Random at 12:01 AM | Comments (4)


January 16, 2006

kanzashi ring

First try at a kanzashi ring. The flower is about 3/4 inch in diameter, made with 3/4 inch squares of kimono fabric. I'm happy with it as a first attempt, but the design's not quite there yet. The main problem is that it's too tall. I glued the flower to a button, then to a ring I got for a quarter out of one of those machines at the grocery store. Also, normally, you fold under the excess fabric to keep everything flat, but I couldn't get it to stay with the teeny petals. All together, it's probably 1/2 inch tall, which looks a little funny. I've seen these rings that have a rimmed base to set stones or whatever in. I think if I used one of those, it would both take off some height and look neater. I might also be able to cut off some of the excess fabric. I couldn't get the petals to look very even either, but I think that's an artifact of the way I strung them together.

kanzashiring.jpg

Posted under Jewelry at 12:04 AM | Comments (13)


January 15, 2006

links update

I updated+reorganized my crafty blogs links page and the artists sections on the artists/shops page. New ones in bold.

Posted under Random at 04:11 PM | Comments (3)


January 11, 2006

desk calendar

I generally use iCal on my Mac to keep track of stuff at lab. You have the calendar where you put the appointments, then there's a sidebar to-do list. You can give the to-dos due dates, and then check them off when done. This has worked pretty well, but I've never been totally satisfied with it. For one thing, my to-do lists are not 1D, but instead are a set of to-dos over several days that all together make an experiment or task. I haven't been able to find a program that'll do this, so I'm back to good old analog.

For design inspiration, Fred Flare was selling these neat 8 days a week desk calendars by Bob's Your Uncle. I like the design and the extra column for Someday. But, in addition to being sold out, it's still an appointment calendar. I'm happy with iCal for my appointments; it's the to-dos I need.

Sooo, I made my own. Here's v1. I printed out enough of them to last a month, when I figure I'll redesign it based on how I'm actually using it. It's on 11x17 paper, which only fits in the black+white printer, so I colored in the headings with my new set of Sharpie highlighters. If I decide after a month that I'm going to stick with it, I'll find a bigger color printer somewhere or go to a copy shop. The stack is taped at the bottom edge with some of my pretty paper lab tape. Then I can flip through to next week if I need to. This does have the disadvantage of requiring that I tape it down again every week after I remove the top sheet. v2 will definitely have a better desk-securing system.

cal.jpg

Here's v1.1 for anybody who might want to print/modify one for themselves: [Word file].

calshot.jpg

Posted under Paper Crafts at 12:01 AM | Comments (10)


January 10, 2006

scissors charm

I need this necklace. Spotted on Plain Mabel, made by Erica Weiner. The scissors actually open and close!

d131.jpg

Posted under Wants at 12:28 AM | Comments (8)


January 09, 2006

plush seal

Some friends of mine are having a baby soon, so I made this for him. The pattern is from the Splendid Soft Toy Book, which seems to be carried by every library in the world. The fur is super soft. I'm not so good sewing stretchy fabrics by machine, so it's all hand-done. I should probably have gone and gotten some different safety eyes, but other than that I'm happy with him.

babyseal.jpg

Posted under Toys (cat and kid) at 12:29 AM | Comments (12)


January 08, 2006

fabric envelope

Idea from this Japanese craft book, that I just got in a swap with chicadecanela. I think the one in the book is a paper envelope that they took apart, glued to fabric on the lining side, then reassembled, since there isn't an actual pattern included. Mine is fabric on both sides (lining is the background fabric), fused together, ironed on the folds, and glued together with Yes paste. The buttons are from a bunch my sister gave me for xmas. She even sorted them in jars, and I've been trying to come up with an excuse to play with them ever since I got home. I'm not sure what I'll put in it. :)

fabenv.jpg

Posted under Sewing/Fabric Crafts at 03:16 PM | Comments (12)


January 05, 2006

Craft-o-lutions

Man, I must've had a good vacation to not craft+post for 2 weeks. I'll be adding a whole bunch of Crafting Japanese updates over the next few days and I'm finally going to update my neglected links pages. I've been itching for a new site design too.

Longer term, here are some crafty things I've got in mind for 2006, craft-o-lutions, if you will:

Should keep me busy. :)

Posted under Random at 10:12 PM | Comments (5)