Thursday, December 8, 2011

The Littlest of Red Hats

When my grandfather died, my grandmother (who will never die--I mean this in the nicest way possible, this woman is an indestructible force) opted to join the Red Hat Society.  Now, her friend loaned her some "large awful thing", and she requested that I make her a new hat, "but not a real hat, something small she can clip into [her] hair."  My grandmother does not like hats.

Now, I've never made a hat, much less a hat with a ten-day deadline in the middle of the Christmas season.  But, she's my grandmother--so what the hey?

Since I wasn't sure where to begin with the concept of "tiny red hat"--other than the obvious--I poked around the craft store and picked up red felt, embroidery thread, purple ribbon, and some various odds and ends.  I have yarn and fabric in nearly every color, so I figured if I needed anything else, I would already have it.  As it happened, I did not.  To get some ideas, I worked on a couple sketches:

The making of the hat was surprisingly easy.  It's hand-stitched (and, embarrassingly, not my best work), with typical sewing stitching for some portions, and blanket stitching where the floss would be seen.  I also used hot glue to stiffen the two bottom pieces of felt before blanket stitching them together. Not the classiest or most professional way to starch the bottom of the hat, but functional under a tight time limit and budget.

Since the hat was so small, I opted to go a bit simple with the details--purple ribbon (just like the red hat logo), a little purple bow, and some Christmas berries, since the hat is for their Christmas party.

And viola!  A tiny little Red Hat!

Of course, I had some concern over the best way to clip it in, but given my grandma's hair type and preferences, I opted to put two loops on the bottom so the hat can be bobby-pinned to her hair.

I even tried it out myself:
Not bad for having no clue what I was doing!

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Dinosaur Delight


Inspiration comes in strange places and from strange things.  For me, it's mostly things I have weird obsessions with, like dinosaurs, bunnies, and trees.  And as luck would have it, my boyfriend lives a few mere minutes away from the Hadrosaurus Park in Haddonfield, NJ.  The site is where the first dinosaur bones were unearthed, and is now an undeveloped woodland park, where my boyfriend and I spent the afternoon taking photos, and excitedly discussing the fact we were trouncing around on the very place a dinosaur once walked.


Of course, despite the beauty of nature, I found myself less inspired by the trees, lake, leaves, and my boyfriend pretending he's a panda:


And more entertained by the idea of dinosaur prints and knitting animals and dresses and silly whimsical (yet classy) dino designs.

Dinosaur skeleton fabric by Bratpacksfabrics on Etsy.
Sadly, dino prints tend to be on the cutesy children's side, although I did find one or two gems I could see as skirts, dresses, and various accessories--my favorite being the one posted above.  (Which, hopefully, will be mine sooner rather than later.)

Of course, my day of searching for fun things to craft wasn't going to end in a dino dress, especially given my new-found love for knitting.

Dino the Dinosaur Pattern on Ravelry

Which was only exasperated by the fact my boyfriend would like me to make him the above t-rex.  Probably to go next to his collection of wooden dinosaur skeletons.

It's been a wonderful day all-around!  Rawr!

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Tiny Legs, Big Head

To start with, I'm updating this from my new (old) netbook!  It used to belong to my boyfriend, although he has a Macbook now, and this is far more suited to my needs.  What does this mean?  That I can now keep a regular update schedule, because I will have a computer seven days a week, instead of just four.  This basically means I can update weekends, when I actually do stuff!



Anyway, other than the new (old) netbook, my mother's birthday is creeping up on me.  Now, my mother is a Dachshund Person, from a long line of Dachshund People.   (No, really, apparently some great-something on mine won the Westminster with a dachshund once.)  She currently owns two of the little devils:

This is Petey.

And Peanut.

So, I opted to make her a plush dachshund for her birthday with an old pattern I found in the thrift for thirty cents.  Now, I normally draft my own patterns, but it looked cute and old-fashioned, and I thought using the right fabric it would match my ma's bedroom.  The fabric is definitely my favorite part of this--I really love the elegant design and blue color.  It's the perfect match to my ma's decorating style, but not so over-the-top it would look silly as a plush dog.


The pattern was a very simple one, nine pieces in all: Two pieces for the body, two for the legs, four for the ears, and one for the face:


All were done in the cotton print, except for two of the ear pieces, which I did in a grey suiting fabric I had laying around.  These pieces were the inner ears, and was different for contrast.  All-in-all it took about an hour to sew, including ironing time and putzing around with thread tension.

Unfortunately, the chest-area doesn't look as nice as the pattern made it look.  It's a bit scrunchy and off, but what can I do?  Eventually I got to like how it looks with the legs laid out, which makes it a bit more whimsical anyway.  I added the button eyes, and purple bow/ribbon collar just to break up the pattern.


I'm not so sure I'll ever use the pattern again, but it was a fun, quick make for my ma.  I'm thinking she'll love it!  She's all about handmade, and it a huge supporter of my work, so I think she'll find it cute!

If I do try to make another one, I'm definitely editing the pattern a bit.  On the other hand, I do have to chalk some of it up to human error, too--I've never made a stuffed animal before!  I'm normally a dressmaker, so it's strange to have to deal with something that ends up stuffed and sewed up completely.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Handmade for the Holidays


As November comes to a close, the holiday season is fast approaching! What does this mean? Hundreds of projects to make! Well, maybe not hundreds, but I've certainly got my hands full. In fact, there's really only three or four projects right now, but two of them are knitting, and I'm new at this!  So, you know, give me a break here.  I'm still a slow knitter.

First up is a project of socks. Socks frightened me, I admit, for awhile. But then I tried to make one, and, hey: it's actually not so bad. Pretty fun, actually, although starting the cuff is a problem for me still.

I'm at the very beginning of this project, although I have been carefully planning it.  I've never done a multi-color design before, and while it is a fairly simple one I'm pretty nervous about it.  Also: because I'm a bit skittish about who might stumble over this blog, I'm refraining from posting what the design is, but here is my very fragile beginnings:

Eventually I'm going to post the full pattern, and the finished project.  This is one gift I'm pretty excited for, so I'm hoping all goes well.

My next knitting project is one for my friends:  Little octopodes for each of them!  We aren't much for exchanging gifts for the holidays, but I wanted the practice, and this little guys aren't very labor intensive.

Each color is for a different person, and Mr. Orange is almost done--just need to finish up a couple more arms.  I'm hoping to do something fun and quirky with button eyes for the little guy, as well.

The pattern for the octopus was completely self-developed.  Since learning crochet wasn't in the plans, I needed to figure out how to make a ball while knitting in the round.  After experimenting a bit, I'm pretty proud of the result.

Finally, my mother's birthday is in a little over a week.  What does this mean?  She's getting a fancy plush Dachshund for her new bedset.  So far as I have the pattern, and the fabric I'm using.  Hopefully this little guy will be done by Friday to show off here:


Thursday, November 10, 2011

Taming the Beast: Versus the Knitting Needles


I am the type of person to whom sewing came easy. Within a month of sewing, I was drafting my own patterns, and looking for a higher-quality machine to work on a long scale. To this day sewing remains the one skill I have that I have the most confidence in. Despite being a general crafter, when people as me what I do, my response is always the same: “I sew.”

However, knowing how to knit is something that opens design doors, and would allow me to expand on the things I make. Unfortunately, where sewing, bookbinding, and various other crafts came easy, knitting is something I just don't grasp.

When I first picked up a basic knitting kit three or so years ago I thought it would be easy. Two needles, one thing of yarn, lets do this thing! Then I actually tried. My stitches were a mess, and forget about gauges and designs. Please! I was hopeless, and not to mention in pain.  (It took a better part of the past three years to realize I need to relax while knitting, and only use wooden needles.)

Since then, once a year, when the weather gets cold I break out the knitting needles and struggle through a week or month of Trying To Knit, before giving up completely.

And Trying To Knit was quite the ritual.  It generally came out with the snow, when other past-times like skating and hula-hooping outdoors got bothersome, and before I realize that Netflix just updated their entire Instant Watch catalog with some obscure television show that I will spend the next few months engrossed in with never-ending cups of hot chocolate.  It involved cursing, and ripping out stitches, and unraveling everything I had done only to redo it, unravel, redo, unravel in a never-ending series of frustration and a scarf only ten inches long before I QUIT.

This year, however, I've noticed something: for all my complaining, sore fingers, and confusion, I'm getting better.

Which is a good thing because this is also the year I opted to knit some Christmas gifts. Go figure, right? But what I've learned is this:  If I weren't knitting things for Christmas, I never would have learned.

For me, knitting was never a real challenge because I never had a reason to do it. Scarves are the traditional beginner's project, but I don't need no stinkin' scarves (no, really: I already own a number, most of which I use to tie back my hair, and my one knit scarf does the job just fine in winter). Socks, however? Adorable knit octopodes? These are the thing I need in my life. Or, rather: the lives of my friends who will be receiving them.

And, really: knitting is fun.

Who knew?

Friday, October 28, 2011

Creating a Space

There's been a lot of delay in my crafting, due to being in the process of a move.  What was supposed to be a quick and painless settling-in in a shiny new (old) bedroom-turned-workroom has turned into a lot of stress--and I'm not even painting the place!


why yes, that is a director's chair, two bags of Monster High dolls, and a large plush penguin in a Santa hat

I found my first problem to be the simple fact that I have too much stuff, and not enough of it is useful to my design process to warrant being in the room I'm supposed to be working in.  While some personal pieces are acceptable I need a clean, orderly space if I'm going to be working in it for hours a day.  Beyond that, I need little chance for distraction.  God knows, my Blackberry provides enough of that.

Some tips I've found to be useful in my own process of setting up a work space:


Separate Items Into "Work" Items and "Personal" or "Fun" Items
As much as I love my extensive collection of stuffed animals, they don't need to be in my work room, and furthermore, detract from my ability to work.  Especially when all my fabric, yarn, and paper selections can be occupying their space instead.

I do leave room for some personal items, especially ones that inspire me.  Artwork hangs on my walls, my bookshelf remains clean and organized behind me.  One or two of my Monster High dolls overlook my work as quirky style consultants, and a reminder that it doesn't hurt to be different or have a little fun with my work.  But beyond that, my penguin in a Santa hat?  He can go in my bedroom.


Organize and Inventory Your Work Items
Especially for those of you like myself, who work in multiple mediums.  When you sew, sketch, paint, knit, make jewelry and book bind it's easy to get your materials in a jumble, and it's also easy to keep things you don't need.  If you have family and friends like mine, you often end up with random items people give you under statements like "you make stuff you might be able to use this broken potato slicer from the 1930s."

And if you're anything like me you're response is "Awesome!  I want that!"

And now it's two years later and you really don't need a broken potato sliver from the 1930s, because let's face it, there was nothing you could do with that to begin with.

So get rid of it!  And everything else you have that you just plain don't need.  Those centimeter-long pieces of fabric?  Gone.  The atrociously cheap and ugly beads you can't knowingly sell people without securing yourself a one-way ticket to hell?  Tossed.

And with what you have left, organize, organize, organize.  Organize by types of yarn, by fabric colors, by materials of beads.  Keep them in bins or on shelves that let you use them at your greatest ease.  I spent years shoving fabric into canvas drawers before I realized it just plain didn't work.  Now they're on shelves--which, granted, I don't have enough off--but at least I can access them with ease.


Set Up the Room to Your Advantage
Me, I have my desk in a corner by the window for maximum light.  I have my beads to one side, and my fabric and yarns on the attached wall where, while I do have to stand up to get them, are not in line with the bed, bookshelf, or anything I will want to nap on.


Granted, this is only as far as I have gotten so far.

This also means getting rid of distractions.  It's amazing how much work I do when I have no computer, and no television in my room, just me, my work, and music.  One of the primary problems I had with my previous space was not only a lack of decent lighting, but the fact I had my laptop desk on one wall, my TV on another, and no real section for working.  I was curling up in bed with bead projects and waking up tangled in silver wire and searching for necklace charms under blankets.  It simply didn't work.  So I didn't.


Don't Forget Yourself
For every tip I have that works for me, there will be another artist out there who swears their organized chaos and broken potato slicers are important parts of there creative process.  So be sure to keep your needs in mind when setting up a space to craft.  Don't try to be the crafter whose room looks like it's out of the pages of Better Homes and Gardens (that is a thing, right?), just try to be you.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

When I Grow Up

I suppose I'll take this first-post blog virginity time to explain myself, and this.

Lenore Lenore is a craft blog, the name of my future Etsy store, and an all-around dump for my creativity.  I sketch, sew, knit, book bind, bead weave, and do other sorts of things that result in various pretties of various kinds.

As for me, I have the typical story: for as long as I can remember I have wanted to create.  I went through phases, starting as traditional art, and ending with anything I can make with my hands.  I do still sketch, mostly studies of things, and I have a tumblr for art studies and suchstuff, although I also port this blog there, because why not?

Outside of these things I like reading, yoga, trying to run, medical sketches, Minecraft, and curling up on the weekends with the Boy, who makes me chocolate chip pancakes.  I also really like chocolate chip pancakes, preferably with more chocolate than pancake.