Showing posts with label Cricut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cricut. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Quick update

Exciting times in my life right now, I just have so many projects going, I don't have time to take photos or write about them all. I am part of many knit-alongs (KAL's), and trying to keep up with all of those has kept me very busy lately.

I am participating in a year-long dishcloth challenge (I am working on 1 a week, generally), I did a shawl make-along (completed, but ends not woven in), and I have so much yarn I'm saving for sweater-making this fall. If last year was the "Year of Doing," this year is the "Year of Buying." I've purchased (and won!) my first skeins of hand-dyed yarn, indie-dyed yarn, and all of it is wool! I never thought I would let myself spend that kind of money on yarn, but I've let the envy bug get the best of me. Now I have far more yarn than I could ever use in a reasonable amount of time, so I need to stop buying again.

Here is just a taste of all the projects I need to work on in most of my crafts (i.e., supplies I have that I need to use!):

Cricut:
Farra gift-needs vinyl
Cheryl gift-needs vinyl
Cathy gift-needs painting, vinyl
shirts
pillows x 9
Tote bags
boys' room decor
birthday/anniversary cards
Hall family tree
Tags for Etsy

Sewing:
pillows x 9
outdoor curtains
tumbling block quilt
5 quilt placemats
DPN cozies
DPN roll
project bags
straight needles case
Aprons 
Seat for mud area
Glasses case
Knit dress
Knit top in aqua
Knit top in purple
Knit dress in purple

Yarn:
socks x 15
sock monkey
Striped cat x 2
Striped bunny
beards x 5
dishcloths x 30
Christmas towels
felted slippers
bento box quilt
Christmas balls x 4
Jodi shawl-weave ends and block
So Faded cardigan sweater
Malabrigo sweater
Joji cardigan sweater
Melanie Berg cardigan sweater
Sophie's universe blanket
Sky blanket
Dish scrubbies 
Quarter keepers 
Christmas dish towels-toweling with crochet tops
Update spreadsheet
Pom Pom gloves x 2
Fox paws x 2-kit, palette
Fair isle fingerless mitts
Sheep hat
Genie cowl
Hippo
Mandala 12-point star blanket
Christmas light garland
Hats
Capelet (boucle)
Gator hat
Crazy Christmas hats for Festival x 3

Hopefully, I'll get to make a decent dent in these lists this year. I'll try to post things as I complete them, and do another update soon with photos of the things I've finished lately. Until then, check out my Etsy shop and the new School Spirit items. 

Happy crafting!

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Lately

I've been busy knitting so many things lately, I haven't taken the time to take proper photos. I have been working on the sweaters for the boys, plus a blanket, making beards like crazy, weaving in ends on projects I've had off the hooks forever, and making gifts with the Cricut.

The boys' sweaters are finally coming along nicely. I finished weaving in all the ends on little Blessing's brown cardigan this week, although I still need to sew on the 5 buttons. Once I get that finished, I'll take a pic to post. The blue striped pullover now has 1 sleeve finished (as of yesterday!), and I'm about ready to finish the second sleeve soon. I still have ends to weave on that one. I also started a green sweater in the same style, using the same colors as the brown one. I'm about two-thirds done with the body, and will post photos as it gets closer to finished.

I found a home for the little purple striped sweater and wove in all the ends on it. My best friend had a little girl in March, so I gave it to her as a gift this weekend when she was in town from Tennessee. It will look great on this little cutie this winter!


I wove in the ends on my big maroon crochet C2C blanket today and let the boys finally lay under it during movie night tonight. They love how soft, large, and warm it is. They didn't say so, but the hubby spoke for them.

I have made 2 more dwarf beards since I wrote last, both in a color I had not done before. I took photos of my handsome hubby in it, so I would have a photo of a male wearing my beards with no helmet of any kind.

Beard in light brown Hobby Lobby I Love This Yarn
Surprise! I have a beard!

In character

Side shot; it's not too small, he just has a very large head...

My hubby has always worn glasses and rarely has an opportunity to see himself without them (unless he's 4 inches from the mirror), so he was pleased to see himself in a photo without his favorite accessory.

I also made some projects with the Cricut for Mothers' Day, but had some technical difficulties, so I haven't yet had an opportunity to give the mothers their belated gifts. I will be doing that soon, so I can share some of the fun things I've been doing with that piece of equipment. I have a lot of iron-on and a lot of the regular vinyl, so I will be on the lookout for opportunities to use both of those for gifts and for around the house in the coming months and years.

One of the last things I've been working on is a beautiful knitted quilt, by Very Pink Knits. I am making it with Lion Brand Mandala yarn. Yes, I have hopped on the Mandala bandwagon and I've fallen completely down the rabbit hole. I fell in love with this yarn after I saw this cowl on Pinterest:


I found out it was unavailable ("Out of Stock" on LionBrand.com) online and only available in certain WalMarts, so I tried to look on Ebay, but it was quite pricey there. I don't live near any of the WalMarts on their map, but I realized that my mom was visiting her sister in South Carolina, and they had it there! I begged her to pick up some for me in the above color, as well as two others. She sent home a huge box of 15 cakes for me! Then, a couple of weeks later, we were visiting family in Springfield, Missouri, and the yarn was at a WalMart just over the Arkansas state line, so I begged the hubby to go there with me, and I was able to get my hands on all the other colors (there are 16 total). So now I have more yarn than I will ever be able to use for a long time, but it's unique and a little hard to get a hold of.

I am using one of the colors (Wood Nymph) to make the quilt. I have one block (out of 16) done, and the small squares for 8 more completed.


The pattern calls for bulky weight yarn and the Mandala is DK, so I just made the first squares to the correct measurements instead of following the number of rows. I ended up with 23 garter rows, or 46 stitches, after the first squares were finished. The other 8 blocks will have the cream in the center and the outside, with the purples in the middle section. I can't wait to see it put together!

I am feeling a bit dizzy, probably from staring at the computer screen all night instead of knitting, so I should wrap this up. Hope you are having fun with your projects!

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Here we go again!

So many new things going on in my craft-mind, it feels like the last several posts have just been exploding with projects. I feel like I can't make up my mind about what exactly I want to do, so I'm just doing everything.

One of the reasons for this is a new podcast I've been watching: The Yarn Hoarder. This gal is so busy, with so many different plates spinning at once, I don't know how she has time to do everything, and podcast, and keep up with her Ravelry group, and find new patterns and yarns to share. Her self-control issues alarmed me at first (they made me have issues too!), but once I got over wanting to have everything she talks about, I realized it is just inspirational to see so many new things I can do with yarn. She has inspired me to just try knitting socks and not be intimidated by them, to finish my sweaters, and her crochet blanket make-a-long inspired me to make (and finish!) my C2C blanket.

She has a wall of (what I consider to be very expensive) wool yarn behind her, plus thousands of dollars worth of needles, hooks, notions, and many other craft projects, which is what I think draws people to her, but she also runs many giveaways and shares ideas for patterns and yarns to try. She shared a felted slipper pattern before Christmas, and I have bought all the items needed to make a pair. I have never felted before, so I am excited and a little bit scared.

All of that to say, I have been branching out too. One thing I forgot to mention: she always talks about her "project bags." I didn't know this was a thing until she mentioned them. They are always cute fabric prints with lots of details, so she shows all the different things about them and where you can buy them. These ladies (and some men) on Etsy are charging outrageous amounts for a project bag, which is basically a cosmetics bag with a cute print and a couple of extra pockets. So I decided I could make that.

I'm not what I would consider a skilled sewer, but my mom did teach me when I was young to use a sewing machine. I have owned one for most of my life (either Mom's or hand-me-downs when I moved out), but for the most part, it sits in its lonely case in the closet. I am trying, though. I watched several YouTube videos (what would we do without it? Learn by apprenticeship?) and realized that the sewing machine is not as scary as I thought, it's not rocket science, and with a little practice, I can probably figure out how to make some of these bags myself.

My first project was not a bag, though. My little Blessing loves to chew on things, anything he can get his 2 little teeth on, especially tags, so I made him a little taggie blanket (we call them "Softs" in our house). I did my best, and pinned everything just so, and sewed it all together, did a top-stitch around the edge (I learned what top-stitching is from YouTube!), and I'm so proud of that little thing!



I have enough fabric leftover that I might just make another one, for when he throws up yellow all over it and it's in the wash. It took forever (I'm still new to this), but hopefully I'll be able to do the next one quicker.


I also bought a ton of fabric from my local Joann's to start making bags with. I've also found some tutorials on making rolled knitting needle cases and DPN cozies. Now I just need to find time to work on them...

After we finished the quiet books a few weeks ago, I told my awesome old-school Grandma that I wanted to learn to quilt like her the old-fashioned way: by hand. She churned out more than 16 twin-size quilts in one year for all the great-grandkids, and she did it all by hand. She's amazing! I didn't want to start something I couldn't finish, so I told her I'd like to make placemats. I'm making each one different, using a traditional quilting pattern. None of this silly machine quilting in a day for me: I'm taking a month to make a placemat! 😊 I've been looking up patterns, and consulting Grandma's advice, and I think we've found some winners.

The first one I'm making is one of my favorites: a tumbling block. It's just a bunch of diamonds, which if you arrange them differently, end up looking like a star. But if you put them in just the right configuration, it comes across looking like an endless stack of blocks. I've always loved this pattern and can't wait to get it finished. Here's the layout:


After hand-sewing all the blocks on the bottom two rows together, I realized it's going to be a bit short, so I still need to cut out pieces for an extra top and side row of blocks. I really like the fun prints and am excited to quilt this one. The plan is to use complementary colors/fabrics for all 8 placemats, so they coordinate, but don't match.

The last big thing I've done recently is purchase a Cricut. I still don't have all the ins and outs of using the software, but I think it'll be amazing for making gifts for friends and family, and using up all my extra felt (and all the felt I bought when it was on sale a few weeks ago...). I would like to make a felt board for the boys that uses some of the more complicated and involved quiet book pages I found, but didn't want to make 3 of. The Cricut will be a huge help in cutting those pieces out, if I can figure out how to get the template in the Design Space to cut them.

Here is a photo of my recently updated craft space:



I got a ton of Cricut supplies with my machine and they were having a pretty good sale on their website as well, so I stocked up on all the vinyl and other supplies I could think of. I also purchased some necessary knitting/crocheting supplies (we got a rather sizable tax return, so I got a little bit of extra spending money) including a digital scale, some foam blockers (so I can finally not use my children's toys to block!), sock blockers, and the most useful so far, a ball winder.

If I didn't already have enough going on with all my knitting and crochet projects, I definitely have enough to keep me busy now. I have so much fabric to start sewing, plus the Cricut to start labeling everything, and more felt than I can probably ever use in a lifetime.

Monday, April 17, 2017

The Mother of All Projects

Here it is: my crowning achievement!! Over two years in the making, it is everything I hoped it would be when I started it. It took about 3 months of real work after I picked it back up, and I enlisted my grandma, who crochets, knits, and quilts daily, and my mom, who recently retired and was able to help cut and wrangle little people so we could work.


Cover: match the letters to your name

Put your hands in the mittens

Mirror

Lift the flap and a photo of you is there

Weaving

Match the shapes to their names

Buckle the belt

Match the balloons to the correct colors

Fire truck and police cars go on the track

Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head

Count the train cars

Put the coins in the piggy bank

L'aig was so excited, I could barely get the photos taken before he wanted to play!

Ribbon pulls

Open the barn doors and hay window

Help the frog catch flies

Count the beads

Put the mail in the mailbox

Feed the monster

Unbutton the flowers

Lace and tie the shoe

Help the cars through the tunnels

Kite puzzle

Peel the banana

Feely page

Dedication page

Finger maze
So there it is. It took me forever to complete 3 or 4 pages by myself 2 years ago because I hand-sewed everything (including all the small pieces for the Potato Head pages). And that was when I was only making 2 books. Since Blessing came along, and I was going to have help, I decided to go ahead and make him one too.

Once I figured out that fusible web works great with felt (wish I'd known that 2 years ago!), we made swift work of it. I would draw all the shapes on the web during the week, then when we went to Grandma's on Fridays, I would iron it to one side of the felt, then have her or Mom cut out the pieces, and then iron everything onto the page. We still had to hand-sew on buttons and snaps and things, but Grandma enjoyed doing that during the week while she watched TV. I also invested in the Babyville Boutique snaps and snap device, which made it even quicker to finish.

All in all, I'm quite pleased with how they turned out. The last two pages were made possible courtesy of my new Cricut, which I'll tell more about in another post. Almost all of the pages were based on ideas I saw online (after much research), but the patterns themselves (with the exception of the Potato Head pages) were drawn by me. I link to all of the pages on my Pinterest board.

That's it. Now I'm working on many, many other projects, and I'll share about more of them later on, but I just wanted to get these on here for tonight. I might post again tonight (depends how sleepy I get after the baby goes to bed) with some of my other completed objects. Until next time, happy Easter and God bless!