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crochetime

~ So many patterns, so much yarn, so little time: story of my hooky life.

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Category Archives: My crochet

Terrific Tuesday

03 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, My ramblings, Terrific Tuesdays

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

crochet, crochet blanket, ripple

On a Monday I can still remember the fun I had over the weekend, Wednesday is the middle of the work week, on Thursday I start getting hopeful and on a Friday I can taste the weekend. But what about a Tuesday? It’s so…. just there. Weekend memories are too far away and the upcoming weekend might as well be a year away.

What we need is a bit of colourful inspiration to get us going on a Tuesday, don’t you think? A pretty picture, beautiful scenery or colourful imagery. Yup, that’ll liven up Tuesdays and turn it into a terrific day!

From now on I will go through my photos and Pinterest likes every Tuesday and find us a pretty picture to add colour and joy to the day.

xxxxxx

20130203-202614.jpg

 

I’m still busy with the ripple blanket in blue. I have about seven rows left to go, then I have to wash the blanket so that I can “open up” the ripples and stretch it a bit, weave in the ends and then do a border.

With each crashing wave and bubbling ripple of white foam, I’m getting closer to finishing my oceanic blanket.

Wishing you a terrific Tuesday!

Natasja

 

02 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, My ramblings, Other people's crochet, Yarnbombing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Market Rasen, Plank 2013

My contribution to Plank 2013 is the striped piece on the pole to the left of the Town Map. I’m so happy to be part of this huge Yarnbomb!

artrovings's avatarCAROL PARKER - social artist, supported with funding from Arts Council England, The Heritage Lottery, Cultural Olympiad 2012 and a bursary from a-n The Artist Information Company

I made an early start and got to Market Rasen for 10am.   Amazingly no rain, wind, ice or snow, so spent a pleasant day sewing on all the knitted contributions (with only one coffee and cake break).

Took some pics so you can all enjoy the installation even if you can’t get to Market Rasen.  Very many thanks to all those who contributed and special thanks to Alison who did the beautiful ‘plank’ pieces and stayed to help me put the rest up, a real star.

I’m not going to thank everyone by name as I know I’ll forget someone….but you are all very lovely and anytime you need some knitting done let me know! x

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Terrific Tuesday

01 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, Terrific Tuesdays

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

crochet blanket, ripple

On a Monday I can still remember the fun I had over the weekend, Wednesday is the middle of the work week, on Thursday I start getting hopeful and on a Friday I can taste the weekend. But what about a Tuesday? It’s so…. just there. Weekend memories are too far away and the upcoming weekend might as well be a year away.

What we need is a bit of colourful inspiration to get us going on a Tuesday, don’t you think? A pretty picture, beautiful scenery or colourful imagery. Yup, that’ll liven up Tuesdays and turn it into a terrific day!

From now on I will go through my photos and Pinterest likes every Tuesday and find us a pretty picture to add colour and joy to the day.

xxxxxx

I think I have a thing for stripes….

crochet ripple blanket

The ripple blanket in shades of blue is coming along swimmingly. The name of the pattern is Atlantic Waves and that’s exactly what I’m going for here: an ocean themed blanket depicting blue waves and white sea foam. I know the carpet and  socks might be a tad distracting, so I won’t blame you if you don’t get a calming ocean wave vibe.

I hope the first Tuesday of 2013 has been a terrific one!

Natasja

Holy Cowl, check out the lights!

31 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

cowl, Inside crochet

Sunday afternoon Hubby and I went to London Town to look at the Christmas lights in Oxford Street.  We are over 35’s but Christmas lights, especially in London, still do it for us. Every time.

The trick is to watch the lights from a bus, thus avoiding the crowds and cold, preferably from the top deck and in the front seats.  Imagine our surprise when one of the brand new Routemaster busses passed us in Oxford Street! It was on diversion so not even meant to be there. We deftly jumped aboard on the back platform and made our way to the top deck. And behold a seat at the very front of the bus. Excellent.

Oxford Street, Christmas 2012
Oxford Street, Christmas 2012
Oxford Street lights, Christmas 2012
Oxford Street lights, Christmas 2012
Starbucks red cups are a must!
Starbucks red cups are a must!
The new Routemaster London bus
The new Routemaster London bus
Oxford Street lights, Christmas 2012
Oxford Street lights, Christmas 2012

We celebrated the pretty lights and our good luck with a mandatory Starbucks Christmas Coffee in a red cup…. and later with a visit to Burger King. Whaaaat? It’s our tradition!

If you clicked on the photos in the fancy shmansy WordPress gallery above, you would have seen my crochet cowl…. Yup, it’s the one that I blogged about on Saturday. I started, and promptly finished, the Saffron Cowl in a day!

crochet cowl at waterloo.jpg

It was super easy and quick. So quick that I think I could have had a better result if I took my time a bit more with the assembly. Let me explain.

The pattern consists of three strips that you plait and form into a cowl. Easy right? And a genius way of doing something a bit different. I did exactly as the pattern stated, apart from the fact that I used two strips in one colour (grey) and the third strip in a mix of green and green-grey. So far so good.

The thing I would do differently, and recommend you do too, is to block the strips before plaiting & assembly. I didn’t block, and my strips all curled around the edges making the cowl less structured and the plait not as obvious.

I think I can still save it if I wet block it now, despite it being a tube. I think I can… Alternatively, I will have to sew the strips together in a few more places where they overlap.

The designer of the cowl, Sara Sinaguglia calls it an “oversized plaited cowl” in her blog. Mine is more of a undersized ropey cowl. (I did do a gauge swatch, so I know the size of my (uncurled) strips are correct.) I’m not unhappy with the cowl, I just think I could make it look better if I sort out the curling edges.

crochet cowl.jpg

The nitty gritty of the cowl:

Yarn: Sirdar Big Softie Super Chunky in gray – shade 319 (Graffiti), green – shade 321 (Beanie) and Sirdar Indie Super Chunky in a self striping greenish grey – shade 154 (Montana).

Hook: 10 mm

Pattern: Saffron Cowl, designed by Sara Sinaguglia in the January 2013 issue of Inside Crochet magazine.

I’ll let you know how if I get on with the Uncurling Of The Cowl.

Another lazy Saturday afternoon

29 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Inside crochet

The January 2013 issue of Inside Crochet magazine hit the shelves yesterday. I had been waiting in anticipation for this issue after seeing a sneek peak of the 21 patterns in this bumper issue on their Facebook page.

The cowl is just one of (at least) two things I’m going to be making from this issue. Buy it, or download the electronic version – you will not be sorry!

20121229-122838.jpg

Mainly Grey Sweater Ta-daaaah!

21 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, Ta-daah!

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

crochet, crochet edge, crochet sweater, wearable crochet

Here it is people, my Mainly Grey Sweater. Ta-daaah!!!!

crochet sweater

I first blogged about it on 31 October, and the yarn was bought way back in May so this has been the longest that I’ve worked on, or planned for, a crocheted sweater. Yarnbombs and hospital visits happened and of course the fact that it consists of 58 squares (!) made it a lengthy project. But it’s done now and I really like it!

The nitty-gritty of the sweater is as follows:

Pattern: Driftwood, a free pattern on the Lionbrand website which you can find here

Yarn: 17 balls of Garnstudio Drops Merino Extra fine in shade 04 (medium gray) and one ball of Sublime Extra Fine Merino DK in redcurrent. I never expected to use 17 balls for this. At £3.10 each that’s £52.70. That’s more that I would pay in the shops for a sweater, but what can you do? No-one said my crochet obsession was going to be cheap. On the up side, I now have a handmade crochet sweater unique to me, so I guess that’s priceless.

Hook: 5 mm

Construction: 58 squares of 11.5 cm x 11.5 cm, two mesh side panels and two mesh sleeve panels

All of the 58 squares had to be blocked before I could sew them together. It was a big job, but so worth it.

Blocking crochet squares

When the sewing together was done, it was time to add the finishing touches. The pattern said I have to do a round of SC followed by a row of slip stitches all around the neck, sleeves and bottom edge. I sort of did what they said….

I did the row of SC in gray as instructed, but then added my HDC of red. Ooo wee, I had been waiting so long for this! The red makes my grey siiiiing!

20121221-114853.jpg

But wait, there’s more. For my last row, again in gray, I did SC, sl st, SC, sl st etc. all round. (I didn’t want to end with red as it would be too obvious, so I needed to finish it all off with another row in gray.) When I turned my work around, I saw that the wrong side of that SC, sl st, SC, sl st row was actually more interesting than the right side, so I made the back, the front. In other words my edging was done as follows:

Row 1: With wrong side facing, SC one row. Turn. (This is as the pattern instructs me to do.)

Row 2: With right side facing, HDC in red. Turn. (The photo above).

Row 3: With wrong side facing, *SC, sl st*.

This photo shows you the end result. A spidery, lacy row of grey over the red stitches.

SC Sl st pattern

This is the neckline of my sweater. I love that intricate grey lines over the red.

20121221-114905.jpg

The pattern calls for mesh inserts on the sides, for size M and upwards, and elongated triangle shape inserts for the sleeves. I think this is genius as it turns the square sweater into something more shapely.

Here you can see the top of the sleeve inserts. They taper to a point towards the bottom edge of the sleeve.

crochet sweater sleeve inserts

This photo shows off the side mesh insert. When I was making the inserts I thought it would be very obvious, but it really isn’t.

side inserts driftwood crochet sweater

The construction of this sweater is extremely adaptable. All you need are 58 squares of 11.5cm x 11.5cm each. That means this pattern can work with granny squares, or any type of square motif as long as it’s 11.5 cm squared! You’ll just need the Driftwood pattern for the mesh inserts. Isn’t that great? Here we have a basic crochet sweater pattern, made up of squares that is wide, wide, wide open to creative interpretation. It’s the kind of pattern you will go back to time and time again. It’s also excellent for beginners.

I’m thinking of making a similar sweater in a summery cotton using one of Jan Eaton’s 200 Crochet Blocks patterns. Can you see it? It would be really great in bright summery colour(s).

Next time when I see a sale on DK cotton yarn, I’m going to buy 17 balls. Yes, my love of crochet is overriding my budget constraints. I’m sure you understand.

Terrific Tuesday

18 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, Terrific Tuesdays

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

crochet blanket, ripple

On a Monday I can still remember the fun I had over the weekend, Wednesday is the middle of the work week, on Thursday I start getting hopeful and on a Friday I can taste the weekend. But what about a Tuesday? It’s so…. just there. Weekend memories are too far away and the upcoming weekend might as well be a year away.

What we need is a bit of colourful inspiration to get us going on a Tuesday, don’t you think? A pretty picture, beautiful scenery or colourful imagery. Yup, that’ll liven up Tuesdays and turn it into a terrific day!

From now on I will go through my photos and Pinterest likes every Tuesday and find us a pretty picture to add colour and joy to the day.

xxxxxx

I finished the Mainly Grey Sweater on Sunday (a Ta-daaaah post will follow soon) and immediately started with this: a ripple blanket in shades of blue.

blue ripple wave crochet blanket

I hope your day hasn’t been blue and that your Christmas preparations are coming along nicely. Isn’t it strange to think that a week from today it’s Christmas Day? How time flies!

Wishing you all a Terrific Tuesday.

Natasja

Crochet earrings ta-daaah!

10 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, Ta-daah!

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

crochet, crochet jewellery, Etsy, jewellery

It feels like forever since I last showed you a completed crochet project. I guess that’s the way when yarnbomb cravings hit, you have 58 squares to crochet and husband goes for an operation.

Fear not, I have been putting my crochet hook to good use and today I have something to show you. Five things actually.

Ta-daaaah! Behold five pairs of crochet earrings.

crochet earrings and crochet thread

Four of these are Christmas presents and one pair is for me. Seeing as the four recipients read this blog, I won’t tell you which pair is mine.  What I can tell you is how I made these earrings.

The nitty gritty of the earrings:

Yarn: The Anchor crochet thread I used for all of these, is from The Making Spot’s giveaway that I won in October.

Pattern: Dainty Dangles Crocheted Earrings by Chanteuse Crochet. There are eight crochet earring designs in the pattern, so the $2.50 is very good value for money.  I only used three of the eight designs. The pattern tells how to attach the earring hooks and also give instructions for blocking and the use of spray starch.

Hook: 1.5 mm Clover soft touch

Pair 1 – Delicate Fan Earrings, using Anchor Freccia 6 in shade 00320:

mustard crochet earrings

Pair 2 – Funky Granny Earrings, using Anchor Mercer Crochet 20 in shade 0149:

navy granny square crochet earrings

Pair 3 – Simple Circle Earrings, using Anchor Baby Soft 8 in shade 0048:

Pink crochet earrings

Pair 4 – Simple Circle Earrings, using Anchor Freccia 6 in shade 01442. These are bigger than the light pink earrings seeing as the crochet thread is thicker:

turquoise crochet earrings

Pair 5 – Simple Circle Earrings, using Anchor Freccia 6 in shade 00255. To get the earrings so big, I replaced the US dc in the pattern, with US trebles:

green crochet earring

I actually have very bad luck when it comes to earrings. For some reason I always seem to loose one. Just one. Seriously. When I get home in the evenings the first thing I do (after saying hello to hubby of course) is take off my shoes, wrist watch, rings and earrings. Many a time I only need to take off one earring. Heaven knows how you can loose an earring without knowing it. And I’m not talking only dangling earrings, studs as well!

But now that I have this pattern, and I’ve seen how quickly the earrings can be whipped up, I’m going to make myself more. If I loose one I can make its replacement within minutes!

Bring it on ye wizard of disappearing earrings. I have an crochet earring pattern and a big stash. Bring it on.

crochet earrings and crochet thread

Yarnbombing a tree in Thames Ditton

18 Sunday Nov 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, Yarnbombing

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Thames Ditton, Yarnbomb, yarnstorm

Another yarnbomb for Thames Ditton!

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

This time I covered a tree at the roundabout of Speer and Summer Roads. I love how it turned out!!!

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

The colours turned out to be a very wise choice. It really pops. What looks like a white horizontal border from afar, is actually a light mint green.

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

I wanted to make a big impact. The initial idea was to do three trees, each in a different colour, later evolving to a an idea for one tree covered from leaf to root in different pieces of crochet, but in the end I settled for this. Once I started work on the first “tree scarf” as Hubby likes to call it, I realised it was going to take a very long time (those trees are more than a meter in diameter!) so I changed my mind I did one tree in three colours.

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

I was also conscious of the fact that people will probably try to pull/tear/damage my crochet, as proven by the then nine, now four squares at Thames Ditton station. For this reason I attached my yarnbomb as high as possible to the tree. Stand-on-a-ladder high!

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

The scalloped edge won’t be visible if you drive past, but if you walk, you can appreciate the frilly, feminine, touch.

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

I really, really, like how this yarnbomb turned out. Can you tell?

treehugger.jpg

I would have loved to cover the whole tree trunk in a beautiful piece of crochet but it’s just sooooo heart breaking for me when I see my crochet damaged. I had to think practical (as practical as any person who crochets coverings for a tree would think) and “held back” on the creativity in order that the one piece I did do, would stay put.

I actually said to my husband “I don’t want my crochet to get hurt”. Only when I had said those words did I realise how I truly felt about my yarnbombing. Every stitch is a little part of me. All I want to do is spread joy and cheer, so when someone removes or damages my crochet it really does hurt.

I’m a yarnbomber and proud of it.

tree-yarnbomb.jpg

Granny squares and alpacas

06 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by Natasja in My crochet, My ramblings

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

crochet, granny square, scarf

The day of my granny square workshop at Toft Alpaca farm finally arrived on Saturday. I have been looking forward to this since reading about Toft Alpaca Farm in Simply Crochet magazine way back in the Summer.

I had to drive two hours to get to the farm, but it was so worth it. Hubby asked, and you are probably wondering as well, why would I want to attend a workshop, two hours away, on making granny squares, when I already can make granny squares (and much more)? Well, you see, I taught myself to crochet so I’ve always wondered whether I could (should?) be doing things differently. I think I wanted reassurance that what I’ve been doing is right, but at the same time I’m open to new techniques and different takes on the same thing. Seeing as I’ve never attended a crochet class of any kind I felt I’ve missed out on that aspect as well: the group of women sitting together, following the instructions of our teach and making something together.

I’m so glad I decided to go because the workshop, in fact the whole day, was everything I hoped it would be.

20121104-165253.jpg

The day started at 10 am with coffee, having a nose around the beautiful shop and “where did you travel from?”, “have you crocheted before?” chat amongst the nine ladies and one gentleman. Everyone seemed really nice and we were a good mix of ages which made for interesting conversation.

20121104-165236.jpg

We found our seats at the huge table in the beautiful workshop of the Toft Alpaca Shop and then Carrie started the lesson.  We started with instructions on how to hold the crochet hook, how to wind your working yarn so that the tension is consistent and then the hooking began.

20121104-164559.jpg

20121104-164604.jpg

By 11 am everyone had made two rounds of the granny so we took a break to walk around the farm.

20121104-165306.jpg

Wellies on, and off we went. It was great seeing the alpacas out there in the field, knowing that by the end of the day I would have made granny squares from their fleece.

20121104-164516.jpg

So cute!

My absolute favourite animal is a giraffe. I’ve never seen one in real life, but I’d like to think I spent a morning with their smaller wooly cousins. Those long necks are so wrong, they’re right. Right?

20121104-164544.jpg

20121104-164610.jpg

Carrie provided a wealth of information and interesting facts about alpacas and the farm. She told us things such as; alpaca’s will obey straight lines, that they have excellent peripheral vision, baby alpaca are called cria, they making a humming sound when content and will spit if they feel threatened. There are officially 22 shades of alpaca fleece but early British importers were told to import white alpacas as the yarn can be dyed different shades. Luckily Toft don’t dye or bleach their wool. Why would anyone want to dye alpaca wool if you have 22 natural shades?

20121104-164550.jpg

When we got back from our walk it was time for lunch, coffee and cake and more crocheting. Just heavenly.

20121104-164523.jpg

I opted to make the granny square scarf which means I had to buy an extra “goody bag” of chunky alpaca wool on top of the pack already included in my £60 workshop fee.

I’m so glad I decided to make the huge granny square scarf. I love it! It’s incredibely warm and snuggly.

I made my scarf with 8 squares of 4 round granny squares and finished it on Sunday evening. Chunky yarn + 12 mm hook = super fast finished project!!!

What I found the most interesting (apart from all the alpaca facts) about the workshop was how quickly people can pick up crocheting. I sat between two knitters who had never crocheted, but by the end of the day, one had completed a granny square in chunky alpaca, and Sue was making Russian Square wrist warmers in DK. In one morning Sue had progressed from learning to crochet by making granny squares, to actually reading a pattern for Russian Squares! She emailed me on Monday to say that they crochet bug had bitten her big time and she loves crochet now just as much as knitting! Nevermind wrist warmers, she’s going to make a blanket! How great is that?!

It was probably inevitable that a day on an Alpaca farm, learning to crochet granny squares with a group of other students in a beautiful setting with amazing natural fibres, can make anyone addicted to crochet. Then again, if you’re following this blog and have read this far, you already know how addictive crochet can be and you don’t need a furry miniature giraffe to inspire you (but it helps).

P.S. The next crochet workshop at Toft is an Amigurimi workshop on Saturday 16 February. If you can, go!

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