Loose Ends No More
in which I describe handwork projects completed in 2013
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
The Last but not the Least
I expect that the above will be the last UnFinished Object in the something of a challenge that some creative friends and I have been doing. The aim was to finish objects or projects that we started before January 1, 2013. Each finished project earns someone one entry in a raffle, the winner(s) of which will be drawn in several weeks when some of us are gathering in Perth, Australia. While I have many unfinished projects, I don't expect to be putting any time into finishing them between today and my departure for Perth two weeks from tomorrow.
The quilt remnant shown above came from a quilted jacket I made some years ago. I was originally thinking of it as a purse. Then, the idea of a laptop bag arose, and it actually would have been just the right size. The problem was that sewing the sides together to make it into a bag was impossible on Xena. Even my Warrior Bernina could not handle two layers of quilt. It hit me the other morning that the piece was the perfect way to keep track of all sorts of buttons and pins that are sitting in various containers, pockets, etc. around here. The ones shown above are the ones I found around the desk in the kitchen and the card catalog in the dining room. I have enough other rooms to search through that the possibility exists I may end up using both sides of the above.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Purse Strings
I bought the hand-dyed yarn for this while in Great Falls, Montana in 2011 to help scatter my dad's ashes on one of his old duck-hunting places. I went into the one yarn shop I saw and asked them to steer me in the direction of something local that I wouldn't be able to find here. This was one of the things they showed me. I knitted the bag in fairly quick fashion and even felted/fulled it. What I didn't do until 2014 was look for handles and, once I found them, sew them on.
I have been since been debating what to do with this. It's about 14 or 15 inches at its widest point. Now having a zipper at the top, something could fall out of it. I also prefer to have bags I can carry over my shoulder. Perhaps I should offer to give it to anyone who comments here that they would like to have it.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
One for the Road into a New Year
I started this wall hanging two or three years ago as part of a workshop the local guild held, instructed by Paula Golden. The idea was to do something somewhat free-form using only three or four fabrics. When we chose the fabrics with which we were going to work, for a challenge I chose a couple fabrics that I thought were pretty ugly. The background fabric is silk, from a skirt I bought at a thrift store. The snake shape and pagoda are also from a thrift store. The only fabric I used that I actually liked was the one that gave me the leaves. At the workshop, I got as far as having stitched down the snake shape and pagoda and pinned the leaves in place. I found this piece last week while cleaning and re-organizing my studio. Since the last two quilts I made demanded some precision, as will the next two in my queue, I wanted to do something freer in between. While zigzagging to hold the leaves in place, I managed to put a sewing machine needle into my fingernail and finger. The villainous needle, actually bent by my nail, was, after the above photo was taken, affixed to the quilt next to the leaves in the bottom left that I was stitching at the time. I think the jewelry came from my grandmother's collection. I'm not totally pleased with the placements, which may be because the quilt is not hanging but lying on the table. For now, though, this is done, and I can start the new year by starting a new quilt that had better not take me as long to finish as this one did.
Friday, June 7, 2013
Felting for the Fun of It
I sometimes find it fun to knit something and felt it. (I have read that the correct term for subjecting something knitted to hot water, soap, and agitation is really "fulling," but more people will know what I mean if I use "felting.) It is, after all, one way to trim one's stash of yarn. Knitting this
helped pass many an evening of watching or listening to the television, usually to a sporting event or a repeat of NCIS or Law and Order: SVU. It used up ten skeins of blue wool that I decided not to use for a sweater and most of two skeins of purple yarn left over from an old project. If I hadn't wanted to felt it, perhaps I could have used it as a bizarre tablecloth. Instead, it now adorns the back of one of the couches in the living room.
helped pass many an evening of watching or listening to the television, usually to a sporting event or a repeat of NCIS or Law and Order: SVU. It used up ten skeins of blue wool that I decided not to use for a sweater and most of two skeins of purple yarn left over from an old project. If I hadn't wanted to felt it, perhaps I could have used it as a bizarre tablecloth. Instead, it now adorns the back of one of the couches in the living room.
Monday, May 20, 2013
Slipping By
I forget how many years ago younger son face me a knit-your-own slippers kit for Christmas. I got everything made and actually sewed one together in the first year. Then, they migrated too far back in my basket of current projects and fell victim to the out-of-sight, out-of-mind curse. When the felted slippers made by a friend started to wear through, I dug these out, sewed the second one together, and continued to have warm feet through the rest of winter.
Paying It Forward the Second
I started this scarf back in 2006 or 2007, when I did an after-school knitting group with members of the academic team at the sons' high school. I finally finished it and sent it off to a high school classmate who responded to the pay-it-forward with something handmade Facebook meme.
Paying It Forward the First
The yarn is handpainted wool, purchased when I was in Montana in October 2011 to help scatter my dad's ashes. I started knitting the scarf to have something to work on while visiting friends in Maine in September 2012. I finished it in February and sent it to a friend's daughter who had responded to one of those Facebook memes of "I will make something for the first five people who comment on this post and promise to continue the making things for others bit." I also sent a small felted bag, but since I made that a couple years ago, it doesn't count here.
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