Friday, 10 May 2013

Make your own rules...

My good news this week is that my “test run” of a beginner’s crochet workshop went so well that the duo that runs the craft business have hired me to do three workshops this autumn, to start with, adding more if demand is there. Two beginner workshops and one intermediate. I’m over the moon! I had so much fun teaching the group; I really enjoy meeting new crafty folks and sharing creative skills.  

My mind is racing with ideas. I’ve been updating my plans, little tweaks here and there to cater to a group, and it got me thinking about how I learned to crochet a few years ago. I was fortunate enough to have my mother and grandma teach me, sharing their vast experience and tips. But I supplemented my learning through various crochet books.
I have a number of books, and every one has a section on crochet techniques and basic stitches, some more comprehensive than others. But none of them really shows a range of methods to do the same technique, or inspires a reader to try their own style.

For example, most books give elaborate instructions on how to hold the yarn, with little pinky fingers being wrangled in and middle fingers acting as a bridge...but here is how I hold my yarn

Yes, I have child-sized hands

Just wrapped around my index finger. And this is what I showed at the workshop, along with the other standard techniques. I stressed that you should try different methods and really find something that feels right. Same goes for making a slip stitch. I’ve seen photos, diagrams, but I’ve never seen a photo of a knee in a book


This is how I make my slip stitches. I’m like a little child, certain things I need to have set out in a terribly basic way to make sense! After numerous attempts to do a slick slip knot with my fingers holding the join, I gave up and just laid out the yarn on my knee.


See? It makes it oh-so-clear and simple. Again, I showed this at the workshop as an alternative to what you read in books. I wanted the group to understand that even those with experience can choose simple options for basic steps. It’s ok!
Make your own rules. As long as the outcome is the same, how you get there is your business. Craft is meant to be enjoyable and stimulating for our creative minds, not frustrating like when you can’t even get the yarn in the right direction for a slip knot!

Colour changes are another area with different interpretations. Books I’ve seen list one method, and some books don’t offer a method at all. But there are multiple ways, some far simpler than others, and knowing this would help newbies to crochet. I’ll show you the two I use, depending on my mood.
Method 1: The Pick-Up

With this method, you insert your hook to make the final stitch in the row, but instead of yarn over the current colour, you drop it, and pick up the new colour, pulling that through the stitch.
Yarn over in new colour

Here is the new colour on hook, ready to yarn over and pull through both loops to finish the stitch


And here is what the little sample looks like, with the yarn tails not weaved in so you can see where the change took place.


Method 2: The Slip Knot
This method is easier for beginners, I think, because the new colour is more secured to the hook with a slip knot. It’s good when you’re still learning how to control the yarn tension. I like it if I’m working with a yarn that tends to split.

First, fasten off the old colour at the end of a row. Then make a slip knot with the new colour of yarn. Remove your hook and leave the knot at the ready. Insert the hook through the first stitch of the new row, then hook the slip knot.


Pull the slip knot through the stitch. Chain one to secure the new colour, then work into the stitch as normal.

Slip knot pulled through, yarn over ready to make the ch1

New colour with ch1, ready to stitch

And here is the finished sample
 
See that little tail of green yarn coming through the front of that first stitch? I left it there so I could remember the difference from the first method. Just pull it through and weave in the ends.

All I’m trying to prove here is that we should not be too stressed out about absolutely perfectly copying a technique. Learn the basics, really understand how and why they work, but if you have an easier, or more comfortable, way of doing something, go for it!

Happy crafting!

Chrissie x

 

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

The joy of cake...

Bunny’s birthday is fast approaching – 10 years old! – and party plans are underway. Cinema theme this year, so I’m sorting out the cake.

I love love love making birthday cakes! It’s always a secret what I’ll do; I scour my baking books and the internet for inspiration. The fun is seeing such happy faces, the surprise “wow” moment when the cake comes in with candles lit.


This was the treasure chest cake when Bunny was 4 and wanted a pirate birthday party. It’s a two-layered yellow cake, with enough sweets on top to send pre-schoolers bouncing off the walls. The sand is crushed digestive biscuits (US: graham crackers). What a hoot!


These cupcakes were from last year’s panda-themed party (her favourite animal, plus turquoise, her fave colour). Based on a design from Hello Cupcake!, a terrifically fun cookbook. Base cupcake topped with crushed Oreo cookies for fur, mini cupcake turned on its side for the panda heads, Cheerio ears covered in black buttercream frosting...it’s important that they taste as good as they look!

But my all-time favourite birthday cake for Bunny was when she turned 8


Lovely, isn’t it? Oh wait, let me show you a better angle

 
Yum!

The rainbow cake was the best surprise I ever pulled on Bunny. She really had no idea, poor thing thought I was so tired looking after her little sister that I just made a plain cake! I’ll never forget how her eyes lit up when the first slice slid out...


This was by far the most fun I’ve ever had baking. It was very involved, it took ages to make, but I enjoyed every step. I had a huge amount of cake batter to mix, then divided equally into six bowls and dyed rainbow hues. I baked two layers at a time, hoping they rose evenly, that the colour turned out, that nothing burned! And that it all was finished in time for me to hide it and fetch her from school...


Then I made a year’s supply of buttercream frosting to stick it all together. Thank goodness for my Kitchenaid; my mountain frosting was whipped into cloud texture by the mighty pink mixer!

I have never been so completely happy while baking. Perhaps it was the nature of the cake, the jolly rainbow colours, happy. Perhaps it was because I baked it with love in every step, happy happy.
(BTW, you can get your own jaunty cake bunting here, made by the lovely Jooles!)

This year’s cake will be a more silly offering to go with the cinema theme, again inspired by Hello Cupcake! – can you guess?

Chrissie x

 

Monday, 6 May 2013

Happy Spring Quilt

The blossoms and abundance of sunshine has me in the mood to take the next step with my first quilt.
The last time I wrote about it, I had made the bold move of cutting my nine-block squares into quarters.


Yesterday I laid them all out on a blanket on the kitchen floor to nail down a pattern. I want to keep it simple, so I envisage the squares set out on a background of off-white, with a decorative binding and reverse.


Eegads, that’s a lot of florals in one image!
After carefully gathering and labelling each row in order, I set about cutting strips of the plain fabric to go in between each square.


Here is a peek at one of the two rows I finished yesterday – it made me so happy to see the über-pretty patterns out in the bright sunshine that I decided I would call it my Happy Spring Quilt.
Remind me of this when I’m still learning how to quilt the thing on a dark night next January...
On Saturday I went to the local library and found these intriguing books


I haven’t yet leafed through the quilt book, but Granny Squares looks super! Nice mix of granny chic and more subdued projects. There are at least three patterns in it that I intend to crochet – cue the Amazon One-Click. I have such a love-hate relationship with One-Click. It’s just so easy. Too, too easy. I expect a personal Christmas card from Amazon’s founder this year, thanking me for my custom.
Anyway, once I have read a bit more of Granny Squares, I think I’ll write a little review. I have some overall thoughts about it that others might find useful. And of course I’ll show anything I make from the book, to see how the patterns work in “real life”!

I’m going out to the garden now, must do some weeding so the lovely flowers can have centre stage!
Chrissie x