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Arts & crafts

crafting during christmas

(43 Posts)
karmalady Tue 21-Dec-21 06:40:28

I cannot be the only on largely on my own over the christmas/new year. I fully intend to be quietly occupied and do buy myself some presents.

Knitting is my go-to over winter so I have bought myself a couple of kits containing pattern and wool and have prepped myself by watching john arbon youtube videos. It has been so very interesting to learn more about wool breeds etc and the long process of designing and making yarns

I am racing away today, finishing the last sleeve and neckband on recycled yarn, I undid 3 tops called afterlight by amy herzog, ravelry. I so loved those tops and made them in the specified yarn with a slightly raised front V but have lost weight and have re-made smaller. It is endless stocking stitch, the design element is in the style. I am being good and this is my only ufo

I can start a shawl tomorrow and a new jumper after that ufo. The new garments will keep me content, dvd, a few chocs, endless tea, bliss

nanaK54 Thu 30-Dec-21 15:01:28

MiniMoon

I've completed the two shawls, and have an order for another.
The yoga blanket will be started as soon as the local wool shop opens after the New Year.
This one of the shawls.

That is lovely

MiniMoon Thu 30-Dec-21 11:47:22

I don't knit karmalady, everything I make is crocheted. These shawls make up in about four or five evenings.
I love having something to do with my hands while watching the TV.
here is a link to the pattern.

karmalady Thu 30-Dec-21 05:35:54

minimoon, that shawl is gorgeous. What is the pattern?

I think knitting is psychologically good for us, besides the rhythmn of it. It gives us something to look forward to with each new project and we can sit, drink tea and not feel guilty because we are doing something constructive and it is a means by which we can get out and sit with others.

I did not swatch for pandora, it is knit in the round and swatching would have meant knitting a small round, cutting it so it can lay flat and wasting yarn that might be needed. Knitting in the round only involves knit stitches, knitting flat involves K and P and they have different tensions. The suggested needle was 2.5, so I am using 2.25. In a few more rows, I will screw on an extra wire, so that I can slip it over my dressform and I will be able to work out if it is too big or tension is too loose. It looks fine but I want to check. I could frog and go down to size 2 (yikes) or make a smaller size. Its beautiful yarn to knit with

MiniMoon Wed 29-Dec-21 17:01:51

I've completed the two shawls, and have an order for another.
The yoga blanket will be started as soon as the local wool shop opens after the New Year.
This one of the shawls.

Witzend Wed 29-Dec-21 16:45:09

I’ve neglected it just lately, but my big stashbuster blanket is all I’m going to do until it’s finished. 3 x 2 foot sections, double DK strands of random colours, just one GS row each, ends made into tassels.
About 240 sts IIRC, 4.5 mm circular needle.
I’ve finished the first section and about half of the second.

It will ultimately go to a charity that dishes them out to refugees, etc.
I was hoping to have it finished before the worst of the winter was over, but that’s not looking likely now.

It’s brilliant for mindless TV knitting, though - no thought needed, except for deciding on the next 2 colours from my mega-stash bag.

BlueBalou Wed 29-Dec-21 07:31:31

I will definitely explore YouTube! Thank you x
I think Covid has clobbered a lot of the craft activities, hasn’t it? Hopefully next year there will be more opportunities.

karmalady Wed 29-Dec-21 07:26:03

Bluebalou, investigate colourwark on youtube, I am addicted to watching people knit, love the chat and am interested in what they make. Wiltshire is full of crafters, it was a big sheep county in the past, so knitting, felting, weaving is still going on in groups

My shawl is laid on a towel on my heated floor now, will be bone dry by lunchtime. I knit that shawl fast because it will be a very useful garment for me this winter. I intend to work on pandora at a much slower pace, will have to fit on me, or my dressform, as I go but today it will only be a swatch

BlueBalou Tue 28-Dec-21 10:18:21

Wow! That Liberty shawl is gorgeous, it would take me forever to knit something like that (my concentration isn’t what it once was)!
I was looking at knitting courses around here (Wiltshire) but there don’t seem to be many). I would love to do colour work but I think I need someone to show me! I vaguely remember knitting my dd a fair isle jumper with multicoloured yarn for the yoke about 35 years ago! It obviously didn’t match up to the real version.

karmalady Tue 28-Dec-21 09:17:19

mission accomplished, liberty shawl is finished with just a few m of yarn over. Made from sheepy wool, so I washed ie squeezed gently, in lukewarm water with eucalan. This is no different to me treating my own spun skeins. Washing takes residual dirt out and causes the bloom to happen. Two lukewarm rinses, rolled up in a towel and squeezed the roll

Now spread out to dry on 2 towels on the kitchen worktops, while I go visiting for the day, I shaped the shawl a bit and patted it and it looks perfect.

Tomorrow I intend to prep for pandora`s love which will be made in yarnadelic, it is corriedale, which is a lovely soft crimpy fleece. I chose black gold of the sun and the beautiful ones as my 2 colours. That will be a perfect top for my many hand sewn tops and dresses

karmalady Mon 27-Dec-21 07:33:34

I treated myself to a new, to me, magazine, expansive at £20 but it arrived and is worth it, small writing, several designer patterns, chat sections and is very thick. I found the issue I wanted from a yarn shop in frome and it arrived, I liked it and the cost was forgotten

I did a browse around the shop site last week, bought 2 more patterns and a few bits, including a project bag, which I could have made myself but I do like to support the smaller craft shops. I also enrolled on a knitting course, colour work, including yarn, lunch and company. Held in lovely countryside. I am needing breaks really, been confined for far too long.

karmalady Mon 27-Dec-21 07:20:25

The project for next year

www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/betty--judy-lodge-sweater

It looked beautiful on people, slightly festive but not over the top. It has no positive ease, so is clingy but should be fine on me, if my weight loss continues after new year.

karmalady Mon 27-Dec-21 07:16:37

liberty shawl is 2/3 finished and is a lovely knit, I know the row sequence now but need to concentrate a bit more at times. I looked at the plainer section yesterday and saw 3 areas with stitch mistakes, grhhh, I am one of those who has to fix mistakes, so I backtracked and dropped a stitch for many rows before managing to right the mistake. Did that three times but very satisfying afterwards, to make the mistakes disappear. I decided to gently wash by hand when I have finished, it will make the yarn fluff even more, strengthen any joins and completely even out any stitch imperfections. I may block slightly but it wont need much, probably just steam from overhead and hand patting

My equipment for blocking is inaccessible as I am waiting for the decorator. I very much love using the zwartbles yarn and will buy it again

I have been eyeing up a project to be done for next christmas, maybe in john arbon devonia, which I have used twice before. I love the composition of it, prefer that to merino which has shorter staples and hence can bobble. Watching JA videos and seeing the very short staples on lambswool, now understanding why my woolover lambswool sweaters always bobbled so badly.

I also treated myself to the wool marketing board British sheep and wool book, found it for £15.60 which included postage, it will help me with yarn composition and fleece choices for my spinning

karmalady Thu 23-Dec-21 11:44:13

my sister and I, we both bought loads of sock yarn from hobii, in their sale. Was made in italy and half price, I also got a knitting bag for £14 instead of £34. Its worth getting onto their newletter list. The sale was tremendous, yes ok, I added to my sock yarn stash but the socks make very good presents and people appreciate them

karmalady Thu 23-Dec-21 11:40:09

hand on head!! I cannot absorb patterns as quickly as I used to when younger. I have done 20 rows of pattern and it looks lovely but there are different cables to put in here and there and I haven`t worked it out yet. This is going to be like the book called niksen, dead slow and stop. However it will be worth it but not the sort of knitting I can do with eyes on tv. It is absorbing and I keep getting up to do washing, lunch prep etc. Later I am going to see if I can work out where to do pattern changes. The row counter is a lifeline

I started off with the long cable wires on 2 needles but they were getting in my way, shorter wires and end stoppers on, I can change to longer wires later. I am not a fan of charts, thank goodness the rows are written as well as charted

I bought the full set of chiaogoo lace interchangeables when they first came out and have added extra wires etc. They are my go-to these days

Gongoozler Thu 23-Dec-21 08:16:13

I am another who is determined to use up my yarn stash. Have made knitted and crocheted blankets, which seem popular. The problem is I always think my item needs a splash of a colour I don’t have so end up with more oddments!

Ailidh Thu 23-Dec-21 07:58:31

I'll b crocheting all over Christmas - although, mind you, I crochet every day anyway!! I'm half way through a Christmas present for one of my best friends. Panic not! I'm getting a head start for Christmas 2022, the 2021 offering is already wrapped.

I'm best at crocheting blankets - currently a big fan of Helen Shrimpton's creations at crystalsandcrochet.com, a very talented lady, - my efforts at soft toys are rather scary.

karmalady Thu 23-Dec-21 07:05:36

quilling, now that is unusual, it sounds like a nice relaxing craft, also small and compact and nice end products

I finished my last afterlight re-knit, the sewing together and neckband took me all afternoon and evening. I am going to wash it today and let it dry flat, no blocking.

This is my project starting today
www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/liberty-ferry
I am using exmoor zwartbles, 3 hanks which I have wound ready, very pouffy and warm yarn. From John Arbon, he runs a very small mill in devon, rescued and old machinery. Love his yarns and ethos and now have several stashes, all presents to myself. The shawl has an icord edge, which I have never done in 68 years of knitting, in fact knitting completely changed once the internet came and the likes of ravelry, knitters from over the pond were really inspiring with their ways and ideas, circular needles, top down etc

Mosaic crochet does indeed sound wonderful, I have only ever done simple crochet as in doubles, trebles and singles

UFOs would be the bane of my life, if I let them, they can sit around for a very long time and then I can never remember the pattern. I am very strict with myself these days, UFOs kind of make me feel guily, the yarn I use now is expensive and natural and I have a fear of moths, everything I have is bagged so moths cannot get in, my garments need to be on the needles or finished

Hetty58 Thu 23-Dec-21 00:37:37

I find knitting very relaxing and rewarding - although I have a cupboard full of unfinished items - it's the knitting itself that I enjoy.

One fine day, maybe I'll actually seam things and sew on buttons! I drew around my little granddaughter's feet today and I've made her one slipper - the other one I'll do tomorrow!

CanadianGran Wed 22-Dec-21 23:18:28

Karmalady, I checked out the afterlight pattern, and it's very nice! Simple and wearable.

Good for you. I like doing stocking stitch, since it's a bit mindless. I don't knit for long periods, so if I pick a more complicated pattern, sometimes it takes a while to figure out where I left off. I haven't made myself a sweater for quite a few years, but I do have some really nice alpaca blend stashed . You've got me inspired.

My last project was a baby blanket for GS who is now 3, so I haven't picked up the needles for a while.

Ali23 Wed 22-Dec-21 21:53:49

How lovely to hear about your Xmas crafting projects? Last year I received a Xmas decoration making kit for Xmas from a friend. I made it on Boxing Day and it really made a difficult better.
This year, I’ve bought a beginners quilling set and a secondhand paper craft book from Amazon... I made my husband a card as a starter, and it’s my plan to keep quilling over our very quiet holiday.

Rosiebee Wed 22-Dec-21 18:35:25

I've just started another mosaic crochet blanket called Winter Wonderland. It's complete with prancing reindeer and snowmen with little scarves. It'll see me through Christmas and if there's another Lockdown looming, it'll help me to finish it all the sooner. I've crocheted off and on for over 50 years and have only recently discovered mosaic crochet. Love the idea that at very nearly 70, I'm still learning and enjoying new ideas.

karmalady Wed 22-Dec-21 11:23:58

I have a magnetic board for knitting patterns, it comes with a long metal strip and some smaller metal bits. Its grand for keeping the pattern on the board and the strip goes under or above the line worked on

Yay, I have booked myself a knitting colourwork course in february, I am hoping to learn some new tricks but anyway the company will be nice. I do so miss the company of dedicated crafters.

I have finished all my `chores` for the day, will have lunch at 12 and yipee, that is when I settle down to crafting for the whole of the rest of the day, more call the midwife including the 2016 christmas special. It is bliss

annodomini Wed 22-Dec-21 09:45:59

I'm knitting a blanket for my first great grandchild, due in six months. I found a pattern I liked on Etsy. At first, I had to do a lot of counting, but now that it has become clear, I am pushing on quite nicely. When I was younger, I took most patterns in my stride but have been out of practice for years. Now I'm enjoying being back into it.

Grandmagrim Wed 22-Dec-21 08:53:55

I have a quilt to finish for my DGS bed socks for my DG in between I will be spinning to keep my kittens amused. I like to mix projects up so no one part of me (hands knees shoulders) get too sore.

karmalady Wed 22-Dec-21 06:35:45

cross stitch is very addictive too and a lovely quiet hobby that keeps the brain busy, thinking about where to put the next cross. Kits are available

I also recommend needle felting kits, I made a lovely robin last year, easy to do as long as you keep the needle straight. Amazon has cross stitch and needle felting kits, I say amazon only because of quick delivery at this late stage. I do prefer to buy from the small specialists

A good light is important for any handicraft, I have a standing lamp behind my chair, I need it for knitting, especially the dark colours. I also have a folding slide-under table if I ever need to use a table for crafting while in my easy chair

Re knitting, I do like my interchangeable circular kit, it means that the garment weight is in my lap and the needles don`t stick out, so chair sides don`t get in the way. I am using 2 needles with a stopper at each end

Its all about being comfy, oh and I take regular breaks, the adverts during call the midwife were long enough to do that

Back front and sleeves of afterlight are now finished, sewing together and neckband today and rolling up the skeins for my soft warm new shawl. I am not making a swatch for that as fit isn`t important, I do knit looser so will just use needles a bit thinner than recommended. I treated myself to a present of a shawl pin from wool warehouse, I needed a couple of things and they are cheaper than amazon