Capturing some of the edits I make to favorite recipes, crafts, and whatever else comes my way.
Showing posts with label crafty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crafty. Show all posts
October 11, 2015
Crochet Pyramid Buddy
I have a stack of projects to post, which can only mean that it is FALL! Time for coziness in the house, making comfort food, and crafting goodies. First up, we have this little creation that my son requested. He tasked me with making crochet aliens which was an out there ask, but we designed these little creatures together and had fun doing it. The last of the set was to be a pyramid. I couldn't find a good pyramid pattern on Pinterest, but followed this good one for a triangle. I just took that to make 4 triangles, and a square base (20 rows of 20 SC- same size as the pyramid base).
After attaching the triangles to each other and putting on the eyes, this guy needed some character. I added hair which went a long way to upping his cute factor, and gave him a fun smile that went around one of his triangle edges. I adding stuffing and was sewing on the base, when my son said I should leave the tails hanging instead of weaving them in. He liked the little jellyfish legs.
Lesson at the heart of this: you can make all kinds of crochet nonsense with some basic patterns and letting yourself go with the flow. It doesn't have to look perfect. Just enjoy it. :)
August 23, 2015
Carpenter's Star Christmas Quilt Part 1
If there's one thing I've learned from my overdue blogging, it's that I forget the details from my crafts and recipes. Trying to avoid that, I'm going to start detailing some of the exciting specifics as I begin piecing together my newest quilt! It's a gorgeous carpenter's star I first saw on this quilt on Pinterest. I figured out my own pattern from that (sadly, the link only showed the final quilting- not the pattern), and I made a quilt for my mother-in-law last Christmas. A couple more baby quilts later, I wanted to revive the carpenter's star pattern for a red and white Christmas quilt for my family. I am well aware that it is still summer, but I like having plenty of time to poke around and work on a quilt. I made the one for my mother-in-law in a breakneck 6 weeks last winter and I have no need to repeat that frenzy.
So, those details I mentioned:
Pattern:
Fabric (for twin size quilt)
[Note: will result in plenty of extra fabric (~1/3 yard per color), which I count as a good thing for inevitable bad cuts, poor calculation (cough cough), stains, loved ones running off with bits of fabric, or other quilting- or life-related issues.)
- 4 yards white fabric
- 4 yards red fabric
- 1/2 yard binding fabric
- 4 1/2 yards backing fabric
- Twin quilt batting- high loft
- Red thread
- White thread
For the quilt top, I ended up getting 4 different patterns of red fabric (1 yard each), 3 patterns of white fabric (1 yard each), and 1 pattern with holly leaves- a mix of red, white, and green, as an accent stand in for some white parts of the star (1 yard). I got a different red for the binding, and am using one of my red quilt top patterns for the backing (so for that pattern, I got 5 1/2 yards of fabric total). With a 20% off coupon, the supplies all cost ~$80 I think.
Squares and Half-Square Triangles (HSTs)
- For each color, cut 12 squares and 24 HSTs
- Squares measure 5 1/2" square
- HSTs cut from 5 7/8" squares; end triangle measurement is 5 7/8 x 5 7/8 x 8 1/4; HSTs sewn together will measure 5 1/2" square, the same as your regular squares
I definitely needed to capture these measurements because I did NOT remember my sizes from the last star quilt. I tried looking up some handy dandy charts online, and unfortunately the one I followed was off, perhaps because I wasn't cutting my HSTs the same way they were. There are a lot of great tricks to save you time, but they require you to have multiple triangle pairs of the same two fabrics, which is not the case in my quilt. What I did was cut each larger square, and cut it in half to get 2 triangles. That likely threw off my end measurements to be bigger than the blossom heart quilts table. Live and learn, right? I had a lot of excess fabric so I cut new squares (now 5 1/2" square) to match my larger assembled HST squares.
After hours of cutting and laying out the pieces in the pattern, here's where I wound up:
As you can see, my designated spot in the living room was too small, so I had to lay out portions on the couch. That's ok. :) You can see the few spots where I swapped out an all-white portion for the holly pattern. I originally had the holly scattered throughout the white parts and it was too distracting, so I consolidated into designated groups and was much happier.
I currently have 4 or 5 rows sewn together, so I'm about 1/4 of the way through the quilt top rows. Onward and upward!
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