04 November 2010
I *heart* geeky crochet!
14 October 2010
Yarn on and dust off those ninja slippers; yarnbombing has taken over
Yarnbombing, guerrilla knitting, whatever you choose to call it, is hitting a city near you. To put it simply, it is the act of covering outdoor objects with knitted or crocheted happiness while employing a stealth-like manner. From signposts to statues, nothing is safe from yarnbombers, as Guardian.co.uk journalist, Maddy Costa found out after spending an afternoon with Knit in the City, a London-based outfit with the aim of covering the city in yarn.
Yarnbombing is quite a new concept, born out of Texas by a crafty lady named Magda Sayeg. She started wrapping small objects in her life with her knitting and eventually, Knitta Please was born. She has travelled abroad, encasing the world in yarn, including our own National Gallery in Canberra during the Soft Sculpture exhibition in April 2009. The movement has taken off and items the world over are being covered in wool over night by crafty ninjas.
Craft — including crochet — has experienced a rebirth in the last few years. It has acquired a reputation with an indie appeal, with many web sites dedicated to creative ideas ranging from the quirky to the extremely bizarre. Craft has taken much from popular culture, adopting styles and inspiration from music, movies and cartoons. Arts & crafts class has been given more than just a face-lift. It has been stripped down, reshaped, and repackaged into a global phenomenon. Maddy Costa quotes Sayeg on yarnbombing and the effect it has on crafty types, ‘It has inspired them to do something beyond the functional.’Yarnbombers are one group among many who are revolutionising craft, bringing it into the global spotlight for all to enjoy (and take part in). Crochet is as much a part of the yarnbombing movement as is knitting. As long as you have a ball of yarn and some inspiration, you are good to go.
Read Maddy Costa’s full article at Guardian.co.uk.
11 October 2010
So you wanna crochet or what?
Lion brand yarn – The LBY website has plenty of video and illustrated step-by-step instructional material to aid you in the most basic of crochet stitches. A good place to begin.
Crochet-mania – this site is a gold mine of instructional video. Starting with the basics, it’s a good introduction to the language and symbols used in crochet.
Meet me at Mikes – Granny squares 101 Pip Lincoln writes a ripping blog to complement her amazing shop. This is how I learned to granny square. Pip takes out all the confusing jargon, strips away all the nonsensical supposed-to-know-how, and leaves you with clear, concise instruction even my 2 year old niece could follow. Hurrah indeed!
Hook & Needles – amigurumi tutorials – This site is a good place to start if you want to learn the art of amigurumi. One of the basic techniques for this kind of crochet is the adjustable or magic ring
A word of advice – don't give up! It can be frustrating when first starting out but you’ll get it eventually. By then you'll be addicted and your house will be full of yarn.
Oh, and to prevent confusion, US terminology differs from UK/AUS a thusly:
US = UK/AUS
Single crochet = double crochet
Double crochet = treble crochet
09 October 2010
Yoshi's story
06 October 2010
you must crochet
Here are 5 fine reasons why:
Video game Amigurumi – Japanese art is amazing, and amigurumi is no exception. Ami – meaning yarn, and nuigurumi – meaning stuffed doll. Video games are ultra-cool and when Mario meets yarn, only good things can happen. Check out this amazing Legend of Zelda play set from Nerdigurumi, or this incredible Bowser by Janama at Cute Amigurumi! if you need more convincing.
Crochetdermy – What do you get when you cross the disgusting with the extraordinary? Crochetdermy, that’s what. Shauna Richardson has taken crochet to a new level with her awe-inspiring life-size yarned animals and you need to see them. Crochet is fast becoming a well respected fine art; artist Joana Vasconcelos has created some of the most intricate sculptures using traditional crochet patterns, while Jo Hamilton uses yarn to render realistic portraits of friends and family.
Its good enough to eat – another fantastic form of amigurumi is food. Everything edible has a woolly counterpart, a fact that CraftyAnna and Skymagenta prove beyond a doubt. If you can eat it, you can double-treble crochet it.
Photo courtesy of yarnbombing.com
There’s no place like home – unless you belong to a craft group. Home takes a temporary back seat once you join an online craft community like Ravelry or the Crochet Liberation Front. As you succumb to the addictive nature of crochet, share your new affliction with the many people you will meet online. Exchange ideas, patterns, trends and more with yarn-addicts the world over.
So there you have it, proof that crochet is not lame. From a humble beginning as your Grandma's fireside hobby, crochet has evolved into a modern pastime with a cult status. So why not pick up a hook at your local craft store and get started on that crocheted iPad cosy you never knew you wanted.
30 September 2010
How it all began - or - how I became entangled in a love affair with crochet
After I picked myself up — having fallen off my chair from giddy delight — I decided that my life could not carry on until I had mastered this craft and created my own huggable Link.
Having attempted crochet in the past with no success, I was reluctant to pick up a hook. My knitting skills were rusty and my teacher, my Gramma, lives 18 time zones away. Thank Google for the internet. Many balls of knotted yarn and GBs of monthly download later, I had managed to master the basics from watching various YouTube instructional videos. The results were supposed to be a monkey. My crochet skills might have been slightly sub-par but my ability to hide my mistakes rivals no other.
But that was ages ago, I now brandish a hook like a pro and have discovered that crochet is akin to smoking; it is highly addictive and those who refrain find it annoying when you light up, or in this case, yarn-on.
I see everything as crocheted; my salad sandwich, my Sunday drive, or even my favourite movie. My partner delights in seeing me happy, but frowns every time he has to untangle incessant bits of yarn from the vacuum cleaner.
Crochet is my calm, my escape from the pressures of life. I never feel completely at ease unless I have something on my hook. Teaching myself crochet is one of my greatest triumphs. It may not be rocket science, but it gives me endless pleasure.
Unlike knitting which seems to take forever, crochet’s joy is almost instantaneous. As the owner of a terribly short attention span, crochet fits in nicely with my impatient nature. 2 hours into a project and I already have a nice, woolly addition to my portfolio.
As for the Link doll, I haven’t made it – yet. I’ll get there eventually, but for the moment there are just too many other paths I need to follow, unraveling my yarn as I go.
Oh, and my costume turned out excellent:
27 September 2010
Nicole Gastonguay crochet art
Just bookmark it, you'll thank me later.
CFF takes over the Bulli country show
My breakfast for 1 took 2nd prize but was silently disputed. The 1 place winner was actually a blanket...blankets having their own category, separate from this one, there were a few city slickers slightly upset.
Oh well, there is always next year...
06 September 2010
welcome to my world
As a self-taught, otherwise-inspired crotchetier under the age of 70, crochet is like any other addictive form of self-expression and I find cannot function in daily life without some type of yarny goodness emerging from my hook.
Crochet has come a long way from your Grandmother's pot-holders and toilet roll covers... from the inventive to the slightly absurd, I’m hoping this blog will introduce you to a few of them.
crochet fish fillet