Saturday, 14 July 2012

Getting a little crochet action!

Well, since my last blog things have hotted up considerably!


Small bag made from string and plastic
carrier bags cut into strips. Handle still
to come.
I have been contacted by the Environmental Division of the Lewisham Borough Council and invited to carry out a series of workshops for children during the summer holidays. They want me to show them how to make bags out of recycled plastic carrier bags. So I’ve been working it out and making my own, planning the workshops and generally thinking about how best to approach the challenge. Interesting. The bags are looking good too, after a couple of false starts. Haven’t quite finished anything but am beginning to feel reasonably confident that we can make something satisfactory out of the idea. I’ve also been down to the House of Curtains in Sydenham and bought out their entire supply of 6mm hooks and some other sizes besides!

These hooks came in very handy, as it turned out, for my free Flower in an Hour session at the Sydenham Arts Festival this July. We weren’t expecting many, maybe 4 or 5 if we were lucky and I got myself positioned on the night, in the back room at Alhambra Homes and Gardens, where I normally teach my beginners sessions, and before Alhambra’s owner, Rebecca Leathlean and I knew where we were,  numbers had grown completely out of hand!

I, completely daunted and gobsmacked, began the lesson with people LINING the room, sitting on the tables, barely able to see me, while Rebecca turned more away at the door of the shop! . Well, we managed, somehow, to make half a flower in the hour and some didn’t really get that done. I  came away feeling not so good, as though I had let them down somehow. I’d only got one pair of scissors and I couldn’t help everyone as much as they needed. It was  a shame.

Flower in an hour workshop TAKE 2! July 2012
Anyway, Rebecca organised an overflow session and the following week, four of those turned away the first time turned up again. This time I had slightly re-thought, AND we’d given them potentially a bit more than an hour, AND I plunged in like an express train, racing through each learning point with barely a breath in between. But you know what? In about an hour and a quarter, they each learned how to slip knot, slip stitch, chain, double crochet, half treble crochet and treble, as well as how to change colour and fasten off, and - miracle of miracles - EVERYONE had made a passable flower And what’s more, they had all also learned how to read a pattern!!!!! I can’t tell you the satisfaction I derived from that unexpected and unscheduled session. And I’m pretty sure my students were pleased with their achievements too!



These new formats for classes haven’t been the only crochet-based activity using my energies of late. Weeks ago I submitted an article to a crochet magazine with only the weeniest hope that they’d be interested and for a very long time I heard nothing back whatsoever, but then, pretty much out of the blue it seemed, they came back showing interest! They want more though. More substance, more quotations, more genuine content. I’m delighted, if daunted. I’ve got my work cut out to do it, but do it I intend. I’ve so far officially interviewed one  of my fascinating ex-students, who is, as it turns out the mother of a child at my son Gabriel’s school, (also called Gabriel!) . She had come to me as an experienced embroiderer wantingto add to her craftskill base and found herself quite out of her comfort zone. In fact she's a multi-talented individual, an actress of some repute, with a great interest in the calming and focussing effects of crocheting and creating that have directly helped her in her work and life. We walked round Dulwich Park one morning after school drop off and talked nineteen to the dozen. My notes from the encounter are still burning a hole in my notebook. I desperately want to get on and start further research and writing but I do find that in the evenings I’m pretty shattered and my head’s buzzing. I need to switch off from it all. Well, I’m hoping for some quality time with my laptop tomorrow before the events of the last week of term and then the school holidays begin in earnest, because after that it’s pretty much a roller coaster calendar until September.

But I never stop crocheting in all the gaps of course - I'm making two bags simultaneously at present, one super chunky, the other super fine. Both looking good - I'll keep you posted! 

Monday, 7 May 2012

Recent successes

 The Cafetiere cover for Mummy, in situ. It's a lovely, textured stitch called Embossed Stitch by Darla Sims in her book 69 Crochet Stitches. I used Debbie Bliss Cashmerino DK on a 4mm hook and the shape of the piece was based on an existing quilted cotton cover made for a smaller cafetiere, and sized up. The button is a little blue bought one in the shape of a flower.
The felted bag went well, I am delighted. I washed it at 60 degrees and that was quite enough to achieve the felting effect. I changed my design at the last minute when I was looking on a Finnish site and found a picture of an interesting looking little basket (not felted) with these supersized button hole handles. Next time I'll crochet a couple more rows above the chain space I think. This basket was so easy to make and it could be lined, and/or decorated with 3D flowers. I could make another one with my own stripes instead of using a multicolour yarn. The great thing is you don't have to weave in the ends when you change colour, you just cut them off once it's felted! MAGIC!


Adriafil Caracas Multicolour
75% wool, 25% acrylic,
DK, 9mm hook
Dc in the round with button hole handles
Last row treble crochet on handles only
60 degrees, short  slow spin



Friday, 4 May 2012

Heart Felt


Wow! Sirdar's website has featured a garment made in CROCHET on their FRONT PAGE!!!! http://www.sirdar.co.uk/ . This really does seem to reaffirm the sense that our beloved craft is on the rise, which is good news, right?.  OK, it's GRANNY SQUARES again, which of course, is in fashion at the moment, however, the bad press of this icon of oldy worldiness could be helping to reanimate the myth that it is where crochet begins and ends.

The image is beautiful, of course, Sirdar is one of the biggest players in the yarn industry in this country and internationally, one would expect nothing less.  Let's just watch this space for some further high profile PR containing some more surprising crochet work, that will have all the knitters and weavers running for their beginners hooks to get on the bandwagon!


 I want to be a crochet designer. I trained as a fashion designer and worked as a graphic designer. I taught textiles and I now teach crochet, but I want to be a crochet designer. And not just make a load of stuff and sell it a craft fair, I want to have my ideas published. I want my designs disseminated so other people can try them. I want my name in print, let's face it. Can I do it? Well, let's find out shall we? I've emailed Inside Crochet with the offer of an article I've prepared, and I've today contacted the General Enquiries email address at Sirdar to ask who to contact with pattern ideas. A thousand mile journey begins with a single step. And since I have a full time job at the university, my steps will be a little sporadic I think. If anyone out there has any advice, bring it on!

Fruits of Life Drawing Class
 Just lately............I've been designing, and I've been felting. I've also made a cafetiere cover for my mum, for which I am awaiting feedback. I returned to life drawing classes (which I think will be lovely for design drawings, but is actually just plain lovely) and I've been teaching a lot. I love watching what it brings to my students, and how quickly they begin to create objects of amazing competence and beauty.
Design Idea
Adriafil Caracas multicolour DK
DC on 9mm hook BEFORE FELTING.


The very same swatch of
Adriafil Caracas
AFTER felting. Almost like a
painting by Turner, isn't it?

Saturday, 7 April 2012

A night in Tunisia


I spent the morning alternately blowing my nose and learning new Tunisian Crochet stitches. The first problem I wasn't entirely sure was hay fever or a cold, and the second issue, much more pleasant of course, served to distract me from the worst of the first.

I've been gaily broadcasting that I will teach Tunisian at some point soon, and I do enjoy it, but in actual fact I haven't had an awful lot of experience with it. I realised I'd need to thrash out some of its pitfalls before I stand up in front of a group and declare myself able. For one thing I've only ever tried a couple of Tunisian stitches so I needed to get a few more under my belt.

If you are wondering, by the way, what the heck Tunisian Crochet is, it's a form of crochet that is much closer to knitting, in that you work loads of loops onto the hook, like, as many as your work is wide, just like knitting, and then you work them all off again. Unlike knitting, you don't work them off onto another needle, they just get looped into the work, safe, like crochet. I've even seen it CALLED 'crochetknit'. Of course, if you do want to make anything any wider than a granny square you'll need a much longer hook than the standard.
At the back is a swatch of Tunisian 
Standard stitch in bamboo. In the middle
is Tunisian popcorn in wool, and the front
is Tunisian Knit stitch, still on the hook.
 I bought mine from John Lewis. It's not ACTUALLY a Tunisian hook because they come with a kind of 'stop' on the other end. A hook on one, and a stop on the other. The ones I've bought from JL are actually 'Double Ended', in that they have a hook at each end. The point is though, that they are LONG, twice as long as an ordinary hook. And I've also discovered that there is ANOTHER form of crocheting, actually a kind of variation of Tunisian, called double ended crocheting, which puts the hook at the other end to good use and produces double-sided fabric, sometimes with a different colour on each side!

Happy Easter, by the way!
In continuation of my treatise on technology last week, I got my instructions from a book for sale on Amazon by simply clicking Look Inside. I won't say which book because I don't want to go anywhere near infringing anyone's copyright, in fact I daresay just by mentioning what I have done I could be inciting the wider public to immoral practices that leave the author popular but poor. Let's just say that it's a current and useful loop hole that's making it possible for me to learn crochet stitches without spending any money, and it probably won't be open for long....

For yet another crochet technology link, do please also visit my Social Bookmarking account at Diigo where I clip all the random, crochet and craft-related links I ever encounter.....


Saturday, 24 March 2012

Crochet - but not as we know it, Jim




I DO spend rather a lot of time devoted to crochet without ACTUALLY crocheting. Looking at crochet books, for one thing - drooling over the sumptuously photographed, deeply desirable objects I could make.... well ok, add to the list of things I’m going to make. 


Yes, so that’s one of the crochet-related activities one can spend a LOT of time on.  But my crochet life has expanded way, WAY beyond the coffee table or the craft section in Waterstones. I like to photograph my crocheted items, for instance, and there’s quite a bit of fiddling about getting that right in terms of the composition of the photo and the lighting. Then there’s time spent uploading to the computer and onto my Flickr site, where I lovingly categorising and caption each image. 


I teach crochet too. That’s a couple of hours a session, imparting, encouraging, enthusing and crafting. I don’t very often get much actual crochet of my own done in those highly enjoyable times either. And, as a professionally trained teacher, I don’t just turn up and teach of course, I PLAN. I sit up in bed scribbling notes, I jot things down on my mobile To Do list at the traffic lights, I BUILD my plans on Google Docs so I can pick up the same list at home or at work. I also prepare by re-visiting some of the stitch patterns and do some translation from US notation into British.

I started a website of course. That took some time and effort! And I wrote some book reviews (with great intentions, as yet unfulfilled, to write a good deal more). I started this blog, to help me reflect on what’s going on in my private little crochet-fuelled world. I find it helps me make sense of it somehow, rather like untangling a wayward ball of yarn. I feel all neat and tidy and virtuous when I’m done!


You might have thought that was enough, but oh no, it was just the beginning! One web presence is never enough after a while, as many people already know. You start with just one website and before you know it you’ve got a Facebook page, your Flickr group, and your blog, moving on to the big league where you have your own Meetup group, through which all Crochet Teaching business is conducted, a membership to Ravelry, and items for sale on Folksy.com. Meetup takes up time, corresponding with my group members, advertising my courses, and uploading photos of my students' work. And now, as I mentioned in my last blog, I have a Crochet Card app for keeping track of the vital statistics of each project.


THIS WEEKEND, as I have formally been invited to teach at Denman College (the training institute of the WI in the UK) in the autumn, I will have to work my way steadily through their extensive paperwork pack, signing contracts and filling in tutor information forms, a CV form, a Denman template for the lesson plan and a full statement of resources. It’s all nice work if you can get it though - I’m not complaining! If you're in the WI, look out for my one day beginners course on 18th October 2012, and sign up, why don't you?


So that's how a girl can feed her obsession without so much as a ball of yarn in sight!

Friday, 23 March 2012

Cute and Easy


Everyone*  loves Nicky Trent's book 'Cute and Easy Crochet'.  I think it's the colours more than anything - a baby pastel palette that seems to 'log in', somehow, to the collective brain of contemporary woman. This is the woman, by the way, who's got past 'ladette' and thinking more in terms of house and home. It's girly and it's got baby stuff in it, and there's a dash of vintage about the whole thing.


For sister in NZ
After discovering some very pretty pink superwash wool in a posh charity shop in East Dulwich at a pound a ball, I set to and made Ms Trench's fingerless gloves. She was right - it was easy, and quick, oh, and they are cute. I packed them off to my sister in New Zealand for her birthday in late March, coming as it does at those latitudes, at the end of the summer, she'll be needing them soon as she counts out the small change in their ice cream shop on Napier harbour. 

But not before my mother spotted them, tried them on, begged for some of her own. Not a problem! Care of another pound-a-ball bargain basket, this time in Hobbycraft in Croydon, she received them on Mother's Day, where, here in England, it is still chilly enough to get some use out of them before this winter is finally through.

For mum 
So now I'm back on the baby blanket, from the same book as it happens. Each square is very small and doesn't take long but there's an awful lot of weaving in of ends and it's slow going. The baby's due in April so I really had better get a wiggle on. I've already joined some of the little squares together and the finishing seam in cream seems to transform them. It IS really pretty. I've got lots and lots more squares to go and I didn't help myself by making a few with the wrong size hook when I returned to the project after the fingerless glove break. It was only when I looked at my notes (meticulously made in an Android App) that I realised my error.

Android App? I hear you mutter. Whatever next? Well, yes. It was a free download from the Android marketplace to my HTC Legend mobile. It's called 'CrochetCards', but anyway, I'll be talking about Crochet and Technology in my next blog….

*(all my crochet students that is, oh and my mum) .


For baby

Friday, 24 February 2012

So much to do, so little time


I went on a little foray to John Lewis today. I don't go very often: the walk's just a little bit too far from the office so I have to take a slightly extended lunch hour if I go or I won't have enough time in the shop. Another reason for not going very often is I would go bankrupt. AND, the array of colours and textures and yarn weights and fibres is so dazzling to me and so inspirational that after a while I feel like my head is going to explode.


I wanted a large knitting needle so I could start making Broomstick lace. They didn't have one nearly big enough but I bought a 20mm crochet hook and it's turning out to be fine for the purpose - ie, creating a relatively small swatch. I also bought a 6mm double ended hook so I can make some more Tunisian that isn't incredibly firm.


I sat myself down and leafed through a book called Simple Crochet by Erika Knight today. I've seen it on Amazon of course, but this was the first chance I'd had to look inside properly. I found it very inspiring. I'd had the idea of producing a book of patterns done entirely in double crochet and although it's not QUITE that, the patterns ARE incredibly easy but they are BEAUTIFUL, tasteful objects in really interesting textures with a lovely, natural, understated colour palette. Very chic. The photography, of course, is all, and made me even more determined to team up with my friend Karolina, an aspiring photographer with an interest in my craft.


The textures make it of course, leather, raffia, string, hemp, as well as wools, cotton, linens and silks. I'm itching to get on with designing and making something to submit for publication. Lots of ideas but I'm holding myself up by wanting to maintain a momentum with my diploma, as well as creating birthday presents for family. Oh, and prepare classes for my students!
Fingerless gloves I'm making for my
sister Caroline's birthday. I got the pattern from
Nicki Trench's Cute and Easy Crochet