It's barely snowed! I work with a lady from Texas and she gets really excited every time she hears it's supposed to snow. She wants to have her very first white Christmas. She's cute.
Here are some hats I made just because I wanted to try out a pattern or try to come up with one...
The blue one is a pattern I found on April Draven's craft blog. It's filed under "plain slouch hat" and I just changed the colors to some yarn I had gotten and wanted to see what pattern it would make. Sometimes you think it will give you one pattern and it doesn't, ya know?
For the panda hat I used the earflap hat from Micah Makes (I linked it in the last post. I really love that pattern!) And just made some changes of my own. I used the ears from her monkey/bear variation and then some circles for the eyes and embroidered the nose on.
The red scalloped hat I used the same snowboarder beanie pattern and came up with a way to get the bottom edge to scallop. I'll probably be adding eyes or something to it to make it a pacman ghost! (I made a blue one and a pink one last year for my aunt and a friend, respectively.)
The multicolored hat in the middle was made using Peruvian Print Red Heart yarn. I believe I based the design on a pattern I found on Purple Sage Designz (She has 2 free patterns listed. One was earlier this year, the other a few years ago... closer to when she started that blog.), and then just changed the sides and top a bit.
The red, black and light gray hat was made following the other free pattern on Purple Sage Designz for the zigzag tam. (The one earlier this year.)
The tan and purple hat was based off a picture I found and couldn't find the pattern to. I saved the image and just tried to guess which stitches had been used. The I believe the colors I used were Red Heart's Grape Fizz and Buff. I just alternated every few rows.
A (sort of) Tutorial!
Dice Bags!
My husband and Dad are getting giant bags of dice. I ended up making dice bags for them. Z requested a bag for each type of die so that he could keep them all separate. That means about 7 bags each. 14 in total. (He already had a bag that his friend's wife made so I already had one out of the way!)
Here is what I have done so far:
To make them, all I had to do was lay out the material (and have it folded in half so I could cut both sides at once), trace around my hand far enough away from my hand so that I had a seam allowance and cut it out.
I put the appliques on so they can tell the bags apart better. They will know which bag has what. You can skip this part if you want.
If you do want to put them on, I used some of the left over material and found some of the pictures and cut them out (mostly with a template I made in the shape of a hexagon). I cut out pieces of the blue color we got in pieces just a little bigger than the GI Joe pictures. I sewed them together.
NOTE: You can also use fabric markers to draw on them or you could embroider numbers or even cut out numbers to sew onto the shape. Be creative!
After that I pinned the appliques to one side of the bag and sewed it on.
Now, put the 2 sides of the bag (right sides facing) together and pin. Sew along the edge just below the stitch line for the casing. (See image below.) If you start higher you will not be able to put the drawstring through later. (You will end up with a little bit of a raw edge here, but it's barely noticeable. I just wanted to make it faster.)
Now turn the bag right side out. Get some string or yarn or whatever you want to use for the drawstring (I used some hemp bracelet material I had lying around. It kinda has a coating on it, which seemed to help get it through the casing.) and put it through the casing. It makes it easier to get the drawstring through if you tie one end of it to a safety pin or a paper clip and guide it through that way. Tie both ends of the drawstring together and you are finished!Any questions?
What have you been doing/crafting lately??
3 comments:
You are the craftiest person I know. I don't craft anything unless you call cleaning the house crafting. Keep up your wonderful ideas and articles. Who taught you how to crochet or did you teach yourself? Lots of love
Mom and Tammie both taught me a little and then mostly just messing around or finding patterns. Sometimes I find tutorials on the internet on how to do stitches or I find patterns I like. :)
You waayyyy passed me in crocheting. You are an amazing crocheter. (is that a word?)
You certainly are very crafty. I'm glad you enjoy doing it!
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