Swaps

So I’m involved in a couple of swaps at the moment on Ravelry, one of which has a “Gnome” theme. I thought I’d expand the theme a little and for the something small I’m going to send, I made some tiny toadstool stitch-markers!

Of course I documented the process for all of you lovely folks playing along at home!

First there was FIMO in red, white, and sand colours, and I used flat-ended jewellery pins.

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On to the pins I shaped the toadstool stalk (I made as many as I had pins for)

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then hood

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and finally the tiny white dots.

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Then it was into the oven for half an hour on 110C

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Once out and cooled, I snapped off the excess wire, and used round-nosed jewellery pliers to bend the ends around and hold the closed jump ring.

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Finished!

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Somehow I don’t think I’ll give up my day job, but I do think they have a quaint and rustic charm! *grins *

A Story

The Gathering

With the blossoms blooming on the trees, the new year has begun. It is time for the Gnomes to come together once more.

They gather at the toadstool.

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Arriving together,

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And separately.

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They dance Ring Around the Toadstool,

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And all fall down.

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Then they travel,

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To the Great Pukeko,

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For story time.

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Back at the toadstool elections are held,

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And a leader is chosen for the coming year.

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At the end of the day they head back home to their families.

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Fin

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Regularly Scheduled Programming

I have a sneaking suspicion, going by the profusion of daisies that have blossomed in my back yard (from the plant I planted last year), and by the pervading scent of Jasmine in the air, that Spring may have finally sprung!

I also have this insane urge to buy some lattice and drape a wisteria plant from it. I may yet do this. I’ll see how much they look like setting me back at the nursery when I go for a walk sometime in the next week!

But what have I been working on? Well you may ask! For some reason I fell in love with a bullion stitch bookmark on Ravelry and scheduled a lesson for myself to learn this amazing new (to me) stitch.

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Being in a crochet type of groove, I was inspired by this magazine, which I then bought,

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Because …

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So I decided it was high time that I learn Irish Lace Crochet. So I headed off to this site, and downloaded myself a 100 year old DMC instruction manual. (Specifically Dillmont, Th. de, ed. D.M.C. Irish Crochet Lace. Mulhouse, Dollfus-Mieg & Cie, [c.1900], 63 pgs and 7 linen patterns.) (I love the internet!)

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I began with some leaves,

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Then a flower,

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Then I decided that my thread was FAR too dense to get the intricacy I was aspiring too, and so I headed back to Morris Craft for a finer gauge.

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In between all of that I have also been slowly progressing with the Crown Prince Square. It’s repetitive, and not all that challenging, so I’ll need to finish it fast before I lose interest in it all together!

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Just one more repeat of the middle section, then the border of crosses, then it’s on to the outer lace!

Somewhere in there I also made a gnome. *grins*

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I’m not sure Elizabeth is as impressed as I am …

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Oh My Goodness!

The plans and organisation have paid off! We have a back yard again, and can now get someone in to fix the decking! There was four cubic meters of stuff hauled away to the tip, and a trunk load of stuff (books, clothing, board games) went to the local Vinnies.

The cull feels so good! Next to pull down all the stuff in the roof and assess!

In other news, I received the most wonderful card from the recipient of the Purple Percy Shawl, and she loved it! I’m so relieved and happy that it made it safely to her, and that she likes it!

Have some more local sites taken on the phone. The handiest camera I own!

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The Fish’s Fichu. A Fishu!

This was a project I had wanted to do for a very long time. From the moment I saw it on the front page of Ravelry all those many months ago, I knew it was something I would love working on, and wearing.

Now that it’s finished, it’s everything I wanted! I wraps, it drapes, it’s not just a boring rectangle scarf, and it’s not too heavy as the weather just doesn’t get that cold here.

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Working out what the designer intended with the pattern however, was a bit of an ordeal. I re-read it several times, still couldn’t make out what she meant in two separate places and had to resort to contacting her for clarification. For anyone contemplating making this pattern, I’m just not convinced that the pattern was written as clearly as it might have been.

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First, on the initial chart for the body of the piece, there is a symbol represented by a dot with an underscore which stands for knit and purl in the same stitch. Given that I was going to be travelling with the piece, I had printed the pattern up, and the underscore at A4 size printing was not obvious. Given that this stitch is used in every row it is necessary, and crucial to your stitch count. I think a different symbol representing this stitch would have made it clearer.

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Adding to this confusion is the fact that, when I looked at the symbol identification table, the purl stitch was represented by a dot. Hence I initially thought that stitch was a purl. As the piece is based in garter stitch (if I made it again I would do the body in stockingette) there is no need for the symbol table to even have the purl stitch listed as it is never used in the piece.

Second, again going back to the symbol table: all the symbols are on the left, with the definitions listed down the right. All except for the “T”, where the definition just reads “T”. Now granted, in the full pattern there is an entire explanation of what the “T” means and does, but not where it will be utilised either in the pattern or on the piece. But when I’m working from a chart I don’t carry the pattern with me; just the chart and the symbol table. So again I was frustrated, forced to a halt, and needed to wait for a response from the designer.

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There were other instances within the pattern where things were all noted, but out of the sequence in which you’d knit them, and therefore in which I looked for them (the “T” was a classic example). I don’t want to have to read an entire pattern just to find the bit which is relevant to where I’m up to; I expect the pattern to be written in a linear fashion and to be able to go to where I am up to in the pattern, read the bit I need and keep knitting. All in all this made dealing with the written section of the pattern highly frustrating. Once I was on the charts (and could read the symbols) I was fine though and the knit was a breeze.

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When I was about half way through the 39 repeats of the edging, the designer contacted me once more to tell me in detail just how talented she is, and to insinuate that my technique was lacking and that the piece was above my skill level. She may have been a touch lax on her research skills, considering some of my finished pieces. Given how easy my other shawls/projects are to find and view, I think she might just have gotten a bit carried away with herself by that point.

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I won’t be buying anything from her ever again, nor recommending her patterns to anyone as they are badly put together and difficult to follow. It’s a pity, given what pretty pieces she comes up with.

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I still love my Fishu, but having to deal with the designer made the knitting process less fun than it could have been.

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