Posts Tagged ‘dishcloth’

Happy Canada Day!

Today is my country’s birthday, and what did I do to celebrate?

I bought this:
Crochet book

I’ve only had a short amount of time to play with it, but so far I like it! It’s spiral bound, which is awesome. All craft books should be spiral bound, because there’s nothing more frustrating than having the book close on you mid-row!

I tried out some of the crochet-on-the-double stitches it has, and got to thinking: would the short-row dishcloth pattern work in this technique? (No, there’s nothing about short-row COTD in this book… that I’ve found, anyway.)

This is what I came up with:
white side
(I’m not happy with that big line of blue at the join… I’ll have to remember that next time and use the other colour for the bind off.)
blue side

I made some changes to the original pattern. I only did 10 stitches instead of 15, and after the first row, I picked up 2 stitches extra each time. I ended up needing 8 wedges to get all the way around, though, so it’s more of an octagon. I’m not sure if the extra wedges are due entirely to using the COTD technique, or if it’s because I picked up two stitches each time instead of just one, but there you have it.

Ideas for next time: alternating sides with the colours in each wedge, which would make both sides the same; binding off with the white; trying more stitches.

Thoughts: This is totally do-able. The shorter rows are kind of annoyingly fiddly, so if I were to make an entire blanket using this technique I’d either make waaaay bigger motifs, or I’d just make one giant octagon blanket. I think it might be cute as motifs with squares added in to make the geometry work.

To make up for using blue and white instead of red and white like I should have (what? I used my patented “use the yarn within reaching distance of where I’m sitting” colour choosing technique. I totally can’t be blamed for this! Besides, what is more Canadian than being cold? And what colour is more cold than blue? Q.E.D.), I’m going to include some of my favourite “You know you’re Canadian when…” jokes:

You know you’re Canadian when you understand the sentence, “Please pass me a serviette, I’ve spilled poutine on the chesterfield.”

You know you’re Canadian when you’ve had to design a Halloween costume around a snowsuit.

You know you’re Canadian when you’ve ever had to plug your car in overnight.

You know you’re Canadian when you’d trust your children in the care of a grown man in tights playing a flute to a chicken.

and finally,

You know you’re Canadian if you know that Casey and Finnegan aren’t a Celtic band.

Who knows? Maybe my next post about this book will have, you know, something actually FROM this book. ^_^

Happy Half-Birthday To Me!

I’m 31.5 years old today! I’ve been celebrating my half-birthday since I was 8.5. Others might remember that day as the day the space shuttle exploded. My memory of that day was something like:

*counting on fingers* “Hey! I’m eight and a half today!” *looks at tv* “is it supposed to do that?”

Obviously, I didn’t understand the gravity of the situation at the time (give me a break… I was only eight. And a half!).

Back to the point: I like to do something fun to commemorate the day. In the past I’ve had frosting for dessert (instead of a whole piece of cake). I’ve taken a half-day off of work. I’ve watched 15 minutes of one sitcom then changed channels and watched 15 minutes of another sitcom and pretended the were the same show (sometimes this make the shows funnier… sometimes it just shows you how similar sitcoms are…).

This year I’ve decided to take stock and show all of you my half-finished projects.

Baby blankets:

Red/Orange Crochet-on-the-Double using Bernat Satin:
red and orange blanket

Yellow/Green Crochet-on-the-Double using Bernat Satin:
yellow and green blanket

Green blanket using Bernat Baby Coordinates:
green baby blanket

The start of a strip for Blankets For Canada using Bernat Softee Chunky (which I seem to be allergic to… it’s ok, I wear gloves while working with this yarn now!) using a Knifty Knitter long loom:
Blankets for Canada strip

Not baby blankets:

My Halloween costume not finished for 2008, maybe it’ll be ready for 2009? The costume was to be a Crazy Cat Lady. I was going to make (and buy) toy cats and sew them on my housecoat, then fill my pockets with these little kitties, which would then be thrown at people. Awesome, I know. I used Bernat Satin for these.
mellon ball kitties

A green purse, using Bernat Satin, abandoned due to an inability to sew the two pieces together properly. They have the same number of stitches on a side, so I’m not sure where the problem was. I’ll try it again when I have time.
green purse

And finally, a yellow dishcloth, Tunisian stitch, using Bernat Handicrafter cotton.
yellow dishcloth

This last picture reveals one of my favourite yarn crafting tips: Slurpee cups make excellent yarn barns. Put the yarn in the cup, pull an end through the hole in the dome, then put the dome on the cup. The best part of this system: you now have an excellent reason to get a large Slurpee!

My more observant friends will probably be thinking to themselves, “That can’t possibly be all of her half-finished projects”. Well, it’s true. There is the scarf (I haven’t worked more on that since you saw it last), the yellow and green baby blanket (OCD won, math geek blanket pattern planned for the next blanket), and the ripple baby blanket at my parents’ house. Dad’s Christmas blanket is in the planning stages, so I’m not sure if that counts or not. In a non-yarn vein, I have a couple dozen un-decorated magnets on my fridge that are waiting for pretty pictures and flat marbles to be glued to them

Annnnd…. I only glanced around the apartment for about five minutes to find the projects shown here. There very well may be many more projects hiding in boxes and bags and in closets. Let’s try not to think about those. ^_^