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Ella's Hand Dyed Purple Hat

  • Aug. 22nd, 2009 at 4:07 PM
 Here's Ella's first attempt at cables. I think she did a great job, don't you?
The pattern is Interwoven Cable from Figheadh Yarnworks! 

Ella's Yarn

  • Aug. 15th, 2009 at 7:53 PM
Ella and I spent Wednesday afternoon dying some yarn in the crock pot with kool aid, cake coloring and Easter egg dye. She just couldn't keep her hands out of it and ended up with purple nails which she thought was really cool.

Today she wound the yarn into 2 balls and now she's knitting a cabled hat! She doesn't believe in starting with anything simple. She's knit and crocheted several hats but found this pattern on Figheadh and just had to try it. She's been working on a swatch for several days and has the pattern pretty much memorized.
She told me she was so glad I lived here because she would have never got to do anything like this without me.

What a sweetie!

A Weekend at SAFF

  • Nov. 2nd, 2008 at 5:13 PM
I went to the Southeastern Annual Fiber Fair in Ashville, NC last weekend. Here's my granddaughter, Ella,  with 5-month-old angora bunny. And here she is with one that was only 8 weeks old.

She really wanted to buy the larger bunny. These are some laid back rabbits!

Here's Ella petting some of the sheep that were being judged.












And here she is petting a young alpaca. 



Check out this alpaca's cool hair cut.








This friendly ram loved to have his neck scratched.



 









Notice the haircut this llama has had. You didn't want to stand too near the llamas. They weren't as friendly as the alpacas and like to spit.







Now the real reason I went to SAFF — FIBER!!!!!!




I made a big haul, don't you think?
 





 







A Week with Ella

  • Aug. 13th, 2008 at 2:40 PM
Our 12-year-old granddaughter, Ella, comes every summer to spend some time with us. We have lots of fun doing the usual things (amusement parks, shopping) and we also have fun being creative.
She designed this skirt herself from a couple of pair of jeans she had outgrown. She cut out all the patches and stitched them together by hand (white stitches). I then went over all the stitches with a machine buttonhole stitch. The lace was the finishing touch.
Below is the belt she designed and crocheted to go with her skirt.


We then went to a thrift store to purchase a wool skirt to make a bag. When I felted the skirt, the white wool shrunk more than the black stripes giving the bag a shibori look. I added a bottom, lining and handles. We call it a designer bag because it was an Ann Taylor skirt (we left the label in).

Now isn't this the cutest little bear? Ella combined crochet cotton and sport weight yarn to get the unusual pattern. The muzzle and tie are crocheted from crochet cotton. This is her own original pattern.


I'd say we had a pretty full week.

Can You Say Amigurumi?

  • Jul. 30th, 2007 at 7:28 PM
Ella has gone to the dark side. She no longer knits. Instead she has taken up crocheting Japanese Amogurumi.


Ella with her Amigurumi turtle. This pattern can be found at http://www.fortheloveofyarn.com/Issues/Spring06/patterns/spring06_seaturtle.shtml

Ella has also almost completed a hippo and camel. She said it's more fun than crocheting dishcloths and afghans.

What is Amigurumi? According to Wiki it is (Japanese: from amu [編む, to knit] and nuigurumi [縫い包み, stuffed toy]) is the Japanese art of knitting or crocheting small stuffed animals and anthropomorphic creatures. Amigurumi are typically cute animals (such as bears, rabbits, cats, dogs, etc.), but can include inanimate objects endowed with anthropomorphic features. Amigurumi can be knitted, but the vast majority of amigurumi are crocheted.

Amigurumi are usually crocheted out of yarn. The simplest designs are worked in spirals. In contrast to typical Western crochet the rounds are not usually joined. They are also worked with a smaller size needle in proportion to the weight of the yarn in order to create a very tight-looking fabric without any gaps through which the stuffing might escape. Amigurumi are usually worked in sections and then joined (some amigurumi have no limbs whatsoever and the body and head is worked as one piece). The extremities are often stuffed with plastic pellets to give them a life-like weight, while the rest of the body is stuffed with fiber stuffing.

The pervading aesthetic of amigurumi is cuteness, or kawaii. To this end, typical amigurumi animals have an over-sized spherical head on a cylindrical body with undersized extremities.

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