Crocheting Away

So much to talk about today! Let’s see…where to start…

Well. We moved into a new church ward last fall – after Charlie was born, so I didn’t know this – but apparently it’s the tradition in our current congregation to give an afghan to every new baby who is born. They had someone I’ve only heard referred to as “The Afghan Lady,” who supplied them with baby afghans and lapghans for the elderly and such. Something has apparently happened to The Afghan Lady (I don’t know what). Perhaps she’s moved, perhaps she’s died: they didn’t tell me and I haven’t asked. (:lol: It sounds kind of bad when I say it like that – I just think it hasn’t come up!) However, they found out that I crochet (back when I volunteered to do some humanitarian crafting) and asked if I could help out with the baby afghans. There’s quite a call for them – apparently over the last year there have been 15 babies born into our ward. Wow! They’ve assured me that there will be other people working on them as well.
Anyway, they supply the yarn, and the nice sister in charge of it asked me what I wanted. She told me that The Afghan Lady always used ‘the red heart yarn,’ and would I like that, because it would work up quicker, right? I assured her that it wouldn’t take that much longer to use the baby yarn, which I thought would be nicer – and comes in baby colors, too! So this Sunday she gave me two shopping bags of Bernat Softee Baby in various colors – which I like. Still, I think that I think I need to reassure her on the speed factor, which could explain this:

Click the pic if you’d like to see it closer: please excuse the tangle of yarn balls. I’m not carrying the threads, because I hate to see them peeking through. Yeah, I’ve done all that since Sunday night. Think I can get the first one done by Sunday morning? Perhaps. She said that they don’t have any left in the closet for boys, and there are several women expecting boys (including one of my friends!), so I thought I’d start with ones that can be used for the little guys, but aren’t plain to the point of boring.

In other news, I’ve decided (in a fit of spontaneity) to prepare and submit a design I was waffling about for Interweave Crochet‘s – weeeeell, crud. I just looked it up to see which issue I would be submitting for, and I missed the deadline for Spring 2008. (It was yesterday – I thought it was the 28th.) You know what, though, that’s fine. It takes the ‘rush’ out of it. I’m pretty sure by now that they decided against my submission for Winter ’07 (although I haven’t heard yet). Which is okay, because sometime after I submitted it, I had a little chat with myself about my designs. I’d been trying – or wanting, anyway – to do what everybody else is doing. To make sweaters and shirts and shawls and whatnot. And that’s not really what I do. I mean, I do it, but the designs that I love the most, and that other people think are awesome, are the toys, and stuff like that. And I do them really well. And I like them. You know? So I decided that it was better to do what I do well, that I like to do, that other people like, instead of straining and trying to do something that’s not really me, that other people already do, and do beautifully. I don’t blame them for not publishing my wristwarmers (yeah: I submitted wristwarmers. You never know.) but that’s cool, because this next design I’m going to submit will ROCK!

In other news, I carried a stack of Red Heart Super Saver down the stairs balanced against my chin and it gave me a rash that took 10 minutes to go away. Am I getting too delicate to be cheap anymore? Crud. Crud crud crud.

I’m still gonna work with it.

Cotton, Cotton Everywhere

I just realized that everything I’m making right now is in a cotton/blend yarn. That’s cool. You know, it’s summer. Hot. Sticky. And I like cotton! I know there are people who hate 100% cotton, especially the ‘kitchen cotton’ like Sugar’n Cream or Peaches & Creme (I primarily hear this from knitters. I don’t think that crocheting with it is as ‘hard on the hands,’ whatever that means), but you know what? It’s an all-natural fiber, it’s perfect for hot, sticky weather (where would I find some of that? Let me think…), I think it’s pretty, and I like it. I buy the kitchen cotton because it’s affordable and I like it.

Anyway, on to the projects! I’ve just finished knitting the third ball of Sugar’n Cream into the blue cotton top, bringing my materials cost so far up to $3. Aaah, what’s that? It’s a headless torso!

Oh, wait, that’s me. A camera timer can only help so much: you need to have somewhere to set the camera. As you can see, it fits pretty well (I bet it would fit better without, you know, another shirt under it). It’s interesting: the pooling at the bottom (that’s from before the decreases) almost gives the illusion that there’s a ribbed hem. Not what I was going for, but cool nonetheless. I’m going to continue the ribbing another inch or two – probably two – before I move on to the bust shaping. This is going pretty well so far! Not that I’m doing anything too difficult, but it’s encouraging.

Less encouraging is a crocheting project I’ve been wanting to make for a long time. You see, I have this pattern for a gingham table set (placemats, potholders, coasters, etc) I want to use. I’m a fan of gingham. It’s cheerful, pretty, and summery. The pattern calls for worsted weight yarn, and I decided to make it it cotton for all of the aforementioned reasons plus absorbency and washability. The only problem lay in procuring the appropriate yarn. I refuse to buy as much as I think I need for this project (about a pound in each of three colors) by the 2.5 oz ball. White was easy; I bought a cone. Blue was harder. I needed two coordinating shades of blue, in something larger than the little bitty balls. I couldn’t find any solid blue cones anywhere. I decided to go ahead and buy the balls, only to find that blue was never around, or only a few balls, or…it just never worked out. This February I bought four of the new Super Size balls at Joann’s in Cornflower (sadly, they didn’t have another, coordinating blue). I figured I was halfway there, but alas! I haven’t been able to find something suitable to go with it. Then last week I was at Michael’s and found giant 14 oz skeins of Sugar’n Cream – and there was a blue! I hesitated for a moment – I couldn’t remember the name of the blue I already had, and it looked pretty similar, but also kind of different – I’m sure you’ve done this before. I bought it, figuring that if it was the same color I could take it back.
I got it home, and it was a different color! Yay! (French Blue, if you’re interested.) However…I wasn’t quite sure that they worked together. In some lighting they almost looked like the same color, and in others it just looked…off. I decided to forge ahead and made a potholder (it’s like a swatch, but less annoying!) to see if I liked it.

And I don’t. Ick. So that project is on hold again until I find something that coordinates better with either the Cornflower or the French blue. I’ll try to remember to take my potholder with me next time, for color comparison. I’m not going to frog it – a functional item is a functional item, right? No matter how…oddly coordinated.

One more thing. Remember the Cashcotton I bought this weekend? Well, when I bought it I tried really hard to plan out exactly what I would make with it, and how much I would need for that. I decided to make a shrug of some sort. (Pseudo-clothing items are more fun than accessories!) I remembered my last shrug and thought, okay: I made a heavily cabled shrug from one skein of worsted wool-ease. 197 yards. The cashcotton is DK, so I’ll need more, but 2 skeins (284 yards) should be plenty for something more conservative. Of course, if you followed the link to the shrug, you may have discovered, as I did (several days later) that I used two skeins of wool-ease on the cabled shrug. I mean, it should still work, I’m just irked that my assumptions were off and it won’t go as far as I thought it might. It’s okay, I’m just sort of paddling around trying to decide what to do with it. Anyone have any patterns/ideas/inspirations to toss my way? Thanks.

More Cloche Pics

Because I can.

I really love the way that this design came together; I love the way the texture of the pattern stitch and the plain single crochet add to the illusion that this is a hat with a ribbon wrapped around it, and not just a two-color hat.

Wren liked it better before it had the bow on it. Fortunately, bows are one of those design elements that aren’t integral to the piece, and can therefore be taken or left by the person executing the pattern.

Which brings me to my next point – I wrote the pattern up this morning, and hope to get it in testing today. That means you’ll be able to buy it within the week (assuming all goes well)!