Friday, 25 April 2014

Crochet spotty blanket

I now have a new blog address.
To look at this post at jodegenhart.com just click this link- Crochet Spotty Blanket











During my fateful craft fair at Kenyon Hall Farm I decided to take some crochet to keep me busy. I find it makes me feel more comfortable with the idea of people judging the things I have made if I can keep my hands busy. Otherwise I think I can seem a little intense, staring at anyone who comes to my stall, trying to read their expression to see what they think of the things I have made.

I took the scraps of some Pattons Smoothie yarn to make into granny squares with the idea of using up the smaller bits and using some dark blue yarn, of which I have lots of balls. With all that time on my hands I sat making lots of circles to be made into squares at a later date.

I was not really sure how big the blanket would be or who it would be for but I really need to reduce my stash from 2+ huge bags to, well, at least only one huge bag and I thought that multi-coloured circles would work well as I had the blue to pull it all together. 


This is how many I have made so far, not a huge number I know but Easter Holidays got in the way a bit. My evening crochet time was taken up by lots of tidying and cleaning for visitors coming then tidying and cleaning after they had gone. Oh, how I hate to tidy and clean especially when I would rather be working on something else, anything else that allows me to avoid tidying and cleaning.


This week I treated myself to some lovely cushions from Marks with big spots and I realised they would go perfectly with the blanket I was starting so I think it will end up as an over-the-back-of-the-sofa-and-to-keep-you-warm-on-chilly-nights blanket. I will let you know when I am finished.



Jo x

Thursday, 17 April 2014

Adana Quarto Press

I now have a new blog address.
To look at this post at jodegenhart.com just click this link- Adana Quarto Press












Before Christmas I happened to be searching for a  press that I could use to create my lino prints to give my poor aching wrists a bit of a break when I came across an Adana Quarto press for sale in a classified advert.




Here she is,  really good condition but no roller. So today we are taking her to the lovely people at caslon for a bit of a service. Feeling very excited about being able to use the press for future more intricate cards.

Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Unsuccessful Craft Fairs

I now have a new blog address.
To look at this post at jodegenhart.com just click this link- Unsuccessful Craft Fairs





Craft Fairs. We spend the weeks before working our hardest to design and create beautiful hand crafted products. All those late nights, all that care and love that goes into the preparation, making sure our stall looks amazing, thinking about how to show our products off to their best. Perhaps creating new products or making more of ones you already have not to mention all the more boring tasks such as float, bags and labels.

We get to the venue, set up our stall, check it twice, then sit there waiting expectantly for the rush of people who will admire our stall and ultimately buy all of our stock.

Then we sit.

And we sit a little more and after a few hours the atmosphere in the room changes from an air of anticipation to one of hope that perhaps in a few hours more people will come, perhaps after lunch? Then to one of despair that after all that hard work and the Saturday or Sunday that we gave up with family has all been a waste of time.

And then we doubt our products, and whether all this is really worth it.



I did another fair a few weekends ago, at Kenyon Hall Farm. There is a farm shop and a cafe and on a sunny day it is lovely (and very busy). They had donkey rides, food stalls, a barn full of beautiful stalls, some hand crafted and some with lovely produce to sell.

On the day, I woke up to rain. Rain which stayed all day and was probably a big part in how unsuccessful the fair was. The organiser spoke about last year when the sun was out and the place was crowded which feels like a theme to all of the craft fairs I do. There always seems to be a reason as to why this time it has not gone well but on the Saturday at Kenyon Hall Farm I heard one of the other stall holders say 'at what point do we stop blaming the weather, other events or wrong timing and start to think is it us?'.

This self doubt is a killer to your confidence but in all honesty I think that actually the craft fairs that you can do well at are few and far between. The dedicated craft fairs struggle for people to attend and ultimately buy, other than at Christmas when people come out ready to buy gifts. At the Artisan or Vintage fairs, hand crafted products priced to reflect the amount of time it takes to make them are undercut by imported or second hand products. The people around me in the last few fairs had had similar experiences and I must admit that when I looked at their lovely stalls, full of beautiful produce, I took a little hope that actually maybe it was not me but that craft fairs do not suit the type of products I am trying to sell.



I am not sure what the answer is but as I sat there on that Saturday I decided that it really had not been worth all that hard work, all those late nights and that I would concentrate on other areas to show my products to other people interested in what I am creating and see where that takes me.


Jo x






Thursday, 10 April 2014

Crochet Easter Egg Pattern

I now have a new blog address.
To look at this post at jodegenhart.com just click this link- Crochet Easter Egg Pattern




I have a problem with arumigami. I just cannot make the decreases look as good as the increases. I have tried using just the top loops to try and hide the holes but I am just never satisfied with the results. So my solution is to make one with two pieces that are whip stitched together so that the egg looks good from both angles.

This idea would work with any egg pattern you have, you would just split the pattern into two, make the first half as the pattern suggest then with the other half, just look at the number of stitches in each round to work out what your increase would be. 

Easter egg pattern
This pattern uses British crochet terms. I used a variegated dk yarn and a 3.5mm hook but it would work with plain colours or in any size.

Top
Start with a magic circle (or two foundation chains and then working into the first stitch). Leave a tail about 20cm long to create the foundation chain loop to hang the egg.
Row 1. 6dc (6)
Row 2. 2dc in each stitch (12)
Row 3. dc in each stitch (12)
Row 4. *dc in first stitch, 2dc in next stitch* repeat 6 times (18)
Row 5-7. dc in each stitch (18)
Row 8. *dc in next 2 stitches, 2dc in next stitch* repeat 6 times (24)
Row 9-11. dc in each stitch (24) fasten off and darn in the tail.

Bottom
Start with a magic circle (or two foundation stitches and then working into the first stitch)
Row 1. 6dc (6)
Row 2. 2dc in each stitch (12)
Row 3. *dc in first stitch, 2dc in next stitch* repeat 6 times (18)
Row 4. *dc in next 2 stitches, 2dc in next stitch* repeat 6 times (24)
Row 5-8. dc in each stitch (24) fasten off leaving a long tail to stitch the top to the bottom.

Making Up


Now we should have a bottom half with a tail from the edge (tail from the magic circle darned in),


and a top half with a tail coming from the starting magic circle (edge end darned in).



Starting with the top and using the 20cm length we left for the loop, use a needle to bring the end through one of the double crochet stitches around the magic circle.


Then push the crochet hook through the center hole and back out the same stitch the yarn end is coming through. 


Put the yarn over the hook and bring it through the center hole then using that loop begin your foundation chain stitch until the loop is the desired length. 


Pull the end through the loop then use the end to attach to the opposite side of the center hole then darn in the end on the inside.




Now to stuff your egg. I prefer the hard shaped eggs so using stuffing as I think it gives a nicer shape. I would normally buy the recycled cardboard ones and paint them white before I used them (otherwise the brown shoes through) but as a friend was getting rid of these polystyrene eggs, I will not feel too bad as I saved them from landfill!


This bit is a little fiddly as the polystyrene tries to slip back out of its crocheted jacket.


Begin by sewing the two ends together for a few stitches then ease the egg into either end. You need to make sure that as you bring the two ends together with the stitches, you reposition the ends so that they are central.

If you want to use stuffing you would just start stitching up the egg as an empty 'shell' and then when you are about 3/4 of the way round, stuff until you have the shape you want then finish sewing the two sides together.


So there you have it, a crochet egg which looks good from the top


and from the bottom.


Now to make lots of them before easter!





Jo x

p.s. if you spot any mistakes, please let me know.