So weeee! Get the pattern via Etsy, made and shared by OlinoHobby. More From This Designer - Olga of OlinoHobby: This post contains affiliate links.
Artist Kate Jenkins (previously) makes elaborate crocheted food art in her studio in Brighton, England. Much of her art depicts the local fare---fish and
You know what’s popular now? Knitting and crocheting. Know how we know? Well, the internet. Duh. When memes like this start popping up in your feed, it’s time to take notice or at least write another installment of Pintershizz. Ellen: I fully acknowledge we could have gone in and made our own meme to correct …
Tal como os prometí la semana pasada, aquí están los patrones de los dos nuevos vestiditos que he hecho, junto con algunas instrucciones. Vestido estrecho Vestido ancho Ya sé que poca gente tiene mini-Ddung, pero ya sabéis que los patrones de ropa se pueden agrandar o reducir y luego retocar si hace falta. No pocas veces me había puesto mi madre un "vestido" de papel de periódico unido con alfileres o embastado para luego acabar de adaptarme el patrón. Y de hecho, esto mismo hice yo con mis Ddung: inicialmente dibujé un patrón, luego lo recorté y finalmente se lo probé a la muñeca para acabar de adaptárselo. Así que sólo tenéis que imprimir el patrón lo grande que necesitéis y luego ya iréis adaptando. Lo que importa es la idea. Materiales: ❥ Patrones ❥ Tela ❥ Aguja ❥ Alfileres ❥ Hilo ❥ Tijeras ❥ Botones o velcro ❥ Puntilla y cinta de raso ❥ Muñeca (para usarla de maniquí) Procedimiento: Lo primero que haremos tanto si vamos a hacer un vestido como el otro, será recortar el patrón. En este caso recorté los tirantes algo más largos por si podía usarlos de refuerzo de la cinta de raso que usé de tirantes, pero finalmente sólo usé un trocito corto, como el del patrón original. ¬_¬' A continuación, sujetamos los dobladillos con alfileres (aunque si lo preferís, podéis embastarlo) y se cosen los dobladillos con pespuntes pequeños. Tomamos la medida de tirantes que necesita la muñeca se los cosemos. Para que quede mejor acabado, cosemos otro trozo de cinta de raso de tirante a tirante. Lo cortaremos algo más largo para esconder las puntitas por dentro. Ahora ya podemos pegarle el botón. Podemos hacerle un pequeño ojal o coserle una especie de trevilla con un hilo grueso o una gomita fina. Para acabar, podemos unir la parte inferior los dos lados del vestido con unas puntaditas de lado a lado o dejarlo abierto. En el caso del vestido estrecho, primero se cosen las costuras laterales con pequeños pespuntes, luego se toma la medida a la muñeca para coserle el velcro y entonces ya cosemos el dobladillo. Un pequeño truco para que el dobladillo no quede tenso, consiste en coser los extremos abiertos en vez de coserlos cerrando el círculo ¿Veis en la foto cómo forman un triángulo? En principio, podríamos coserle los tirantes y ya estaría listo. Pero si nos parece algo soso o queremos que nos quede mejor acabado podemos coserle una tira de puntilla alrededor del dobladillo inferior y superior. A continuación, tomamos la medida de los tirantes que necesitará la muñeca y se los cosemos con los extremos por dentro, para que no se vean. Espero que os haya gustado el tutorial ¿os atrevéis a adaptar alguno de los patrones a vuestras muñecas? ❀
Check out Amigurumi Barbie, knitting models and examples now and start making. Free amigurumi patterns for you.
The last part of the summer dresses on pukifee-lati yellow. Welcome ^)
This design is made in 4ply yarn - ideal for using up those scraps of 4ply in your stash. The legs of the pants are knit separately and then joined to knit the body with a centre back seam. The cropped top is worked in one piece to armhole shaping with a centre back seam and one button fastening. I've also added a cute headband! If you try the pattern please let me know if you have any problems Thanks for your interest. Barbie knitted capri pants and cropped top pattern The pants have side leg seams and centre back seam. The top has a centre back seam with a button fastening To fit: 12 in Barbie (latest model) Materials: approx 25g 4ply knitting yarn in main and contrast colour, 1 small button Needles size 3mm, and 3.25mm ( US 2 and 3) Tension: 30sts and 36rows over 4 in (stocking stitch) using 3.25 needles Abbreviations: k: knit, p: purl, beg: beginning, sts: stitches, yon: yarn on needle, rep: repeat, ss: stocking stitch, m1 pick up loop between sts and knit into back, tog: together, dec: decrease, inc: increase, psso: pass slipped stitch over Capri Pants Right leg Using smaller needles and main cast on 14sts Work 4 rows garter stitch (every row knit) Change to larger needles Work 4 rows ss Inc 1st at each end of next and every following 6th row to 22sts ending wrong side Work 2 rows ss* Next row: Cast off 1st, k to end Next row: Cast off 3sts p to end Fasten off yarn leave a long enough tail for sewing leg seam Leave 18sts on holder Left leg Work as right leg to * Next row: Cast off 3sst, k to end Next row: Cast off 1st p to end Do not fasten off yarn Joining legs Slip sts from right leg onto left hand needle with right side facing, Slip sts from left leg onto left hand needle with right side facing, (see photo) 36sts on left hand needle The 3 cast off sts should be on either side of the row. Work as follows: (K2tog, k14, k2tog) 2 times, across 36sts Next row: purl Next row: k2tog, k29, k2tog Work 5 row ss ending with a purl row Change to small needles Work 4 rows of k1, p1, rib Cast off loosely in rib. Cropped Top Using smaller needles and contrast cast on 30sts Work 2 rows garter stitch Change to main Work 2 rows garter stitch Change to larger needles and contrast Work 4 rows ss Next row: Cast on 2sts, k to end (the 2 cast on stitches are for the under flap of back opening) 32sts Next row: k2, p to last 2sts k2 Next row: knit Repeat last 2 rows one time Next row: k2, p to last 2sts k2 Shape armhole Next row: k8, cast off 3sts, k12, cast of 3sts, k to end Next row: (buttonhole row) k2tog, yon, p4, cast on 9sts, p12, cast on 9sts, p6, k2 Change to main Cast of loosely knit wise, when casting off work k2tog at either side of 9 cast on sts to shape neckline. Fasten off yarn. Headband Using no 10 needles and main colour, cast on 30sts Work 2 rows in garter stitch Cast off, sew into a round To finish Capri pants - sew side leg seams and rear seam. Fasten off all ends Top Sew back seam to cast on sts of back edging, slst border flap in place. Sew on small button to correspond with buttonhole.
New pin cushions have been added to the shop today.. perfect for those Christmas crafting weekends on the horizon! Friday, hallelujah! I hope you all have a great weekend. xx
What Is The Number One Tatting Question The number one question asked by Tatters? Do you know the answer? They are looking for patterns beyond the traditional doily and edgings. Thanks to Globaliza…
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Bonjour ... ici sous la pluie ... Et voilà aujourd'hui les 3 derniers chapitres ... les sucreries et les glaces, la crémerie et les boissons ... de mon nouveau livre " Le panier de la marchande au crochet ". Maintenant vous savez tout ou presque :-)...
A lot of women love to wear retro hats nowadays. Some prefer modern styles, however everything new is a forgotten past, as they used to
Noel est si proche que je vous propose une petite selection de poupées et maisons anciennes..... Très belles fètes de fin d'année à tous et RDV l'année prochaine ........
Hello my dear friends, today I am so excited to share my latest free tutorial with you! It is the how to make my seam binding roses. They are easy to make and look so beautiful and you could use them for so many different things. This is going to be a longer post since I have taken many photos so you can see everything really well. Please note that I did not design how to make these roses ~ I am only showing you how I make mine. This is what you will need: ~ Fabric or the piece you want to embellish ~ Seam binding ~ A large needle for the seam binding ~ An embroidery needle for either embroidery floss or strong thread ~ Embroidery floss or strong thread in the color of your seam binding ~ A sewing needle and thread (to sew the pearls onto the rose) ~ Pearls/beads for the centers of the roses ~ Embroidery hoop ~ Scissors ~ Pencil or disappearing quilt marker (when using velvet I use a fine tip Sharpie pen) ~ Coins or small round objects (for the size of the rose) ~ Piece of lace or doily (if you wish) And now you can start ... Using your pencil or marker draw a circle onto you fabric where you would like the rose to be. (When I used velvet I had to use a fine Sharpie pen to draw with.) Mark 5 dots as if you were to draw a 5 pointed star. Now place your fabric in the embroidery hoop that is nice and taught. Double thread your smaller embroidery needle with your embroidery floss or strong thread and knot at the end. Now stitch a 'star' into the circle using the dots as guidance. Secure the thread in the back well and cut the thread off. Next ... thread your large needle with a length of seam binding and knot it at the end. I think that I thread about 30 inches/75 cms when I make my large roses. I always have a leftover piece of seam binding once the rose is done but I would rather have too long a piece than a piece that is too short. I just hold on to my leftovers and use them in other projects. Hold your hoop and from the back stitch through your fabric close to the center of the thread star. (This can be difficult at times because of the size of the needle with the seam binding so be careful and tug gently until it goes through.) Now twirl your needle around a few times so the the seam binding curls but not too much. If your seam binding becomes flat again whilst making it, twirl the needle a few times again. Now the 'growing of the rose' starts ... (sorry for the bad picture) ... you are going to weave your seam binding into your thread star by either going over or under the thread alternately. I like my larger roses to be very full so I try and use as much seam binding as I can that is on my needle. You can make your roses of course as full as you like - just don't over fill it! When you are at the end pull your needle through the fabric by going slightly under the rose and make a knot. Make sure you carefully push your knot towards the fabric to tighten it but don't pull too hard or you will ruin your rose. Cut the seam binding off leaving a small tail. I like to take the needle and thread and secure the knot with a few small stitches to prevent it from reopening which it sometimes can because the seam binding is quite smooth. And now your rose is almost done. The only thing left is to sew the pearls into the center of the rose. For this take your sewing needle and thread it with strong thread and knot the end. Now going through the center of the back of the rose, firstly fold the 'ribbon tails' over each other and push your needle through them. Once your needle is through to the front center of the rose, thread a pearl into the needle, position the pearl in the center of the rose and then go back through the rose. Do this 3 times and then secure the thread and cut it off. Now your rose is finished! If you wish to embroider your rose onto a small tattered piece of lace or old doily, this is how I do it ... Start by drawing your circle and marking it with your 5 dots onto a strip of muslin. Next center the area and slip stitch your lace/doily piece over it so that you drawing is on the back and visible to you and then place it into your embroidery hoop. Now continue as you would before ~ as above. Once your rose is completed, carefully cut it out leaving a circle of muslin under the rose slightly smaller than the rose but beware not to go too close to the stitches! Again your rose is now completed! I work very hard on my tutorials and take many photos too in hope that it will help you lovely bloggers, even those that have never created before, to be able to learn how to create a little something. I hope you have enjoyed today's tutorial ~ maybe you will try it out one day. I would love for you to visit me here at Todolwen some time again. I hope you are well and life is treating you kind my dear friends. Have a peaceful and creative day, Karen B.
Seize the Crochet Hook! The other day I saw this cute little crocheted chair on a link party. It was made by Clara at AmiEggs Something about it seemed very familiar.... Very cute... It looks like my pink chair! You can make your own pink chair....Go to the AmiEgg Etsy Store. To purchase a pattern. She has many other cute things to crochet too. I love to crochet but haven't in a long while. I told my friend Deidra just the other day... "If I'd known in my twenties, what I know now, I wouldn't have spent so much time crocheting!" Youth is not to be wasted on crocheting. She laughed and laughed at this because she wasted her twenties doing drugs and having meaningless sex and doesn't regret it one bit but thinks my crocheting in my twenties is very sad indeed. In my youth I thought it great fun to drag out the ol' yarn and patterns and crochet a whole Christmas tree worth of snowflakes or make scarves or doilies! Doilies!! Doilies? WTF? I think I even said to boyfriends..."Not tonight....I have some crocheting I want to do". Clara at AmiEgg who designed this little pink chair is 23. My advice to Clara is to go out and have fun and save the crocheting for middle age. And I mean that in the nicest possible way. I want her to learn what I didn't know till it was too late. Clara's creations are little pieces of art. She creates these patterns herself...they are quite brilliant. Not really to be compared to the snowflakes and granny squares I was making. But you are only young once. What was I thinking back then? Mr. Knight in Shining Armor was going to come charging into my living room on his horse and tell me to put down my crochet hook and ride off into the sunset with him? I came to my senses in my early thirties and knew I had to leave the apartment to meet him. I did eventually meet him...and the irony is, when all was said and done, my time probably would have been better spent crocheting! But if anyone reading this is in their twenties and is sitting at home crocheting....stop... put down your hook and yarn and go, get out...out...out! Because when you are middle aged, you'll realize that you should have been having as much fun as possible and crocheting is really not THAT much fun. Of course if someone had given me this advice when I was younger...I wouldn't have listened....especially when I saw things as cute as these... I thought I had my whole life to be out dancing and flirting....but I was wrong....I had my whole life to be at home crocheting. Still....these are pretty irresistible. AmiEggs Tweet
crochet ... satchels ... ~...(via Meštek na centíky by Bunadruhu - SAShE.sk - Handmade Iné doplnky)
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This week I have been tweaking one of my favourite (and most popular designs) to knit it in a finer one ply yarn. I had to make the panels a bit bigger and adjust the stitch counts so that it fitter together properly. I am pleased with the finished result though, the thinner yarn (it was previously 2 ply) looks much more in scale and drapes beautifully on a dolls house bed. Well worth the effort. The bed in the photograph is 5" x 6" in size. www.bitstobuy.co.uk
Today we are learning to crochet a tiny hat. You may ask why we even need to know how to make one. Well, there are
Patroon onderbroekje Baby Born Ik heb dit onderbroekje gehaakt met Soft (Zeeman) en haaknaald 3,5 Haak 30 lossen en 1 kee...
This pattern has been on my list of things to do for a long time, and I think when I have a long list of things to do I get a little restless. I'm really really really good at procrastinating, so much so that I picked the thing on the bottom of my list (DJ Lance Rock) and made him instead of you know, another load of laundry. I have about a million Conan O'Brien dolls to complete, and don't get me wrong, I'm way ahead of schedule on those but it gets a little tedious. So this weekend I took a little break and made a super cool dancing DJ---DJ Lance Rock! I think you'll like making him too, and if you want to start out slow, here's his boombox! BOOMBOX: Front and back (make 2): Using gray yarn and an E hook, ch 16. R1: sc into second stitch from hook and next 14 st, ch 1, turn (15) R2-9: sc into each st, ch 1, turn. Do not ch 1, turn on the last row. Fasten off and leave a long tail. Edge (make 1): Using gray yarn and an E hook, ch 5. R1: sc into second stitch from hook and next 3 st, ch1, turn (4) R2-9: sc into each st, ch 1, turn (4) R10: sc into BLO, ch 1, turn (4) R11-25: sc into each st, ch 1, turn (4) R26: sc into BLO, ch 1, turn (4) R27-34: sc into each st, ch 1, turn (4) R35: sc into FLO, ch 1, turn (4) R36-49: sc into each st, ch 1, turn (4) Do not ch 1, turn on the last row. Fasten off and leave a long tail. Sew edge piece around the front of the boombox. Stitch the back onto the edging, leaving it open to stuff. Stuff with polyester fiber fill, a foam block cut to size, or a stack of polyester batting. Stitch completely closed and hide yarn tail within boombox. Speakers (make 2): Using dark pink yarn and an E hook, make an adjustable ring, ch 1, and sc 6 into ring. Pull closed. R1: 2sc into each st (12) Fasten off and sew speakers to front of boombox. Finishing: Cut a square of black felt to fit the front of the boombox a shown. Stitch a row each of pink, green, yellow, and blue as shown. Stitch across the middle with white yarn. Sew or glue the panel to the front of the boombox. Create a handle for the boombox! Fold a pipecleaner in half and bend into the handle shape. The handle should be almost the length of the boombox. With a very long piece of yarn, wrap the handle all the way around with gray yarn. Stick the handle straight down into the top of the boombox. Sew the pipe cleaner into the boombox by wrapping the base tightly and knotting the yarn, then repeating. DJ Lance is available in my Ravelry shop! If you use this pattern and like it, let me know! I'd love to see your finished boomboxes and DJs! Make sure you link back to me if you share this pattern----thanks :)
CUNA VER PATRÓN 1 31 23 lanas colores guata para el relleno ganchillo y aguja de lana
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Crochet dolls, patterns and love ♥ by Katushka Morozova
PATTERN THE FOOT FOR AMİGURUMİ DOLLS Pattern owner: @sihirlikanca English Translation: @samyelidesign MATERİALS: Yarn: Alize Forever (skin clor)- Hook: 1 mm Yarn: Gazzal Baby Cotton (3412)- Hook: 2,10 mm Fiberfill Electric wire (2,5 mm) ABBREVİATİONS: ch:chain st: stitch mr: magic ring sc: single crochet inc: increase (2 sc in the next st) ( )*6 : Repeat whatever is between the brackets the number of times stated ~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~ 1) Magic ring into 6 sc (6) 2) 6 inc (12) 3) 5 sc, inc, 6 sc (13) 4-8) sc in each st around (13) (5 rnds) 9) 2 sc, 3 sc in the next st, 10 sc (15) 10) 3 sc, 3 sc in the next st, 11 sc (17) 11) 4 sc, 3 sc in the next st, 12 sc (19) 12) 5 sc, 3 sc in the next st, 13 sc (21) 13) sc in each st around (21) 14) 5 sc, skip 1 st, 3 sc, skip 1 st, 11 sc (19) 15) 4 sc, skip 1 st, 3 sc, skip 1 st, 10 sc (17) 16) 3 sc, skip 1 st, 3 sc, skip 1 st, 9 sc (15) 17) 2 sc, skip 1 st, 3 sc, skip 1 st, 8 sc (13) 18) sc, skip 1 st, 3 sc, skip 1 st, 7 sc (11) 19-23) sc in each st around (11) 24) 4 sc, inc, 6 sc (12) 25) 4 sc, inc, 7 sc (13) 26) 5 sc, inc, 7 sc (14) 27) 5 sc, inc, 8 sc (15) 28) 6 sc, inc, 8 sc (16) 29) 6 sc, inc, 9 sc (17) ....... For more, you can follow @sihirlikanca instagram page.