Archive for the 'DIY Tools' Category

prompting progress…

every year I go through this self analysis and strategic planning phase as the new year aproaches. I look back over the previous year and see where I got off course … and try to make new goals accordingly. There is a lot of that going on right now, and I won’t bore you with it… but I wanted to share one of the results of this years “Think”.

I’m a creative type. could you tell? and the problem with creative types is, usually our interests are a bit scattered…. attention spans are short… there are more things to do in the world than time to do them in. this can, ironically, result in a lack of doing anything. because I can not do the whole dozen things I am inspired to rush off and start right now, I will do none of them… or I will do something familiar and convenient – stagnant. ideas remain unfulfilled because I am frozen in the headlights of choice.

as I was pondering this stumbling block and looking for solutions for the coming year, I started to think about how I’ve handled this in the past. in the past, I would wait until I either had spare time between deadlines or I was bored and looking for a new project/different project.

when those times came, I would sometimes wander into the studio and start pulling open drawers and boxes looking through supplies. usually this would be prompted by a spontaneous bit of cleaning. as I looked through the options of supplies, I would get inspired to play and experiment… but I would be inspired by too many options. I would also usually be stymied by the lack of clear workspace that inspired the spontaneous cleaning to begin with…

other times, when I hit that need to do something (anything) else, I would pull out inspiration/idea journals or start roaming the art bookshelves. again, overload. too many ideas without enough time.

as I was pondering options for overcoming this, I started to think about my alarm program on my laptop. I started entering a few of the larger categories of things I often forget to get back to as prompts to pop up in a few months… but it occurred to me that I might not have the time or right motivation at the randomly selected time of the pop up alarm to make these effective. sure, they would bring things back into the foreground of my awareness… but that might just add stress. not relieve it.

so, what could I do at the time of that restlessness that prompts new action… but wouldn’t cause inspiration overload?  and then it came to me… I use a journal prompts jar to prompt me on topics to explore in my journal… why not a project prompts jar?

as a tool, it fills a lot of the needs of the situation:

  • I can use it to isolate one idea at a time when I need a prompt.

  • if the first prompt isn’t what I need right then, I can choose another.

  • it doesn’t pressure me when I am under deadlines or not available.

  • I can add both large/global concepts and specific small “one-time” projects or unfinished projects.

  • things can be added and removed as needed/desired.

  • it gives me all the pleasure of knowing (and visualizing) that I have many options… without pressuring me with all the things I haven’t done.

in a matter of a few hours, I have 45 project/idea prompts in the jar. I know there will be many more to come. at the moment, I’m keeping an additional list of all the ideas I have added to the jar, so I can remember if something has been added already. eventually, once most things have been added to the jar, I will stop keeping the separate list… if things get added more than once, then obviously they are on my mind… and therefore it would be good for them to come up a bit more often, right?

and now, I can also go and clean up the studio without feeling guilty as I look at all the things I haven’t been utilizing. instead, I can tell myself that I will pick something from the jar… right after I finish clearing up a nice workspace so I can actually do something! and all those things I find along the way… into the jar they go!

and, yes, being the creative type, eventually, the jar will become something decorative and pretty… but for the moment, it is just an old pickle jar with crumpled papers inside (folded papers tend to stick together)… it is more important to have the tool function right now. decorating the jar is just another prompt to add….

Loom To Grow Go

i finally have my first finished weaving project ready ready to show you all. i took my fabric woven on my backstrap loom and turned it into a bag to carry and store the backstrap loom in.

Backstrap Loom Bag

i folded my fabric over lengthwise to make a long thin bag. (i still have a nice chunk of leftover fabric) the top is rolled over twice to create a channel for the drawstring.

Backstrap Loom Bag

after i sewed the bag and tested the loom inside, i decided that the bottom could use some reinforcement… the weight of the loom bits but a fair bit of stress on the bottom. so i sewed a cap for the bottom from denim (recycled from the same pair of jeans as the make do and mend pillow) and added a denim strap.

Backstrap Loom Bag Backstrap Loom Bag

the drawstring is made from the alternate color of yarn i used in the final bit of weaving (not used in the bag) and another blue yarn held double on my new lucet. the tassels were made from the extra warp threads left when the cloth came off the loom. i added a clip so that the drawstring doesn’t need to be tied and untied all the time.

i am extremely happy with it. i had a few issues learning to sew with handwoven cloth (and had to fudge it a bit at times), but for a first project it pleases me to no end! i already have identified a few issues i would change if i were to do it again (the strap could have been a touch longer… and the bottom cap should have been a bit taller), but they don’t make me love it any less.

to read about the weaving of this bag, check out the Backstrap Weaving and Off the Loom posts

So, do you Lucet?

Congratulations to Carol! Random.org picked her as the winner of the lucet made by Paul. (btw, i also mixed up the order of the names of folks who commented during the last 2 weeks to help with the randomness before assigning numbers to everyone and letting the RNG have it’s go.)

i had hoped to confirm with Carol before posting on here… but i haven’t heard back from her. maybe she isn’t getting my email. Carol, if you are reading this, i’ll need to know where to send the lucet!

Sock Patching…

i’ve always hated darning. really hated it. i don’t know why… but it just really causes a mental block for me. socks go into the darning pile, maybe get a row of darning started… and then don’t come out. i got to the point where i didn’t have any hand knit socks to wear because they were all in the darning pile. my solution, make sock knitting for me a priority! i would rather knit a whole new pair than darn!

so i have always perked my ears up at talk of other ways to fix socks… i’ve been hunting for a good replaceable sole pattern option… but then i heard about someone using the little 2″ Weavettes for sock patches!

well, i couldn’t find any 2″ looms for sale. i did find a 4″ Hazel Rose multi-loom at Stitches West 2009. i used it to learn the threading technique, etc. but one thing became immediately apparent… the sett on these types of little hand held looms is way to loose a weave for sock patching. so, off to make my own!

DIY Sock Patch Loom

the sett on my little loom is 10 EPI. this is very tight with the 18 gauge nails i had… but it is workable. and it is worth the effort. the nails so close together caused the wood to split a tiny bit, which made the holes loose. after weaving several patches, a few nails came loose… so i just glued them back into place. when that seemed to hold them well through more weaving (while others came loose) i decided (after the photo shoot) to add a bit of glue along the whole line of nails where they met the wood. not as pretty as could be, but it solved the loose nail problem.

DIY Sock Patch Loom DIY Sock Patch Loom DIY Sock Patch Loom

and how does it work with my sock darning block? well, every single sock from the mending pile has been patched! (except the pair with the ribbed sole that needs to be darned in ribbing…) i haven’t worn them in shoes yet.. but without shoes around the house, i can’t really feel the patches unless i’m paying attention and trying to. i had expected a bit more bulk feeling than that. they look a little bulkier than darning does… and i can always feel the thicker darned area. i think i am going to really love this method!

Sock Patches

Got Lucet?

Lucet

My sweet husband, Paul, made me a new toy. it’s a Lucet… a Viking tool for making braided cord. it is the ancestor of spool knitting… if you only had two pegs on your knitting spool, this is what you’d have. it creates a square cord with a column of knit stitches on each side of the square. very useful for making strong non-stretchy cords. i can see lots of drawstrings, shoelaces, etc in my future!

here’s a very helpful video on how to use a lucet.

and now, a little contest to see who is reading my blog :) i know there aren’t very many of you out there… but i was curious who was. so, you have until July 25th to leave a comment letting me know you read my blog. on the 25th, i’ll use a random number generator to pick a winner for a lucet just like mine made by Paul.

Lucet

Backstrap Weaving

Backstrap Weaving - Tofutsies

for my birthday this year, my wonderful friend Ruth gave me a backstrap loom made from a Schact rigid heddle.here’s a pic of the heddle on it’s own…

Schact rigid heddle

Ruth taught me how to warp it up with TOFUtsies, and i’ve been happily learning to weave. i’m just doing a plain weave in the full width of the heddle… my selvages are atrocious! but they are getting better as i go along. i’m planning to sew this first weaving into a bag that will hold all the loom pieces or weaving in progress in the future.

Backstrap Weaving - Tofutsies

i promise i will get pics of the finished weaving before and after sewing it into the bag. it’s almost finished weaving, so it shouldn’t be long now… now i’m getting excited thinking about what i should weave next…

You make the world go round…

I’m playing in a swap that the Ankh-Morpork Knitters Guild over on Ravelry is hosting…. The Discworld “I’m just sending this box so my partner can have cardboard for their boots and I was guilted into putting stuff in it” Swap. i’ll be posting more about it after i send the box out. but i was just too excited to not share this:

The Discworld Spindle
Discworld Swap - Spindle

(i am growing very attached to this. i need to make another one for me very soon!)

1/4” dowel, cup hook, doorskin disk cut with a hole saw, and polymer clay. i used the doorskin* disk as a base to build the clay on and give it strength.

it spins nicely… thanks to the counterweight continent, lol.

Discworld Swap - Spindle

*(doorskin is a 1/8″ thick plywood used in the making of hollow core doors. it is one of my favorite art materials.)