But would it go through a car wash and not have its drawers drooping?
Flickr user, Start the Day, shares this fun sight caught out on the streets of Rome.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Monday, July 12, 2010
Knitted Wire and Beaded Bracelet
Attempting to make a bracelet with about two hundred 4-10mm glass beads, I was hung up on a technique relating to securing the beads to a flat surface. This video was helpful:
and here was good information and a free pattern to make another attractive bracelet.
With stretchy cord in hand, the first attempt was too bulky. Rip. Out it went.
Below is a picture of the final cuff. It was made in a similar manner to that found free at this site. Not only did I end up knitting on size 3 needles and copper wire, but also added embroidery floss crocheted edges.
and here was good information and a free pattern to make another attractive bracelet.
With stretchy cord in hand, the first attempt was too bulky. Rip. Out it went.
There was another attempt at beading a bracelet, but the fiber was polyester, too thick to easily bead, and too glitzy:
A third attempt at beading yet another bracelet using waxed weaving floss (a small diamater orange macrame thread) resulted in this clash of colors:
Below is a picture of the final cuff. It was made in a similar manner to that found free at this site. Not only did I end up knitting on size 3 needles and copper wire, but also added embroidery floss crocheted edges.
At Spun Magazine, the author of this pattern says:
If you are one of those knitters that has to touch every yarn you see (and owns a good bit of it), then you probably look at the myriads of beads on the market with an envious eye. All of those colors and textures are just begging to be tried. But – how can you possibly knit with every yarn and learn to bead at the same time? Here’s a logical solution: knit with beads.
Like you, I like to try new ideas, but so many seem to take too long to learn or too much of an investment. That is what led me to design a beaded bracelet that a beginner knitter could do with expert results. While knitting jewellery is a bit more tedious, in just a couple of hours you will have a piece that costs hundreds of dollars at a jewellery show (and you can say you knit your original yourself).
There are thousands of beads: glass, crystal, gemstone, clay, wood, etc. Any of which could be incorporated into a unique piece of jewellery, but for a basic bracelet (shown here in blue topaz, crystal quartz, and aquamarine) I recommend beads approximately 4mm in size.Give it a go and made a beaded bracelet, if you have the will. It is not a project for the faint of heart. I'm thinking that was my last beaded bracelet knit with wire the size of dental floss.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Faces in the Garden
Today's blog title was unabashedly stolen taken from a similar post by a fellow blogger who writes Awake with Charm & Spirit. Please go to her link and see some beautiful photography in her garden. I would show it here, but it is copyrighted.
Kiki's posting back in June made me think of the many faces in my garden, so with digital camera in hand, I searched in my garden early yesterday morning. This is what I found:
A Mother Mouse and Baby in a pot of flowers on the patio, and this:
A turtle and a toadstool in with ground cover. And,
this Laughing Girl was with some marigolds was right out in plain sight.
In fact, I found so many faces (and even forgot to take a picture of the rooster's face on the weathervane), that I made this video of Faces in the Garden:
Music: " Heavenly Day" by Patty Griffin
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