Crochet Charm Lace Along: Choosing Motifs
For Crochet Charm Lace, you need crochet motifs, like flowers and leaves. Naturally, I’d love for you to use patterns from my books. There are lots of other motifs to choose from, from birds and butterflies to sea creatures.
With all that choice, what do you do?
You can choose lots of different motifs, for a look the doily above, which I made some years ago for an article at crochetinsider.com.
You can choose a major motif and one or two accent motifs. The main motif from the pink Flower Cloth Scarf (see previous post) is the Twirl Center Rose; Paisley is the accent motif. Find patterns for both these motifs in Crochet Garden.
Or you can strike a balance between the two: several motifs, like in this sample where you see all the variations of Center-or-Not and the Plain Veined Leaf from Crochet Bouquet.
For my Crochet Charm Lace Along project, a table runner, I am going with option 2. After some trial and error, I decided to use the two variations of Perspective Daisy, along with lots of filler circles. At first it was also going to have leaves, but that didn’t work out.
Filler circles are meant to fill in the awkward spaces between motifs that are too small to fit a regular motif into, but too large to be acceptable. Filler circles are one round of sc, hdc, or dc. You will probably make lots of these. Tiny motifs work well for this, too.
On November 5, 2013, look for “Make a Template and Crochet Motifs.”
Crochet Charm Lace Along—Choosing Yarn
You’ve seen the pink Flower Cloth Scarf in Crochet Garden. You’ve seen the Roses Poncho.
“I want to do that, but I’m not sure how to get started!” you may be saying. Anyway, I hope you’re saying that, because I have been wanting to do a Crochet Charm Lace Along for a long time.
To make our Crochet Charm Lace projects, we will:
- Choose yarns and motifs.
- Crochet the motifs, weave in ends, and block.
- Arrange the motifs on a fabric template (it won’t be part of the final project). The template can be any shape. You choose how to arrange the motifs.
- Turn motifs face-down and safety-pin in to the template.
- Using yarn or thread, sew the motifs together wherever they touch.
- Remove safety-pins and turn your project right-side-up.
A reasonably-sized Crochet Charm Lace project, like a scarf or table mat, may take you around 3 weeks to a month, if you work steadily, a little each day. With the holiday season almost here, it seems that the end of January might be a good end date for us.
So let’s begin!
Choose yarns.
You can use any fiber, texture, or size of yarn. Why? Because you are making separate motifs and they don’t have to be any particular size. Okay, that’s a little too much choice for a lot of us. Here are a couple of suggestions for you:
- If you want to use lots of textures and sizes of yarn, then choose a limited color palette. See the Pink Scarf above.
- If you want to use lots of colors, then limit the textures and sizes of the yarn. The Trillium Scarf above is a good example. It is made with only one kind of yarn.
I am making a table mat for my Crochet Charm Lace Along project. My container of orange yarns is overflowing, so I pulled out lots of textures and weights of orange yarn.
It was a lot of orange. For a little relief, green seemed to be the answer. Here’s the orange, with and without the green.
This is a great project for using up yarn leftovers. Have a look through your stash and see what you can come up with!
On November 1, 2013, look for “Choosing Motifs.”
Halloween Success
My friend Marie, who is an excellent quilter and hostess, had the perfect pumpkin button to finish off my Candy Cornflower. Most impressive was the fact that she knew exactly where it was. Thank you, Marie!
I pinned the Candy Cornflower to my shirt and wore it all Halloween day at the International Quilt Festival in Houston. Like many of the people there, I enjoyed being with friends, shopping for craft supplies, and seeing thousands of gorgeous quilts.
Now that Halloween is done for the year, I hope you’ll consider crocheting the Candy Cornflower in different colors. Pattern in Crochet Garden.
Candy Cornflower Crochet Along with Improvements
It’s almost Halloween, and we still have a couple of days to crochet some Candy Cornflowers!
The idea for these flowers came straight from my childhood, when candy corn was practically a food group at Halloween. It’s called corn, so it must be a…veggie?
The pattern for “Candy Cornflower” is on pages 124-125 of Crochet Garden. Round 1 is pretty easy.
Things get more interesting in Round 2, where you create a common popcorn stitch to start the petals.
But first, how do you start a round with 6 hdc? To start the round with hdc, make a slipknot on your hook, yo, and draw up a loop in the first ch-2 sp as directed (Photo A). Yo again and draw through all 3 loops on hook to finish the first hdc (Photo B). Work remaining 5 hdc in same ch-2 space.
To popcorn-join this group of 6 hdc, enlarge the last loop of the last stitch. Take hook out of loop. Insert hook into the top of the first stitch of the group, then reinsert it into the last loop (Photo C). Pull the last loop through the top of the first st to complete popcorn (Photo D).
Before you start any petal after Rnd 2, take time to identify the stitches of the previous round, which you will be working into. And remember, in Crochet Garden, unless otherwise directed, each stitch (or stitches) goes into the next stitch of the previous round.
In Round 3, fourth line of pattern, change “petals of rnd 1” to “petals of rnd 2.” Unlike your usual popcorn stitch pattern, in this round, you work into the stitches of the previous popcorn, skipping the first and last hdc of each petal, for a total of 8 hdc per petal. The sts of these petals are also pulled together as you would join a common popcorn stitch (Photo E).
When you’re finished with Round 3, the underside of the flower looks like Photo F.
Since Crochet Garden was published, I have crocheted the Candy Cornflower several times, making what I hope are improvements to the pattern along the way. Here are my rewritten Rounds 4-6.
Improved Candy Cornflower Rnd 4: Ch 2 (counts as first hdc), hdc in next st, (2 hdc) in next st, hdc in next 2 sts, (2 hdc) in next st, hdc in next 2 sts, popcorn-join this group of 10 sts, ch 6. *Starting in first st of next petal, hdc in next 2 sts, (2 hdc) in next st, hdc in next 2 sts, (2 hdc) in next st, hdc in next 2 sts, popcorn-join this group of 10 sts, ch 6; rep from * 5 times, join with sl st to first hdc of rnd. Fasten off C. (Photos G and H show underside and topside of Candy Cornflower after this round.)
Improved Candy Cornflower Rnd 5: Join D with *hdc in first hdc of next petal, hdc in next st, (2 hdc) in next st, hdc in next 4 sts, (2 hdc) in next st, hdc in next 2 sts, popcorn-join this group of 12 sts, ch 4, sl st in next ch-6 sp, ch 4; rep from * 6 times, join with sl st to first hdc of rnd.
Improved Candy Cornflower Rnd 6: *Sk 3 sts of next petal, working in back loop only, (hdc2tog) 3 times, ch 1, sl st in next ch-4 sp, ch 2, sl st in next ch-4 sp, ch 1; rep from * 6 times, join with sl st to first st of rnd. This rnd bends to the back forming the top of the candy corn motif. Photo I shows Rnd 9 in progress.
Weave in the ends, block gently, and you have a Candy Cornflower!
One last note, in Crochet Garden, I mentioned that candy corn makes excellent false teeth and fangs. Two lovely models demonstrate in the photo below.
Third Time is the Charm OR Fallen Arches
After Charles and the kids built the arched window for our well-house, they pulled the wooden arch form out of the opening. We had ourselves a window! Here they are, posing in a totally (or should I say “toats?”) teenager fashion for the photo.
So with this good memory glowing in my mind, when Rachel and I finished this interior arch on the house, I said, “Let’s pull out the form and see the arch!”
The form caught a little on the earthen brick, so I tapped it gently with the hammer. Slowly it moved out from under the arch. Finally it came free from the arch and…
…the arch tumbled down!
Okay, okay. That was bad. I think the problem was that we tapped the arch form out instead of lowering it and then pulling it out. Well, we did lower it as much as we could, but it was catching on a little lip of earthen block at the bottom, so it wouldn’t lower enough.
Stoically, we vowed to rebuild it next time we worked. And we did. We finished just as Charles brought a couple of colleagues over to look at the house. “Charles, will you help us get this form out?” we asked. He did, because he’s a helpful guy and having more than two people for the job is best.
We removed the shims, we unscrewed the frame from the uprights and removed them. Charles gently lowered the arch form. He quickly realized he had better step out of the way, because…
…the arch tumbled down!
Charles’s colleague, Alex, has read widely about early Mexican and Native American building techniques. The literature of the time describes how people would glance up and scuttle hurriedly under freshly-built arches. “I can see now why they might have done that,” he commented.
We agreed that next time we built the arch, we would leave the form in for a couple of weeks. So we did. The arch is fine. The mud we used as mortar to hold the arch bricks together just needed time to cure. And here it is, sometime later, finished and ready for us to pour the bond beam on top of the wall.
Inspiration from Highlights
My daughters reread their past issues of Highlights for Children, so copies of the magazine are often sprinkled around the house. I admit I reread them, too, and always look for the hidden pictures. It’s such a fun publication.
In the spring of 2011 I was working hard to finish the last few designs for Crochet Garden. The deadline loomed. The large and unusual flower called Rafflesia was on my list as a possibility for the book. “Should I make a Rafflesia?” I asked myself again and again.
To delay having to answer my own question, I opened the nearest copy of Highlights. And there was an article called “This Flower Stinks!” about the Rafflesia.
I felt this was a sign that I should definitely make the Rafflesia. My version doesn’t stink, thank goodness. If you make it from bulky yarn, you can use it as a bowl for candies! I call mine Rafflesita, because it is a much smaller version of the original flower.
Thank you, Highlights!
Kitchen Lintel
Building a house can play games with your mind. It’s about space and defining space. It’s about seeing the trees over the wall one week, and barely seeing the tops of the trees over the much taller wall a couple of weeks later.
I like the game of opening up a space in the wall for a window. Suddenly you can see through the wall. As you build the wall higher, it becomes a frame around the outside scene. It’s an open-ended frame with unlimited potential. It could grow tall enough to frame the heavens.
The sensible lintel puts an end to all that romantic thinking. It caps the potential, it closes the frame. This is not a sad thing, though. It just focuses your attention on a certain view.
The lintel seems dominant when you install it. As you build the wall over the lintel, its visual impact gets smaller and smaller. Once the windows are in, you hardly notice the lintel.
Cover for New Book
You’ve probably heard the old saying, “Never judge a book by its cover.” Most people ignore this advice. A book’s cover is extremely important. Publishers analyze, fret over, and redesign book covers for maximum selling impact.
I love the covers that Lark Crafts designed for Crochet Bouquet and Crochet Garden, so I was eager to see what they came up with for Cute Crochet World.
The first glimpse I had of any of my book covers was on Amazon.com. And today was the day for Cute Crochet World! I saw it on the Amazon link here at the blog. Right away I clicked the link to see a larger view.
The cover is posted here for your convenience, though I wouldn’t mind if you clicked on the Amazon.com link!
Let’s say this is the cover for now. Sometimes they change. Fun!
House Building Update
In Summer 2012, my daughter Eva and her friends Beth and Tim worked with me to build walls for our Compressed Earth Block house. We finished the wall with four windows in it: two windows for each daughter’s bedroom. Then we moved on to the kitchen wall, which we were able to build about 5 feet tall before school started and took away my helpers.
In September 2012 the house looked like this. Here’s the southern wall, which is the longest wall in the house, measuring 80 feet. About 68 of those feet are made with earthen block. Charles and the teenagers and I installed the lintels ourselves. We rigged up a pulley, but still needed to guide and lift the heavy pieces with our own muscles.
Here’s that 4-window wall from the inside. Looking at this photo fills me with nostalgia! The place looks so different now. I’m glad we have photos to remind us of how the house developed.
Moving around to the northwest corner, you can see wooden frames around the top of the wall. Present day earthen buildings usually have a reinforced concrete bond beam along the top of the walls. Our bond beam is about 4″ tall, but since the walls are 2 feet thick, we used a lot of concrete.
Charles, our friend Brittney, and I poured this part of the bond beam one autumn day in 2011, using thirty-two 80-pound bags of concrete. A motorized conveyor that brought buckets of concrete up to scaffold level. But our muscles got a workout, carrying buckets from the mixer to the conveyor and lifting the buckets from the conveyor to the top of the walls.
Finally, here’s the northeast corner, an L-shaped section of wall nearly 80 feet long. Once we finished the rest of the house, this little section would seem like a breeze. You can see our stacks of bricks, all sorted by thickness, which varies with the moisture content of the soil. The blue thing is our brick machine, made by AECT, Inc. of San Antonio. Here’s a better photo of it:
Crochet Charm Lace is a New Name for Flower Cloth
Formerly known as Flower Cloth, Crochet Charm Lace is made of separately crocheted motifs, fitted together and pinned, right-side-down, on a waste-fabric template, then sewn together wherever they touch. The fabric is removed and the lace turned right-side-up.
Why the new name? My new book, Cute Crochet World, has lots of motifs that are perfect for the Flower Cloth technique, but they’re not flowers.
The inspiration for Crochet Charm Lace came partly from the quilting world. A charm quilt is patchwork, where every patch is from a different fabric. Since you can use yarns in different weights, colors, and textures, the “charm” part of the name seemed to make sense. I call it “lace” because the fabric has spaces that let the light shine through.
The first Crochet Charm Lace project I made was the enormous Rose Poncho. I crocheted dozens of Oval Center Roses, Simple Fives, and Rose Leaves (from Crochet Bouquet). For a template, I sewed a poncho using a commercial poncho pattern and some unfortunatey ugly fabric. I pinned the motifs to the template. Sewing all those motifs together took forever!
This doughnut-shaped doily is true to the “charm” aspect of Crochet Charm Lace, because of the many different yarns in the project. Find step-by-step photos and instructions at http://crochetinsider.com/article/crocheted-flower-fabric. All the motifs are from Crochet Bouquet.
The Trillium Flower Scarf is made from motifs from Crochet Garden. You can see step-by-step photos for putting the scarf together here.