Estes Park Wool Market 2008-3: The Buttons
My polymer clay button classes are always wonderful, but in Estes Park my button class was wonderful and large! They had great fun making buttons and it shows in these pictures.
Columbine Crochet Along
Please join me for the first Crochet Bouquet Crochet Along! This month, we’ll crochet Columbines, and I will post some step-by-step finishing hints for this beautiful flower.
I’m trying to choose flowers for these Crochet Alongs, which have special significance for the month or season of the year.
So how does crocheting Columbines in July make any sense? The Columbine is the state flower of Colorado, which joined the United States on August 1, 1876. I figured if some of us want to celebrate Colorado’s statehood anniversary, we’d better make our Columbines in July.
If you’d like to join, this link will tell you how.
Naturally, I would love for you to use the flower patterns from Crochet Bouquet, but if you prefer a different pattern or if you’ve designed your own, you are absolutely welcome to join in.
You’re welcome to use Columbine Crochet Along badge on your blog or web site. Please save to your own server or photo host, and link the button to this post.
See you there!
Crochet Bouquet Crochet Alongs
Readers–this is an old, old page, which I’m archiving as a blog post. The Yahoo group is no longer active. The links here may not work. Any time you need help with a pattern from any of my books, please contact me at knitandcrochetwithsuzann at outlook dot com. And feel free to organize a flower crochet-along of your own!
Welcome to the Crochet Bouquet Flower Crochet Alongs! I’m Suzann, the author of Crochet Bouquet, and organizer of these Crochet-Alongs. The plan is to crochet flowers and leaves that are featured in Crochet Bouquet, but if you prefer a different pattern or if you design your own, you are absolutely welcome to join in.
To participate, you can simply crochet the flower of the month, or you can join one of the two Crochet Bouquet Along groups. The nice thing about the groups is that you can see other crocheters’ work and join into the group conversations. If you have questions or comments, please post on the Curious and Crafty Readers blog or at our Crochet Bouquet Along groups.
You can click here to join the Crochet Bouquet Along group on Yahoo, OR follow the directions below to join the Crochet Bouquet Along group on Ravelry:
- Join Ravelry by going to http://www.ravelry.com. You have to request an invitation, which should arrive within a week.
- Once you’re on Ravelry, open the “Groups” tab. Search for “Crochet Bouquet Alongs.” [Update: the group is now Knit and Crochet with Suzann], Join the group.
- Start crocheting flowers, asking questions, and making comments! Post photos of your finished flowers and projects, so we can admire them!
Please join in at any time. We are going to do a different flower each month for about a year, starting in July 2008. After that–we’ll see.
I’m hoping to choose flowers that have some significance for the month or season. We’ll concentrate on about one flower each month. Do you have a suggestion for a flower of the month? Please post your suggestion!
You decide how you want to participate. Crochet the flower of the month or any other flower you want. The main idea is to crochet flowers.
Please feel free to save our Crochet Along buttons to your own server, and link back to this page, which is http://www.textilefusion.com/crochet-bouquet-crochet-alongs/
Here’s a tentative schedule:
March 2009: Shamrocks
February 2009: Valentine Roses
January 2009: Sunflowers
November and December 2008: Flowery Gifts
October 2008: Leaves
September 2008: Mumsy
August 2008: Poppy
July 2008: Columbine
Estes Park Wool Market 2008-2
Marilyn was in my Slip Stitch Color Knitting class at Taos a couple of years ago. She knitted her class samples with the most beautiful variegated yarn. She dyed it herself! She was in my button class at Estes Park, too. She travels around with an RV and her doggies, selling her home-grown hand-dyed yarns at fiber festivals.
We bought these beauties from Marilyn, whose business is called Black Hills Woolies. We don’t know yet what we’re going to make with them, but you will be among the first to know. I told Eva we could buy two skeins, so naturally, she said, “Three! Please, Mom. Please? Pleeeeeeeeeeeeease?” Her pleas worked this time, and we bought three.
Marilyn’s yarn colors are so vibrant! Look for her when you go shopping at your local wool festival.
I have been looking forward to seeing the Plain & Fancy Sheep & Wool Company, so I could buy enough yarn to refinish my pansy capelet. Yes, I meant to write “refinish.” I wanted to finish in time for last year’s Taos Wool Festival, so I hurriedly crocheted this little cape.
Then I put it on. It looks terrible on me! Really awful! The solution is to crochet a bunch more pansies, and make a longer, poncho-style cape. In spite of the amazing yardage on this yarn, I needed more.
The problem now is that I have already blocked the cape, and the yarn stretches like crazy! I think I’m going to have to stretch the new yarn before I start crocheting. This could be interesting, so stay tuned.
Don’t feel badly for the capelet. It saw the Rocky Mountains before it was unraveled. With any luck, it will see them again in its next life.
Estes Park Wool Market 2008-1
We loved the Estes Park Wool Market! The weather was cool and nice. We had mountains all around. The smell of food made our mouths water. And then there was the yarn!
Our first view of the Wool Market was these white tents, which turned out to be the animal tents. The vendors were in a big metal building. It was incredibly busy. Amazingly, Eva and I recognized Woolwinder, also known as Tracy, and her husband, John. We knew they were coming, so we were on the look-out–but with so many people?!?! It really was amazing.
Apparently, we both had to travel to Colorado to buy yarn from Plain and Fancy Sheep & Wool Company of Henderson, Texas. After a pleasant chat, John took our picture. I hope you’ll go see it on Woolwinder’s blog. Then we parted ways to do some more shopping.
Eva told me that she liked crocheting pretty well, but she wasn’t sure if it was really her thing. She planned to try lots of different crafts to see what they were like, before settling on a favorite. Hmm. Sounds familiar. Here she is, practicing needle-felting. She enjoyed it and wanted to do more. She also got a rug-hooking sampler kit. I hope she will offer to hook several rugs for me. I really like how they look. Maybe I will drop a few hints.
Ella was much more interested in the animals, especially the alpacas. Here she is, petting a Suri alpaca. I had heard of Suri, but didn’t realize it was a distinct breed of alpaca. It has long, soft locks of hair, instead of the puffed-out wooly look of the other kind of alpaca.
When I visited an alpaca farm a couple of years ago, I commented that each alpaca had its own cool hairdo. But I never saw this style until last weekend. It’s so funny to see those bushy heads of hair on top of the delicately slender necks. And as I work on this post, I see that Woolwinder also thought they were funny.
Next time, I’ll show you the yarn I bought. It’s pretty! I’ll leave you now with this handsome llama. Its owner was grooming it for the show with a blow-dryer. You could tell by how the fur blew around, that it was very soft and light. Stunning.
How Color Happens for Me
Even as a kid, I noticed and admired color. I must have been seven or eight years old, when I decided to study it. Ever since, that’s what I did.
Color inspiration happens all the time, if you just watch for it. I was weaving yarn ends in a few days ago, piling the trimmings together. I glanced at the pile, and wow! The combination of peach and dusty coral and burgundy took my breath away.
I had to crochet some flowers in those colors right away. First, I looked carefully at the scrap pile, to see the proportions of the colors. There was a lot of peach and coral, some variegated yarn, and just a tiny bit of burgundy. Proportions are important.
Large Ray Flowers (page 31) and a Filet Center-or-Not (starts on page 21 of Crochet Bouquet) were perfect for a multi-color experiment. You can change colors however you want, either following the pattern, or following your own instinct.
And when your color instinct talks, listen to it! You’ll find color inspiration in all kinds of places.
Speaking of inspiration, how about this flowery tractor? We saw it in Knox City, Texas.
Patchwork and Daffodil
“Mom, can I use some of your flowers?” has become a frequent refrain around our house. The last time I heard it was a few days ago, when Eva decided to make a handbag for herself.
She decided on the size of the bag and she did all the patchwork on her own. She decorated the finished patchwork with polymer clay buttons and a few crocheted flowers from Crochet Bouquet. I agreed to sew the pieces together for her.
It looks great, doesn’t it?! It’s a true piece of TextileFusion! The daffodil she chose was crocheted with Cascade 220, and then felted.
I am very proud of her. She showed initiative, and she persevered, even though I told her she probably couldn’t finish the purse before we left for our family/working vacation. She proved me wrong. Good for her!
We’re on our round-about way, first to Denver, for a book signing at Showers of Flowers, and then on to Estes Park, Colorado, where I’m going to teach a polymer clay button class.
Though you can’t really tell it, the photo of Eva’s handbag was taken at Soda Dam in New Mexico’s Jemez Valley. It’s a natural dam made from minerals from the hot spring there. The dam is about 300 feet long. Here’s where the river squeezes under the dam. The mineral is travertine, and it was deposited bit by bit as the spring water came out of the earth. Amazing!
Book Signing at Showers of Flowers, Denver
I can hardly wait to visit Showers of Flowers, a fabulous yarn store in Lakewood, Colorado, near Denver. I’ll be signing books there on Tuesday, June 10, from about 6:00 to 9:00 p.m.
How perfect is that?! Signing a book about crocheted flowers at a shop called Showers of Flowers!
People keep telling me how great Showers of Flowers is. It’s amazingly big. It’s comfy. Sharon, the owner, says she never does anything halfway. It’s going to be fun!
I’m going to bring lots of flowers and projects from the Crochet Bouquet, and some that didn’t make it into the book. You’ll see the wonderful flower cape, modeled here by my daughter, Eva.
And I’ll be announcing our first Crochet Along.
Hope to see you there!
For more information, call the store at 1-800-825-2569.
Flower Collage
“Mom, can I use these flowers?” my 12-year-old daughter asked, showing me a plastic bag of bright Off-Center Ovals and single Plump Leaves from Crochet Bouquet.
I said, “Okay.” I didn’t hear a peep out of her for a long time. She emerged from her room with a poster. It was a collage of things she likes, a couple of badges from school, a ribbon she won—and some crocheted flowers.
It was so pretty, and such a good idea for using crocheted flowers, I had to share it with you. I think small, flat flowers would be great decorations for scrapbook pages, too.
Then my 12-year-old did something else that made me very happy. She helped her little sister make a collage, too! They used the Firewheels from the book, and I love how they glued Baby Stars onto a Fern Leaf. It looks very exotic.
The best way to glue a flower or leaf is to paint the glue onto the back with a stiff brush. Be sure to brush the glue all the way to the edges. Then press gently in place on your project. Brushing the glue on helps to avoid globs of glue squeezing out between the stitches.
DFW Fiber Fest 2008-3
My polymer clay button class at DFW Fiber Fest was the best! It was small, but everyone was very enthusiastic. In fact, they were so excited about the buttons they made, they scooped them up and went off to show their friends before I had a chance to take pictures.
Luckily, with a small class, I get to make buttons, too, so I’ll show you mine. We started with the incredibly easy Faux Lapis button (at left). Then we moved on to the easy and colorful swirl button (at right).
For the first time ever in one of my button classes, we did a joint project. We began with a core color, and then each person wrapped the core with different colors. We shared the resulting canes of clay, and made our own buttons. Here are mine.
The afternoon was devoted to polymer patchwork buttons, one of my specialties. Everyone’s patchwork buttons turned out well.
Any polymer project generates scraps, and I like to show how to make use of those scraps. Here are some buttons and beads I made from the patchwork button scraps.
This long piece is made from scraps of our class button project. Most polymer clay folks use this technique to make beads, which they call by several names. I prefer ‘Miracle Beads,’ because you can get such miraculous results. A person can also make buttons with the technique.
I was going to make buttons with this piece, but it turned out so cool, I decided to make it into a pendant. Can you see the kitty? Can you see the butterfly?
My class was most impressed. I told them it was just luck that it turned out that way–if I had chosen a different side to slice, it would have been completely different. They said, “We would have believed you if you had said you planned it that way!”