My Poinsettia Cross-Stitch Picture was featured in the Holiday issue of Craft Ideas. It's a great magazine that features all kinds of crafts--jewelry, painting, paper crafts, crochet, knitting, crafts for kids, and, of course, cross-stitch.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Monday, December 15, 2014
Crocheted Icicle Garland
Aside from early adventures with crayons and construction
paper, crochet was the first craft I learned. I think I was seven when my
grandmother patiently guided me through a pot holder made from gray Aunt
Lydia's Rug Yarn. This sparkly crocheted garland is even easier to make than a
pot holder--and, I think, a lot prettier. If you can chain stitch and count,
you have all the skills you need.
You can find plastic "crystal" teardrop beads like the ones shown here at a craft store. I used purple embroidery floss and a size 10 steel crochet hook, but you can use crochet thread and a hook of your choice. Just make sure the point of the hook fits through the hole in the beads.
To make the garland, chain 50 stitches and add a bead: push the point of the hook through the bead's hole, wrap the crochet thread around the hook, and then pull it back through the hole and through the stitch on the hook. Chain 30 and add another bead. That's all there is to it. Keep chain-stitching and adding beads until the garland is the length you want (or, like me, you run out of beads). End the garland with 50 chain stitches. Hang your finished "icicle" garland on your Christmas tree or drape it around a mirror or window.
Tip: To keep the garland from tangling, wrap it around a cardboard tube for storage.
Labels:
Christmas crafts,
crochet
Monday, December 8, 2014
Embroidered Pine Balsam Sachet
The first step in making the sachet is the embroidery. You
can follow the chart below as a guide and choose the shades of green floss you like.
I used 18-count antique white Aida and two strands of DMC embroidery floss in
Dark Fern Green (520), Fern Green (522), and Light Blue Green (3813). The design
is worked in straight stitches, and I think the trees look best if you work the
trunks first and then add the branches. To layer the trees as they are in the
picture, work the tall trees first, the small trees second, and the medium
trees last. When the embroidery is finished, trim the fabric, leaving five rows
of Aida around the design.
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| Pine Forest Sachet Chart ©2014 Kathleen Berlew |
Now it's time to make the pillow. Cut two rectangles of felt
and use sewing thread or a single strand of floss to sew the embroidery piece
to the center of one of them. Use the Aida grid as a guide and stitch two rows
in from the outer edge. Be sure to sew through the Aida threads and not just
the holes so the fabric doesn't unravel when you create the fringe.
And that's the next step. When the embroidery is stitched
securely to the felt, gently pull away the outer row of Aida threads on all
four sides. This creates a pretty fringed border around the design.
Assembling the sachet is the easiest part of the project.
Pin the two felt pieces together, wrong sides facing, and sew them together. I
used blanket stitch, but running stitch will work too. Leave an opening at the
bottom, fill the sachet with pine balsam, and stitch the opening closed.
Labels:
Christmas crafts,
cross-stitch,
sachets
Monday, December 1, 2014
Tiny Tree Pins
I made a forest of these tiny felt tree pins last Christmas.
They're simple, fast, and cute--my favorite kind of craft. And, at just about
two inches tall, they're a great project for using up scraps of felt.
To make each tree, cut two triangles from the felt color of
your choice. I made the pins shown here in a mod palette of bright pink and
neon green, but I've also made them in traditional green and red. Decorate one
triangle with buttons, beads, sequins, and simple embroidery. Be sure to leave
a narrow border around the embellishments so you'll have enough room to stitch
the tree pieces together.
Be warned: these little trees are addictive. If you're like
me, you'll want to try all kinds of color and embellishment combinations.
Labels:
Christmas crafts,
felt crafts
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