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~ warp, weave, be happy!

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Tag Archives: craft

“Painted” Yarn

16 Wednesday May 2012

Posted by Jennifer Williams a.k.a. inkledpink in Projects

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

color, craft, eric carle, markers, martha stewart show, painted warp, perle cotton, warp, yarn

What’s so faux about this painted yarn?

I didn’t use paint! Nope. What did I use?

Permanent markers!

On a recent episode of The Martha Stewart Show she made a “tie-dye” t-shirt with a technique using Sharpie Markers and rubbing alcohol (see it here). My creativity lightbulb went off! “Can I do that on yarn?” The answer is YES!

I have Bic brand permanent markers instead of Sharpie, but they worked just fine. When I finished the yarn, the colors I chose looked so good together. Then I realized I used a Bic Color Collection set of markers. They were made to go together! There was no way I could mess up the color combinations.

So, following Martha’s directions, with slight variations, I made my first “painted” warp.

Wrap a piece of cardboard parchment paper. I wrapped one of my 2 year old’s books like a present (it was the perfect size and no harm came to it!), waxy side out. I did also slip a piece of paper towel under the yarn, to absorb any excess color. Heaven for bid, Eric Carle’s “From Head to Toe” be ruined! Doesn’t the paper towel look pretty too?

Wrap white 10/2 perle cotton around the covered book as many time as necessary to get the length of yarn you want. I wrapped about 35 times.

Start coloring! Color in 1″ – 2″ sections with slight gaps of white showing between each color. Stop after every few colors and add a few drops of alcohol at the edges of the colors. I found the colors blended better when the ink was still wet. Tip: I didn’t have an eyedropper, but a cotton swab dipped in the alcohol and dabbed on the yarn worked just fine.

Unwrap the yarn and let it dry after you’ve finished having fun coloring, and it is will be fun. (Your fingers might get a little stained at this part.)

Put the yarn in a small bowl filled with white vinegar to set the color. Let it sit for about 10 minutes, rinse, put it in a small bowl with clean water (no soap) and let it sit for 10 more minutes, rinse. (You may want to repeat the rinsing process until the water in the bowl is clear. Although, I did not because I was too impatient to see the end results.)

Remove the excess water by rolling the yarn in paper towel.

Heat set it. I threw my yarn in the dryer in a lingere bag, but you could use an iron on a work surface that you don’t mind getting a little ink on, like an old towel or sheet.

Once it was heat set, I only noticed a small amount of color on my fingers, but I think that is because I used red. You know how red is! And, I only rinsed it in water once.

So there you have it; a faux “painted warp”. It will be fun to weave something with it! What do you think? If you give it a try, please do let me know how it turns out.

warp, weave, be happy! ~Jennifer

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Inkle Origami Mobile

26 Thursday Apr 2012

Posted by Jennifer Williams a.k.a. inkledpink in Projects, Tutorials

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aleene's glue, craft, embroidery floss, fish, inkle origami, mobile, stash

My thought after I made my inkle origami fish last week was, “Great, that worked, and they’re cute, now what do I do with these fish?”

Then it hit me: an inkle origami mobile!

Inkle Origami Mobile

Inkle Origami Mobile

Fish out of water!

I’ve wanted to make a mobile forever. The fish gave me the perfect opportunity. This project made me very thankful that I have tried so many crafts and am a collector of crafty supplies.

From my stash I grabbed:

  • an embroidery hoop that I bought at an estate sale
  • embroidery floss from my overflowing bin
  • a spool of beading nylon cord
  • dyed shell pendant beads
  • a spool of “invisible” nylon thread
  • my go to glue: Alene’s Tacky Glue

To make the mobile, I:

1) Hung the fish from the beading nylon cord and tied them to the inner ring of the embroidery hoop, spaced evenly.

2). Put the hoop back together, catching the tied nylon between the inner and outer hoops, and wrapped the whole hoop with embroidery floss.Inkle Origami Embroidery Hoop

3) Tied the shells to the fish cords with the invisible thread, randomly spaced.

Inkle Origami Mobile Shell Beads

4) Tied 4 lengths of floss to the hoop at the top, spaced evenly, gathered them together so it was level and tied a loop to hang it from.Inkle Mobile Embroidery Hoop Close-up

This can be customized so many ways: with more fish, more beads, tassels, hanging the fish evenly or unevenly, or even using a bigger or smaller hoop. Sky’s the limit!

Now where to put it? Should it be new décor for our son’s room, or for my creative room? Hmmm.

warp, weave, be happy! ~Jennifer

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Inkle + Origami

22 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Jennifer Williams a.k.a. inkledpink in Projects

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

craft, earth day, inkle, inkle band, inkle origami, needlepoint, origami, projects, rivers, Weaving

One of the first crafts I learned as a child was origami. I have enjoyed it for many years and thought it would be interesting to pair origami and inkle weaving. Yup, inkle origami. Probably two words not often said together, let alone done together. To commemorate Earth Day, I decided to try my hand at making origami goldfish.

Inkle Origami Goldfish

I have a few origami books, but the best and easiest instructions I found were in a wonderful post on the blog Nan: Now and Next. I folded these paper goldfish using her directions.

Even if you don’t want to make origami goldfish, her post is more than worth reading. It is also a touching post in honor of her Grammy. I’m going to try that Dr. Pepper float, and I don’t even like Dr. Pepper!

Inkle Goldfish meet Paper Goldfish

To make the goldfish I sewed together 4 pieces of a 1″ wide band cut 4″ long to make a 4”x4” square; using a zigzag stitch to join the selvedges, then sewed a straight stitch across the fringe edges (very short stitch length to catch the all the ends).

Next, I saturated the square with spray starch and ironed it to make it stiff, but still foldable. Each time I made another fold I added spray starch then ironed. Tip: If you spary over wax or parchment paper, you can dip the folds in the overspary caught by the paper so you don’t waste your starch.

The eyes are french knots stitched with needlepoint floss. Fish have blue eyes, right?

The only modification I made to Nan’s pattern was to the tail. Instead of cutting the tail I just folded it up and pulled it back a little to make it stand. I didn’t want to cut the bands and have fraying.

Do they look like origami fish or am I just wanting them to? I’ve been looking at them way too long.

warp, weave, be happy!

~Jennifer

An Earth Bit:

To quote my son’s book, Little Helpers, “When I turn off the faucet while brushing my teeth there is more water for the fish in the rivers.” My inkle goldfish are not suiting up to go for a swim in the river, but we are teaching our son to conserve water for the fish that do and for all of us who depend on accessible clean water. Here is a list of 100 Ways to Conserve Water.

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The Gift That Inkle Saved

16 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Jennifer Williams a.k.a. inkledpink in Design, Projects

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

border, craft, DMC floss, gift, inkle, inkle band, pillow, piping, projects, sew, silk

What gift should I give to dear friends celebrating their 7th wedding anniversary? Hmmm… Oh, wait, I know, how about the gift I started making for them 7 years ago for their wedding and never finished!

Here it is ready to be wrapped.

The back.

Why did this pillow take me so long to complete? Because I can embroider, sew basic straight seams, but I can’t sew piping! Sometimes my ideas are bigger than my abilities and I can fake it ’til I make. Not this time.

I had such high hopes for this gift. My friends are bird watchers, so embroidering birds was an obvious theme. The pillow is made of the same color dupioni silk as the dresses that the bridesmaids wore. Perfect, right?

Nope. This project went so wrong.

I ripped it apart, sewed it again, apart, sew, apart, sew, until, out of frustration, I put it in a box and there it stayed. For seven years. I thought of it every year around their anniversary, but my skills had not changed and neither did the state of the pillow.

What the pillow was waiting for was for me to learn how to inkle weave. An inkle band added the perfect finish to what I couldn’t achieve before.

I wove the band with DMC embroidery floss, which gave the band a pretty sheen that matches the silk, then sewed it to the front piece. The design of the pillow is a little different than I initially planned; it was supposed to be a removeable pillow case, but I lost some material taking the piping off again, so it is stitched closed on all sides.

I’m very happy with how it turned out and that it is FINALLY finished. I hope they like it.

Happy anniversary you guys! May you have 7 years times infinity more.

warp, weave, be happy!

Jennifer

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Try Your Hand at Inkle Gardening

06 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Jennifer Williams a.k.a. inkledpink in Projects, Tutorials

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Aleene's glue, batting, carrot, craft, green, inkle, inkle band, needlepoint, orange, projects, rabbit, sew, stash, stitch, stuffing, tatting, tutorial, weave, Weaving

How cute are these little carrots?!

With my non-green thumb, these are the only carrots I can grow – besides, I’m not all that crazy about digging in the dirt. I had a blast designing them. Quick and easy, they are a great stash buster, ok, really they didn’t even make a dent in my stash but, I did use yarn that I had on hand. Carrots come in a rainbow of colors, so use the yarn you have!

If you “grow” your own carrots do let me know how they turn out. I’d love to see pictures and if I get enough I will do a garden post!

You will need:

Materials

  • 1”wide inkle band at least 18” long

*(a little wider or narrower is okay) with two shades of orange 10/2 or 8/2 perle cotton, tatting yarn, or needlepoint yarn. 8/2 perle cotton and needlepoint yarn are a bit thick but will work.

*The carrot in the rabbit’s arms is woven using needlepoint yarn and the other two are woven with both 10/2 perle cotton and tatting yarn.

  • green worsted or sport weight yarn
  • cotton or poly stuffing batting
  • woven fusible interfacing
  • straight pins
  • needle and matching thread (forgot to put in picture –oops!)
  • scissors
  • glue (Alene’s tacky)
  • ruler
  • fine felt-tip marker

Equipment

  • sewing machine (very helpful but optional – can be sewn completely by hand)
  • iron
  • ironing board

Have fun!

I hope you enjoyed the first Inkled Pink tutorial! Don’t forget: show me what you come up with – I’d love to see!

warp, weave, be happy!

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