Sexy Halter Top by Maz Kwok
Free Crochet Pattern Here

Origami Around
trying on a metaphor

if i look back, i am lost
Sweet Seals For You, Always
official daine visual archive
h

No title available
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Kiana Khansmith
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
almost home
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Discoholic 🪩

pixel skylines
Today's Document
KIROKAZE
we're not kids anymore.
RMH

Andulka

oozey mess
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Netherlands

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Brunei

seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Ukraine

seen from United States
@b3crochet-blog
Sexy Halter Top by Maz Kwok
Free Crochet Pattern Here
Broken Stripes Dishcloth by The Unraveled Mitten
Free Crochet Pattern Here
For later
Is it normal for aces to hate their body (mostly what’s most sexualized in media)? I think I might have dysphoria but I’m not sure.
We get a lot of asks that empathize with you. So yes, I think it’s common.
- Fae
Same here. What really annoys me is when my family says stuff like “I can’t believe the biggest breasts in the family are wasted on the asexual” like large boobs are already really annoying just from a back pain standpoint and people making comments like well their purpose is sexual/child feeding/insert other use here. I don’t even think about them really aside from back pain. Like thanks for reminding me other people pay attention to “sexual” bits of my body! No way I could live without that!
Sorry for ranting a bit I’m just annoyed. Like why can’t life have a character creation screen?
New project
Started a new project for me, I got out some of my nice wool yarn and am making a hat. I’ll add pics later. The yarn is thinner than I usually work so it’s taking longer.
as someone who’s never crocheted and only done very minimal hand stitching, which would y’all recommend more as a beginner project? crocheting a quilt? or making a stitch quilt?
If you have your heart set on making a blanket as your project I suggest crochet. Bernat blanket yarn works up very quickly since it’s bulky, you can get it in large quantities fairly easily, you can unravel it as many times as you want, it’s machine washable, and it’s pretty much always on sale. I would suggest you see if there are any blanket tutorials you like on YouTube since that is much easier than trying to follow a pattern.
Generally I get yarn at joann fabrics. If you have their app they always have good coupons.
Tho that’s probably my bias showing, every lost needle in the house ends up stabbing me.
Send help
Okay, so, I’ve started making products for my soon to be online store, it’s handcrafted items, which includes crocheted items. I’ve been leaving long tails on the finished products. They’ve been tied off and cut but I’ve been having issues hiding said tails. Any tips, I don’t like cutting them off all the way because sometimes they come untied for some reason.
Generally I try to weave them in a bit (between 1 to 3 inches), then find a tight stitch to make a small knot through and cut off the extra tail. Sometimes I make a knot weave more and make another small knot. If you are doing horizontal lines you can crochet over the tail which has been very effective for me.
I made little clouds! ☁️☁️☁️☁️
And a rainbow!! 🌈
These appliques will be sewn onto my godma's shirt for her company event dinner, the theme is "sky" because they'll be going to the i-fly thing....
So I'll be making more clouds, some stars, a moon, a sun.. maybe some m birds 😂😂 y'know, m birds?
🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
Well, i hope she can win the best dressed! 😋😋😋😋😋
Btw, rainbow pattern is from Ophelia talks on YouTube. She makes me laugh 😂 adorable. https://youtu.be/TuqEI9KQNB0
I just winged the clouds :p
Cute :)
materials
You guys know those cool aluminum scales people are making scale mail with, I’m thinking about getting some to play around with. They are just a little bit expensive for something experimental. Like I can get some really nice yarn for 36$ you know?
So this is what I did today it’s not finished since I don’t have buttons or black yarn for the eyes. I followed a YouTube tutorial and the original looks much much better than mine. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OA5nFOr7owg
So this is the completed shawl, I decided against doing any edging since it looks fine and I am emotionally done with this project. I’ll post the width and height later when I find my tape measure. I think next I’ll try making one of those tiny stuffed animals because they are so cute. I’ll have to look through my yarn stash before I decide which to do.
So here is what I got done yesterday and the last little ball of yarn left add. I am up to 149 stitches on each side and it’s a bit mind numbing to recount them over and over as people keep talking to me and making me lose count. My kingdom for stitch markers. I think I’m going to do some edging as well since I have a white yarn about the same gage from lion brand and I’m not really happy with how the top is turning out.
Shawl project
Made so much progress on my shawl today! Just one little ball left and maybe some edging. I’ll upload a pic tomorrow since it’s late at the moment so the lightning is terrible.
New project! This is something for me. I’ve wanted a shawl for awhile but haven’t really had the energy to start a new project. You can’t really see in the picture but this is a light blue, there are four other shades of blue in the set.
So in my last blogpost I said that there was one more Christmas present I still had to show you, but that it needed its own post.
This is it.
This is Van Gogh’s The Starry Night, rendered in freeform crochet.
Before we go any further into exploring this, let me stress that this was freeform crochet. That means that there is no pattern. There never will be a pattern. Don’t even ask, because I wouldn’t be able to do it!
I started this project back in August, and there’s a reason I haven’t shared updates with you all. The reason is that this was a Christmas present for my mother. The Starry Night is one of her favourite pictures. She has a Starry Night case for her ipad. She loves the episode of Doctor Who, ‘Vincent and the Doctor’, that features Van Gogh and this painting (among many others). It was, I knew, the perfect picture to recreate, if I was going to attempt to recreate anything of the kind in crochet.
And I was absolutely determined that it would be a secret. Even if she realised I was working on something for her for Christmas, she wouldn’t be able to guess what it was. So of course I couldn’t blog about it, because she reads this blog (hi, Mum). And I succeeded! She had no idea I was working on something like this, and no idea what was wrapped in this particular present under the Christmas tree. She was fairly stunned.
To begin at the beginning: some time back in August, I found myself thinking ‘I wonder if I could crochet Mum a version of Starry Night for Christmas’. And then I did a bit of googling, and discovered that Google Arts and Culture have scanned in, in extremely high definition, quite a number of important works of art…including The Starry Night. I could see the whole, but also zoom in to focus on the small details.
I had never done freeform crochet before. And this would not be an easy beginning. That much I knew. And yet I love a challenge, and I wanted to see if I could do it. I wanted to see if I could use my stitches to recreate the brush strokes of Van Gogh, to recreate the swirling sky with the stars and the moon and the colours. I knew that, if I succeeded, my mother would love it – and if I failed, then she would never need to know!!
Having decided to give it a go, I then had to choose colours. And where else would I go for a great variety of colours but to Stylecraft Special DK? So many colours, as well as being my favourite ‘every day’ yarn (as in a yarn I will happily work with every single day for weeks/months/years on end!).
I chose black, dark brown, mocha, silver, white, lemon, saffron, meadow, khaki, cloud blue, aster and midnight, matching the colours as closely as I could to the colours Van Gogh used in the painting. I added royal in at a later date, bringing my total number of colours up to thirteen. Most of these I had in my stash, in varying quantities, which means I have absolutely no idea how much yarn I ended up using. An awful lot of aster! But lots of the other colours, too. I think the colour I ended up using least was mocha, but it’s perfect where I do have it.
Although I couldn’t blog about it here, I did blog about it on my tumblr blog, which is full of fannish geekery and therefore of no interest to my mother whatsoever. So all the pictures that follow include the caption/comments I wrote when I posted progress pictures. You will have to click on some pictures to see the full caption, and all pictures were taken with my mobile, often in artificial light, so forgive the picture quality!
How to begin it? Well, I thought, break it down into shapes. Start with something easy, and go from there. I knew I wanted to work mainly in single crochet, and I knew I wanted texture, to mimic the texture of the painting. So I began with the moon, and used single crochet, slip stitches, and front/back loop single crochet – the stitches which would form the vast majority of this piece.
One corner done.
‘One corner done’. Ha! Little did I know. Still, it was a good start. I moved on to a couple of stars.
Think I’ve hit upon a better way of getting the sort of swirling paint strokes. I may redo the moon corner. Or at the very least, do some surface crochet to get more swirling texture into it. But it’s going well, I think.
Better? I think better.
A good beginning, but that’s all it was at this stage – a beginning!
Trying to join stars to moon. Definitely going to put some embellishments on that – the thing now is just to get it to join flat. Must do something about all those ends, too.
Oh, those ends. So many ends. And keeping it flat was difficult, too. In some of the joining bits of sky, I ended up using hdc and dc stitches just to keep it flat and even, whilst still trying to mimic the brush strokes with the direction of the stitches.
Two stars and a moon, joined together. And I did some tidying of ends, too. I think the next step may be the big swirl in the middle.
And don’t forget I was working on this in secret. I live with my mother, and I was trying to keep this a secret! There was an awful lot of snatched half hours while she was in the kitchen, or the odd couple of hours when she was out somewhere. And a lot of quickly shoving it all in a bag and pulling something over it to conceal it, too, if I heard her coming down the hallway to the living room.
Having made a good beginning on the upper right-hand side of the picture, the next step had to be the central swirl. I could have made some more stars, but I wanted to keep the picture in one piece, as much as possible, in order to keep the proportions right. So onto the swirl. Oh boy, that was hard.
This is actually attempt number two at the big swirl, but it’s going well, I think. More embellishments needed, obviously, once I’ve got more of the base swirl.
Some progress made. The swirl need to be in a slightly different position, but that’s fine, it’s adjustable. I think next thing is to tidy up some ends, then work on some more stars, because the swirl needs more stars before I can really continue it.
I used more hdc and dc stitches in the swirl, because of needing to build up the shape and size of it. And this was really only the very beginning of the swirl, which continues right across to the left side of the picture in a beautiful streak of pale sky. Still, it was a beginning: a basepoint to work from.
Slowly making progress.
Ughhh, have registered that the two stars at the left-hand side are positioned wrongly. The lower one should be higher and more to the right. But it’s too much work to rip out, so I’ll leave it as is and just be more careful with the rest of it.
I kept going, adding two more stars. But check the caption under the righthand picture there: ‘the two stars at the left-hand side are positioned wrongly. The lower one should be higher and more to the right. But it’s too much work to rip out‘. Ha. Well. I am, if nothing else, a perfectionist. So of course I did end up ripping it out – or, to be more precise, I had to cut it out. Ouch. Ouuuch. I do not like cutting crochet. But I couldn’t live with it as it was, so it had to be done!
Sigh. Cutting and pulling out has begun. But it’s going to be worth it.
Better. Not perfect, but a lot better. And I don’t think Van Gogh would mind a lack of perfection!!
Onward I went, filling in the top of the sky above the swirl/between stars, and making more headway on that central swirl, and the stars that were close to it.
Definitely made some good progress today – because Mum’s been in the kitchen making lemon curd!
Might not look like it, but I’m making progress. Another star joined in, another made but not joined, more swirl done, colours working well. And a lot of ends tidied in, though it might not seem like it!
About two-thirds done with the top half of the picture 😀 😀 still planning more embellishments in various parts, but it’s definitely looking good. I’m very pleased with it so far. I think I’m going to have to make a start on the lower half and the tree/bush, next. I have no idea how to do the town, but I think I’m about at the limit of what I can do with the sky without having the town to meet up with it.
There’s another swirl in the sky, of course, which had to be done too. Not to mention ends to sew in. Ugh so many ends. The thing was, I wanted to avoid too much turning and going back along a row, because it changed the texture of the piece. It decreased the swirling nature of the stitches, reducing the mimicry of the flowing brush strokes. I had to in some places, but I tried to do it as little as possible. Sometimes what I did was start somewhere with a really long tail (we’re talking several feet long), so I could then use that long tail to work another row/curve/etc, without giving myself extra ends to sew in.
But I’d reached the end of what I could do for the sky without having something for the sky to attach to. If I was going to keep everything in proportion, I had to start working on something other than (nice, easy, flowing) sky.
A week or so later, I’d made a good start on the tree. The bushes to the side of it were relatively easy, but the tree itself was harder. I did a bit of foundation single crochet here, to create long lines that I could then build up into the trunk. I definitely wanted to go ‘up and down’ rather than ‘side to side’, because that’s what the brush strokes do in the picture. Working the black and khaki in slip stitches along the surface of the brown sc stitches helped with that, adding depth and texture.
It wasn’t smooth sailing, even when I was feeling it was going well. I had a tag for this on my tumblr blog, ‘secret crochet project’, and occasionally I used it without a picture just to grumble. For example:
UGH have to rip out a whole load of secret crochet project because I got the heights of something wrong. UGH. *takes deep breath* better right than quick. Right?
Made quite a bit of progress today, despite having to rip some out. This part of it is HARD.
So…yeah. Relatively easy is, well, a relative term. Some of it was easy enough, but sometimes it was bloody hard work. It wasn’t just about breaking the picture down into shapes, it was also about keeping those shapes in proportion to each other. Making sure the tree was as tall as it needed to be, from bottom to top, to end in the right place – right up there in the sky. Making sure the streaks of lighter sky matched up on both sides of the tree. There was a lot of looking and staring and working out if a few stitches more were needed. And quite a lot of pulling out yarn and trying again!
But bit by bit, I was really making progress.
Bit blurry, but this is what I’ve got overall so far.
Slow but steady progress 🙂 need to head right now, rather than keep going up. And see in some ends! But it’s looking good.
It was literally coming together, as I joined up the two bits of it:
Ignore the multitude of loose ends. It’s coming together! All in one piece now/at the moment. Obviously the tree on the left will be taller, and there’s still the village to do. But it’s looking really, really good.
Coming along nicely. Lots of ends sewn in today, plus more linking up the two sides and a bit of bush. It’s harder to work on now, to keep everything flat and placed correctly, but it’s going okay.
It began to get even harder to keep everything flat. I did an awful lot of ‘work a bit, put it on the floor to make sure it was all flat, work a bit more, check it again, pull out a bit’. And repeat, and repeat, and…you get the idea. Flatness was important. Flatness mattered, and it was important to keep everything proportionally the right size and in the right position relative to other features. Still, it was progressing, bit by bit – and still entirely secret, worked in short snatches of time.
As ever, ignore the ends. The top of the tree is pretty much done, still working on the swirl of lighter colour that goes across the sky behind it. There’s two more stars to put into that corner of sky, too. I’m aiming to get all that side finished before I head back down towards the village at the bottom right corner.
Making good progress 🙂 not a huge amount more to do to finish the top left corner, now.
It was going so well that sometimes I just had to stop and squeal about how wonderfully it was coming together!
Ahhh it’s going so well!!!!
The star in the upper left corner is attached, and the base of the sky there is nearly complete. Also did a little more embellishing and sewing in ends. Honestly, I’m so pleased. It’s not entirely accurate in terms of layout, but close enough that you can see what it’s meant to be. Still a fair bit of sky to do (there’s a yellowish stripe across the sky at the horizon above the hill) and a bit of the tree, then onto the village.
But even with the most exciting of projects, there is inevitably a fair amount of just plodding on, working on things that need doing but that don’t show much change…like huuuuuuge numbers of ends to sew in. Sometimes I spent my secret-crochet-time just sewing in ends. Slow, tedious work, but an important part of the whole.
Top left corner done except for some embellishments. More ends sewn in. Bit of dark blue added in the upper left. Slow but steady progress.
More done on the tree, and filled in a bit more of the sky beneath the moon. I’ve definitely got the proportions a bit wrong there, but I can increase the size of the moon a bit with surface and sl st crochet. Then onto that yellowish streak, more tree, and finally the village (which yes, I’m still trying to work out how to do).
I was, as you can tell, avoiding the village. Oh yes. Tricky technically, and I knew it would be fiddly, too. Yes, the village got left for some time.
Pondering adding another blue – yes, at this late stage. A royal-type blue, just for some of the surface crochet. I need to check what I’ve got in my stash. Meanwhile, today I have done some more of the yellowish streak (base of light blue) and some more work around the moon.
More ends sewn in, and some straightening up of sides. It’s hard to keep it all flat and the edges straight, but I’m getting there. I’m thinking that probably once it’s all done and straight-edged that I should border it somehow to make it really neat. We’ll see.
Going to have to start the bottom right corner now, I think. The dreaded village. Gulp.
Finally, of course, I had no choice. I had reached as far as I could go with tree and with sky. I needed to start the village.
So how to tackle it? Since I wanted to keep everything in one piece as much as possible, I started at the base of the tree, to begin with, and moved right, along the bottom of the picture.
I’ve started on the village, hurrah. Ends are hidden, not sewn in, heh. Need to straighten up the left side more, but I might leave that until later. Not sure.
Mostly today I’ve been straightening up the left hand side and the top, and sewing in ends, but I’ve done a little of the village, and will hopefully get a bit more done this afternoon before Mum gets home 😀
It feels like very slow progress at the moment, because the village is so fiddly. However, I AM making progress, and I’m pleased with how it’s coming out. Lots of ends to sew in, obviously.
Oooohh this was so fiddly. In the sense of shapes, it wasn’t actually too bad. Even Van Gogh’s buildings are regularly shaped: rectangles, squares, triangles. But then there were the odd dabs of colour for doors or windows, and the inescapable problem that nestled among these lovely straight lines were the round lines of bushes. A bit of a headache. Just a bit. But I focused on the straight lines of the buildings, and only started added in some curves when at least a few of the buildings were more-or-less complete!
And at this point it was 30th November. And something happened on the 29th November which…rather gave me a helping hand in terms of time. My mother went into hospital for at least a few weeks. We’re used to this; her health means she needs inpatient treatment at irregular intervals. I hate it; she hates it. I wanted her home very badly……..BUT as you can imagine it was a godsend in terms of giving me hours upon hours on which to spend on this. All through December I would complete my daily Advent ornament as quickly as possible, and then spend hours blitzing this!
Three days later I’d achieved a lot.
The church spire is done, and all the fields/bushes to the left of it 🙂 nearly done with the buildings, too. Lots of bushes and fields/hills left, mostly – plus more surface crochet or embroidery to add more ‘brush strokes’ in various places.
Obviously the bottom edge needs straightening out, but oooh, look how much I’ve done over the last couple of days! So damn close to finishing. A stretch of bushes at the right hand side, then some gloriously simple hills. There’ll be further embellishment in all sorts of places, but the bulk will be done in another few days, I think. Then I’ll know how big a frame I need to order!
Solidly crocheting on it meant suddenly my progress was leaping forward. Huge amount of the village done, starting to get those curves in for bushes, and building up from the righthand corner, too.
The church spire is done, and all the fields/bushes to the left of it 🙂 nearly done with the buildings, too. Lots of bushes and fields/hills left, mostly – plus more surface crochet or embroidery to add more ‘brush strokes’ in various places.
Obviously the bottom edge needs straightening out, but oooh, look how much I’ve done over the last couple of days! So damn close to finishing. A stretch of bushes at the right hand side, then some gloriously simple hills. There’ll be further embellishment in all sorts of places, but the bulk will be done in another few days, I think. Then I’ll know how big a frame I need to order!
Ohh, those bushes *headdesk* so much hard work. And I was working under the misapprehension that I was playing yarn chicken with the last of my meadow. Next time I think that, I really must check my stash bag for more! Still, I managed. The meadow held out.
As I got closer and closer to finishing, I got more and more excited:
Holy sh*t I’m nearly finished. Close enough that I’ll measure it for a frame tomorrow and get one ordered. I can’t believe I’m this close to finishing.
One tiny last bit of straightening the edge to do, at the right hand side. Quite a lot of surface crochet and embroidery to do, particularly on the hills and around the moon where I’ve had to add more blue to straighten it out. A frankly enormous number of ends to sew in. BUT it is all in one piece, all one panel, and tomorrow I will measure and order a frame.
Squared off, and in daylight. Still a fair bit of work to do, but even so, it’s basically done.
I can’t tell you how excited I was at this point. One of these last days, I stayed up until something like 11pm, working on it. I was so desperate to get it finished in time to get a frame sorted.
But from here? From here it was just ‘easy’ stuff. The picture was there. Now I just had to tidy it up, by getting all of the edges straight and making sure it was square, and I had to add further embellishments in the form of surface crochet and a little embroidery chain stitching.
So at this point, on the 8th December, I ordered a frame.
I’ve ordered the frame for Starry Night *bounces* it’s a box frame, and I found a place that custom makes them, so it’ll fit perfectly. I can’t wait to see Mum’s face when she sees it on Christmas Day!!!
I found a shop online that custom makes frames, according to the customer’s measurements – https://www.picframes.co.uk. And yes, you can bet that I double, triple, quadruple checked my measurements! I knew that I wanted a box frame for this, which limited my choices of colour and wood a little. But white is a good neutral, and I chose white for a mount, too, to set off the picture nicely.
Of course, even having ordered the frame, I still had final touches to do on the picture. More embroidery, more slip stitches across the surface – the finishing flourishes. I kept working, until finally:
I have just sewn in the final end of Starry Night, having spent the evening putting the final touches on it. And the frame is coming tomorrow.
Feeling rather emotional about it, really.
I can’t wait for Christmas to see my mother’s face 😀
I took a lot of close-up pictures of it before the frame arrived. But even with close-up pictures like these, it’s hard to convey the texture I managed to create.
And for anyone who’s interested, this is what the back looks like. Quite a mess. But nobody will ever see it!
The frame arrived on the 15th December…on a day when I had planned to go and visit my mother in hospital! So I unwrapped the frame, admired it, worked out how I would attach the picture to the mount (I’d ordered brown tape from the same company, for taping it to the back of the mount)……and then had to leave it for four or five hours while I trekked over to the hospital. Still, I finished framing it that night:
I’ve framed Starry Night and OH MY GOD IT’S SO GOOD I mean I know I’m British and meant to be all modest and stuff but I CAN’T BELIEVE HOW GOOD IT IS, it’s just SO FANTASTIC, the white mount and box frame really makes it just so stunning, I’m sitting here looking at it and grinning like an idiot, and I keep giggling, and OH MY GOD IT’S SO INCREDIBLE I DID THAT I DID IT MY MOTHER IS GOING TO BE SO STUNNED pics tomorrow, when I can take some in daylight.
I was a little incoherent, it’s true. But OH, that picture. Suddenly, framing it, it became a work of art, not just an experiment that I’d been working on for months. And given how I started out, unsure and making lots of mistakes…given how frustrated I’d been by it at times, particularly the endless ends to sew in…given all that, I think I had a right to be full of squeeful glee 😀
Oh, it’s so perfect. It’s just so perfect. I mean, it’s not perfect. It’s not an exact replica of The Starry Night. There are places where things are a bit fudged, a bit off. The church spire is a bit crooked! But it’s unmistakably The Starry Night, nonetheless. I am so, so pleased with how it came out.
So, a quick round-up of my tools, materials and techniques:
I used Stylecraft Special DK, and a 4.5mm hook. Occasionally I used a smaller hook (3mm or 3.5mm) to do some of the surface crochet. I also used a tapestry needle, both for sewing in ends and for the bits of embroidery I did.
I followed the shapes and the flow of the paint strokes as much as I could, so I did very little turning, ie I worked primarily from the right/front side of the piece. When I was working with circular shapes (ie the moon, the stars), I worked amigurimi-style, in endless rounds with no joining. I used primarily single crochet and slip stitches, with a few hdc and dc stitches in places (US terms). Occasionally I whip-stitched two sections together, but only in a very few places.
The final size is 445x360mm, and once again, there is no pattern. It was entirely freeform.
As for how my mother reacted – well, there was an awful lot of ‘wow’. And ‘did you have a pattern?’ and ‘wow’ and ‘it’s stunning’ and more ‘wow’. She’s going to put it up on her bedroom wall, but only after she’s shown it to absolutely everyone who comes into the house for the next few weeks 😀
The Starry Night So in my last blogpost I said that there was one more Christmas present I still had to show you, but that it needed its own post.
This is amazing, like I was just scrolling and admiring all the cute crochet animals and BAM hit in the face with awesome! Like this is so amazing!
Story of my life.
Another project, though I’ve been working on this awhile. This is my brothers Christmas gift and I just have a bit more of the blue and the purple left. This was actually supposed to be last years gift but somehow it just didn’t get done, we’ll see how well I pass my willpower checks this year. I used the wrong sized hook so I might turn it into a rug instead since it is so thick it drapes oddly. I am happy with the stitch pattern I choose even if I do have to hide the edges with a fringe later since I messed up a couple of times.
So this is my most recent project it’s an ace pride hoodie for my sister for Christmas. I don’t know how to work from measurements yet so can’t move on to the black part of the flag. @fuckyeahasexual I believe this sort of thing is relevant to you?