
Product Placement
Peter Solarz
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
d e v o n
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dirt enthusiast

Origami Around

Kiana Khansmith

PR's Tumblrdome

tannertan36
Acquired Stardust
taylor price
cherry valley forever
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

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Not today Justin

Kaledo Art
Claire Keane
AnasAbdin

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@bitter-knitter
ok here they are the most ridiculous socks I have ever made
Omg those buttons are incredible. I’ve knit these, found the pattern super super clear and easy to follow tho? So must just be pattern preference. Highly recommend wearing them with low shoes and showing people the socks without warning
thank you!! I was soo lucky with the buttons, I was in some random charity shop and I saw them and I just KNEW!!!!
regarding the pattern… personally I just found it to be overly long and complicated - the designer just wrote it out row by agonising row, and there were so many points where I was like, this could be written so much more simply. the short rows for example - every single row was written out, even for the sock heel where in every other pattern I’ve knit it gets written out once, and then you get “knit to 2 stitches before the gap…” etc. i kept reading it like, is something different meant to be happening here…? and then I was like oh. no it’s just normal short rows. I also really wanted there to be a chart for the knit/purl pattern on the leg and foot because I find charts so much more intuitive and memorable than written instructions and again, they were just written out row by row by row. I actually ended up charting it myself so that if I got lost in a row or forgot where I was, I could easily see what I was meant to be doing, and that worked much better for me.
like, I know some people prefer written instructions but I just couldn’t get on with them, so I ended up not really enjoying the knitting process at all - which is such a shame because they’re so clever in their design!
It’s okay about not tagging!! This isn’t my primary so I think that’s why!
My buttons were some boring ones from Michael’s and if I hadn’t gifted the socks already I’d probably go looking for better ones lol yours are awesome.
No I get you - I skim read the short rows, figured what was happening, and went from there. I didn’t use the heel turn bc I have a preferred heel turn I usually use. Honestly once I saw the questions on the FAQ… some of the explanations were so obvious i figured the designer probably had too many beginners knitting it and asking questions so they wrote everything out. Idk overall appreciated that there wasn’t anything I had to interpret or figure out, anything I needed was in the pattern and the color coding was nice too instead of a billion parenthesis. Used a PetiteKnits pattern recently that I can’t say the same about… Bought like four of their patterns at once and regret it lol.
ok here they are the most ridiculous socks I have ever made
Omg those buttons are incredible. I’ve knit these, found the pattern super super clear and easy to follow tho? So must just be pattern preference. Highly recommend wearing them with low shoes and showing people the socks without warning
All of these were created by KnitPicks! Check out their site for all your knitting needs, but also some awesome freebies!
I DID IT! I finished my Katia Alma cardigan, after having to change everything in the pattern because I decided to go for a different yarn size 💕🙌✨ my first wearable, me proud 🥺
Move Over Fish Socks, Shark Socks Are Over, It’s All About Crikey Crocodile Socks Now! 👉 https://buff.ly/3fAfbxX 🐊
i WILL knit these one day…
I test knit the Westwood Sweater by hiirismakes on Instagram! 🥰
Knitting decorating someone’s hedge!
Pinterest • https://www.pinterest.com
Merino silk bala for my friend valerie who used to be the assistant manager at my job and then we both quit
Adorable!!
With a few hours free these last couple evenings, I decided to take another stab at socks. This is further than I've ever gotten one, I may have figured it out!
ko_lo_man
Are you searching for a somewhere that you almost know? Do you yearn to walk along a path that takes you home? Half-remembered, half-forgot, half-dreamt within a dream. Your weary soul is aching for the things that could not be. And it’s more a feeling than a thought that greets you in the night with memories lost to the years and all that would delight. It says “go back” but you cannot. You’re further gone with every breath. And that’s the gift and that’s the curse: to live this life and know regret
- by Ellis Nightingale
We're mismatching on purpose from now on (and maybe trying to use up scrap yarn to justify buying more)
I decided to make a post about Ravelry
I’ve recommended it to many people over the years, mostly elders who hadn’t considered the internet being that useful, and usually they’re like, “aw? A website? No thanks, it’s not necessary”. Which is fine even if internally I was like “plsssss no it’s so good”.
A lot of gen-z are getting into fiber crafting and that is exciting.
So, here’s a little intro
This is the homepage, after making an account
Up on the top right is your notebook, which you’ll probably visit the most because it contains all of the tools for organizing your projects.
That’s your notebook, on the left bar are your various tools. Projects are lined up neatly on the rest of the screen. There’s a Handspun tab for spinners, Stash is where you organize your yarns, uQeue is where you list upcoming projects, Favorites is where you can save and organize your favorite projects/patterns, Needles & Hooks gives you a chart that you can fill in with what you already own, Library is a digital library of patterns and even representations of the physical books that you own.
Each of these can be customized, for example in favorites in there is a place to bundle them, so that if you wanted to say make a bundle of everything you want to knit as Christmas presents throughout the year, you can do that. In Queue you can link the called for yarn and the yarn you are going to use, linked from stash or otherwise, you can make notes on each entry. I will often note whether I need needles and what kind, so that if I drop by the store, the info I need is just a couple of clicks away. There is even a place in the stash to note where you got your yarn and how much it cost.
I’m not going much more deeper into that, but if ya’ll want me to do a post about specific tools let me know.
The most attractive part of Ravelry for me is easily searchable database of patterns.
If you click on the Patterns button at the top left of the homepage, it takes you here.
I typically go straight to pattern browser & advanced search through the link under the search bar.
The great part of this are the filters on the left. You can filter by category of clothing, if and how it’s in your notebook, by craft type, by it’s availability (like whether it’s free, downloadable, or purchased elsewhere), whether or not it has photos (because there are many self-published designers), by attributes such as shape, techniques, texture, and types of colorwork, by age, size, ease, fit, and gender, by weight of the yarn called for, by yardage required, by number of colors used, by pattern source, by needle size, by star rating, by difficulty, by origin of crochet terminology, and by language. There are many more search options after the main filters.
So for example if I had exactly 700 yards of worsted eight yarn in two colors, and I knew I wanted to make a scarf, using bobbles and colorwork, I could search that.
Not only that, but you can customize the filters to combine traits:
I could make my selections and hit advanced where I’ve circled in red and,
specify that I want merino, and cashmere, or silk, but not nylon. I still got 27 matches from that search, but that’s how big the database is.
And the same goes for the yarn tab at the top left of the homepage next to patterns. You can search through pretty much every yarn available, from red heart to indie fiber artists, using similar characteristics to narrow it down.
I hope someone found this useful and if you’re a knitter or crocheter, it’s seriously worth a look. I’m not very active lately, but It’s where I go for inspiration if nothing else.
Thank you for making this. I have a lot of newbie knitters and crocheters who still think Pinterest is the best place to find patterns
Oh no, my octopus only has five arms and I’m almost out of yarn!!! I have no clue where this yarn came from ;( What do I do? I have some (much finer) yarn that is a similar color (the yarn on the right in the bottom pic) so I thought maybe I could start blending that in to the last three arms and it would at least make the original yarn last a little longer and maaaaaybe it would be unnoticeable… ugh, I’m so disappointed!
If you’re open to ripping out your legs, you could make them in two portions. The bottom portion in the thinner yarn you found, and the top, more visible half, in the yarn you already had, and sew them together. If doubling the found yarn will match the gauge well enough, then you could crochet it in one piece, top half in the original, bottom in the found. That should stretch the yarn enough. Hope that helps!! I feel your pain completely
People often look at the tags on my handmade goods and declare that my prices are outrageous. I did the math and THIS is what that handmade beanie you want for $10 ACTUALLY cost to make.
So if you see that $30 on the label, be courteous. Know that I am paying myself far, far less than minimum wage in labor ($2.22 per hour, to be exact) to even come to such a supposedly ghastly price. I can't take that $10 for a hat because no one can live on $0.37 an hour, much less sustain a business.
Handmade goods aren't overpriced, people just undervalue the hard work and years of skill artists put into them.
Is it just me or would this colorway be ideal for a bi pride knitting project?
I bought this before thinking the same thing but imo the colors were garish and not very bi pride :(