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Barberpole Striping over at FreshStitches

Stacey Trock is one of my crochet heroines.  I think her crochet animals are really cute – but what I admire even more than her design sense is her business model and brand.  She is really great at making quality: be it posts on her blog, patterns, or items she sells by commission.  Everything she does is well thought out and through.

So a couple of weeks back when Stacey asked for blog submissions for her blog, I put on my big girl pants, screwed up my courage and overcame my fangirlsquee and emailed her.  She was very kind, and accepted two of my blog proposals.

I meant to post about it the day it came out, but I’ve been under the weather, barely able to do the things that keep things running around here.

So anyway, I’m telling you about it now.  The other day I was over at Stacey’s blog talking about Barberpole Striping (or Helix Striping) in crochet.  It’s a fun little tutorial, and as soon as I get my lightbox fully built, I hope to follow up with a series of video tutorials.

Go over and take a look!

Rosemary’s Hedwig

I realized that I had never gotten pictures of the Christmas gifts I made for everyone up – I had to keep them a secret because well… I wanted them to be a surprise.

Rosemary, my sister, this year got a crochet Hedwig.  I’ll quote my notes from my Ravelry project page directly, because I think it says my thoughts about the project well:

Heavily modified Nelson the Owl from Fresh Stitches, almost so that I wouldn’t call it the same pattern.

Different stitch count on body (made body taller and less squat), different stitch count on head, I didn’t do the color changes, sized up the wings, improvised my own feet so that there were toes, no ears, made eyes slightly different. Basically, only thing not changed was the nose. Changed the colors to reflect a snowy owl, made body white, didn’t do the color changes on the belly, embroidered little “ends of feathers” onto body after crocheting, made an improvised set of feet with bobbles turned inside out. 

I still think Hedwig looks funny without ear tufts, but since snowy owls don’t really have ear tufts, that’s fine. She reads as a snowy owl, so I guess that’s all that is needed.

Rosemary was happy with it, and all told the project probably only took me at most, probably 5 or 6 hours all told.  And that was mostly because I was being fiddly with things, and ripped back a few times to adjust.  I also was fiddly with the seaming, so that took longer.  I still think it came out crooked, but don’t tell my sister that – Rosemary has a “thing” about objects being symmetrical  and I already had to convince her the eyes really WERE the same size.