fiber arts!

Discussion in 'Make It So' started by jacktrash, Jun 3, 2015.

  1. IvyLB

    IvyLB Hardcore Vigilante Gay Chicken Facilitator

    I actually think scarves of the giant ass long variety are beautiful and very cozy and fun to wear, but then I also wear blankets as scarves so :P
    A scarf versus a blanket would be less material intense and probably a bit less unwieldy on the needles
     
    • Like x 2
  2. Kaylotta

    Kaylotta Writer Trash

    i made this for @blue for secret santa! it is a wolf 359 reference

    [​IMG]

    it is about 7 inches diameter, approx 4000 stitches and 30 colours. i'm not entirely happy with the colour changeover, but ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
     
    • Like x 5
  3. Saro

    Saro Where is wizard hut

    I have a bunch of cotton yarn odds and ends lying around, think I'm going to try to make a shopping bag. Hope I can find an easy pattern, I'm not up for fancy work right now....
     
    • Like x 1
  4. Mossflower

    Mossflower Well-Known Member

    I need to take pics but I made 5 pairs of socks for family members over christmas. Not to mention the temperature blanket I've started on and just now got caught up to date with.
     
    • Like x 3
  5. Ducks

    Ducks 79 Plural Fowl Illuminates The Legendary

    I made a circle skirt with attached petticoat! Been so long since I've finished a garment.

    Edit: I forgot the images i was so excited.

    IMG_20170116_222525.jpg Snapchat-247529419530536918.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jan 16, 2017
    • Like x 11
  6. TwoBrokenMirrors

    TwoBrokenMirrors onion hydration

    • Like x 6
  7. artistformerlyknownasdave

    artistformerlyknownasdave revenge of ricky schrödinger

    MADE HAT :3

    [​IMG]
     
    • Like x 11
  8. Kaylotta

    Kaylotta Writer Trash

    hey @spockandawe - a friend of mine asked me about how you adjust cross-stitch technique for stitching on non-aida fabric. i told her I didn't have much experience but I knew someone who did ... so: any tips?
     
  9. spockandawe

    spockandawe soft and woolen and writhing with curiosity

    Well, the easiest thing to do is pull waste canvas into the mix! It'll basically give you an aida-like overlay on the fabric of your choice, and it's pretty easy to use. Though in the link I put in, the writer shows the corners of the stitches being done in the big holes in the canvas, and I've heard that's not actually the best way to do it, and if you do the corners of your stitches in the little holes, you'll get better precision.

    Now, for woven fabrics, things are pretty straightforward. If you're using waste canvas, you want to lay one over the other and put them into a hoop. If you're doing things by the book, you probably want to stitch the waste canvas down to the fabric with a loose running stitch, in a '+' shape from the middle out. But if you're lazy or in a rush (like me), you can just go for it regardless, though you have an increased risk of warping in the final product.

    Waste canvas does tend to be pretty stiff, so it can be a bit tricky getting it into a hoop, and it's difficult to adjust or pull things taut once the hoop is in place, but the waste canvas is rigid enough that this hasn't been too much of a problem for me.

    One problem I did have was that for a larger project (the mama whirl one, call it... about a 5''x7'' oval on 14-count canvas), I had so many stitches down by the end that even with pliers, I couldn't pull out most of the canvas threads after I was done stitching. Once you've got more than a few dozen stitches in a row, it's going to be real tough to pull a thread out from under those. In that case, I ended up just trimming the threads as close to the edge of the stitches as I could, and it helps that I have a pale background fabric and most of the canvas threads are white, but it's hard to see that anything is wrong unless you already know what to look for (it's a bigger problem that every fifth thread on my canvas was blue, and you can see slivers of dark past the white sections of my stitching, but again, it's not that obvious if you don't already know it's there). On my other project (the cronus footstool), I did only part of the colors at first, took everything off the hoop and removed the threads, then put it back in the hoop and finished the last few stitches using the existing stiches to eyeball the corners. I haven't had the opportunity to test that on a larger project yet, but that's my tentative plan for the future.

    Plus if you have a woven fabric with a coarse enough weave, and you have good eyes, you can eyeball the count between threads to figure out your own grid. I have one friend with a non-aida cross-stitch project that was packaged that way, and vague plans to maybe do something pseudo-rustic on one of those printed burlap fabrics or something. But I have no concrete experience of my own at the moment.

    And if you're looking to mess with knit fabrics, things get more complicated. I think the general rule of thumb is that you want to work on this fabric when it's stretched as far as it will be when it's in use. So if you want to stick it in a frame or something, pull it taut and you're good to go. But if you want to stitch a design onto like, the chest of a shirt, you need to work out how stretched it'll be when it's being worn, and try to get it to that same point before you start stitching on it. I... think there are ways to use waste canvas with knit fabrics, but waste canvas is so stiff and hard to manipulate that I think that has to be a pretty difficult setup to wrangle. But there are other options if you look into tearaway embroidery stabilizers. I haven't used these myself, so I don't know how easy they are to work with, but they're one of the big products that gets recommended for cross-stitching on non-aida fabric. I assume they're usable with woven fabrics too, but I'm only really familiar with the waste canvas side of things, so I can't meaningfully compare the two.

    One last random blurb that doesn't fit well anywhere else: if you're planning to put this project into a frame, my experience is that thinner fabrics are harder to work with on the framing than aida fabric. Aida is pretty stiff and isn't really prone to wrinkling, but getting smooth edges and corners with thinner fabrics can be a nightmare. I managed to get something that looks pretty good, but I had to fight it hard to get there.

    And that's everything I can think of for now. I hope that helps!! And I'll definitely do my best to answer any other questions that might come up :D
     
    • Like x 3
  10. Ducks

    Ducks 79 Plural Fowl Illuminates The Legendary

    • Like x 1
  11. Marimo

    Marimo Member

    Here are some pics of a couple of patches I made recently and one I will hopefully finish someday.

    IMG_20170130_125908.jpg



    IMG_20170130_125831.jpg
     
    • Like x 11
  12. sirsparklepants

    sirsparklepants feral mom energies

    • Like x 1
  13. keltka

    keltka the green and brown one

    ssssso I had some questions about looms and the making thereof
    see for my final project for my indigenous rhetorics class, it's...really open-ended? and I kind of wanted to do something related to weaving because I miss it a lot and one of the topics we cover is "conveying meanings and records through fabrics/fiber arts"
    but I feel like I should be doing it in the traditional Nahua style so does anyone have any tips on loom making,
     
    • Like x 1
  14. albedo

    albedo metasperg

    Never done it, but on cursory poking around, this looks potentially useful. https://backstrapweaving.wordpress.com/tutorial-starting-out-in-backstrap-weaving-steps-to-success/

    It's uh... pretty WHITE LADY EXPLORES NATIVES, but the actual weaving looks cool.
     
    • Like x 2
  15. keltka

    keltka the green and brown one

    Thank you!! I...think I went about it the wrong way, I started out with the historical archives then tried to find information from there
    not gonna lie that particular narrative always makes me cringe a lil but if she's informative, I'll wordreplace all the cringe stuff to "pineapples" or something ;D

    sERIOUSLY THANK.
     
    • Like x 1
  16. albedo

    albedo metasperg

    Yeah; I googled around for Nahua looms and it looked like backstrap looms were the usual (like https://www.flickr.com/photos/citlali/9670909543 ), and then just poked around for backstrap loom tutorials.

    It makes me cringe too, but man, that fabric's pretty.
     
    • Like x 2
  17. keltka

    keltka the green and brown one

    I think I saw that one too! the first google bit I did led me to a really weird blog post—entirely different "WHITE LADY EXPLORES NATIVES" and there was Too Much Word so I bailed @_@ will probably dig it up again later....
    Also, the one in the image says it's probably from Vera Cruz which is perf because that's where my prof learned Nahuatl, so she might be able to help me verify :D

    RIGHT THOUGH??? goddamn. I miss my home looms, having an easy pack/easy move loom is gonna be the Best
     
    • Like x 2
  18. spockandawe

    spockandawe soft and woolen and writhing with curiosity

    I spent my night stringing cross-stitch letters together!

    nevertheless, she persisted.png nasty woman.png super callous fragile racist sexist nazi potus.png

    source one, source two, source three (i couldn't get any further than pinterest, their link was broken)

    Please note, that last one is seven words long, the exact perfect length for a rainbow color scheme. With any luck, this weekend I'm going to get to working on that first one in glitter floss on black fabric to passive-aggressively hang in my cubicle at work.
     
    • Like x 10
  19. theprettiestboy

    theprettiestboy wombatman

    I've been looking at spinning wheels with Great Longing for years, because I love my spindles a lot but the weight of them and the motion of winding on has become increasingly hard on my hands even with my light little silk spindles. I kind of resigned myself to never having one because the cheapest seem to start at $200 or so without even starting to look at bobbins or accessories, but recently I ran into the dodec, which claims to cost less than $10 to make and require minimal woodworking skills and now I'm obsessed. Has anyone tried anything like this?

    ETA: after a second look those plans look like kind of A Mess, but the general principle is pretty clear. If I manage to puzzle it out would people be interested in following along with that and seeing any plans I come up with? I'm all about open source equipment.
     
    Last edited: Feb 12, 2017
    • Like x 2
  20. Marimo

    Marimo Member

    I made some fingerless gloves :D

    IMG_20170214_150026.jpg
     
    • Like x 10
  1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
    Dismiss Notice