Using this Yarnspirations pattern, I put together four or five of these picture frames!  You can check the rest out on display in the Frankfort Michaels this week, or better yet, come take my class, Sunday, October 5 at 2:00.  Ask me how to register!

If you already know crochet, this pattern is pretty great and easy and turns out super cute, of course.  I just cut circles out of scrapbook paper to use as backing.  The real question is: what should I frame?  Probably just pictures of my cat per usual.  I even have a framed photo of my cat next to my sewing machine, as if there is ever a time I have been sewing without the cat right there "helping."  But who cares because this:


I mean couldn't you just die?
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I've been taking a little break from crocheting today to brush up on my knitting, and I'm taking a break from both of those this weekend to makeover my spare bedroom into a totally amazing craft oasis where out of town guests can sleep blah blah blah whatever.  One man's guest room is another woman's yarn room, or so I've heard.

Here are a few inspiration pics:





And here's what it currently looks like:


Gonna be a long weekend, guys. 


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Last week when I was Yarn Crawlin' I bought this amazing Alpaca yarn from Blazing Star Ranch.  I'm selfishly using it to make a scarf 100% for me.  Too bad for you guys!  I'm following this pattern: http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/dodi-infinity-scarf and am trying out the Solomon's Knot for the first time.  So far I couldn't love it more.  I love love love this yarn.  Love it. 

Check out Blazing Star Ranch at the link above and read the alpaca blog!!  Here's a picture of Santana, the nice alpaca who gave his wool so I could have a new infinity scarf this winter:


 
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Recently, the sweetest little Baby Anna was born and I couldn't wait to meet her!  While I made her a (somewhat abstract) bunny blanket (another post for another time), I wanted to whip up a little something for my favorite New Big Sister Sophia.  After searching through some pattern books, and using this newfangled thing we call the internet, I decided on this pattern: I Love Buttons by Emma.  It really is just the cutest!  I went with more traditional giraffe colors than the pattern called for, but at least half of that was because I had a ton of yellow yarn laying around.  I love how it turned out, and I think it was a hit! 

Here's a tip!  Michaels has those small black buttons in a 4 pack, and they are awesome for amigurumi eyes.  
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If you are in Colorado, then stop reading now and head to Yarn Along the Rockies.  Otherwise, check it out here: www.yarnalongtherockies.com and then keep reading.  And be very very jealous.

A very fortuitous google search for activities to fit in around (instead of??) my trip to the Conference of Government Mining Attorneys in Golden, Colorado turned up Yarn Along the Rockies, a yarn crawl to 24 different local yarn stores from Boulder to Colorado Springs and as far west as Evergreen.  As you well know, I hate yarn and hardly have any, so I thought eh what the hey, I'll check it out.

Just kidding, I am a major yarn hoarder.  I brought 4 skeins just on this trip.  One per day.

My regrets about Yarn Along the Rockies are as follows: I forgot to take a picture at each store, and I only made it through 16 of the 24!

I kicked off my crawl at I Love Knitting in Denver.  Even though I don't love knitting, as I have mentioned before, the store was delightful, people were knitting, yarn was on sale, and best of all I got my Project Tote Bag and my very first pin for it!  Each store had a special pin to place on the bag.  Here's my completed (complete for me) bag:
 I love it!  

As you can see from the bag, I made it through the Boulder, Denver, Englewood, Littleton, and Centennial stores.  Not too shabby.  Had Delta not been creative with my departure and arrival times on Sunday, I still believe I could have made it through the whole lot, but oh well.  I saw many people just pop in, get their passport stamped and pin, and duck back out.  I may have only gone to 16 but at least I got to really spend some time going through the stores, and getting lots of ideas!

Another great thing (as if it wasn't already great enough) is that each store was giving away a prize basket, in addition to the prizes you were eligible if you finished the crawl.  But even if I don't win a prize, I basically made a prize basket of my own! 

I needed all this. 

I discovered and fell in love with alpaca yarn on this trip.  The green variegated yarn in the front I bought at Blazing Saddle Ranch in Englewood from a lovely woman who raises the alpacas, shears them, spins the wool into yarn, and hand dyes it.  I love this yarn so much that I almost feel bad touching it with hooks or needles.  Almost.

I was pumped to find the giant double ended ended hooks I needed for a pattern at Shuttles, Spindles, & Skeins in Boulder, and a huge afghan hook at The Recycled Lamb in Golden.  I got a great deal on a pattern book at Wooden Spools in Englewood, and I was pumped to see a huge yarn class going on at A Knitted Peace in Littleton!  At Mew Mew's in Lafayette, I was sad to miss the cat, but she gave me the great idea to do a pattern of stitches or colors in a number that's significant to you like your phone number, social security number, birthdate, etc.  So if I were to use my birthdate, I would do 9 rows of red, 6 rows of blue, 1 row of yellow, 9 rows of green, 8 rows of purple, 4 rows of orange, and repeat.  If I were to use my social security number, it would be... just kidding.  

What was the best part though, was meeting and talking to so many likeminded women who were interested in yarn and what you can do with it.  In Lexington, Kentucky, where I live, we just don't have the kind of stores and community I experienced on this trip.  All in all it was a fantastic experience!  Though it seems that not everyone felt the same way:




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Recently, I made a video for a student to explain a technique she was struggling with a bit.  The intense focus of this photo doesn't begin to express just how awkward it was making a video with the laundry going and the cat periodically chasing after my yarn.  I don't think I have much of a future in instructional videos! 

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Lately I have been trying to teach myself Tunisian Crochet.  Michaels' July-September projects included a Tunisian Crochet tablet cover and when I got the pattern, I figured I might need to actually learn how to make it before I put it on my class schedule! Crazy, right?



The Tunisian Tablet Cover project was not a successful class project, but I got hooked on it!  (get it? hooked?  I am tooo hilarious.)

No but seriously folks, Tunisian Crochet is basically a hybrid of knit and crochet, that I find I prefer to knitting.  Look, I don't want to make anyone mad, and knitting is fine. I don't hate knitting.  I plan to brush up on my knitting this winter if you must know.  But in the meantime, let me tell you how awesome Tunisian Crochet is.  You use one giant crochet hook with a stopper on the end- called an afghan hook or Tunisian hook- which you can get basically anywhere.  Michaels carries an H size, and I also have J and M which I purchased at more specialty yarn/fabric stores.  Like knitting, you work the basic stitch by keeping all your loops on your hook on a forward pass, then working back across the row.  Unlike most crochet, there is definitely a right side and wrong side, as the same side faces you the whole time.  I haven't gotten brave enough to do color work yet, but this is the technique you use for fair isle crochet, and I think also tapestry crochet.  Fair isle crochet is another thing I plan to work on this winter! (side note: I have a LOT of projects planned for this winter so I should probably say my goodbyes now.)

You're probably wondering where this is all going, and if I've completely lost focus on showing you pictures of my work in progress.  I have been working on this blanket pattern: http://www.allfreecrochet.com/Granny-Square-Afghans/Granny-Square-Tunisian-Throw-from-Lion-Brand

The cool thing about this blanket is that it incorporates blocks of 9 different Tunisian stitches so it's been a great learning opportunity.  I have successfully worked my way through H, doing one block of each pattern at a time basically.  I did do a couple blocks of the first two.  I have selected all green colors because I am planning to give this to my sweet tiny grandmother for Christmas and she loves green.

She's too adorable not to include:



Step one was I bought a bunch of yarn.  That's the beginning of most of my projects/days.  I selected 9 different colors, all medium (4) weight, some variegated, some not and picked which would be which square and labeled as follows:

Please excuse my crude labeling system.  You can see there where I made it looks like three of A already, and two of B.  I think my favorite yarn is F?  Or really just whatever color I am currently using honestly.  I am in the process of working on H which is a Tunisian honeycomb pattern: 


And I am pretty sure my favorite so far is the Tunisian Knit Stitch, which to me really does look exactly like knitting!! 


And just because I can, here's a shameless picture of my WIP on my balcony at the hotel I'm currently staying in during my conference in Golden, Colorado.  I'm a little homesick, but you can't feel too bad on a beautiful clear fall day in the mountains.






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