Wednesday, 14 February 2018

Make a last-minute hanging heart for Valentine's Day - from almost nothing!

Forgotten
to buy, or make, a card? Running out of time? No craft materials on hand? I'm not necessarily saying any or all of the above apply to me, but I'm on holiday in Vietnam, I didn't bring a card with me, and Valentine's Day isn't celebrated here. I did have an old newspaper, scissors and thread, so I made a hanging heart. 
I folded a piece of paper, cut a heart shape on the fold, then used that as a template to cut more.
I stitched them together up the centre line, leaving a long length of thread to hang the charming finished item.
Went down rather well.

Wednesday, 10 January 2018

Knit for charity: Woolly Hat Day

Last time I knitted a woolly hat was for 2017's Women's March, and I made it in a couple of hours, by knitting a rectangle, folding it over, and joining the sides. Not the best-looking hat ever – and by no means the best made – but certainly fit for purpose.

You don't need to knit a new woolly hat for Woolly Hat Day, on January 26, organised by St Mungo's homelessness charity, to take part, but I think it adds another level of giving. Knit your hat, take your selfie wearing it, post on social media with the hashtag  #WHD18, donate to St Mungo's then give the hat to a charity shop or send it to Knit for Peace.

To make your donation text WOOL18 £2, WOOL18 £5, WOOL18 £10, or the amount of your choice, to 70070.

Need a pattern? Try one of these…
Ribbed beanie designed by Graeme Knowles-Miller

Classic pompom hat


Saturday, 30 December 2017

See it, try it, buy it: 2018 shows for crafters

Liven up the coming year ahead by planning a day out at a craft show or exhibition. Whether you go to be inspired by exquisite pieces, to stock up on supplies, to socialise – or a combination – you'll refresh your creative juices and return home full of enthusiasm for your next project. (I'll be updating this page so you might want to bookmark it.)

Perspectives on Patterns, Bankfield Museum, Halifax 
Until June 2 2018 | Free
Curated by the TAG (Textile Art Group), commemorating the mill-working tradition in the area, with embellished cards and clogs, bobbins with fabric strips (I think I saw this in Saltaire a couple of years ago), textile samples, stitched panels and needle-felting.

Wonderwool Wales Festival, Royal Welsh Showground, Builth Wells
April 28-29 | £10
With over 210 exhibitors spanning spinning, felting, weaving, knitting and crochet. Take part in hands-on woolschool workshops and events showcasing the best in Welsh and British wool and natural fibres

Orla Kiely: A Life in Pattern, Fashion and Textile Museum, London SE1
May 25-Sept 23 | £9.90
A look at super-successful designer Orla Kiely's 30+ years of work, from first sketches to finished fabrics.

Anni Albers, Tate Modern, London SE1
Oct 11-Jan 27 2019 | £16.50
Barred from studying painting at the Bauhaus school – because she was a woman – she turned to weaving and became an influential figure, pioneering innovative uses of woven fabric as art, architecture and design. This exhibition brings together some of her most important pieces of work.

Saturday, 25 November 2017

Christmas is coming…

It's the time of year when many more of us like to get creative, so here are some of my ideas from Christmases past, on this blog, in features I've written, and on Instagram. And there are Christmas presents to buy, too, in the form of a couple of gift guides for particular people.

Christmas cards and decorations

So-simple Christmas cards Your own photos pasted onto cards

Make a mini wreath

Make a festive foliage bauble

Transform tealight holders

Make paper Christmas decorations – perfect for children

Sew a felt Christmas stocking

Make a popcorn and cranberry garland

Make pine cone decorations

Make a paper bag advent calendar

Gifts to make

Step-by-step instructions, or simple inspiration

How to make spiced gin

How to make sloe gin

How to make preserved lemons

Make mulled wine sachets

Embroider a hashtag

Make bird-feeder balls

Knit a cowl

Make beard oil

Knit for babies (11 free patterns)


Christmas gift guides

For particular people, more to come, and more to be added to each.

Thursday, 23 November 2017

Christmas gift guide: houseplants & horticulture

On-trend interiors are currently channelling the 1970s jungle vibe, so here are some pressies for budding gardeners with a growing enthusiasm for all things green-fingered…

What's planted where
Even in a weeny windowbox, it's easy to lose track of the plants, seeds and bulbs that are in there, especially if they're lying dormant, died back or, not wishing to be negative, but just plain dead. And it's not unheard of to forget the name of that favourite flowerer… Pop in a plant marker, with the plant name (and date of sowing or bulb planting) written on it in pencil indelible marker and you'll know what's where. So useful.
Wooden plant markers, £3.95 for 40, Sarah Raven



Light up
Elho plant light
Light the way, or show off a favourite plant, with this space-saving planter featuring a built-in solar-powered LED lamp. Yes, fairy lights are lovely, but this will sit on a tabletop. Once fully charged, it gives eight hours’ light, perfect for outdoor entertaining.
Elho Flower Light, £35.95, The Worm that Turned







Learn with experts
No, not the services of a gardener. This is RHS Ambassador Jamie Butterworth, whose RHS remit is to encourage more young people to get into gardening. This online gardening course teaches how to convert any spot into a plant paradise including how to plan properly, what to plant for both food and beauty and how to maintain it all.
The new Contemporary Garden course, led by RHS ambassador Jamie Butterworth, from £79, www.learningwithexperts.com (gift vouchers available)


Hearts on hand
Yep, an actual plant. This Ceropegia woodii, aka chain of hearts or string of hearts, is a trailing vine, looking its best cascading from a hanging basket or down a set of shelves. It's often to be seen in the top #houseplants Instagram posts
Ceropegia woodii, £12.50, Trouva







No visible means of support
Terrariums look great, although their popularity may have peaked. However, as anyone who's ever owned one knows, the plants can quite quickly fail to thrive. That micro-environment needs careful managing in order to create optimum growing conditions. I've learnt this the hard way, by making several terrariums and watching their decline. See James Wong's terrarium advice. However, if you routinely kill all houseplants, an airplant (Tillandsia, to be precise) is much less demanding than soil-sited plants. This just needs a bright place, good air circulation and squirting with a plant mister a few times a week in summer, less frequently the rest of the year.
Airplant terrarium kit, £10.50, Crafty Plants (I'd leave out the reindeer moss when assembling, myself)

As seen on my screen
Definitely not Crocs. I appreciate that you don't reeeeally need special outdoor shoes for a bit of light pruning on the balcony, but these will identify you as a gardener when you're going out for supplies, visiting a garden for inspo, guerrilla gardening etc. Light, comfortable and waterproof, Backdoorshoes are made of super-lightweight expanded foam, in sizes 3-14, in loads of jolly outdoor designs including flowers, veg, grass, meadows (like mine, left).
Backdoorshoes, £25, www.backdoorshoes.co.uk

Tuesday, 31 October 2017

Handmade Halloween

Two Halloween ghosts made from paper hankies, for Adrienne Wyper's Made it! craft blog
Sick of Halloween decorations and costumes, fake cobwebs and plastic pumpkins festooning every shop you enter? For me, Halloween decorations and costumes should be based on stuff you have around the house, not on a load of mass-produced tat you buy and use/display for one day only. Waste of money, waste of the world's resources.

(The award for the most inappropriate Halloween display goes to my local B&Q, which had a 'trick or treat' bunting banner suspended over…the paint aisle. How about a beautiful display of your black grasses, nearly-black Cosmo atrosanguineus, dark purple-leaved heuchera and orange-flowered plants to salute the season instead?)

So here's a truly last-minute way to decorate your home or garden, made from stuff you're likely to have around the house: tiny dangling ghosts.

You will need
• Paper hankies
• Scrap paper
• Black felt tip
• Needle and black thread

Fold the hankies in four, corner to corner, to find the middle. Draw on two black circles for the eyes, slightly below that point. You can add a mouth if you want.

Crumple up the paper into a ball shape.

Thread the needle, keeping the thread doubled. Tie a knot in the end. Push the needle through the paper ball. Now position the hanky so that the needle comes out through the top of the ghost's head.
Squeeze the hanky around the paper ball to give a more drapy shape.

Tie your ghosts to a twig, window catch, mantelpiece… wherever you want.

More…
Last year I made a mini pumpkin lantern from a Cape gooseberry

Saturday, 14 October 2017

Finally finished: longstitch kit

About two years ago I sent off for a longstitch kit; I fancied following a pattern for once. I've done some cross-stitch before, both word-based works, and both designed by me. (I'm talking about 'Fuck off, moths' and 'Moho sweet moho'.).

However, it's quite difficult to find contemporary embroidery patterns, by which I mean no cutesy fluffy animals, ugly flowers, ladies in kimono or whimsical landscapes. I wanted something bold and colourful. And I found it. And now it's finished.

It probably took no longer than about six hours in total, but I kept setting it aside.

In terms of technique it was really easy: like colouring in with yarn.

The kit (by Vervaco, £25 from Stitcher) contained the printed Aida fabric, plus short lengths of yarn (and I have so much left). It's designed as a cushion cover, but I think I'm going to frame it. My only criticism would be that some of the printed lines were a little off-centre.