Cross Stitched Rings

Crosstitch Rings

These have been in my head for AGES. Remember how excited I was when I finally found the rings I needed? Oh, the relief!

Every crafter I’ve ever met has looked for ways to cover their whole life in their craft of choice. Knitters knit furniture, scrappers scrap artwork, and stitchers stitch jewelry.

I drafted up these little patterns to be stitched over one thread of 28 ct linen with one strand of embroidery floss, making sure that the design fit inside of the ring’s bezel.

Crosstitch Ring Tutorial Step 1

With the stitching done I traced the ring on a piece of cardboard, and cut it down until it would fit inside. I cut four pieces of thin batting to the same size and glued them altogether.

Crosstitch Ring Tutorial Step 2

Cut your finished stitching into a circle about 1/4″ bigger than your ring. Stitch a running stitch around the edge of the circle, a few threads in for stability. Pull the thread like a drawstring with the batting and cardboard inside. Stitch from side to side to lace the edges together and really secure your stitching around the batting. Then use a strong glue to glue it into the bezel.

Crosstitch Initial Ring

I made this ring to wear at BlogHer with my internet identity initials on it.

Cross Stitch Tree Ring

And then this ring is my personal icon – a tree for Tresa.

I made sure to use linen and thread that would hold up under washing, since I wouldn’t be able to do much of anything without this ring getting dirty. I’ll just have to remember to take this one off before doing any big construction projects and I should be just fine.

Grown Up Friendship Bracelets

Grown Up Friendship Bracelets
I had the idea for these bracelets last year, but didn’t get around to doing anything about them until September. By then nobody’s thinking about something as quintessentially summer as friendship bracelets, so I put them away for today.

Proving that these things are just in the air, I’ve been seeing friendship bracelets everywhere this summer. I love them all, but as a grown up, I need to be able to go from a beachy hobo look to professional at a moments notice. Which means I can’t really wear my friendship bracelets until they turn all grungy and rot away. I wanted the laid back look of a friendship bracelet, with the practicality of adult living.

Grown Up Friendship Bracelets - Back
The secret is tying a little toggle clasp on to each end. Instead of having to tie knots whenever you want to wear them, you just slide the little toggle through the hole, and remove just as easily.

There are tutorials for these all over the web, but here’s mine.

Friendship Bracelets - Step 1
Start by cutting a bunch of lengths of embroidery floss and tying them together with one big knot. Push a safety pin through that knot and use it to anchor it to some surface (a blanket or a pillow, say) so you have both hands to tie your knots. The finished width of your bracelet will depend on how many pieces of embroidery floss you use. You should also cut each piece plenty long enough. I found 4″ of floss to be about what you need to make 1″ of bracelet, if your bracelet is 8 pieces wide. If you make it wider than that, you’ll also need to make your pieces longer.

Friendship Bracelets - Step 2
Take the thread farthest on the left and tie a knot around the thread next to it by looping it around and pulling it through. For my pattern, I tied two knots around each thread.

Friendship Bracelets - Step 3
Pick up the next thread and tie two knots around it, and repeat this all the way across the row. Then start over again with the new left-most thread and tie knots over and over again until your bracelet is the size you want.

Friendship Bracelets - Step 4
Tie the threads together in a knot and cut off any extra, leaving a couple of inches to tie on the toggle closure. I just slipped a couple of the threads through the holes on the clasp and tied little knots.

Grown Up Friendship Bracelets
Making these brought back so many memories. My best friend in third grade, Nicole, and I used to sit and tie knots for hours and hours, including every recess. I plan on making a whole bunch and sending them out to all my pals, now grown up bff’s.

Knotty necklaces: Working with fibers

Knotty necklace

I learned about pre-threaded bead cord from my favorite local bead store, and I’ve become obsessed with it. The great thing about buying it pre-threaded is that it comes on a needle thin enough to get through even your little beads without breaking them. Then you can buy it in a bunch of different colors and sizes to get the look that you want.

Knot closeup
Here you can see closer that I just tied a knot at the top and bottom of each bead, and then left about 1/2 an inch between each bead.

Crimp closeup
When you use fibers instead of chain, there are a couple of different findings you can use to attach it to a clasp. Here’s a bead tip finding where you thread the fiber and then close the metal down around it. Or a cord coil where you smush the coils down tight on a cord. Or as I did here, a cord cap where you use pliers to close those tabs down.

Big knotty necklace
I used this same technique on a larger scale with these great big chunky beads. Since they were so much bigger I could use a ribbon and thread it right through.

big knot closeup
Since I was making this a tiered necklace, I wanted to vary the look. Look at how different each strand looks just by changing the space between knots.

Closure closeup
Since I was going with several strands of ribbon, and I had all kinds of those triangle jump rings left over, I skipped a traditional finding and just tied the ribbons around the ring. To make it secure, and keep the ribbon from fraying, I melted the ends together.

Knot tutorial Step 1
If this is totally rudimentary for you, just skip all the rest. But I thought I’d add it because when I have taught classes I’ve been continuously surprised by how many people – particularly the teenagers – don’t know how to tie a knot in the end of a thread. So here you go. Start by bringing the end around and crossing it over the thread.

Knot tutorial Step 2
Bring that end under the thread, and through the loop you’ve made.

Knot tutorial Step 3
Start to pull it tight, and use your thumbnail to scoot the knot along to where you want it to end up. This part can take a little practice, but you can always loosen the knot and take a second run at it.

I’ve seen some amazing things made with some really out there fibers. You bring in some of those specialty yarns with the sparkles and the fringe and you can add a whole new dimension to your jewelry.

Yo Gabba Gabba Quilt for Davy

Davy's Yo Gabba Gabba quilt
My quilting streak continues, this time for a very special little girl and her mama who needed to be shown how many people were cheering them on.

Ruth is an old family friend. My mother-in-law is best friends with her mother-in-law, Bear and his siblings grew up with her husband and his siblings, when we were very first married and I was still planning on being an actress, we even helped out with her husband’s wedding video business.

Since then we’ve all gone off in a bunch of directions, but stay closely connected through this family network. Ruth’s husband is one of the creators of Yo Gabba Gabba, and the one responsible for the fun we had when we went to the live show.

Davy was born with some significant challenges that have led to surgeries and medications and serious medical bills, so all her friends and family got together to throw a benefit. I couldn’t attend, but I wanted to contribute something to the silent auction so I busted out a few of my favorite techniques and made a Yo Gabba Gabba inspired quilt.

Yo Gabba Gabba quilt
The fabrics are all old Amy Butler favorites I had left over from other projects. I hoard her fabric, so I had just enough of different pieces to make a crib sized quilt. The colors couldn’t have been more perfect. Totally girly, but with a big bite of acid.

Yo Gabba Gabba quilt
And because I can’t stop myself from machine appliqueing, I made a center panel with a message from the show. I downloaded a Yo Gabba like font and drew a flower like Foofa wears, and used this sentiment that comes from a song Muno sings when he’s too afraid to go to sleep.

They were looking for items to be auctioned off, but the whole time I was working on this I had little Davy in my mind. Being a mom of a kid with special needs is wonderful and hard and often lonely. I wanted to show Ruth solidarity, I wanted to lend Davy courage. I wanted to wrap them both up and tell them to not be afraid, that their lives won’t look like other people’s but they will be rewarding and full of love, to welcome them into a network of people who learn a whole different way of finding value in people and in life.

The quilt never made it to the auction. It’s now keeping Davy company in her rocking chair, which is exactly how it should be.

Mondrian Quilt is finished!

Mondrian quilt
With Bear’s parents visiting us last month, I wanted the house to look as perfect as possible, which meant that I not only wanted to get my quilting mess out of the way, but I wanted to be able to show off the finished product. I’m totally in love with it.

Mondrian quilt
As a reminder, here’s the piece I rendered in quilt. I saved that picture to my computer and made the pattern in photoshop by doing a whole bunch of math. I divided the whole quilt up into 12″ squares so that when they were all sewed back together they would create the original image. Then it was a matter of figuring out the math of how big each tiny piece had to be to create the 12″ piece, which in turn would create the actual image. With my love of puzzles, it was a ton of fun to work out.

Mondrian quilt closeup
I wanted to keep the quilting simple, partly because this is a 12′ x 12′ quilt I did on my home Singer, but also because I didn’t want it to distract from seeing the image as a whole. I decided to do this little spiral square pattern to really emphasize the squares of color, and distract from the patchworking it took to get there.

I love Mondrian’s work as an artist, but also because it just screams out QUILT! to me. I think this quilt may be the first in a series. Imagine how great this one would be. Or this one or this one. And of course, the most iconic of them all, this one.

Tiered Necklaces: Using Crimp Beads

Black stacked necklace
I’ve been loving the trend lately of the really dominant necklaces. I haven’t found a bib necklace that worked on me yet, so I’ve been following the “dripping with beads” trend. Bear’s grandmother left me a ton of these jet black beads, but they’ve been sitting in my drawer for years. In my necklace making marathon, I decided it was time to address it.

Crimp beads
Each of these strands is secured on to one clasp using a crimp bead. This clasp is made for a three strand necklace, but I snuck in a fourth by tying two strands to one of the loops.

White stacked necklace
I made another necklace in the same style using these crazy white beads I found. They’re enormous, and remind me of Wilma Flintstone. I can’t quite decide if I love it like crazy or think it’s a little ugly. It’s a fine line sometimes.

Silver stacked
While it doesn’t use a crimp bead, I wanted to share this necklace here too. It’s another tiered necklace like the others, but this one is light weight so I could get away with just using knots.

cone closeup
The strands are tied together and then threaded through the cone,then tied around the clasp, and the unpleasant ends are threaded back into the cone. The cone doesn’t offer any strength or anything, but it hides all those ugly knots securing everything together. Whenever I just use knots I always make sure to reinforce it with glue.

Crimp Bead Tutorial Step 1
Now back to the crimp beads. These are really excellent for securing just about anything onto a jump ring, which can then be secured onto a clasp. This is especially invaluable when you use something like tiger tail which is super strong, but impossible to tie knots in.

Thread your crimp bead onto your fishing line.

Crimp Bead Tutorial Step 2
Then thread the clasp or jump ring you’re securing your line to.

Crimp Bead Tutorial Step 3
Bend the end of your line around and thread it back through the crimp bead.

Crimp Bead Tutorial Step 4
Then pull the line tight and crimp the bead closed with pliers.

This is usually the first lesson I give to beginning jewelry makers. It’s the easiest thing to learn for the fastest payoff of fun jewelry.

Maximum Fun Baby Shower

028
I’ve been on board with MaximumFun.org since the very beginning. And being around so long, spending so much time chatting on forums, listening to podcasts, supporting this new experimental media, makes me feel so connected to Jesse Thorn that he feels like a friend. Jesse and his wife Theresa are expecting their first child, so when we got together at MaxFunCon, a bunch of forum friends and I knew that it was only right we throw our friend a baby shower.

Max Fun Baby Shower
The whole weekend was scheduled so we decided to keep things modest. I sent out emails to everyone I could track down, inviting them to bring a card or something, a whole bunch of folks donated cash, and we all surprised them at lunch with our gifts. I had to make them a diaper cake, of course, but the real group gift is the quilt I whipped up.

Baby Thorn's baby quilt
Jesse frequently speaks of his love of antiques, so I went with reproduction 40’s fabrics with some cream kona cotton to break it up. They’re having a boy, but I don’t love aggressively gendered baby items, so I was pleased with the color palette here. Not pastel, not primary, but still somehow juvenile. It was hard to give up.

MaxFun baby quilt
My favorite part was the appliqued section. I wanted to include a memento that would remind them where this blanket came from, but I also didn’t think they’d love decorating their baby in the business logo, so I recreated the iconic MaxFun rocket ship, but kept it off in a corner in an attempt at subtlety.

When I first had the idea I was worried that it might be a little weird. I’m not typically a fanatic type of fan, and I thought it might be a bit much. But as soon as I mentioned it to my MaxFun friends, everybody thought it was the right thing to do. That’s what keeps me coming back to the internet. Supportive, loving communities that spring up around something awesome.

Showing off the beads: Eye Loops

Red bead necklace
I loved these red faceted beads so much I really wanted to highlight them. But stringing them all by themselves didn’t seem very special, so I used this really simple technique that sets each bead apart to really shine.

Eye closeup
Each bead is threaded on to a wire, and then the wire is bent around to make a loop linking it to the next bead. It’s super easy, and eliminates the need for any other findings besides the clasp.

Chain and pendant necklace
Along with using it to make the whole necklace, you can also use this technique to incorporate beads and chain. Here I interrupted the chain with those silver beads by making loops on each end to link in place.

head pin closeup
I made the pendant in the same basic way, just using a head pin instead of wire. One end is flat so the bead can rest on it while the other end secures it to the necklace.

Simple chain necklace
I was watching TV while I was working on this, and I saw an actress wearing a necklace I really liked. So I made it right then. Just a few simple beads staggered out among a couple strands of chain. This is totally an “everyday” necklace that will be perfect with a T-shirt and a simple skirt.

Eye Loops Tutorial Step 1
Bend the wire so that a little more than 1/4″ is perpendicular to the rest.

Eye Loops Tutorial Step 2
Use your round nose pliers to bend that end around in a loop to meet the rest of the wire.

Eye Loops Tutorial Step 3
Link it onto whatever other piece you want to attach it to, and then close the loop by pressing the end up tight to the base.

Once you get this technique down, you can make just about 80% of the stuff you’d see in the cheap accessory stores. But you can use better looking stuff to do it.

2011 Year of Pleasures #23

BINGO!

For years, YEARS!, I’ve had this idea in mind for a project using a ring with a premade bezel. I searched and searched and came up empty. When I could find one in a jewelry finding catalog it was the wrong size and totally awful looking. Having one custom made was cost prohibitive. I even bought rings and tried to get the stone out, but I just ended up destroying the whole thing.

Then in my weekly perusal of the craft stores….BAM! The very perfect thing. When I found it on the shelf I wanted to run through the aisles of the craft store, hugging everyone I saw.

Now to get to work.

Chain Necklaces: Working with Jump Rings

Chain necklace
I bought a big spool of chain with a coupon at the craft store so I could make a simple necklace I could wear with anything. It’s just a whole mess of chains attached to one chain that goes around my neck, all thanks to jump rings.

Jump Ring close up
Here you can see that it’s chains attached to little rings, onto a bigger ring. Doing it this way saves cash by putting all the chain just where you can see it, and also saves the skin on the back of your neck from being rubbed off by a huge rope of chains.

Mocha and chain necklace
I just went nuts over this heavy chain I got at Michael’s, but I had no idea how to work with it. I also loved those gray brown faceted glass beads, so I just bought them because I loved them. That’s part of what’s so fun about jewelry to me, you buy stuff you love and then just mash it up together.

Toggle closeup
This chain is so thick that a circle big enough to get around it would be way huge. This was a perfect application for those triangle jump rings. I used these to attach the toggle closure to the chain, as well as the beads to the chain on the other end.

Jump Ring Tutorial Step 1
Jump rings are super simple to use, and incredibly versatile. All you have to do is twist the two ends open with a pair of pliers. Don’t pull them straight apart, you want to twist or you’ll never get it back in to proper position.

Jump Ring Tutorial Step 2
Then you just thread on your chain, your clasp, your charm, whatever you’re joining together and twist those two ends back until they’re touching.

This is part of what’s so addicting to me about jewelry making. It really couldn’t be much easier, but just knowing how to twist these rings closed opens up worlds of creativity. And betcha $10, if you’ve got a broken necklace you now know how to fix it.