Showing posts with label craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label craft. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

DIY: 5-minute Apron


This was initially posted in an old blog of mine - reposting here just because. (It still is my favorite apron.)

In a house-cleaning frenzy one Saturday motivated by the presence of a clean-freak friend, I hastily made an apron from an old pair of jeans. It was a bit late in the making but it still had its use.

Ingredients

  • An old pair of jeans, preferably one that fits your hips or waist
  • A pair of scissors

Steps

  1. Make a jean skirt by cutting along the dotted line as shown in the picture. Be sure to cut the crotch of the pair of jeans to turn into a skirt. Also, trim the hem of the jean skirt to make it straight.

  2. With the front side facing you, cut a little to the left side of the fly from the bottom. Upon reaching the waistband, cut across the zipper thereby separating the two sides of the front.


That’s it! All done! Wear the apron buttoned from behind, so you’ll have use of the before-back-pockets in front for the putting of various cleaning implements.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Happy New Year's Crafting!

Happy New Year to all! (And a super belated Merry Christmas. Derp.)


I'm eschewing all pretenses at new year's resolutions and have decided to embark instead on craft projects throughout the year, to be logged and documented on an old Starbucks leatherette planner that's been gutted and refilled with nice blank pages.

Lesson 1: Make it pretty but not perfect. So I won't be afraid to make mistakes and be frozen with fear instead of actually starting the doing.

The leatherette planner was an old 2008 planner that has been sitting around for ages that I've been meaning to refill and use for something. Several trips to National Bookstore yielded no premade refill paper that would fit the rings. So I said screw the search and started punching holes on standard bond paper to make my own refills. Problem solved.

Lession 2: Start the doing. Never mind that the materials aren't complete or if a crucial step is missed now and then. Just start doing.

Project 13A is a white shirt embroidered with a whale shark (yesss, addictions...) in bright blue embroidery floss. Inspired by the designer Aida Coronado's mexican clothes with its exquisite embroidery, I wanted to start practicing embroidery again. Last time I held embroidery floss was almost 15 years ago when cross stitch was all the rage. I finished after 4 nights of sewing.


Sunday, November 11, 2012

Craft MNL's Knit Wit!


Craft MNL is hosting a beginner's knitting workshop by yours truly! Hala! So soon! I'm scared-excited. As part of the facilitator's profile, they asked me to answer a whole slew of questions about crafting. Napa-tumbling ako. And so, after all that effort, I'm posting my answers here:


How long have you been crafting?  What got you started?

I’ve been crafting for as long as I can remember. My grandmother taught me how to crochet when I was young, but making doilies bored me as a child and I was always reading through craft books for projects that was different or out of the norm. Art was a favorite subject (along with Math, Science and Reading ;p) just because that gave me freedom to fool around with different materials and techniques.

What's your favorite medium?  Why?

Colored pencils! I love colors and I love to draw. I would have liked to be a master painter but sadly, painting was never my medium. It didn’t agree with me and my grande vision.  It’s still a dream, though.

Next up are yarn and needles, of course, which include knitting and crochet. I taught myself how to knit in 2007 from video tutorials on the internet, which always amazes people for some reason. I can’t stop myself knitting hats since then.

Tell us about your favorite projects.

One of my earlier knitting projects was a unfinished knit pouch using a binary pattern that when translated is supposed to say “property of rubybox” in Unicode Western Latin. I did the manual translation myself from UTF character to binary, and feel sufficiently nerdy enough to brag about it. I doubt though that the translation would hold water if checked by a computer science major. As for the project itself, all that’s left is to sew it up and attach a zipper - something I’m not looking forward to and have been procrastinating doing since 2008.

What's the one crafting skill you've always wanted to master/learn?

Spinning! With the amount of yarn that I use in knitting and crochet and the lack of variety yarns in the most accessible craft store, it stands to show that the next step would be making my own yarn. I’ve watched dozens of tutorial videos but am still at a loss on how to start sourcing tools and materials.

What are you currently working on?

Right now, I’m knitting a winter hat with an attached fake beard for my sister in the US - she wanted one for when she starts snowboarding this Christmas season. Also, an ambitious crochet blanket that I forsee will be finished by the year 2020.

What's your dream project?  What have you done to make it happen so far?

An ambitious rainbow crochet blanket that will be finished by the year 2020. I’ve already got the initial set of yarns and have already started on it, but the going is slow.

I also want to make a set of bike accessories for my folding and mountain bike but that’s still on the drawing board.

Aside from crafting what else do you do?

Aside from knitting, crocheting and drawing, I also make websites, climb mountains and do volunteer work for different environmental groups. I help out whenever I can with Dolphins Love Freedom murals, an awareness campaign initiative by artist AG Sano for the plight of dolphins in captivity, and am also currently helping to maintain the website and facebook page for Butanding Network, another awareness initiative, this time, for the conservation of whale sharks in the Philippines.

How does creativity influence the other areas in your life?

When I encounter little problems, I always think what can I do/make that will solve this? When my wallet zipper broke, I crocheted a little coin purse as a replacement. In my favorite color. With a carabiner so that I can attach it to anything to keep from losing it.

Any advice for other aspiring crafters?

Make something useful and pretty, then USE IT, or give it to someone who will. That’s how I get my motivation to continue crafting.

What do you do to beat a 'creative block'?

Hmm... I usually sleep on it. For several days. Or I do another entirely different thing, totally unrelated. But then that could just be me procrastinating again. Though it does work sometimes.

Give us 3 crafting essentials you must have in your toolbox at all times.

A pair of scissors, any writing implement and a notebook. All for catching ideas.

Why should people get their hands busy (and start crafting)?

You know that satisfaction people get from finishing a long and arduous project? Add an actual tangible finished product that you can show off to unsuspecting people with a smug look on your face, saying, “yes, I made that.”

Where can we find your work?

Usually worn by friends and family. I’m terrible at keeping blogs and it takes me two gruelling hours to write a single paragraph, but I’m changing that soon *crossing fingers. For those with a Ravelry.com account, I keep my projects posted under the username rubybox.


The workshop will be in Craft MNL workspace on November 24, 9-12pm.

Craft MNL
Unit Y, The Collective,
7274 Malugay St., Brgy. San Antonio, Makati City
+639178040553

Join the class! Register now with Craft MNL.






Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Whale Shark Amigurumi!

Recent obsession with whale sharks, fiber arts, and a need to look for other sources of income has inspired me to create for the first time ever in my life an amigurumi pattern in hopes for sustaining my existence through my increasingly expensive and thus largely unsustainable hobbies - yes, yarn is expensive.

Amigurumi is an ancient (;P) Japanese art of creating soft cutesy animal toys through either crochet or knitting. While this goes against my standard craft philosophy of "must be practical and useful," it cannot be helped that I did find the creation of this to be ADORABLE. (The emotions far outweighed the practicality; I'm sorry, little brain) So now I choose to share this ADORABLE WHALE SHARK with the world via Ravelry.com, for only 3.00 USD (plus taxes, I believe.) FREE!

This original pattern is designed by yours truly. Born of hours of hard work, this little whale shark is sure to inspire joy and happiness to whomever embraces it!


Promotion! This pattern is free of charge until October 8! So get it NOW!

[UPDATE 2013-04-17] I'm making this pattern a free Ravelry download just because I'm nice. And I need testers for my future patterns. But you're welcome to donate if you feel like being nice too! Just use the little button. All donations will go to a personal advocacy fund I'm putting aside for supporting local conservation efforts.