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Squared Circles Afghan

This squared circles afghan started like this. Beautiful shades of color in lovely wooly circles. These lovely bright shades of color just made my week. I spent  wasted spent  a lot of time just enjoying these colors. This was near Christmas time last year (as you can tell from the ornament topper that landed in the middle of this photo).

squared circles afghan

then I added the lovely borders in darker colors and squared the circle. They were curling up on the edges and seemed all different sizes and shapes.  So I blocked them and truly enjoyed the rich colors again. It was about this time that I thought about a cardigan or poncho crocheted out of these lovely colors.

squared circles afghan

I didn’t know what to do so I put them away for 5 months!

IMG_8468

I guess the hatching time was just right as it turned into this beauty!Squared Circles AfghanIt is incredibly beautiful with all the colors of the rainbow in it. Squared Circles Afghan

My favorite is the ruffled border. It is just perfect! the oatmeal wool granny bordering each square is just perfect. The squares are join as you go and the long color change yarn is wonderful to work with.  This squared circle blanket is 90 % wool and 10% nylon which means that cleaning it will require dry cleaning or gentle hand washing. As you can see from the top photo the yarn is quite fuzzy and the fibers wanted to mat together. It was difficult to frog any of this blanket.

Talk to you later,

Karen

 

 

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October’s To Do List

So here’s September’s to do list.

  1. Make Menu and Grocery list
  2. sew cup cozies 20    These are sewn and just need top stitching and buttons. October's To Do List
  3. Sew Christmas hearts October's To Do List
  4. Sew Tardis baby bibs
  5. Finish sampler afghan
  6. Finish wool afghan
  7. Finish grey afghan  You can see some of the results of my hard work below.October's To Do List
  8. Crochet 4 Minion hats child sizes  I have 5 finished and need eyes on 3
  9. Crochet 4 Ninja Turtle hats child sizes  These all need eyes but I have them crocheted  and waiting on sewing.
  10. Crochet 4  men’s hats
  11. Crochet 4 1 Women’s rose hats
  12. Crochet 5 Granny Stripe Scarves
  13. Crochet 5 Granny Square Scarves
  14. Crochet stars
  15. Crochet hearts
  16. Sew 10 super hero capes
  17. Sew 5 + aprons
  18. Cut out 5+ aprons
  19. Organize my side of the maker space
  20. Check computer for nasty virus
  21. Sew 6 flannel baby blankets for crochet trim
  22. Sew pillow cases for crochet trim
  23. sew 3 craft show aprons
  24. Figure out my signage for the show

My sweet daughter in law came over this week and helped me organize some of the sewing and fabric mess in the studio. She had some great ideas. While I am feeling much better and I am sewing more than last week, I still get tired pretty quickly. Sleep has been elusive the last couple of weeks. I am only getting about 5 hours a night and for an 8+ sleep person a night it just isn’t enough. I am doing all that I can do to make sure I get a good nights sleep and it just isn’t happening every night.

Here is October’s to do List! Get Ready it is countdown time to the Craft fair. Wow, This list is going to be enormous!! I have already started this morning!

  1. Make Menu and Grocery list
  2. sew buttons on cup cozies 
  3. Stiffen  all crochet ornaments
  4. cut out Tardis baby bibs
  5. cut out flannel baby bibs
  6. sew flannel baby bibs
  7. sew 37 cup cozies now cut out
  8. Sew Tardis baby bibs
  9. add ribbons to all ornaments
  10. Crochet 4  men’s hats
  11. Crochet 2 Women’s rose hats
  12. Crochet 5 Granny Stripe Scarves
  13. Crochet 5 Granny Square Scarves
  14. Crochet stars
  15. Crochet hearts
  16. Sew 10 superhero capes
  17. Sew 10 aprons
  18. Cut out 8  aprons
  19. Organize my side of the maker space
  20. Sew 6 flannel baby blankets for crochet trim
  21. Sew pillow cases for crochet trim
  22. sew 3 craft show aprons
  23. Sew 20 burp cloths
  24. finish owl hats that need eyes, wings and beaks
  25. Sew tags on all the scarves and hats
  26. Anything else I can think of!

That is a bunch of work! I had better get busy.

Talk to you later,

Karen

 

 

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The Sampler Afghan

Here is the sampler afghan. I started it last year; posting four squares a week. It grew quickly. It was going to be 200 squares randomly joined but I soon realized that I would need to cut it short. Putting it together was going to be a nightmare and the blanket itself would be enormous. Here are some photos

The Sampler Afghan The Sampler Afghan of the beginnings of it.  Then I started blocking it and the squares look so much better.

The Sampler Afghan

The Sampler Afghan

I tried several different border colors. I wasn’t fond of this one.

The Sampler Afghan

The Sampler Afghan

I tried a multi- color yarn and I sort of liked it. I was in the process of frogging some of the squares here. It has really been a love hate relationship with this afghan. I love the multicolored yarn. I just wasn’t sure how it would look assembled. I really disliked this blanket at this point. Nothing was right about it. So I took all the squares apart and started over with the multicolor  yarn along with the Stylecraft DK Special graphite to join the squares.

I have included affiliate links and will receive a small percentage of any purchase that is made.

The Sampler Afghan

The graphite really sets off the bright variegated yarn.

 

The Sampler Afghan

I loved it enough to finish the blanket. This is a throw sized sampler blanket.

The Sampler Afghan

It isn’t the huge sample blanket that I had envisioned but it is beautiful and the bright borders on each square really frame each granny square.

The Sampler Afghan

I love the bright colors in the framing around the sampler squares. It really gives the afghan some life and beauty.

The Sampler Afghan

 

The Sampler Afghan

There was so much already going on in this crochet blanket that the edging is as simple as you can get. Two rows; one of grey and one of the variegated yarn. It is quite beautiful and I am really pleased.

The Sampler Afghan

I am disappointed in myself that I didn’t crochet 200 squares as I had planned but I ran into a few road blocks on that project. One of which was finding 200 squares that were really different. The other was how to join them all together while keep the blanket a uniform shape and size. Originally I had planned to put them all together any which way. I figured out that I just can’t do that, it was really bothering me.
The other road block was working in one plain color. It was just so boring, and really not my style at all.

Talk to you later,

Karen

Ps. I am opening an Amazon handmade shop as well, so stay tuned. I will let you know the grand opening date! The items will be the same so we will do a test run and see which store sells the most!

 

 

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The Sampler Blanket

I made time to block the sampler blanket this week. If you are following me on Instagram you will notice that I have also started putting a border around each square.  Here are some befores and afters of the blocking process. If you have never steam blocked acrylic yarns you really should try it. It does a great job of heat setting nice straight edges and giving the granny squares their final shape.

The sample blanket

 

They sure look all wadded and out of shape. I started blocking them on my ironing board a few at a time.

The sampler blanketThey started looking so much better. I don’t always block my granny squares but these desperately needed it. The sampler blanketI used a ton of pins and my steam iron. I was really careful not to touch the iron to the yarns as it would melt. the squares all turned out to be about five different sizes when I was finished blocking them. Which was a nice surprise. The sampler blanketThis was going to be one creamy sampler blanket with no other colors but I just couldn’t leave it alone. Here is one with the borders that I am putting on each square. It will be much easier if I end up with squares that are all about the same size.The Sampler Blanket

 

Talk to you later,

Karen

 

 

 

 

 

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Yarn Stash

I hate to admit it, but my yarn stash was getting out of control! I had tons of yarn and yarntopia was packed.

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There was no more room in the cabinet for any more yarn. It is simply all squished in here. I even had skeins in a couple of baskets on the floor. Then I started crocheting hats, many hats, millions and billions of hats. Well, not really but at least 30+! Now the yarn stash is down to this.

2015-09-05 09.10.39-1You can’t really tell but there is definitely quite a few blank spots.  If you looked behind the mullions in the middle you would be able to tell that these spots are empty.  I love being able to see all of my yarn stash. I have even used up a bunch of the yarn that was in the baskets on the floor! Here is a quick view of some of things that have been finished in the past 2 months.

So many hats, baby blankets,  and scarves. I have used at least one skein for most of the hats. I have quite a few duplicate hats and a wide range of sizes. This is a small selection of what I actually accomplished. I am also quite close to finishing this beauty that I started last fall.
2014-12-31 13.02.48-2I can’t wait to show you the end result! There is so much happening and times is racing past. I hope to finish this blanket up this weekend but we will see! Meanwhile, the yarn stash is getting smaller and my embarrassment about the excessive amount of yarn I had is too! I would really love to show you the yarn cabinet with about half that much yarn. I will see what I can do to continue whittling the stash down to size.

Talk to you later,

Karen

 

 

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September’s To Do List

Today is the first third ninth day of September and time to do the To Do List! I’m in the middle of preparing for the Affair of the Heart in November. Time is winding down and I need to get on with preparing for it.

August’s To Do List:

  1. Sew tags on all cup cozies without tags
  2. sew tags on completed hats
  3. sew tags on completed scarves
  4. sew tags on  other completed items.
  5. Sew buttons on completed cup cozies
  6. Cut out needed fabric pieces for cup cozies
  7. get hair cut (it is so wild and bushy that I can’t stand it.)
  8. make menu and grocery list.
  9. rearrange furniture in living room

to do list

I did pretty well, considering I didn’t even start the to do list until August 26th.

So here’s September’s to do list.

  1. Make Menu and Grocery list
  2. sew cup cozies
  3. Sew Christmas hearts
  4. Sew Tardis baby bibs
  5. Finish sampler afghan
  6. Finish wool afghan
  7. Finish grey afghan
  8. Crochet 4 Minion hats child sizes
  9. Crochet 4 Ninja Turtle hats child sizes
  10. Crochet 4  men’s hats
  11. Crochet 4 1 Women’s rose hats
  12. Crochet 5 Granny Stripe Scarves
  13. Crochet 5 Granny Square Scarves
  14. Crochet stars
  15. Crochet hearts
  16. Sew 10 super hero capes
  17. Sew 5 + aprons
  18. Cut out 5+ aprons
  19. Sew 6 flannel baby blankets for crochet trim
  20. Sew pillow cases for crochet trim
  21. sew 3 craft show aprons!
  22. Figure out my signage for the show

to do list

WOW! I think that is enough. I am not sure that I can get it all done but I can sure try! September is going to be a full month as we look at all the things that need to be completed. I need to also figure out my displays, price tags, and packaging for the craft show.  I did get my serger sewing machine working about three weeks ago. I am so pleased. It has not been working well for about 8 years. I just didn’t have time to fix it and it wasn’t a priority. I think it is really going to speed up sewing the capes and aprons. I just need to get some white thread. There is a beautiful story attached to this serger and I need to tell you about it later this week.to do listThis is what the little work table next to the couch had looked like the past 8 weeks while I recover from knee replacement surgery. I am a bit young to have surgery but sometimes bad things happen and we just do what we have to do.

Talk to you later,

Karen

 

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5 Business Lessons Etsy Taught Me

There are many lessons I have learned as an Etsy seller the past 7 years. Condensing that knowledge down into the top lessons I have learned is hard but I will try to keep my list down to about 5. Here are the top five lessons Etsy taught me in my years as a seller.

1.Your shop is a business– treat it that way. Open a business account at a bank, keep your money separate. Pay yourself each month if you can. Keep regular hours, answer customer requests quickly.

2.Price your product with Profit in mind ( yes, Profit with a capital P). If you are not making a profit and supporting your business then you need to price your items accordingly. Pay yourself for your time and effort.

3.Don’t give up. IF I had $1 for every time I was going to close-up shop in May, June, or August, I would at least be able to buy dinner out. I have seriously thought about closing up my shop in the lean summer months for the first four years. Finally, I sat down to chart my lovely Etsy stats. I make at least 60% of my income between September and January. Ah Ha! I had a moment of insight. I was selling cold weather items, scarves, cup cozies, blankets, etc… These items sell in the cold weather months during the Christmas season! While we would all love to be an overnight sensation on Etsy. Think about what would you do if suddenly demand outstripped your ability to provide product. How would you handle selling 50 items a day. Who would create new product, package and ship it? It is better to have slow growth while you work out some kinks in your business. When Etsy used to have a front page treasury, many sellers would suddenly find themselves having massive sales for one day. The demand would outstrip their ability to provide and then the next reviews of their product would be bad.

4.Keep improving: Keep improving your product, honing your craft, fixing your tags, titles and learning all you can about SEO and selling online. Listen to experienced shop owners when they offer advice about fixing your photos and descriptions. Be alert and make it easy for your shop to be found. Add new items to your shop in either a huge online blitz with an accompanying social media blast or trickle it in with new items everyday! Either way works and there are mixed feelings on which is better.

5 Business Lessons Etsy Taught Me

Believe it or not these photos are of the same blanket. There is a huge difference between natural and artificial light and between my little camera and the photographer’s camera. I just don’t take good photos of the crochet blankets in my shop so I hire someone else to shoot the photos. The bottom photo is part of the ones that I will use in an upcoming pattern listing. They illustrate beautifully how soft and lovely this crochet blanket is.

5 Business Lessons Etsy Taught Me5. Brand everything: label your package, label your emails, use stickers, business cards, special packaging, use every opportunity to get your shop name out in front of your customers and to prove to them that you have a superior product.

6. Fix your product descriptions: How did Land’s End become the mail order catalog that it was in the 80’s and 90’s? It’s packaging and product descriptions. How did Cold Water Creek get to be such a big women’s retailer? It’s product descriptions and photographs made people want to buy the items. When someone can’t touch your product, it is extremely important to have lovely, fun descriptions. How do they know about it? What would you want to know, how big, how much, what is it made out of, How long did you work on it, how many of each do you make? These are all questions that need to be answered in your product description.

I admit that my product descriptions are one of my weakest points and something that I am going to work on in the coming weeks as we head into the start of the shopping season.

talk to you later,
Karen

Next time I will tell you how I did this step by step.

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August To Do List

I have to get my August To Do list written down as I have so much to get done before the craft show in November and Christmas in December. I have physical therapy and homeschooling biting into my time. Along with all the other things that Mom’s do! I have been stuck on several projects lately and also struggling with reaching the goals I have set for this year.  It is interesting that right as I am thinking all of these things two blog posts from some people that I try to remember to read on a regular basis. One is Michael Hyatt and the other is Dave Ramsey. Today, I’m going to lean pretty hard on Dave’s post about 4 Ways to Reach your Goals Before the End of the Year!

1. Write it Down

2. Keep is Specific and Measureable

3. Set a Time Limit

4. Own it.

These are great and they are the basis of this week’s to do list!

  1. Sew tags on all cup cozies without tags
  2. sew tags on completed hats
  3. sew tags on completed scarves
  4. sew tags on  other completed items.
  5. Sew buttons on completed cup cozies
  6. Cut out needed fabric pieces for cup cozies
  7. get hair cut (it is so wild and bushy that I can’t stand it.)
  8. make menu and grocery list.
  9. rearrange furniture in living room

If you noticed there is not one little bit of crochet on this list. I am pampering my wrists as I get carpal tunnel symptoms when I crochet too much. I will crochet later in the month when a loved one has surgery. It will be easy to take projects with me for my time sitting with them at the hospital. Here are a few photos of some crochet items that I finished up while recovering from surgery.

August To Do List

Lovely flannel receiving blankets and new crochet baby blankets ready for ChocolatesBabyShop!

August To Do List

 

We have had some lovely sales and I am teaching my new assistant how to package each order. It is taking a little extra time but she is doing a beautiful job. (This translates into I am training our youngest daughter to help me in the shop in return for cold, hard cash!) She is doing a great job and seems to enjoy it. I desperately needed someone to help with this as I was not getting around very quickly when she started working for me.

Talk to you later,

Karen

 

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Hats

Here are some of the hats I have been crocheting lately. I just love crocheting hats. They have a quick turn around time and I get an almost instant feeling of accomplishment.

2015-08-08 13.50.39Kathryn crocheted the crown on this little hat. I added the edgings and then also the rose and tag.

IMG_8301This hat I started from the yarn. It was fun to crochet. The picot border isn’t showing well in this photo.

2015-08-08 13.58.19

This cream hat is one of my favorites. It is a larger hat and the sequins and cream will look wonderful with anything you choose to wear. I have crocheted many other hats, caps, and scarves. I am going to wait to show you the rest of the things. They will be listing in ChocolateDogStudio and will also be for sale in my booth in November’s Affair of the Heart craft fair in Tulsa, OK.

This week has been a turning point in our lives as we transition back to school. Our youngest daughter started her school on Monday. Our oldest daughter heads back to college to start her senior year. We have been incredibly busy as our oldest son and his wife bought their first home. It needs some cleaning and lots of love to make it a home. Thankfully they have the energy and the time to get it done. Their church family is stepping in with painting and moving help. We are also transitioning some furniture that needs to go to another home.  Some of it is left from my Mom’s home when she moved to her retirement  community, some of it is our old furniture. These are all good things but between the different furniture pieces leaving at different times and the boxes of things headed to college our home feels a little chaotic.  I have been crocheting quite a bit and also going to physical therapy. The physical therapy is definitely needed but it takes every bit of my self control to make myself do the exercises and to also go to class. It just isn’t comfortable and it causes pain. While I know the end results are worth it, a part of me wishes that I could just skip the whole thing.

Talk to you later,

Karen