Finished Objects – 1/3

(This post originally appeared on my Ko-Fi page on January 3, 2025.)

I have decided that, for the time being to get through the giant amount of WIPs that have been languishing in my boxes, bags, and drawers, I am going to make myself finish something before starting something new. Considering we are only 3 days into the new year, it’s going pretty well so far. I’ve finished 2 projects this week.

[A crocheted baby dinosaur with pink belly, stripes, and nostrils, gray back, tail, and limbs, and crocheted eyes with three shades of green in the iris and a white highlight sitting on an upside down tan plastic bucket.]

First is yet another Baby Dinosaur by Complicated Knots in the leftover Loops and Threads Soft Classic from my mom’s birthday present. I swear I will take a break from these and make something else for a while, unless someone wants to order a custom one. This one will be listed in the shop next week.

[A cross stitch of the faces of Garfield and Odie on black Aida fabric.]

The other is this cross stitch of Garfield and Odie by Motoruxin. By searching through my Google photos archive, I clearly started this for StitchMaynia in 2020 (the only time I ever attempted it) and then promptly set it down on June 1 with just the yellows and oranges filled in. So I finished it up over the past couple days, and am ready to fill in the last corner of this sheet (even though I am going to cut them apart and frame them individually).

[A square of black Aida fabric with Animal’s face, Stitch sideways with his mouth open toward the sky, and Garfield and Odie with an empty bottom right corner.]

I’ve just grabbed her Cookie Monster pattern because I realized I didn’t have another small pattern to go there.

For now, I’m going to stick to these weekly update styles instead of trying to write full blog posts for every single thing and then getting behind and getting too overwhelmed with the amount of things I need to finish. Especially since I am intending to finish a lot of projects that are just sitting around with minimal work left to finish them.


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Finished Object – Baby Dinosaur

This little Baby Dinosaur by Complicated Knots was equally deceptively difficult and deceptively easy at the same time, and I can’t exactly explain it.


A crocheted baby dinosaur made in various shades of blue, teal, and purple, sits on a wooden table facing the camera.


It’s made in parts, a stuffed main body piece, head overlay, two arms, two mirrored legs, and a back panel, and then sewn together at the end.


The right side of the baby dinosaur.

I actually finished most of the pieces long before I sewed it together because I pulled one of those “putting off the easy part” moves.


The left side of the baby dinosaur.

It’s made of partial mini-skeins of Knit Picks Brava, hence way more colors than the two colors it’s supposed to be, and the back piece is slightly scrunchy, but it turned out super cute. It was very confusing, however, that I decided to pick the opposite colors of the original (blue as my dark color and purple as the light) because I would occasionally get mixed up seeing her pick up the purple where I was supposed to be using blue or vice versa.

The back of the baby dinosaur.

It was definitely fun to explore the different shaping techniques like using surface crochet to curve the legs, and to know that other people use the same “make a bunch of fingers and stick them together to make a hand” technique that I tend to use for creating hands and feet.

While this is not a beginner-friendly pattern, I would say don’t be scared to try it if it looks interesting and you have made a few Amigurumi before. My one tip is just for my fellow lefties:  when it comes to the back legs, the one you make for the “left” instructions will go on the right of the dinosaur and the “right” on the left. This is visible once the legs are finished and ready to sew on, but it might be good to remember while you are working on them.


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Finished Object – Scrap Blanket

I present my second finished and washed scrap blanket.

A blanket with diagonal stripes of varying lengths, widths, and colors with a blue and green border laying across the top of a bed.

It’s made of all the unknown scraps from my stash box, so it’s definitely got a few bits that felted slightly in the wash. But not enough to affect it too much. 

A black dachshund puppy laying on the blanket piled up on the bed.

It’s definitely passed the puppy test. In fact, it’s passed the puppy test so well that he’s basically claimed it as a nap spot and I’ve taken to leaving it and most of the rest of my blankets on the floor at the end of my bed as his cozy area.

A ball of triple-stranded yarn with each strand a different color, the outer layer with two shades of pink and black, and inner layers involving blues, purples, yellows, and oranges in addition to the black strand.

Like I said, this was random scraps, so I don’t actually have a lot of precise info, but I can outline the general process. The base is a C2C blanket. I think this is the tutorial I learned from a few years ago, though if it isn’t I still think it’s a good, comprehensive one: C2C blanket blog post tutorial from Sarah Maker. I started in my heavier worsted weight yarns and used the magic knot method to create a ball of yarn to work from and add subsequent balls of yarn created the same way. With my thinner scraps I just used more strands together to get the right thickness. I “measured” by laying it on my bed and working until one side went across the foot of the bed, then turned one corner while lengthening the other side until it was as long as the bed before turning to make the final corner. 

The inner portion of the blanket before the border was added laying on a light wooden floor.

Once the middle had four finished corners, I took apart another C2C blanket that had been abandoned for a very long time because I ran out of the colors and used it to crochet a 6-row border around the outside using a pattern from the Crochet Every Way Stitch Dictionary and making up the corners.
Scrap blankets are my favorite way to use up scraps, especially if you are like me and just have an entire box you need to use up. I just probably would suggest that, unlike me, you wait until the heat wave dies down before you start working on one.


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