On Designing

Is that too pretentious of a title? Meh. Anyway, I have finished many things recently, but I am not ready to write everything up about them just yet. So instead, I thought I’d share a bit about how I go about designing patterns.

Most of the time, it starts with a swatch and a bit of math on paper. I have to write it out, and often a few different times, so I can see what is going to happen. With these socks in particular, I had to draw out the increases several times, and I am having to do that for each size because I cannot wrap my brain around it to just jump into it.

Other times, I can just measure a swatch and work from there. But that just means I have to do the piece over and over. Like with this blanket. I thought I was going to like the larger squares, but it was too much.

The second time I started this blanket, I still went too large with the squares. But I did find out that you can get a full scarf out of a single ball of Lion Brand Heartland Tweed yarn, in case that information is of use to anyone.

Third times the charm for this particular blanket. Once I finally make the piece I was aiming to make, taking notes on it all the way, I write the pattern up fully, wait at least a week, and then make one following the pattern exactly to make sure I’ve gotten all the steps down. That final version is usually the one I use for the pictures I include in my patterns, though I sometimes also include the one from which I wrote the pattern if it didn’t change much.

There’s a bit of a sneak peek into my design process. Hopefully it’s helpful for anyone looking to design their own knitting or crochet patterns.


Rainbow Hearts Galore

Ok, I had planned this to happen way back at the beginning of the month, but then I kept changing my mind on how to do certain things and what I wanted to be in the boxes. But it’s done and out now: Rainbow Heart Cross Stitch Kits and my Rainbow Heart Cross Stitch PatternsCircle and Square!

I have really been focusing hard on this for the past week once I decided how I wanted to make the “getting started” guide. You don’t have to purchase a pattern or kit to get that guide, just click here!

I had originally wanted to film all the videos myself, but I decided to go ahead and find videos that already existed to use with the guide now and film my own tutorials to add to it later on because I really wanted to finally launch these.

The patterns themselves are available in my Ko-Fi Shop, while the kits are available on Etsy. Any purchase in my Ko-Fi shop over $3 unlocks all supporter exclusives for 30 days which means any pattern purchase, single pattern or the double pattern bundle, gets you exclusive downloads, too!

I’m so excited to finally share these with you all, and hope you love them as much as I do!


Crochet The Day Away

Fell into a bit of a crochet pit recently. After finishing my Betty Boyfriend Sweater, I wanted to do something with the extra ball of yarn I had ordered. And by after finishing, I mean immediately because I stayed up way too late that night starting on this bag:

And once I finished the main body of the bag, it needed flowers. And once I made those flowers, I was struck with the idea for the belt after finishing the flowers. It was a mad flurry of hooks and fiber for a few days. Once I finished those, I still felt a need to crochet something else. So I grabbed my Crochet One Skein Wonders book and created this yoga mat bag:

I ended up making it twice, because the first time I went way off course from the pattern. The second time I followed the pattern exactly and it ended up being about a foot too long. Luckily I was able to put my mat in, rip back to about where I wanted it to end, and redo the final round with the mat still in the bag. It’s not a crochet project unless I have to do at least one part twice, I guess.