Sunday, September 6, 2009

Sweet Enough to Eat —
Raspberry Ripple with Real Vanilla HDT

Ooh, this motif looks so scrumptious in Tatskool's HDT. The creamy vanilla...the warm raspberry ripple...it looks sweet enough to eat.

Tatting with this thread is an irresistible treat. Rings hold their shape and chains don't go all floppy like three-plies sometimes can. This is a six-cord thread and yessirree, is it ever smmooooooth.

But it is a bit hard to see on a light-colored background, so here it on some purple silk.

Isn't it just lovely stuff? Tatting with it gives me the sweetest taboo. (Apologies to Sade Adu for using her song title.)

Now on to more murky technique analysis. If you're not in the mood, you may want to stop reading now.

From the start I suspected this round might not lie flat. Sure enough, the final repeat is 316 -inch too narrow to complete the pattern. So close! Would blocking fix it? Dunno, really.

A few days ago I received the instructor's critique on this motif. It was a thorough and thoughtful review, and I'm grateful for her suggestions. It's just that my design wasn't constructed very well. It was pretty and a nice design effort, but unstable.

Here is what I have learned: chains are a good means of traveling up and out, but they need built-in structure to avoid "wet spaghetti syndrome." Rings are great stabilizers, but can devour precious negative space.

Another thing I learned is that retrofitting stability into a motif is like forcing a square peg into a round hole.

Looks like I have a long way to go to whip this doily-size wet noodle into shape. It makes my heart ache because I pored my creative soul into the lesson. But the class isn't even half done, so there are many, many more things to learn and lots of room to grow.

Witness the genesis of a design. Who knows? Maybe even a designer.

That wince? It's nothing. Just shrugging off a growing pain and getting down to business.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Tatting at the Smithsonian

If you haven't seen these yet, I didn't want you to miss it.

Shirley Hays over at Shade Tree Art recently shared photos of tatting samples she saw during her Behind the Scenes Lace Tour. Go see!

What colors are your Rainbow?

Everyone seems to be taking this quiz so here I go.
Jumping on the rainbow bandwagon, lemming-like.

No surprises here, though I think they are a bit off the mark about the patience.


Your rainbow is strongly shaded violet.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

What it says about you: You are a creative person. You appreciate beauty and craftsmanship. You are patient and will keep trying to understand something until you've mastered it.

Find the colors of your rainbow at spacefem.com.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Tatting Tea Tuesday - ParTEA On

**UPDATE** Hey, this doesn't look anything like a palm tree!

Ever start out with one tatting goal in mind but get derailed by something else entirely?

It seems my inner child would not be quieted, insisting I create this vaguely iPod-esque cameo of her instead. Say hello to my inner child.

Can't quite see her? It's sort of like an autostereogram, except you stand a much better chance of actually seeing the image, LOL!

Maybe this pink iPod ad will help.

Here's another iPod dancer image that I rather liked.

Maybe now I can tat that darling palm tree and dream of some well-earned hammock time in the process.

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Settling in for a tropical tat with an island concoction from Zhena's Gypsy Teas called Mojito Mint. A splash of rum, aromas of mint and citrus...this infusion sets a relaxing mood. Think of kicking back in a hammock while idyllic island breezes gently rock your cares away. To that end, I'm tatting a palm tree.

The Palmetto Tatting Guild has generously posted two palm tree patterns. Click on "Favorite Patterns" to see them.

Since the Sprout's nap times have been steadily dwindling, I chose this one: Palmetto Tree [PDF] Care to join me for an island get-away?

Wishing you all blissful me time to create something beautiful.
See you next Tuesday for more communi-tea!