In with the new…skills


VL

Happy New Year! What a good time to start learning new skills! Although I suppose that before I can move forward and measure my progress I have to take a quick look back into my crafting past.

Projects from my crafting past

So what can I and can’t I do? Well, I’m not an absolute beginner. I can find my way around my sewing machine, although I haven’t got to grips with everything these wonderful contraptions can do yet. I can hand sew and embroider a little and I know a couple of crochet and knitting stitches. I have a few basic beading tools and accessories for making jewellery too. But there’s room for much improvement and so much to learn.

My aim is to make this more than learning the techniques alone, I want to train myself into knowing what works aesthetically and what doesn’t , what suits me and fits well and what is the most responsible way of going about it.

So here’s an official ‘out with the old’. Here are a few things I’ve made in the past and do actually use but with a wave goodbye to the so called techniques that I invented to put them together. To my experienced crafter friends these will seem obvious but they’re all honest mistakes. To other newbies like me, these may seem familiar…

The summer top

Summer topI love this little top and I have worn it on the few warm days we get around here. I got the fabric from a terrific craft fair in Brinsley (just outside Nottingham) a couple of years ago. I managed to score myself some gorgeous 1970s fabric on that day I tell you.

LESSON LEARNED:
Finish a job properly

Fabric frays, its a fact of life we can’t ignore – you just can’t leave raw edges on a hem, especially if the item of clothing is getting some good wear and tear. Learn the ways of the bias binding my friend or learn how to do hems properly for goodness sake!

This goes for any project or item you’ve taken care to make. Why go through the whole thing cautiously making sure your sewing is in perfect lines and looking all neat and tidy just to rush the end for that quick gratification? Its just not worth it.

Jewellery

Bracelet and necklaceI have a few hand made items of jewellery, some of which are my favourites, like this bracelect that looks just like juicy pomegranate seeds and this necklace with the pretty leaf bead at the end. I have lots of beads which people have given to me over time and I’m sure that eventually I’ll find a use for them all.

LESSON LEARNED:
Get the right tools
OK so teeth were around long before pliers and pinchers but that doesn’t mean they make the neatest and most secure finish to your work. If you’re going to spend hours lovingly threading individual beads onto the wire then at least spend a little cash making sure they stay there.

As much as I love using shoes for hammers and knives for screwdrivers I have to accept that whatever you’re making there’s no substitute for the right tool.

Bags, purses, you name it

Hand made handbagBasically I’m talking about anything with a lining. Bags are the things I’ve made the most with linings whether they’re cotton totes, crochet clutches or kitch little handbags like this one which was made from a shirt. They all need linings and deserve to have them done properly.

LESSON LEARNED:
It’s what’s on the inside that counts
I know that sounds like something from the Oprah Winfrey show but it is true. Although no-one may ever see your lining you’ll still know if you didn’t put enough effort into it.

Everything that has instructions

Image of instructions for a patternThis is the simplest of all but the most important and my downfall everytime. Instructions? Tutorials? Patterns? Phooey!

LESSON LEARNED:
Read the manual!
I don’t need to say anymore. The implications are obvious, I just need to make sure I follow my own advice.

2 Responses to “In with the new…skills”

  1. Claireon 06 Jan 2009 at 2:10 pm

    We all do shortcuts sometimes. And teeth work well as pliers, scissors, you name it. And I defy anyone who is an experienced crafter to say they don’t have their own shortcuts! Welcome on board the blogging hon! x

  2. Pamelaon 19 Jan 2009 at 6:54 pm

    Yup, we’ve all used our teeth to cut wire at some time in our creative lives. It’s a bit of a rites of passage I reckon.

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