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Crochet and sustainability have a natural intersection, as this craft involves creating beautiful and useful items from yarn, a renewable and versatile material.
Eco-friendly self-care involves taking care of oneself while also considering the impact that our actions have on the planet.
By incorporating sustainable crochet practices into our daily self-care routines, we can not only improve our own well-being but also reduce our environmental impact.
One way to practice sustainable crochet is to choose eco-friendly yarns.
Many companies now offer yarns that are made from sustainable materials such as organic cotton, bamboo, hemp, and even recycled fibers.
These yarns are produced with less harm to the environment, and choosing them can support sustainable agriculture, reduce the use of pesticides and chemicals, and decrease the amount of waste that ends up in landfills.
Another way to practice sustainable crochet is to use natural dyes.
Natural dyes can be created from plants, flowers, and even food waste.
Not only are they better for the environment than synthetic dyes, but they can also create beautiful and unique colors.
Experimenting with natural dyeing can be a fun and rewarding way to add a sustainable element to your crochet practice.
In addition to choosing eco-friendly materials and practices, sustainable crochet also involves using your crochet skills to create items that are useful, long-lasting, and reduce waste.
For example, instead of buying single-use items such as plastic bags or paper towels, you can create reusable alternatives through crochet.
You can also repurpose materials such as old t-shirts or sheets to create yarn and use them in your crochet projects.
By finding creative ways to reuse and repurpose materials, you can reduce waste and contribute to a more sustainable lifestyle.
Furthermore, crochet can also be used to create items that serve a specific purpose in reducing environmental impact.
For example, you can crochet produce bags to use at the grocery store instead of using plastic bags.
You can also crochet dishcloths or cleaning cloths to replace disposable sponges or paper towels.
These items are not only sustainable but also functional and beautiful.
Incorporating sustainable crochet practices into your daily self-care routine can also have a positive impact on your mental health.
Sustainable crochet can be a form of mindfulness, as it requires focus, patience, and creativity.
By taking the time to create something with your own hands, you can feel a sense of accomplishment and pride, which can boost your self-esteem and overall well-being.
Additionally, by contributing to a more sustainable lifestyle, you can feel a sense of purpose and fulfillment, which can also improve your mental health.
In conclusion, sustainable crochet is an excellent way to practice eco-friendly self-care while also engaging in a creative and rewarding activity.
By choosing eco-friendly materials and practices, creating items that reduce waste, and contributing to a more sustainable lifestyle, you can make a positive impact on the planet while also taking care of yourself.
So grab your hooks, choose some sustainable yarns, and let your creativity flow!
Alison Heathcote, a passionate crochet enthusiast and dedicated business blogger, combines her love for crafting and entrepreneurship to inspire and connect with others.
With a knack for transforming yarn into beautiful creations and a flair for sharing valuable insights about running a successful crochet business, Alison embodies the perfect blend of creativity and practicality.
If you enjoyed this post and crochet is your thing, you may like some other crochet articles from our blog.
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.
Repetitive Actions We find solace in repetitive actions. We learn this early on. As children we love having the same book read to us because knowing the end of the story makes it not so scary. As we get older we build ritual into our lives by going to work the same...
Granny Jacket Update Number 1 I am making a crochet jacket for the autumn in Vanna's choice (DK) with a 5mm hook. This jacket will fit a 2x size woman (that's me) and I will post updates as it goes along. I want to say I did quite a bit of crocheting at my newly...
The war between knitters and crocheters continues unabated.
If you are not a knitter or a crocheter you may not be aware of the subtle war that rages on in parlours and coffee shops across the land.
I was chatting with my friend Nicole at Canadian Frost Apparel the other day about this very issue.
Like most wars, there is a pointless tension between the knitters and the crocheters. No one knows when the animosity began, but it crept in and is seemingly here to stay.
Let’s get straight to the point.
Knitters use two needles with points. They may use a circular needle with points at both ends and a wire joining them, or, just to get tricky, they could use four double pointed needles for socks and tube-like things.
They have many stitches on their needles at once and sometimes hundreds for a large piece.
If they drop a stitch and it runs, it takes serious effort to retrieve it. Yes, knitted stitches will run away from their mistresses.
Knitters often feel superior to crocheters as though to knit is to be better in some way. Crocheters never look down on knitters but they see them as their crafty cousins. Both use the same yarns and buy their supplies at the same store.
You can have a “knitting bag” but who has heard of a “crocheting bag” I mean really.
Crocheters use one hook and yarn. The hook can have a thicker handle to aid tired hands and make the act of crocheting easier for extended periods of crafting. This feature on hooks makes crocheters calmer and relaxed.
Crocheters have one stitch on the go at once.
Crocheters can easily make a circle, square or any three-dimensional shape. In fact, crocheting has been used to demonstrate the Möbius strip-like in the March Möbius cowl, hyperbolic crochet and other spatial concepts.
If you can knit and crochet be careful in which camp you pitch you tent.
I once joined a knitting and crochet meetup group. When I arrived the eight women there were all knitting. As I took out my crocheting there were gasps of horror from the assembly.
Who was this woman? What was she doing here, and with a hook?
One pleasant looking woman turned and said to me, “Oh, can’t you knit?”
I replied, “Yes I can knit, but not tonight. I’m enjoying my crocheting time.” Gulp.
I can knit and crochet. But, these days I prefer crocheting. It is easy and quick. I can do small squares everywhere I go and take them home to create a beautiful blanket or lapghan.
I can crochet in the car or trapped in an aeroplane seat at 35000 feet. Here I have to use bamboo hooks as they get twitchy these days. But you can’t knit in a plane even with bamboo needles. It’s the point of the needle that annoys the authorities.
In the end you have to do what you like. Don’t be knitting because your mother did. If you prefer crocheting then forsake knitting for a while.
If you prefer the rhythm of knitting and can do it without looking then let that be your therapy.
Do what you love and love what you do. It will permeate into your items and the love will shine through your completed items whether you used a hook or needles. 💛
Traditionally Christmas stockings are hung on the mantelpiece around a fireplace so Santa can come down the chimney and put gifts in the stockings for everyone. They are also know as Christmas socks.
In days gone by every sock has an orange and a piece of coal in the toe. This symbolized food and warmth for the year. These days we are just as likely to give a Terry’s chocolate orange and we always give chocolate coins or money in envelopes.
Traditionally the Christmas colours are red and green as these are the colours of holly. Holly is the main shrub with red berries and glossy green leaves that grows through the winter months and is available to take into your house for decoration at Christmastime.
Each stocking is embroidered with the person’s name so Santa has no problem working out whose is whose so he gets the gifts right. Well that’s the theory.
There many ways to make Christmas socks and here are the ones I’ve made for my family over the years.
Red crochet sock for Mom and striped crochet sock for Dad
Knitted socks for the kids.
The inspiration for the socks were from two were bought by my mother years ago in Johannesburg from a craft market. They are the inspiration for the other two kids stocking which I knitted when they were born, and that is over twenty years ago now.
I tried to make the second two socks similar to the first two socks because the younger children liked to have the same as the older children.
I am not really a knitter and these are about as fancy I I get with a pair of needles.
We put up our family Christmas tree on the first Saturday of December every year. We have a “Trim the Tree” party where we order in food (which is actually a treat as we usually cook every meal in our home and don’t get takeout often).
We start at 5pm when the family arrives and it takes the whole evening to get the tree beautiful.
Every year you need to have a new ornament relating the what you did that year. This special ornament often has the year on it.
Add the Christmas angel to the top. We have a Christmas book and write down each year which child added the angel and whose turn it is this year. The kids love to be the one to add the angel. Take family photos around the tree and it is done.
All that is left is to eat the food and have a drink. Cheers!
An easy poncho design is made by crafting two identical oblongs. In this design the the length is twice the width.
For example if the short side is 40cm then the long side should be 80cm. This would fit most women. For infants kids you can start with a 20cm to 30cm short side.
Then you sew them together offset and fold on the dotted line to join at the back as shown in the diagram below.
If you add a crochet border at the neck it will provide a better fit.
You can also create a polo neck to this ponch for cooler weather. If you don’t want so much fabric at the shoulder area you can add a drawstring that will make the whole garment adjustable.
The two piece poncho design works well with stripes going lengthways. This draws the eye down towards the point thus elongating the look of elegance.
If the stripes go on the short side it makes the garment seem bulkier to the eye.
Any crochet pattern or striped stitches can be used to make the two simple rectangles and the possibilities are endless.
You can use granny squares as well.
Ponchos are great for kids and women.
You can easily ride a bike in a poncho.
Wearing a poncho at an evening bar-b-que is a good option to a pashmina which you always seem to need to hold.
A poncho is easy to wear as it does not have to ‘fit’ the body well.
Your poncho should be snug but have some room.
Ponchos are good for travelling on the bus or plane as they are light and comfortable to wear.
A poncho is a casual garment at best.
This item is not part of your business, work wardrobe but will form part of your weekend easy-going clothes.
I like to have a new poncho every autumn and I will usually crochet one in the fall colours that season.
I sometimes make my daughters one each as well although they don’t always want one, that doesn’t stop me. 🙂
If you keep a poncho too long it can look ratty and tatty.
When it gets old give it to the dog as a blanket.
Be careful of ponchos that hang too low in front.
You don’t want it flapping around you knees so you look like Clint Eastwood in a western movie.
The front point should lie at the same level (horizontally) as your finger tips when your hands are by your side.
Many ponchos have fringes which can be either all around the edge, are only tassels at the points, or only on two sides (left or right when facing front and back) of the point.
Watch out for garish colours and too many colour combinations in one poncho.
They look best with one, two or three colours only.
When you use colour in crochet you need to understand what works best.
If the darker colour is at the bottom and the lighter colours are at the top the garment is visually pleasing because the darker colours ‘ground’, or add visual gravitas, to the poncho at the widest part (the edge).
I like making ponchos almost as much as I love crafting shawls and wraps. You can see my easy Poulton Poncho pattern and Preston Poncho pattern (details coming soon).
Alison Heathcote, a passionate crochet enthusiast and dedicated business blogger, combines her love for crafting and entrepreneurship to inspire and connect with others.
With a knack for transforming yarn into beautiful creations and a flair for sharing valuable insights about running a successful crochet business, Alison embodies the perfect blend of creativity and practicality.
If you enjoyed this post and crochet is your thing, you may like some other crochet articles from our blog.
Designed by Alison Stapleton This is a crochet pattern for a beautiful blanket scarf. I wanted to make a soft and cozy blanket scarf for winter. A blanket scarf is the same length as a normal winter scarf, but about twice as wide. It covers your ears and neck...
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Discover how finding new combinations of colour can change the feel of an item or garment.
by Alison
This is a basic Granny square
A Granny square is the building block of crochet work. Every crocheter can learn to make a Granny square and it is lots of fun.
Each row is made with a different color yarn and there are four rows in total. You can add as many rows as you like.
I make my Granny squares but I turn the work from the front to the back each row change.
This means that row 2 (and all even rows) are done with the wrong side facing (WSF) me as I start the row, and row 3 (and all odd rows) are done with the right side facing (RSF) me as I start the row.
I do this because if you continue on the right side all the time the square can easily become slightly out of shape as you are always going one way.
But, if you turn the work each row it creates a balance for the square as the stitches are worked first one way and then the other way.
It is like knitting on two needles where you knit one way and then the other way, but when you do circular knitting (all the same way) the work starts to creep in one direction.
Over time I have found that Granny squares made right-side-facing then wrong-side-facing keep their shape even after being washed for years.
Every corner is a 3 chain (3ch or ch3) corner. If you have 3 chains in the corner you have one on each side when you are sewing up. This helps to keep the squares well, square as you sew.
Sometimes I add add a 1 ch between the groups of 3dc on the sides.
I recommend sewing your squares together. I am not keen on crocheting them together as that can make a bulky seam and it is not always regular in tension.
When you sew your squares together the seam lies flat which is nice. In this particular Granny square pattern I will use the same black yarn that I used for row 4.
If every Granny has the same color on the last row it is easier to sew them together so it looks neat.
Please note: This pattern used US/Canadian crochet stitch notation not UK or RSA. You can learn more about the difference between USA and UK crochet terminology and follow along.
The first row is in a yellow.
Foundation chain: With yellow, ch 5, join with slip stitch (sl st).
Row1: Ch 2 (as 1st stitch), 2 dc, ch 3 (corner), 3 dc, ch 3, 3 dc, ch 3, 3 dc, ch 3, join with ss. Sew in ends as you go.
The second row is white.
Row 2: With white, wrong side facing, in a corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, in next corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, in next corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, in next corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, join with a sl st. Sew in ends.
The third row is pink. Row 3: With pink and right side facing, start in a middle gap, 3dc, in first corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, 3dc, in second corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, 3dc, in third corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, 3dc, in last corner gap 3dc ch3 3dc, join with sl st. Sew in ends.
This particular Granny square is an example.
You can make this Granny square in any combination of color and the color choices depend on what you will be using the squares for.
See more about choosing colors for your crochet projects and make sure to select the best combinations for the projects you make.
Alison Heathcote, a passionate crochet enthusiast and dedicated business blogger, combines her love for crafting and entrepreneurship to inspire and connect with others.
With a knack for transforming yarn into beautiful creations and a flair for sharing valuable insights about running a successful crochet business, Alison embodies the perfect blend of creativity and practicality.
If you enjoyed this post and crochet is your thing, you may like some other crochet articles from our blog.
by Alison Crochet Stitch Diagram - Basic Granny Square This is a basic Granny square A Granny square is the building block of crochet work. Every crocheter can learn to make a Granny square and it is lots of fun. Each row is made with a different color yarn and there...
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Discover your crochet niche which is the special segment in the crochet industry that you know well and where you are skilled.