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FREE PATTERN & STEP-BY-STEP VIDEO TUTORIAL – BEE PRESENT!
Hello!
It has been far too long since I’ve had a crochet video here at Ink & Stitches, and although that may be the case, I’m here to tell you that I’m back and plan to stay! I’ve missed sharing crochet tutorials with you, free patterns, and just Bee-ing Present (see what I did there?) here on my blog. So with that, let’s dive into another free pattern and this time I hope you’ll hop over to my YouTube channel and follow along as I crochet with you from start to finish this little guy, BEE PRESENT!
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Whimsy’s on LoveCrafts!
From storybook to amigurumi: How this author became a story stitcher
Do you LoveCrafts, cause I do!
LoveCrafts could not have been any more wonderful to work with on this article and tutorial. They are truly a one-stop-shop for the crocheter out there. In the tutorial you will find links to all of the materials you can buy through LoveCrafts if you’d like. They aren’t the exact yarns I used but they were the right colors, so they should work up a brand new Whimsy and Flit beautifully.
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C2C Dogghan CAL 2020: Introduction. Let’s get started!
The time for teaser pup pics is over!
Today is Earth Day, and with everything going on in the world, what better way to celebrate than to get excited about something fun to do at home while we’re stuck inside anyway? I hope the Dogghan is a light amidst the stress and seclusion. I also am sending good vibes out to you and yours to stay safe and healthy. As you know, we are in this together. Without further ado… let’s talk about dogs!
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Even More Videos on Ink & Stitches YouTube!
Four New Videos Now Live on my Ink & Stitches YouTube Channel!
I finished up editing and posting the last four videos I had filmed to my YouTube Channel. They are ready to help you learn new techniques and stitches that can be used when making your own amigurumi patterns, or if you are working through ones you found online that include these techniques: picot stitch,
changing colors in the round (with jogging vs. jogless)
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New Ink & Stitches How to Crochet Amigurumi Videos!
I’ve been hard at work since finishing up the illustrations for the Corgi book series (book #1). Since illustrating had taken up all of my free time for the past few months, I thought it time to get back to my
Ink & Stitches YouTube Channel
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Making Amigurumi Patterns (Part Two)
How to Crochet Amigurumi from the Ground Up
I’ve been creating my own amigurumi patterns for almost seven years now, ever since I realized that amigurumi are made by knowing how to make shapes. Using decreases and increases to your advantage there is almost nothing that can’t be converted into a crocheted character. Deciding when special embroidery stitching would add some nice flare, finishes off each piece making it look professional and as true to life as possible.
In Part One of this making patterns series, I explained the ideas behind making a circle shape as well as a flattened triangle which you see often for animal ears.
For this post I’d like to talk about creating tubes and what they’re used for, as well as how to make teardrop shapes (often used for arms and legs).
Creating Tubes:
In order to create a tube, first you need to make a chain. Depending on how wide you need the tube to be, will determine how many chain stitches to begin with. For example, in my Happy Sunflower pattern (click the link to get the free pattern), the stem begins with 6 chain stitches joined together to form a ring to which single crochets are worked in the round to create the tube.
Sunflower Stem Pattern Instructions to Make a Tube:
- R1:ch6 (leaving tail), sl st in 1st ch to make circle, place stitch marker, sc around – 6
- R2 – 17:sc around – 6
sl st, FO, leave tail for sewing.
Ink & Stitches Video of How to Start Making a Tube:
I used this technique not only on the stem of my Happy Sunflower, but also for the bat wings in my Veddel pattern. The upper wing is the only part with wiring, but creating a tube was essential to being able to fit the wiring into the piece in order for the wing to be posable. You’ll see tubes created to make legs and arms where often the arm is a tube and a separate piece is made for the hand or foot. They are a wonderful shape to make for allowing wiring to fit through, so you will find them used in crafting amigurumi often.
Teardrop Shape:
The teardrop shape, you will often see used for arms and legs of characters that don’t need defined fingers. Rather than decreasing to create a point at the top of the teardrop shape (for an arm it’s where the shoulder would be attached to the body), the shape ends while the top is still flat across. It would be very difficult to sew a point down to the body of an amigurumi and is much easier to sew down when the top is straight across. In order to make the top circle a straight line, the piece is just flattened together. Often you may want to crochet both sides together to create one solid line instead of having a circle, which helps to make the arms or legs even more floppy. I used this technique to make the arms and legs of my Floppy Cat pattern (click the link for the pattern).
To begin a teardrop shape, you build up the increase rows just as you would for a circle shape (see post on
Making Patterns Part One