kerravonsen: Stone egg on moss: "Art is Life, Life is Art" (art)
Kathryn A. ([personal profile] kerravonsen) wrote2011-10-12 01:17 pm

A Profound Addiction

I have just realized another reason why I have fallen so fast and so hard for crochet. Unlike most of my other crafts, I am enjoying the process just as much as the end result. There is something soothing and relaxing about the interaction of fingers, hook and yarn. One doesn't have to concentrate hard while doing it, one doesn't have to peer at tiny beads looking for the holes, or worry about not poking one's fingers with sharp pointed objects. Even Getting Things Wrong is less stressful with crochet, because it's quite easy to undo one's work back to before the mistake; no undoing of impossible knots, or dropping beads on the floor, or getting out the seam ripper. Just pull gently.

With beading, I do enjoy the designing part, but the stringing-the-beads-on is fussy.
With sewing... I hate the process of sewing. I love the end result, but the process is fiddly and time-consuming and tiring.
Macramé is nice, but crochet is nicer.

This makes me wonder whether I should just toss out my cloth stash and give away my sewing machine, but I balk at the idea.
Anybody got some good ideas about how to make sewing less fussy and more fun?
dreamflower: gandalf at bag end (Default)

[personal profile] dreamflower 2011-10-12 01:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Sewing frustrates me because I don't know how to make up patterns.

Aha! I see. You know until I started figuring out how to do that, I was like the person who commented above-- just thinking of it as something useful, but not necessarily creative, other than that I could pick out the colors and designs of the fabric.

But gradually I got a little more creative with commercial patterns by combining different parts: sleeves from one pattern, bodice from another, collar from a third. This helped me get a bit more sure of my own abilities and also my understanding of what a pattern entailed.

Then I joined the SCA, and began to realize that the commercial patterns for historical garb were either inaccurate or prohibitively expensive for me at the time. But I soon found that there were lots of sites online that have FREE patterns I could make myself-- and learned that mostly early garments were simple geometric shapes. And not only that, but they could be adapted to make modern garments as well! (This pattern can easily be adapted to make a dress for modern streetware.)

I also learned how to make my own dress dummy out of duct tape, which meant I could make up patterns directly on the dummy.

Now I find sewing a much more creative process than I used to.

Your four steps sound rather like my four steps, LOL! Except I'm not sure how deliberate the "never do the same thing twice" is for me, as I may occasionally want to repeat something and never quite seem to be able to. (It may also explain my difficulty with knitting socks in pairs...)
Edited 2011-10-12 13:02 (UTC)