Tag: Stuffed Animals

What’s New in Luvvies – 9/4/18

Happy after Labor Day to all my American friends – and happy unofficial beginning of fall. I’ve already curled up with my first (two) pumpkin spice lattes of the season, and am waiting for the heatwave to break so that I can settle in to my absolute favorite time of the year.

As we enter the fall, we enter a busy time for Lil’ Luvvies. In November, I will be heading to Rhode Island for Rhode Island Comic Con, followed very closely by a return to Steel City Con. Added to that, I’m not sure what the holiday seasons will provide in terms of gift buying from my site(s).

In honor of Labor Day, I ran a sale on my Etsy shop for 10% off almost everything in the store. I didn’t get a crazy amount of orders, but I got enough that it will definitely keep me busy for the next couple of weeks.

In addition to that, I have been busily crocheting away making new Luvvies – as orders and as stock for cons.

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One of my favorite newer Lil’ Luvvies is based on a pattern from Blue Rabbit Toys I absolute love how scary and cute this little voodoo dollie looks. I added the pins to take some pictures of her, but they are not included in the finished product. This little girl worked up quickly and was so much fun to make.

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I’ve also been working on making some Winnie the Pooh characters. This was my attempt at a chibi Piglet. For a first attempt, I don’t think he turned out too badly.

Over Labor Day weekend here in the states, my husband and I took our daughter on a mini vacation. I ended up using the time to crochet – although I didn’t make as much as I thought I would. But during that time, I started working on a full-sized Winnie the Pooh.

The pattern said when he is completed Pooh will be 18 inches tall – I think he might be a bit bigger than that.

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I tried to crochet some in the car on our way to vacation, but there was too much construction and the roads were a little too uneven for me to get a good rhythm. Plus with my migraines trying to read a pattern in the car was a challenge. (Desi’s Eeoyre is not one that I made, he was actually mine from right after I got married).

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Once we reached our destination, I took over the “living” area of the room and created a makeshift work station. My husband took our daughter to the water park and I stayed to create.

Funny thing (especially considering I just wrote a blog about finding good patterns and everything you should do), this is the most complex and convoluted pattern I have ever read in my life. For the nose/muzzle area, I had to restart five times before I created something that was passable. There were a couple other areas that I had to rip out and restart, as well, and there were some areas that I said heck with it, and just left it not quite perfect (hoping that I can clean it up at the end)

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As I mentioned before, I’m not quite halfway with Pooh and I think he is going to be a bit bigger than I originally planned. I sent the above picture to my father last night (because he has to see all the pictures that I post to the blog and to social media), and – ever the jokster – he said to me, “Where’s Pooh’s head?” What you don’t see a fully completed Winnie-the-Pooh (lol)?

Although Pooh is for a custom commission, he is not at the top of my priority….he’s really not, it’s just I got started on him and now I want to see what he is going to look like once everything is finished.

All this fun has been in addition to me finding ways to creatively crochet through injury.

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I’ve recently learned that crochet is a contact sport and it hurts like anything to hold yarn with a pulled tendon in your hand.

I’ve tried wrist braces and the ever attractive compression glove (as pictured above), but none of these options seem to provide a good solution to prevent further injury. Soaking in Epsom salts and taking ibuprofen have helped with the swelling and the pain, but I still am looking for that viable solution to prevent further damage. I guess, as with anything, practice makes perfect.

I hope you all have had a wonderful week. Sending all my love and best until we chat again.

Hugs and cuddles,

Elisha

Crochet is a Contact Sport

Many may not know this about me, but although I am a serious couch potato, I am a huge sports fan (I played some baseball in my youth, but never pursued it in later school). One of the reasons I chose not to pursue sports – aside from the fact my nose was always stuck in a book and I don’t like the outdoors – is because I am one of the most accident prone people you will ever meet. If there is something to trip over, I am going to trip over it….if nothing is there for me to trip over, then I will find a way to trip over my own feet. Putting myself directly in the position to increase my chance of injury, not really that bright, so I’ll stick to being a spectator.

This is why it is both with utter amazement and complete resignation that I find myself with a crochet related injury. Now, before you ask it is not on my primary/dominant hand – that is still fine and able to make nice stitches. The issue is with my non-dominant hand, the one that holds the yarn.

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Sometime Saturday night/Sunday morning, as I started to work on one of my outstanding projects, I noticed that my index finger on my non-dominant hand was really hurting me. It hurt to bend, it hurt to flex, and it was radiating pain the whole way up my arm. Trying to cut things off at the pass, I thought I’ll use a heating pad.

I should say, my father was an athletic trainer for a number of years and I know some first aid. I know enough first aid to know that for inflammation you really don’t want to use heat first, you want to use ice, but I was uncomfortable and I did not have ice in my house, so heat it was.

The whole day my hand just was killing me. Alternating from stabbing pains to burning irritation. That afternoon when I started working on my project, I couldn’t find a comfortable position to hold my hand. And even though it wasn’t the hand I used to make the stitches, it was the hand/finger I used to wrap my excess yarn around to keep tension in my project.

If I would have thought about it, I would have videoed the contortions I tried. From using different fingers to wrap the yarn around, to using my toes to thread the tension through, I tried just about everything, but the only way I was making stitches I was happy with was by holding the yarn the way I always did. However, this just caused more pain – and swelling.

Because Amazon is my friend, I decided to order a brace for my hand.

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I thought maybe if I could stabilize my finger a little bit that I would be able to more comfortably use my finger to keep the tension on my yarn. So far, that hasn’t exactly worked to plan. The way the brace is situated it keeps grabbing the yarn and fraying it, which makes me mad. So, back to the drawing board – I have just ordered a compression, fingerless glove that should be here soon that I can try out and see if this helps.

I mean, I expected to have to worry about carpal tunnel – heck, I knew carpal tunnel was probably in my future with as much as I type and text – but, I wasn’t expecting to have problems this soon into my crochet adventures.

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Today at work my hand was so swollen that I decided to use some of the ice we have here and try to soak it for a little bit. I don’t know if it made much difference, but at least I was trying to bring down the swelling.

My father bought me some Epsom salts, so I think I am going to try to soak my hand in those tonight and see what happens. I’ve also heard from people that Aleve or Advil might be good to help with the inflammation. I’m going to try using a combination of these tactics and see what might help. Of course, my father and husband are saying that I really should take a night or two off and try to rest. The thing is, (a) I have orders to fill and I don’t want to get behind, especially not this soon into building the business; (b) I don’t want to take a night off. I get so much enjoyment – pain and all – from crochet that it really does help to settle my mind. I haven’t been pushing myself as much – I went to bed early last night and stopped working when ordinarily I would push through to finish because I was so close.

With the Labor Day holiday coming up, I’m still waiting to see what happens. I tend to think I just hyperextended my finger from hours of keeping it straight-ish to hold the yarn for my projects, and with some soaking and some brace action, I’m hoping it will be back to normal soon. However, if it isn’t feeling better after the holiday weekend, I will be going to the doctor or to urgent care to get it checked out. I may not like making a big deal of things (unless I can make fun of myself), but if it is something that might stop me from pursing either my primary or secondary occupation, then I am going to have to get it taken care of. Hopefully, it’s just a bit tweaked and by Monday I’ll be right as rain again.

Until then, follow me on Instagram (@lilluvviesamigurumi), I’m sure I will be posting more awkward pictures of myself as I try to adapt to my injury. Like I said, if I can’t laugh, what’s the good in it?

Hugs and cuddles,

Elisha

All Hail the Mighty Stitch Marker

Yet another tale that is going to start with: Back in the day…..I really do feel like a old lady when I start blogs like this (back in my day we didn’t have these fancy). I’m only 40, but sometimes the age starts to show.

Anyhow, back in my day (lol) when I started crocheting the first time, my mother and I were simple crocheters. We had a hook, some yarn, and the pattern from the wrapper of the skein of yarn. My mother and I had never heard of notions; the first time someone in a Craftsy class mentioned notions I was like say what now?

Which also explains when I started crocheting again last year and I bought a set of hooks, I had no clue what the weird circle like thing was. I thought maybe it was for knitting and didn’t pertain to me. It wasn’t until I started watching some videos and saw people talking about stitch markers that everything clicked for me.sm3

Pictured are a loose stitch, locking stitch, and claw stitch marker

Once I started into amigurumi and working in the round, I really started to learn how valuable stitch markers could be. With working in the round because you are just going round and round, you need to know where your first stitch is to know what to do for that round’s pattern.

There has only been one time that I thought I was smart enough to know to count my stitches exactly that I tried to forgo the stitch marker…the result ended in my garbage bin. Needless to say, stitch markers have become my little lifesavers since then.

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I’m coming to find, however, that stitch markers have more value than just being used for patterns in the round. Even more “traditional” types of projects can be aided with the stitch marker.

I’m waiting for some materials to be delivered for a custom order I’m working on, so I decided to play with my first graphghan (go big, or go home, I always say). I decided for this that I wouldn’t use the corner to corner crochet method, but would just use a traditional double crochet. I started to get nervous as I did this. Each row should have 150 stitches – in the past blankets and afghans have always been my nemesis because I’m not always the greatest counter (even though I am an accountant and I work with numbers every day of my professional life). I get distracted too easily – either by watching a show on TV, or by talking to whomever is in the room, or just by my own thoughts….what number was I on again? So, working on a pattern for an afghan where the stitch count was going to be vitally important because of the design, I started to question my own sanity.

However, as I was doing my foundation row the idea snapped into my head: Use stitch markers! They can be like the little breadcrumb trails that lead me along my path and keep me on the straight and narrow (or straight and growing as I hope will be the case).

Armed with this epiphany, I started to place stitch markers every 10th stitch: This way I can either count the full 150 chains; count each set of 10; or just mosey along and only go back to check if the stitching starts to look a little wonky. I have to say, except for the last 10 stitches of each row, I have been just kind of breezing with the breeze – that’s the beauty of having the stitch markers guide my way. Of course, to this point, there haven’t been any color changes or distinctive pattern markings either, so that has made a bit of a difference.

I have the first 15 rows of the project completed and (touch wood) so far my rows are staying nice and straight and consistent – well set up for the pattern to come. Now, we will see what happens as we go on. My actual first attempt at a graphghan was a corner to corner crochet-a-long that I got so far in and then had to completely frog because I had missed a stitch somewhere and I just couldn’t get the pattern back on track. Scaling this back and using not only an easier pattern, but traditional rows I think will help make the project more set up for success. Of course, I could always panic again and just decide to rip the whole thing out even after making 25-30 rows of progress.

I am posting regular updates of the blanket on my Instagram page if you want to follow along and drop me some encouragement (I could use it). I’m as curious as anyone to see how it turns out.

Hugs and cuddles,

Elisha