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New! The Herrschner's Worsted Palette - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
New! We've just added the palette for Deborah Norville Everyday Yarn! If you knit and/or crochet, this is for you. This is a beautiful yarn with a nice feel to it, a good alternative in worsted weight acrylic! (Thank you again to BetwixtTheStitch!)
New! The Red Heart Super Saver Palette - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
Welcome to Stitchboard! Feel free to sit and stay awhile. Check out our new Premier features. In addition to the ability to create larger patterns (up to 500 stitches wide), illusion knitting and private labeling (no more worries about editing those pesky and messy PDFs), we've just introduced Filet Crochet, our most popular request! We have many more features planned, too!
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De'Andrea,
I know what you mean about framing! It's soooooooooooo tedious. It's not creative, as you noticed, it's just...ugh. Dull. Not fun. And trying to get all of the stretching done right and the sides all straight, shudder. NO thanks.
I'd rather be counting blades of grass.
I also framed mostly smaller things. But I'm loving your fringing idea and the "frame" stitched around it. And who can't get a small branch, twig, whatever? Best of all, they're free! (This appeals to my cheapness. )
Wow, I'm so excited for you! That's great about the threads and loving the idea of that frame. What a find!
What gorgeous designs! I love southwestern anything. The colors and symbols are incredible, and you've done such a beautiful job designing!
I love peyote, but have also worked in square stitch (I've never loomed). Not sure I'd ever loom beyond learning (love to learn and am a technique junkie, so that part appeals!), only because I also love how secure square stitch is. When I've taught square stitch in the past, I'd always end the demonstration by cutting the work apart...and it still didn't fall apart! For some reason, people love that particular visual.
The star is stunning! And I love the name Walks In Spirit. Beautiful!
If you ever need any help in creating PDFs, I'd be happy to do that.
Thanks, I'd love the patterns! I can send you an email in the next few days (and if I don't, please hit me over the head a few times so I remember, LOL!). I would normally write immediately, but ugh, the next few days are beastly. As were the previous few, LOL.
Is that a teardrop bead in the center of Walks In Spirit? Whatever it is, it's so perfect...the color, how it glows...the whole piece is beautiful and the bead in the center makes it pop!
I am new at graghgan I love it thank you
Sue,
I'm so sorry I misunderstood! You don't have to take the 80 blocks, so you can choose, say, 60 or 20. The important thing in that is the freePatternWizard isn't a graphics program, so it's usually best to manipulate your image in a graphics program first, to make it larger or smaller. If you try to use the freePatternWizard to actually resize your image, it will turn into a blob if you're making it too large or too small for the program to handle.
(If this is confusing, I'd say to just try it as is and if the pattern looks too blobby, then you can deal with it.)
If you'd really like to tweak your image with a graphics programs and you're using a Windows PC, I can suggest two very powerful (and free!) programs that will allow you to edit your image.
As for knowing how many blocks, yes, unfortunately this is what I was talking about before. Your gauge is as individual as you, so your gauge is crucial to knowing how many blocks you need for the size you want. And actually, I should have talked about blocks, not stitches, since that's what you're really looking for in this case. Still, you should work a gauge swatch, determine how many blocks per inch. Then you'll know that if you have 4 blocks per inch, multiply that by the number of inches you want. If you want a piece that's 50 inches wide, you'd calculate 50 inches x 4 blocks per inch, giving you 200 blocks needed for your finished pattern.
Unfortunately, it all goes back to those pesky gauge swatches! If you're making something simple, like a scarf, that's a bit more forgiving; you often don't have to work a gauge swatch if you're using a similar fiber/hook as what the designer recommends. But with anything you want to work to a specific size, such as a sweater, gauge is important. Though it's tempting to just start a project without any gauge swatch, you can easily be left with something that's too large or too small.
If I'm understanding your question correctly, that's the case...your turning chain does not count as a stitch; only your actual stitches count.
To read a particular post, simply click on it!
Buggg,
Fantastic - can't wait to
see! And you're so welcome!
De'Andrea,
I know what you mean about framing! It's soooooooooooo tedious. It's not creative, as you noticed, it's just...ugh. Dull. Not fun. And trying to get all of the stretching done right and the sides all straight, shudder. NO thanks.
I'd rather be counting blades of grass.
I also framed mostly smaller things. But I'm loving your fringing idea and the "frame" stitched around it. And who can't get a small branch, twig, whatever? Best of all, they're free! (This appeals to my cheapness. )
Wow, I'm so excited for you! That's great about the threads and loving the idea of that frame. What a find!
What gorgeous designs! I love southwestern anything. The colors and symbols are incredible, and you've done such a beautiful job designing!
I love peyote, but have also worked in square stitch (I've never loomed). Not sure I'd ever loom beyond learning (love to learn and am a technique junkie, so that part appeals!), only because I also love how secure square stitch is. When I've taught square stitch in the past, I'd always end the demonstration by cutting the work apart...and it still didn't fall apart! For some reason, people love that particular visual.
The star is stunning! And I love the name Walks In Spirit. Beautiful!
If you ever need any help in creating PDFs, I'd be happy to do that.
Thanks, I'd love the patterns! I can send you an email in the next few days (and if I don't, please hit me over the head a few times so I remember, LOL!). I would normally write immediately, but ugh, the next few days are beastly. As were the previous few, LOL.
Is that a teardrop bead in the center of Walks In Spirit? Whatever it is, it's so perfect...the color, how it glows...the whole piece is beautiful and the bead in the center makes it pop!
I am new at graghgan I love it thank you
Sue,
I'm so sorry I misunderstood! You don't have to take the 80 blocks, so you can choose, say, 60 or 20. The important thing in that is the freePatternWizard isn't a graphics program, so it's usually best to manipulate your image in a graphics program first, to make it larger or smaller. If you try to use the freePatternWizard to actually resize your image, it will turn into a blob if you're making it too large or too small for the program to handle.
(If this is confusing, I'd say to just try it as is and if the pattern looks too blobby, then you can deal with it.)
If you'd really like to tweak your image with a graphics programs and you're using a Windows PC, I can suggest two very powerful (and free!) programs that will allow you to edit your image.
As for knowing how many blocks, yes, unfortunately this is what I was talking about before. Your gauge is as individual as you, so your gauge is crucial to knowing how many blocks you need for the size you want. And actually, I should have talked about blocks, not stitches, since that's what you're really looking for in this case. Still, you should work a gauge swatch, determine how many blocks per inch. Then you'll know that if you have 4 blocks per inch, multiply that by the number of inches you want. If you want a piece that's 50 inches wide, you'd calculate 50 inches x 4 blocks per inch, giving you 200 blocks needed for your finished pattern.
Unfortunately, it all goes back to those pesky gauge swatches! If you're making something simple, like a scarf, that's a bit more forgiving; you often don't have to work a gauge swatch if you're using a similar fiber/hook as what the designer recommends. But with anything you want to work to a specific size, such as a sweater, gauge is important. Though it's tempting to just start a project without any gauge swatch, you can easily be left with something that's too large or too small.
If I'm understanding your question correctly, that's the case...your turning chain does not count as a stitch; only your actual stitches count.
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