Miniature decorated Christmas trees

trees together

Hello! Now that Thanksgiving is over I feel open to Christmas decorating. Almost a month ago I wanted to just sit and crochet without a particular goal in mind, and ended up with this little tree, in sport weight yarn:

first tree

To make it I stitched a cone of sorts using back loops only, stuffed it and added a base, and then went back with a new length of yarn and single crocheted in each unused loop, with 4 chains in between each time. It’s slow, but not difficult.

I started writing a post about making such trees and decorating them, but it was ludicrously large even before photos, so I broke it up. I have for you a four-post series, two posts each today and tomorrow.

1. This post!
2. Making your own trees like the ones above (stitching a cone, closing the bottom, and adding branches).
3. Decorating the blue, silver, and white tree in the top picture (magic chain garland and stars).
4. Decorating the red and gold tree in the top picture (chain garland, ornament balls, and pine cones).

The decorations we’ll discuss are all made with embroidery floss, which is a little more challenging to work with than yarn. Part of this is the size, and good lighting helps a lot with that. The other part is that floss doesn’t give at all – yarn will stretch a little as you stitch with it, which helps you get your hooks in and out. To deal with that, try two things: make sure your loops get all the way up to the largest diameter part of the hook (especially important with steel hooks, which start tapering a lot farther from the end) so they aren’t too small, and turn your hook’s mouth downward when you pull the hook out of a loop. The downward direction has a little more space in most stitches (where for a chain, “down” means toward the previous chain). I used “satin” floss (rayon) for one tree and metallic floss for the other, and notes on working with those kinds of floss in particular are included with the ornament instructions. I have to say, though, that my advice for working with satin floss is DON’T. It is like trying to crochet with well-greased twine.

earring tree

Of course miniature Christmas decorations are also available commercially. The tree above is decorated with earrings (the hook kind); insert them into the tree, as far out or in as you like. Crochet is well suited to making wreaths, as well, either on its own or around a plastic ring.

I can’t close without the piece I promised last time. This is fine yarn (Vanna’s Glamour “Sapphire”, weight class 2) worked with a D/3 hook (3.25mm). The branches took forever, but it’s so chic! I decided to go minimalist and simply use individual strands of metallic embroidery floss as long tinsel. I cut the strands to approximately the right length, erring on the side of “too long,” and wet them so they would lose the kinks from being wound on a cardboard bobbin (at least mostly). Then I separated the strands (almost forgetting my own advice to start by pulling off pairs, because separating a single strand from more than one other strand is difficult) and attached them to the branches, near the cone, with lark’s head knots.

tall blue tree

The Vault: Part 2

Before moving on to embroidery floss crochet, as I implied I did right away in one of my very first blog posts here, I ambitiously set out to stitch a kodama for my brother-in-law. This was in my second month of crocheting, and it went rather well.

kodama progress kodama finished

I got on a kick of finger puppets, and made a tentacled alien, shown blurrily below, for a friend (also Buddha’s fashionable hat, which was the result when my friend challenged me to make a stadium). I tried to make a finger puppet from a pattern that used joined rounds, and ended up accidentally adding stitches until it was a Jabba the Hutt kind of shape, so I added a face and arms to get the second alien below.

alien puppet alien puppet

buddha hat alien puppet

To be continued…

The Vault

Today is my third crochetiversary! To celebrate, I’m going to dig into the archive and present some projects I did before this blog began (the following March). This will be a Sunday feature (why not?) through the end of the year.

I began crocheting during a bout of insomnia, from the Reader’s Digest Complete Guide to Needlework. My first attempt was a muddled mess. Finally I succeeded in a couple of rows of recognizable fabric.

earliest crochet

One mistake: the yarn was not only fuzzy-textured, it was variegated and rather dark. Smooth, light colored, solid yarn is better to start with, for easier hook-work and for seeing what you’re dealing with.

I tried some taller stitches and had the typical trapezoid experience.

earliest crochet

Finally, though, I succeeded in making Caron’s free heart. I am pretty sure it did not match the pattern, but it was a recognizable heart.

first heart

This went on Facebook with the caption “I did a thing!”

My next project was a pattern I’d actually tried the first night I crocheted, sitting on my bed in the wee hours of the morning, and mangled terribly. Not so this time! I made piles of goldfish.

fishies fishies

After that I felt bold enough to experiment with different hooks and with stitch improvisation.

different hooks shell experiment

In late November I tried a pattern that used one-loop-only stitches, a butterfly, and by the beginning of December I had a perfect swatch of double crochet (plus some single crochet).

butterfly successful dc swatch

To be continued….