Friday, November 8, 2019
Table Runner For Greatgrandson
This is honestly the last table runner I'll make until I get to Florida in January. We're having a baby shower for my granddaughter this month and we know she's having a little boy so I just had to do it! I don't think she really likes my Swedish weaving but she can pass it on if she wants to...once a gift is given, it's their's to choose how to use it. Anyway, I just wanted to make this for my new baby!
The monk's cloth is a medium blue and the yarn is Caron's Simply Soft "spring brook", a lovely variegated that I managed to find. The center pattern is completely one I designed myself and the sailboat pattern is one I copied from someone's project. There is a lot of overlapping in the rows but it turns out well and doesn't look lumpy at all.
I love this and hope my granddaughter can use it as a dresser scarf in the baby's room but it's up to her. I just enjoyed making it!
Saturday, November 2, 2019
Pink Swedish Weaving Table Runner
I love this one and wish I had a little girl to give it to. It's Christine Allan's pattern, "Pine Ridge" but I did add another couple of rows inside the diamond. It didn't need it but there was a slight flaw in the fabric that I wanted to cover. The yarns used were Caron's Simply Soft in orchid and Red Heart Soft in plummy. I just love this Red Heart yarn color and I'm so sad I could only find the one skein.
Just a note: I like working with variegated yarns but only buy one that has short (approximately 4") color lengths. The colors blend so more easier when the color lengths are short like this. When using variegated yarn with long (sometimes 12"+) lengths of color, it seems to end up looking like blocks of the same color as you add rows to your project.
And More Runners
I never worry about producing too many pieces of Swedish weaving because I get so much enjoyment out of making them. If they don't sell at the craft show this month, I can always donate them or give them away. In any case, I'll just continue making them and enjoying the process and the finished project.
I've been doing a lot of black and grey lately so I decided to just grab up a few colors and make up a simple pattern for the top table runner. I used scrap pieces so I don't know their origin but it's done on beige monk's cloth and looks kind of retro to me because of the colors.
The bottom one is Christine Allan's pattern, "Moon Shadow" but I reversed the pattern, using the original center for my border and the border design for my center. I added a bit to the center, also. This is a very easy pattern and I'll use it when teaching a new pupil. The yarn is Caron's Simply Soft in bone. Another thing I really like is tone on tone like this.
The booklet I used is Christine Allan's "Christmas Patterns" and it was gifted to me by my lifelong friend, Donna, who passed away in July. This particular booklet is filled with really good patterns but, because it was Donna's, it will always hold a special place in my heart.
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
2 More Swedish Weaving Table Runners
These are two more table runners and it really never ceases to amaze me how much I love the looks of every one I see...even if it's made by someone else.
The first one is from one of the borders shown on "Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend" by Avery Hill. I often pick just one part of a pattern and use it as the main focus on table runners. The yarns used were Caron's Simply Soft Party in charcoal heather and Paton's pale grey mix and medium grey mix.
The second one is my own pattern using Loops and Threads in fern and Caron's Simply Soft in charcoal heather. I really love creating the pattern as I go, starting in the center and then building on it but I do wish I was able to do that with more complex patterns, too.
I still have a lot of older stock of monk's cloth but I recently was gifted some from my friend who passed away and it's the new stock with the weird salvedge. It's one that just can't be rolled over and sewn down to complete the edge so it has to be fringed. I don't like it at all. Thank heavens I still have enough old stock to last me the rest of my life and beyond. LOL!
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Swedish Weaving Table Runner
The pattern is "Celtic Cross" by Christine Allan. It is on white monk's cloth and I used Caron's Simply Soft yarn in black and Paton's yarn in medium grey mix. For once I followed the pattern exactly because it was just perfect the way it was.
I really liked this pattern and will probably use it again in the near future. I'd like to do it in greens.
I really liked this pattern and will probably use it again in the near future. I'd like to do it in greens.
Friday, October 18, 2019
1 Runner and 2 Placemats
I'm never bored because I keep myself busy but I sometimes wonder what I'd do with my time if I didn't do Swedish weaving. It's so relaxing and satisfying that I sometimes put in many more hours than I plan.
The top photo is a full length table runner in white monk's cloth and using Christine Allan's "Serenity" pattern. I used Caron's Simply Soft Party yarns in spring sparkle and red sparkle and also a Red Heart yarn that is a variegate green.
The first placemat was done simply in rows of Red Heart Soft yarns in plummy on Ikea blanket cloth. Working on such a dark color is very hard on my eyes so I opted to do straight rows around the border.
The second placemat was done using Red Heart Soft yarn in waterscape on the grey/black Ikea cloth. It is a great buy for doing Swedish weaving...very inexpensive and just a tiny bit flimsier than the monk's cloth. It only comes in the grey/black and a very light beige, though.
I only do one craft show a year to sell my items and I'm pretty happy with what I've accomplished over the summer and fall. The craft show I do is at the senior center and we really get a lot of customers passing through. I enjoy talking to people and I always have a little freebee yarn necklace to give to the little girls who come by.
I'm going to make one more comment about Christine Allan's patterns. She is very talented at designing them and the diagrams are almost always super simple to follow. Anything that gives me a bit of trouble just becomes a unique pattern with my own spin on it.
Saturday, September 28, 2019
Grey and White
I think all (or almost all) of anything done with Swedish weaving is gorgeous. It doesn't seem to matter what pattern or yarn choices are made, the end product is simply beautiful...in my eyes anyway.
I prefer to work with colors but I gave in to the fact that so many people are decorating their homes in shades of grey and have started making a few table runners in greys. They turn out just as gorgeous as their brightly colored cousins.
My daughter confiscated the last table runner I'd made in grey so I quickly made another one and I think this is even prettier than the last one...hope she doesn't grab this one up, too! It's on white monk's cloth and I used Caron's Simply Soft Party in black sparkle, Caron's Simply Soft grey heather, and Paton's pale grey mix (this isn't a variegated so I don't know why the name). The pattern is Christine Allan's "Cobblestone Way" which I reduced to fit the runner.
I think it's beautiful but, then, aren't they all? LOL!
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