The
very night I blogged about this first poker attempt, I completed tatting it. I
decided to make it an earring or a pendant. My earlier idea was to create a kind
of garden of blooms for a greeting card. Making a whole bunch in size 80 was no
joke – I was working blind! One can
only bluff to an extent ;-P
Added
a pearl bead with spiral ring to hold the appropriate findings.
Mulberry
Earrings / Pendant pattern
Here’s
the pattern, if interested.
2 shuttles with different colours.
Tie threads.
CATKIN :
All
are picot flowers, meaning each ring
is made of picots separated by 1ds. There are 3 sizes :
- large, with 7
picots : 2±1-1-1-1-1-1-2
- medium, with 5
picots : 1±1-1-1-1-2 or 2±1-1-1-1-1
- small, with 3
picots : 1±1-1-1.
Tat 3 large rings, 2 medium, 3
small, 2 medium, and 3 large rings.
Leave bare thread between rings,
and join to previous ring.
TIP: If you wish to have some green thread
show up like I did, here’s how –
After the first 6 rings, tat the 7th
(small ring) But before closing the ring, pass green thread through it, then
close.
From 8th ring onwards,
make a lock join to corresponding bare thread, trapping the doubled green
thread within.
STEM & LEAF :
Josephine chain : 15 long picot
15.
Chain : Insert paper clip on core
thread to hold inward picot. 3-3-3-2 fold 2-3-3-3, join to inward picot.
Josephine chain : 15 long picot
15.
This is one sprig. One can tat a
ring for findings and continue for the 2nd sprig.
TIP: In order to change the direction of
Josephine chain, switch to the other half stitch. So, if 1st
stem is tatted with 1st half-stitches, tat the 2nd stem
with 2nd half-stitches. It creates a sharp turn.
For 2nd sprig, repeat
the first or alter the number of picot flowers.
So
how’d the cards stack up?
Card
#1 for stem
Card
#2 for large picot flowers
Card
#3 for leaves
Card
#4 for small flowers
Card
#5 for medium flowers
Natalie
thought the first part looked like a hyacinth, while hubby thought it looked like
yummy mulberries! Your deal ;-D
I
can’t even remember all the little ideas and off-shoots that came to my head
while playing this game! A few I sketched out for later, but most have since
evaporated.
Here’s
my trial of one of them. It has fancy onion rings, thrown rings, and picot
flowers. Could be an edging or return back for a bookmark or insertion. But I’m
done playing for the present ….
I
fold.
Many
many thanks to Natalie Rogers
for sharing & organising this creatively fun game!
It
is a semi-structured designing process. It is a great way to start a design and
tweak for perfection. Add more types of cards such as techniques or effects or
perhaps colour combos, etc. and we can spread our imagination further.
To
see what was on other players’ cards, check out this facebook page and do visit
Natalie’s blog for her previous games and details.
Very sweet, especially in such delicate thread. I take my hat off to you for playing the game and coming up with such a lovely result!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Jane 💗 I might have continued if the thread was thicker 😉
DeleteFun game. The flowers in the jewelry look very real. Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Marja 💕 The cards are a great way to start a design 😃
DeleteThey make pretty earrings! Spring colors and all....
ReplyDeleteLizbeth has such wonderful colours/colourways, and they photograph much better, Mel 😍🌹
DeleteBeautiful!!! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sue 💗🌹💗
DeleteI am so glad you played! You came up with beautiful designs!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Natalie, it was a Fun challenge! Thinking of dealing another set of cards??? 💕😍💖
Delete