Filet Scarf and Stole: Cookie’s Last Dance

It is with enormous pleasure that I offer the adorable filet crochet that I created in remembrance of my dog (see previous post Cookie’s Last Dance). In DJC: Cookie’s Last Dance, Cookie the Chihuahua spins merrily in anticipation of his supper, up and down the length of a scarf and around and around the panels of a stole.  Even for those who don’t give a toss about Chihuahuas or have never contemplated working in filet crochet, there’s plenty of content in this file to help you add to your skills.  Along with the instructions for a scarf and a stole, the pattern holds many extras, including an overview of filet crochet, extensive filet charts for single and double width Cookies, step by step technique tutorials and suggestions for yarn substitution.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Not to burden the pattern with too many image files, I prepared a separate photo tutorial for two special techniques that I think will make your project dance better: Foundation Double Crochet and Beginning Extended Double Crochet.  Although the swatches and stitches in the images are taken from this specific design, the information may prove useful for all.  So if you purchase the pattern and need to see the stitches up close, or if you are interested in these techniques, please view this new tutorial page.

So I’m a sentimental idiot; I can’t yet wear my scarf or stole without getting… sort of… verklemmt.  I did love creating and crocheting these samples.  Even the pattern writing was less the usual nuisance, and more therapeutic than I had imagined it would be.  I believe I am ready to let go of them both, the filet design and the tiny, twirling terror that inspired it.  DJC: Cookie’s Last Dance is available for download for $3.99.  Please visit the design page at  DesigningVashti.com for complete information about the pattern and purchasing.  Enjoy!

One last note.  A wonderful, talented and crazy friend crocheted this and sent it to me along with her best wishes.  I hesitate to share it with you because I do not wish to be inundated by requests for the pattern.  I DO NOT HAVE THE PATTERN.  But he is so cute and even has a blanket, as suggested by her daughter as a necessary accoutrement for a heat-seeking Chihuahua.  Awww, he even has a little collar and dog tag.  “C” is for Cookie. 🙂

Haley's  Cookie

Cookie’s Last Dance

Cookie 6 months

Cookie the quirky, defective, anti-social white Chihuahua, was my best pal, although I was not his. A natural born heat-seeker, Cookie preferred and deferred to our other pack member, John, because John’s hands were always warm and mine always ice.

He wasn’t very smart for a dog, impossible to train, but he had his charms. The one trick he would perform on demand was the old “gimme five”, or more accurately “gimme four”. Cookie would sit and quickly touch his paw to your outstretched hand, but only if he knew you had a treat in your other hand. He also had his own happy dance, crazily spinning around like a compass needle, reserved for moments of ultimate fulfillment of longing and joy, like suppertime. We tried to encourage this natural behavior and get him to dance on command, but to no avail. Cookie did exactly what he wanted, whenever it suited him. So it had been from the day we brought the little brat home nearly 14 years ago until just last month.

In mid-March, Cookie stopped dancing and eating, not even tempted by his favorite treats, no longer aware of what he was doing or where he was.  Tests at the vet proved inconclusive; systems were failing.  I knew he was slipping away and all I could do was make him comfortable and wait.

That last morning I didn’t know it was going to be his last morning.  I groomed him as gently as possible, dabbing at the bit of dried blood that still matted his fur at the back of his neck where the vet had drawn so many samples the week before. I trimmed his nails, and for the only time in his life he did not protest, and wiped away the bits of yarn fiber that were constantly getting sucked into his soft, brown saucer eyeballs.

After we were done, I set him on the corner of the sofa, his beloved watch post, but Cookie didn’t stay there long. Eyes clouded with cataracts, legs weak and unsteady, he staggered down his little doggy stair steps and, drawn by instinct, found a welcoming spot on the floor, the place where the late morning sun hit and heated the carpet. He circled that spot once, laid himself in the sunny warmth, breathing heavily. I tried stroking him and calming him, but nothing would delay the inevitable.  His head drooped to the carpet, he shuddered and breathed his last.

I never understood, in the movies and TV, when grieving loved ones would say “he looked so peaceful” or “I thought she was just sleeping”.  I get it now.  And I have done some difficult things in my life; I birthed two babies, I sized crochet garment patterns, I lost my dad. But the hardest thing I ever had to do was that morning, bundling Cookie’s tiny, limp, still warm body and taking him to the vet for his final arrangements.

People deal with grief in their own time and in their own ways.  Today I immerse myself in my crochet and have been creating a remembrance. It’s not quite finished; it is a work in progress as is my grieving.

Cookie's Last Dance

In a while I will have my emotions in hand, will likely publish this filet project as a DJC Design so I can share with you Cookie’s Last Dance.

One more thing.  I am not sure if I have figured out how to do this, or if I have the right to do this, but I hope all concerned will forgive me.  This piece of music has helped me, a catharsis in four and a half minutes.  Written by Karen Taylor-Good and Burton B. Collins, produced by the late Phil Ramone, this song, performed by Laura Branigan, might be heard if you click through here a couple of times.

Rewards for Alternative Crochet

I hope it has not escaped your notice that I occasionally refer to award-winning crochet designer, writer, instructor, blogger and deep-thinker Vashti Braha as “my boss”.  Not that she is in any way bossy.  Quite the opposite, she is as laid back as anyone I know, perhaps due to the languid {outside of hurricane season} sub-tropical climate where she resides.  Maybe it’s something else. I get the impression that she can smile while all hell breaks loose simply because she knows stuff that we don’t.

I teasingly call Vashti the boss because she owns the site Designing Vashti, where she hosts her own patterns as well as my independent pattern line, DJC Designs.  She is technically, then, my landlady, shopkeeper, stockperson, shop accountant, payroll manager and the one sweet voice in my ear who propelled me into self-publishing land.  So OK, she charges me exorbitant fees {not really!} for the privilege of having my designs listed, but it works… works astonishingly well… as a partnership in crochet goodness.

I also hope that her popular Crochet Inspirations Newsletter has not escaped your notice, either.  By free subscription, this gem can arrive in your e-mail inbox every couple or three weeks, the frequency of publication dependent on whether I have been successful at enabling procrastination.  Funny how the disease/sin/vice of procrastination, although not exactly infectious, can easily be encouraged by a few words at the right moment!

Anyway, when she manages to ignore me, Vashti pours out her heart and soul in vibrant full color on the pages of her newsletter.  She delves into the mysteries of crochet techniques, spills about the designing process and generally goes where the rest of us go except she confesses all to YOU, whereas we are mostly too embarrassed to speak up. And she swatches WAY too much. What Vashti has learned and experienced through her incessant uber-swatching could fill… well does fill going on 50 issues of her newsletter.

Her crochet aesthetic and mine co-exist happily at DesigningVashti and also on the pages of magazines and books.  We thought it so funny that our latest Tunisian crochet designs, her Rivuline Shawl and my Shantay Skirt, appear back to back in The New Tunisian Crochet (Interweave Press, February 2013) by our friend Dora Ohrenstein.

Rivuline ShawlShantay Skirt

On one thing we agree completely; Vashti and I strive is to pass along our love and obsession for alternative, mind-expanding crochet techniques, and we put our money where our mouths are. As we have been for 2011 and 2012, DesigningVashti is the proud sponsor of the CGOA 2013 Design Competition prize for Special Technique. (The idea for rewarding technical merit was pioneered in 2010 through a personal grant from KJ Hay, another fellow crochet geek.)  Although it is necessarily Vashti herself who chooses the winner as I am always up to my eyeballs with producing the competition, we both want to see design entries that make us think, “Holy Crap, why didn’t I think of that?”.

It is our hope that the $200 prize for 2013 will encourage design entries using alternative crochet such as Tunisian, Broomstick, Hairpin, plus beading, innovative colorwork, fresh approaches to all types of ethnic, vintage or historic techniques, and in particular, brilliant new directions in which to take our beloved craft. Past special merit prize winners illustrate the glorious and wide-ranging possibilities:

2010, KJ Hay prize for Technical Merit: Rose Infinity Doily designed by Kathryn White

Rose Infinity2011, DesigningVashti prize for Special Technique: Poptastic Purse designed by Janice LonnrothPoptastic Purse2012, DesigningVashti Special Award for Technical Merit: Summer Dreams Bolero designed by Dot Drake

Summer Dreams BoleroAll during March, as the 2013 celebration of National or International Crochet Month continues, it’s a great time to kick your crochet skills up a notch by practicing or tinkering with new crochet stuff.  Vashti and I hope you will be as fascinated by alternative crocheting as we are and that you might be motivated to come to where crochet is spoken, Crochet Guild of America, become a member if you haven’t joined us yet, and watch for information about entering the CGOA 2013 Design Competition. We are on this voyage with you… to explore strange, new worlds… to seek out new crochet forms and new techniques…. to boldly go where no crocheters have gone before.  🙂

The Crocheted Skirt: Fashion Fact or Fantasy?

The crocheted skirt has to rank up there as the ultimate “in my dreams” garment project, at once wonderfully feminine yet totally impossibly impractical. Why, then do I have at least ten current skirt designs, either out there for 2012 or in production for 2013? Good question, considering there is not one drop, not an iota of Girly-Girl in my constitution.

I am strictly a jeans/T-shirt/Chucks female, the look I landed on in 1971, and the one I’m sticking with probably forever. [Shoot, if I could bring myself to sit still long enough in a hair salon I’d get me a 70’s shag haircut and finish my total blast from the past]. The parts have changed over the years, my body parts as well as the wardrobe essentials.  The jeans now tend to be mid-rise or loose cargos instead of hip-huggers, straight leg not bell bottom, in the new trend of not wasting water and resources to factory pre-wash the fabric so they are dark, creased or whiskered, and a touch stiff, as opposed to the well-worn, ripped look of decades past. The T-shirt, which now must be long enough to cover the top of the pants, no longer has radio station or rock band logos or cutesy slogans like “I’m a Spam Fan”; instead my shirts are emblazoned with geeky sci-fi logos, NASA meatballs and esoteric fan slogans like “Keep calm and don’t blink”. But I find it comforting that high-top Chuck Taylor All Stars are pretty much the same (except for the inflated prices); seeing as I can now afford more than one pair at a time, I like to mis-match the pairs.

So why do I design such unabashedly femme, sashaying crocheted skirts that have girls of all ages squeeing with delight?  Beats me. Yes, I wear my crocheted skirts, and yes I do it in public. As a designer it is my responsibility and my mission to show crochet on the body every chance I get. I could make it easier on myself if I designed projects that don’t require me to suck in my gut, such as hats or scarves or baggy sweaters, which are way less complicated to wear and less bruising on the ego to style on this old lady’s squishy, squat body. But, no.  I have to design skirts.

The early skirt designs were mostly larks, just for fun and shock value. The first skirt I ever designed for a yarn company was purchased but never actually published, presumably because the public (more likely the editor) wasn’t quite ready to go there.  The next three became part of a beachwear collection “Surf’s Up” featured in Family Circle Easy Knitting in 2004, followed by the Vive La Provence skirt on the cover of the first Interweave Knits Special Crochet Issue in late 2004.  Since then I have done dozens more, with a few stunners yet to be unveiled in 2013, including four in my own next book, Convertible Crochet. Here are some of my skirt hits and the inevitable misses, FYI. Some you may never ever ever see or be able to get patterns for no matter how hard you search or how prettily you implore me to cough them up since they are sold, lost in some vault, no longer in my possession. So just look, don’t cry.

JAN 05 Interweave CoverDesigned by Doris Chan, Family Circle Easy Knitting, 2004Designed by Doris Chan, Family Circle Easy Knitting, 2004 Designed by Doris Chan, Family Circle Easy Knitting, 2004From Amazing Crochet Lace by Doris Chan Designed by Doris ChanFelinaRiver SongPingRohise

Jolimar skirt childBirthday Girl

Exploded Lace Motif Skirt

  Multi Media Skirt Lara's Dance Skirt   Charlotte Skirt

Bias Mini by Doris Chan from Crochet Noro, published by Sixth&Spring Books. Photography by Rose Callahan copyright © by Sixth&Spring Books/Knitting Fever, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Bias Mini by Doris Chan from Crochet Noro, published by Sixth&Spring Books. Photography by Rose Callahan copyright © by Sixth&Spring Books/Knitting Fever, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Crocheting my kind of skirts is easy. All are virtually seamless, starting with a sturdy, elastic waistline formed with the chainless foundation wonder of the world, FSC. It amazes me how the FSC ring can be 8 to 10 inches smaller than your full hip measurement, yet allows you to shimmy into the skirt. From the foundation each skirt is shaped in specific ways to lie smoothly over the hips. Here’s the most critical caveat you’ll get from this post: if the pattern calls for a Foundation Single Crochet waistband, do not, I repeat DO NOT try to work around it using a traditional chain start.  You’ll never be able to get the waist stretchy enough to pull on the skirt, no matter how loosely you chain. As a result, you’ll have to size up so far that the skirt waist and high hip contain too much fabric and will pouf out. Trust me, hardly anyone looks good in that.

My skirts are all pull-on style, without fussy closures or fitting, held up with drawstrings or elasticized with applied waistband elastic or crocheted with carry-along elastic thread. Many are generously sized for hips, or are flared for easy fit. The editors normally request sample garments to fit their tall, leggy photography models, but they nearly always stick to conservative skirt lengths, at or around the knees.  However there are always pattern options for adjusting the length. The fabrics are crocheted with relaxed tension so they have terrific drape on the body without cling. If you choose your yarn fiber wisely, if the yarn twist is firm yet pliable, then you’ll have a skirt that can tolerate the stress of being tugged and sat upon without shredding.

Do  you dare to wear a crocheted skirt? Obviously you are inviting attention, but you can make sure it’s for the right reasons.  Begin by crocheting the correct skirt style, size and proportions for your figure. Crocheted skirts are not for every body, but I believe nearly everybody can find one that works.

My designs have lots of holes, being generally lacy, and need some sort of clothes under them, unless you are a film star, pop diva or reality TV icon and don’t mind parading around with nothing under your lace. You can do what I do, wear skirts over leggings (not opaque tights, but actual pants that are slim fitting), or skinny jeans or over thin knit tube skirts. Slips work well, if you can get over the concept of people seeing your slip. This completely horrifies my mother, BTW. To her, a slip is still an unmentionable and should never be seen. I remember a time where you would die of embarrassment if someone took you aside and whispered “Your slip is showing”.  HORRORS! If only we knew what all would be showing in 2013!

If you have an active lifestyle and find yourself on the beach, poolside, or ducking in and out of yoga or pilates classes (so NOT me!), I understand that crocheted skirts make useful, pretty cover-ups for swimsuits and workout attire, allowing you to be dressed enough for the boardwalk or the sidewalk, juice bar or cafe.

If you have talent for sewing you can make color-coordinated linings for your crocheted skirts, which is so not what I enjoy, but linings have the advantage of looking more natural (as opposed to a stark white slip).

And, if all fails and you find yourself unhappy with the look of your crocheted skirt, depending on the cut and proportions, you can try wearing it as a capelet or poncho. Straight or slim skirts aren’t going to allow enough room for your shoulders, so you’ll have to choose wisely. Just saying.

Random Winner of Clever Crocheted Accessories

I go through this every time I do a giveaway on this blog: obsessing over how the winner might be chosen. Most bloggers who stage such contests state right on the page that the winner will be drawn at random. It would be simple enough to go to a site that offers a plug-in random number generator designed for this very purpose. If the blogger is stellarly popular and there are hundreds upon hundreds of entries, there is not enough time to read and weigh every comment (unless the blogger has no life), and this seems the most efficient method.

Saturday Beret designed by Ellen Gormley

Saturday Beret designed by Ellen Gormley

My post offering a free copy of Clever Crocheted Accessories by Brett Bara (Interweave Press, 27 November 2012) has attracted 90 comments, a nice, round, manageable figure, and I actually read them all. Although I clearly mentioned that sucking up to me wouldn’t improve anyone’s chances of winning, it was sweet of so many readers to say kind things, thank you. The commenting is completely transparent in that everyone can read all the entries, so you can see for yourself how I might get to know, if only briefly, many of the readers. Having looked each one of you in the eye, so to speak, I find myself wishing I had 90 copies to give away because it’s going to kill me to disappoint the 89 hopeful faces behind the not-winning comments.  Know what I’m saying? By reading your replies I have become invested in each of you.

So I decided to let my blog readers be the instrument of choosing. I pulled up the stats for the number of page views for each day in the past week, picked out the highest total, noted the last two digits. The winner, decided by you, is lucky number 17, Andrea! I’ll be in touch through the e-mail address attached to your comment. Hoping everyone else can enjoy this book, too. Thanks again for the comments and congratulations to Andrea.