September 2010

September/October brings change of season, and fresh starts and frivolity and seriousness too. So for a break from whipup realtime I am introducing a few weeks of guest bloggers to liven up your crafty experience. To bring you something fresh, and hopefully invigorate you to make and do and be and think! Its going to be a fun few weeks so come along for the ride.

I want to introduce you to Disney, whose blog www.RufflesandStuff.com I discovered through all her fabulous refashioning experiments. Disney is a wife and mother, who loves all types of crafting and creativity. She has been sewing since she was a little girl, and now enjoys making excessively girly things for her own daughter. She has an archive of many of her crafts and tutorials at: www.RufflesandStuff.com

Hello everyone!
I am so honored to be invited over to Whip Up to guest post today. I’ve been enjoying working on some shoe refashions lately and I thought I would share them with you. Refashioning shoes is something I’ve wanted to try for long time, but I wanted to be sure that the end result was elegant, with a look of quality. And of course, be able to hold up to a few kicks! My daughter and I have both kick-tested these, and we’re very satisfied with our newer, fancier footwear.

The supplies that you’ll need for this project are:

  • Shoes to refashion
  • Extra fabric/material to add to your shoes
  • A leather needle ($2 for a pack of assorted needles at a discount store)
  • A thimble
  • Matching thread (heavy duty thread if you have it)
  • Use your imagination to find scraps of material for your project. Look for leather, vinyl, and other heavy-duty, water-resistant types of materials: an old handbag, a pair of shoes that aren’t wearable anymore, your husband’s retired wallet, the world is full of outcast items that are just waiting to adorn your feet. For my projects, I used a vinyl cosmetic case, and an old suede clog. You may want to test your fabric out before you commit to using it, by poking the needle through to see how easily it penetrates. (Wish I’d done that with my clog, which was a little difficult to work with. Then maybe I would be able to feel my fingers….)

    Once you’ve selected your material, you can choose your design. Look at shoe stores online for inspiration. Love those little polka-dotted Pediped boots you see everywhere? Make some of your own. Or cut out some flower or leaf shapes. Today I’m going to share my own versions, with ruffles and rosebuds!

    To make the double-ruffled shoe that I’m wearing:

    1. Use a seam ripper to remove any unwanted accents on your shoe.
    2. Cut out one 3/4″x6.5″ strip, and one 1.5″x6.5″ strip of vinyl for each shoe.
    3. Quadruple your thread to make it nice and sturdy, tying a knot at one end. If you happen to have a heavy-duty thread (such as linen thread), that would be great to use too.
    4. Using approx. 1/4″ stitches, stitch across the top of your strip, pulling slowly, but firmly, pushing the material downward, to creating gathering.
    5. Once you’ve gathered to your satisfaction and length, knot your threads to secure. Repeat for each strip.
    6. Set the narrow strip on top of the wider strip, place them on your shoe, and stitch on. Don’t forget to use your thimble to push the needle through!
    7. Finish by rounding off the corners of your vinyl strips with scissors, if desired.

    To make the rosebud shoe that Paige is wearing:

    1. Use a seam ripper to remove any unwanted accents on your shoe.
    2. Cut a .5″x6.5″ strip, in a slightly curved shape for each shoe.
    3. Quadrupling your thread (or using heavy duty thread), stitch along the top, from one end to the other.
    4. Pull slowly, but firmly to gather your strip as much as it will gather.
    5. Roll into a rosebud shape, and stitch onto your shoe.

    Be sure that you stitch thoroughly! Your decorations should be nice and secure. And as much as I’d love to tell you that you can just use super-glue for this project, I tried it and it didn’t work. (So next time you are at the craft store, ask for a leather needle! They’re inexpensive, and they work just like a regular sewing needle. And there are so many things you can make with them!

    Lastly-don’t automatically throw away the accents you remove from your shoes! I used the bows that my shoes originally had to make hair clips for my daughter. And that you can use super glue for.

    Thank you so much, Kathreen, for having me over today. It was such a pleasure!
    And have a great day, everyone!!
    Love,
    Disney

    { 21 comments }

    September/October brings change of season, and fresh starts and frivolity and seriousness too. So for a break from whipup realtime I am introducing a few weeks of guest bloggers to liven up your crafty experience. To bring you something fresh, and hopefully invigorate you to make and do and be and think! Its going to be a fun few weeks so come along for the ride.

    Today I want to introduce you to one of my favourite makers – Margie Oomen from the blog resurrection fern – always innovative here she discusses her inspiration, her natural dyeing experiments, and interviews natural dye blogger Sonia Cantie.

    Let us start at the beginning. My father a mathematician and electrical engineer instilled in me a very curious mind and the lifelong love of collecting natural objects as well as vintage treasures. My background is an undergraduate degree in biochemistry, a doctorate in synthetic organic chemistry and then to top that off I became a medical doctor in my spare time. Currently I am using stones smoothed by the constant energetic forces of nature collected from my travels and from the kind donations of wonderful people all over the world. I feel the ocean and the stones surrounding it connect us in ways difficult for us to fathom. I use only repurposed vintage threads and the crochet hooks were forming lace patterns long before I used them in my own two hands to cover the stones. The patterns are almost always inspired by things I have observed in nature: lichen, leaves, webs, frost patterns and snowflakes to name a few. The fractal patterns, fibonacci and other mathematical sequences are more obvious in some of the stones than in others. Most of my patterns are made up as I crochet along using the color, texture and shape of the stone to guide me.

    Canadian rural physician and textile artist, Margaret Oomen has been a gatherer and maker of things for as far back as she can remember but has only been referred to as an artist in the past year. Aside from a spinning and printmaking class she is completely self-taught. She draws her inspiration from her treasure hunting family, her scientific (biochemistry and synthetic organic chemistry) and medical backgrounds and her great respect and love of the natural world. Her favorite quote is “Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature, it will never fail you.” Frank Lloyd Wright. Her work has been featured in Country Living Magazine, design*sponge, uppercase magazine, apartment therapy, Elle Décor SA, Glam .com, readymade blog, whip up, craftzine blog, the purlbee blog, softies central and plush you. Her work can be found at resurrectionfern.ca. She lives in southern Ontario with her husband, four children, three cats and a snail called fern.

    NATURALLY DYEING an interview with Sonia Cantie

    If anyone has been reading my little old blog this summer they would know that I have been having great fun with dyeing in my backyard laboratory this summer. My favorite part of the whole experience has been the vintage tablecloth that has a natural dyeing Pollack sort of vibe to it now. I am seriously considering hanging it on my wall when I am finished for the season. I have been so in love with the work of another dyer over the past year. Her name is Sonia and she has been meticulously and beautifully documenting her experiences on her blog Naturally Dyeing , dyeing experiments using locally grown vegetal species. I have been dying to ask Sonia a few questions.

    What inspired you to get started?
    Sonia: Well, several friends & flickr contacts really inspired me. I think that the very first person who inspired me was Cathy (Cullis). Then you Margie, Lisa, India Flint herself and then Eva (Tinctory) & Carolyn (Saxby). All of you girls’ dyes & experience really inspired me & motivated me to start my own dyes.

    What do you plan to do with the gorgeous hand dyed fibers?
    Sonia: Well, that’s still THE question for me. Naturally dyed fabrics are rather (or really) light sensitive, so I really have to think about it seriously before starting to cut into these very small pieces of fabrics.

    What advice would you have for someone wanting to begin gathering and dyeing with plants?
    Sonia: MY way to proceed is to gather plants that grows locally, and that are not endangered. I think it is the most eco conscious way to dye with plants. As much as I love indigo, it doesn’t grow here, so I don’t want to try using it. Local nature provides everyone enough materials to start dyeing with not a big expense. I gathered old pans, buckets, spoons, etc from my family, so I didn’t spend very much. All I bought was the mordant (alum). One last advice: try to learn (through books or online, too) about the local vegetation. Then, you can start picking things that grow locally, really knowing what you are doing, what you are picking. No way to pick something that is dangerous (poisonous), or that is endangered specie.

    Thanks so much Sonia. It is always a pleasure to chat with you. Sonia sells postcards of her dyeing experiences in her etsy shop and I have heard that there will be a zine in the near future. I have already reserved my copy.

    Thanks so much for having here at whipup,

    { 3 comments }

    I do love a re-fashionista – so here are some refashion and diy fashion tips and tutorials:

    I love this puff sleeve top – and the matching petal shoes are totally cute (thats the image above)

    Turn a mens shirt into a skirt

    I like this tie-front cardigan refashion

    try cropping your sweater

    you will want to make these upcycled hats

    or a t-shirt knotted scarf

    I really like this pleated top – with tutorial.

    how to fashion patch jeans

    I love these felt hats too

    try to make some t-shirt summer sandals

    I love this gathered scarf

    Here is a how-to make a one-sleeve t-shirt

    how use that wide elastic to make a cute skirt

    make some diy skinny ties for your man

    How to Make a Sweater Dress from Your Boyfriend’s Old Jumper

    make a couture gathered skirt

    Make this slashy t-shirt scarf

    make a ruffle spring top

    make some tack-alicious shoes

    turn a maxi dress into a mini dress

    { 4 comments }

    September/October brings change of season, and fresh starts and frivolity and seriousness too. So for a break from whipup realtime I am introducing a few weeks of guest bloggers to liven up your crafty experience. To bring you something fresh, and hopefully invigorate you to make and do and be and think! Its going to be a fun few weeks so come along for the ride.

    Today I want to welcome Ashley English to Whipup. I am a huge fan of Ashley and her books (which I reviewed over here) this is a woman after my own heart, Ashley lives on her plot of land in a small mountain community, where she lives and writes about sustainable food practices, and how to reconnect with food. I loved her books and really look forward to more. In the mean time you can check out her blog and her regular Design*Sponge column – Small Measures.

    I don’t know where you hang your hat, but around my neck of the woods, the weather took a much welcome turn this week. Mornings that were previously hot, heavy, muggy, and not particularly welcome by anyone in my un-air conditioned 1930′s home are now cool, crisp, and beloved. I’m making simmering pots of slow-cooked steel cut oats for breakfast now and resting my hands lingeringly around mugs of steaming, fragrant tea. I’ve begun busting out my hoodies and cardigans and have even found the need, not witnessed in months, for socks, not to mention closed-toe shoes! I’ve even started hunting for fleece sock liners for my Wellies and wool long johns for the Hubs. Firing up the wood stove before too terribly long is also definitely now on the horizon.

    Parallel with this resplendent weather, though, comes a drastic reduction in humidity. Subsequently, my skin, all dewiness and moisture during the haze of summer, can be rendered into a leathery mess unless I stage a quick “skintervention.” Unless I step in and step up the moisture, things can get ugly, fast. Always looking for natural, DIY, thrifty means of managing my skin care needs, come autumn, I turn to my old standby, tried and true-The Great Pumpkin Patch Face Mask.

    It’s not everyday that just two ingredients can make you look radiant. Just two simple things alchemically interact, rendering your skin into absolute smooth, moist, plump perfection. Two things, pumpkin and yogurt, in combination, slathered onto your face and left to work their magic in minutes, can turn you from Leatherface to Cleopatra in half an hour. But don’t take my word for it-whip up this easy peasy concoction yourself, ready in minutes and, better still, available at a fraction of the cost of ready made goods.


    The Great Pumpkin Patch Face Mask

    The Goods:

  • 1/4 c. pumpkin puree (not pumpkin pie mix!)
  • 2 Tbsp. plain whole milk yogurt (unflavored)
  • The Deal:

  • Place ingredients into a small bowl.
  • Whisk gently until completely combined.
  • Slather liberally on face and neck.
  • Leave for 15 minutes (I’d suggest using a head band to keep your hair off your face).
  • Rinse off with warm water.
  • { 7 comments }

    September/October brings change of season, and fresh starts and frivolity and seriousness too. So for a break from whipup realtime I am introducing a few weeks of guest bloggers to liven up your crafty experience. To bring you something fresh, and hopefully invigorate you to make and do and be and think! Its going to be a fun few weeks so come along for the ride.

    Today I am really happy to welcome Nancy Langdon, co-author of Sewing Clothes Kids Love (flickr group here) (which we loved and reviewed). Nancy is also the designer behind Fledge and studioTANTRUM, North American distributor for Farbenmix, mother, small business owner and somewhat argumentative wife of the Professor. She does not have an MBA, but she keeps a diagram of Michael Porter’s Five Forces: A Model for Industry Analysis on her inspiration board under her sketches, magazine clippings and fabric scraps. Nancy today, along with a thoughtful and thought provoking essay on why the stay-at-home work-from-crafter has the same experience as someone with a MBA degree, has generously provided also has a free e-book with a pattern and instructions for making a newsboy cap from scraps – she explains more below.

    True story: My husband and I were having one of those “discussions”. Nonsensical as it was and who knows how it started, but I recall it ending up here (maybe you are familiar with this marital back-and-forth): His work was more important than mine, while I am “just” the stay-at-home parent to preschool children, plus he was the president of his own company. Some points I had trouble debating, but that last one I could handle: With my computer and a credit card number, I went online and registered my own corporation. Just like that, I was president of my own company, too, thank you very much.

    Now that I had a corporation in my name, I might as well do something with it. That bit of passive-aggressiveness has since turned into an active business. Several years later, a nice little sewing pattern designing and distribution gig, and a best-selling book under my belt, I am some sort of sewing muck-a-muck. But with that company, I am also a small business owner. And still a full-time stay-at-home parent: team manager, soccer referee, art education docent, playdate hostess, community activist and all the rest of it.

    A 17 February Wall Street Journal article chronicling the difficulties some people were having reentering the workforce after many years at home has been on my mind lately. This article cites U.S. government research indicating that over 80% of the 2.3 million college-educated stay-at-home moms with children under 18 would like to return to the workplace at some time. For some of these parents, however, after a decade or more of being out of the loop, these otherwise highly qualified professionals were unfamiliar with the way business was being done today.

    Confidence with emailing, social networking, word processing, accounting software is expected of all sorts of professionals: Lawyers, doctors, salespeople and CEOs alike. Knowing that the hip bone connects to the knee bone is not enough: Physicians need to understand that patients, through the Internet, are better than ever informed (and misinformed) of the latest research and treatments. Customers and clients talk openly about their experiences online. A single eye-roll from a disengaged salesperson can lead to a negative Yelp! review in minutes. Attorneys at law, who could once depend on a comfortable income just passing along information, now realize that Googling works for most people in answering basic legal questions and, therefore, their service scope needs to be more individualized. Secretaries have gone the way of white gloves and crinolines, and today’s Administrative Assistant is about as likely to type and fax a letter in the age of email as he would be to take a horse and buggy to work.

    I will venture that if more of these stay-at-home parents had explored their crafty sides while undertaking the very important work of rearing children, they would be well equipped to hit the ground running in today’s workplace. The Internet has permitted crafters to learn, inform others and show off their handiwork. Very quickly, an “Atta girl!” or a “How’d you do that?” can turn into a business opportunity. Enough positive responses on an online forum, a flickr group or WhipUp.net article, can light the fire under the crafty crafter and a personal pastime evolves into a commercial enterprise. That was my experience. And I have seen it happen again and again. I’ll bet it happened to some of you. At the risk of singing to the choir, I’d like show you how a bit of crafting can become a homemade MBA.

    What starts out as a few sales on Ebay to pay for craft supplies morphs into an Etsy shop with a loyal customer base. And it becomes time to be a big-girl businesswoman. So the journey begins. And these are the things you will need to appreciate along the way:

    - An understanding of the determinants of group behaviors and cultures in an online, interconnected world: Reviews on forums and blogs create instant feedback loops that the business-minded crafter better be on top of. Because of the feedback functions of Internet commerce, selling crafters are prompted to offer excellent service and quick communication. The Internet is instantly global, so you’ll need to be aware of all the things a world wide marketplace requires: Sensitivity to cultures, currency risks and language usage issues (I once spotted a cute pencil case on Etsy with a special place for “rubbers”, the British English word for “erasers”. Yeah, awkward.) Happy customers talk and word of your good work gets out. But unhappy customers talk, too. In fact, unhappy customers tend to talk more. Some may call the Internet the Virtual World, but it is based on the real world, and your real world values will surface. My experience? It has probably been about five years since I left one individual with less than a warm and fuzzy feeling. And, oh yes, that individual is still making her opinion of me and my work known to as many people as possible. If I’d only ignored the taunts back then or used more winkie emoticons ;-) Hatchets just don’t stay buried on the Internet, do they? Smilies and winkies all around :-) ;-)

    - Establishment of productive relationships with suppliers, employees and strategic partners: As much as you may be running your own creative endeavor, working in virtual teams and in networked communities is essential to your success. On my Streetcar called Designer, I have relied greatly on the kindness of strangers (my apologies to Tennessee Williams). Collaboration with crafters around the globe is possible and probable. Make-it-or-break-it relationships are built with suppliers, collaborators and customers. More than that, one-to-one relationships with early adopters and opinion-makers is accessible to all, so better learn to take advantage of all that is available.

    - Creation of a mission and vision and aligning and motivating self, suppliers, customers and partners behind that vision: My mission is this: “Have fun. Make Money. Do Good. Give Back.” I have found similarly minded others, and others have found me similarly minded: We find mutual benefits and our goals align naturally, organically. (I interrupt this blog post for a quick shout-out to Sabine Pollehn and the team at Farbenmix: Thank YOU!).

    - A bit of Marketing: The entrepreneurial crafter will want to consider her how her product is presented: That’s called merchandizing. She’ll turn to flickr and learn how to photograph her products more appealingly. Using email blasts, Facebook and blog postings you get the word out. Using online polls and discussions, you gauge customer wants and needs. Pulling actionable information from the responses you gather is part and parcel for marketing science. Definition of a marketing mix and implement measures for determining return on advertising investment: The craftpreneur will need to get the word out: marketing and advertising.

    - Hand-in-hand with marketing is your PR: You are asked to do online interviews and guest posts (Howdy! Whipper Uppers!). You buy an ad here and there on different blogs and forums. There is a famous quote that goes “It pays to advertise”. There is also a famous quote by turn-of-the-last-century department store merchant John Wanamaker that goes, “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half”. With a bit of Internet savvy, there are ways to see how effective your online advertising strategies are. There are bits of Internet Big–Brother magic, especially on Yahoo! and Google, that marketers use to trace the paths customers use to make purchases. We all dislike Spam, Internet and otherwise: But if Spam is served from someone I know and trust and to my taste, I might just bite.

    - Identification of niche and mass opportunities and their ROI: I cannot think of a community that reacts faster to new trends and current events: Are Japanese “bento” lunches all the rage at your elementary school? Etsy has the one-of-a-kind handmade bag no one else does. Silly Bandz traveling up your children’s arms? Silly Bandz rolls and holders are found only on Etsy. Hurricane Katrina, Haitian earthquakes and, more recently, the floods in Pakistan have Etsy and Ebay crafters raising money to do good. Again and again and again, a lonely crafter will touch on the greater Zeitgeist and the mass culture soon adopts the look, the creation, the cause. I’ve done it. Sabine Pollehn of Farbenmix has done it. Many, many of you have, too. A focus on return on investment will move the crafter to successful business owner. Development of a brand, brand identity and associations.

    - Protect intellectual property: Although many of us have nudged the Zeitgeist and been at the genesis of a new trend, most of us have not reaped the lion’s share of the benefits from our creative inspiration, have we? The time comes when you achieve enough acclaim that it makes sense for you to copyright your work and register trademarks for your commercial identifiers. Perhaps in your creative meanderings, you come up with something so novel, that you should apply for a patent. There’s a fine line between sharing a bit of your sandwich and someone eating off your plate, so better stick a fork in it before it’s all gone.

    - Evaluation of economic conditions: Maybe the regulatory environment changes and new regulations throw a wrench in your works. Things like CPSIA, which casts a wide regulatory net over all childrens’ products, including handmade products, may require you to organize with others for political change. Without knowing what to call it, you are battling what the business guru Michael Porter called “Barriers to Entry.” Depending on the economic climate of the moment, you will adjust the focus on the your product to be sensitive it its value, luxury, exclusivity and/or environmental friendliness.

    - Accounting and Management: As you chug along, craft and sell, craft and sell, pretty soon you’ll encounter a whole exciting world of admin. Admin, admin, admin. If you are taking in money, you will need to keep the IRS well-apprised of your activities, your bookkeeping better be by the book. You may also need to consider incorporating or forming an LLC to limit your risk. You may consider your risks and buy some insurance. So many things to consider. With success, you may find that you can’t juggle everything and start to find others to do some of the work, maybe some of the administrative work, maybe some of the logistics, maybe even some of the crafting. And now you are outsourcing services or insourcing by becoming an employer: Whodda thunk you would be the boss lady? And such a paper-pusher to boot?

    - Finance: When you’ve done things right, your business will grow and change. You may find it’s time to upgrade and invest in a better sewing machine, produce your very own fabrics or buy a vintage letter press, which may involve a bank loan. Better give that business plan a thorough going over before sitting across from the loan officer. Making a workable finance plan is key.

    Familiarity with the paradigms and effects of networked technology: Things like CPSIA, which casts a wide regulatory net over all childrens’ products, including handmade products, may require you to organize with others for political change.

    Technology: Crafters make or at least administer their own Web sites, forums and groups. How many of you have spent a good many hours setting up online payment systems, formatting blog templates and searching through lines and lines of html for just that one misplaced backslash? Revenge of the nerds: We’re all computer geeks now.

    And there is much more to this list, including Cash flow valuation, Capital budgeting, Risk analysis, Monitoring and Resource allocation. Sister, if you’ve done even half of what is listed up there, you’ve covered most of what is taught in any standard MBA program. Just because your annual revenue is probably less than what a Fortune 500 CEO spends during a single lunch in Manhattan, doesn’t mean that you haven’t had to do and consider all the aspects of a business that she does.

    What? Don’t believe me? The headers in bold above are adapted from the curriculum of the Harvard Business School MBA program (which, by the way, runs a cool 46 grand a year for tuition alone). Feeling intimidated by all the business-y thing-a-ma-words? If you don’t have the time and 46 thousand dollars to run over to Harvard for schooling in business administration, there is help out there. The Small Business Administration is one of many good places to go (www.sba.gov). As far as things like the Small Business Administration and the IRS go, my opinion is, it’s my government, why not let it work for me? I’ve picked up the telephone several times and spoken directly with government employees who understand the nuts and bolts of the things I struggled with. While you may be an expert at a welted fantastic and a double stockinette, your government knows you may need a little help understanding what exactly a use tax is. Those free phone calls and emails have saved me time and money and (knock on wood) kept me out of trouble.

    Frankly, the ROI in the handcrafted world is generally rather small. I’m probably not taking my own advice very well, because my own cash flow valuation is pretty paltry. The riches are found for me more in the richness of the experience. The rewards are found in feelings of accomplishment, community and family, and not so much in Euros and cents. Not for most. Nonetheless, I will argue, that in addition to the rewards in your personal growth, a crafting business benefits your career skill set, as well. I came of professional age about 1990, before the Internet boom and during a significant recession. The sheepskin in my hand was no ticket into the profession of my choice. The mantra of Generation X was, be flexible and build a career, not a profession. I want to encourage stay-at-home parents to work on their careers: If you can think like a professional, you are a professional. When the time comes to find that briefcase hiding behind the kids’ old sporting equipment and head off to job interviews, you, the business-minded crafter can confidently and truthfully add many of the above skills to your résumé. (And we’ll keep it just between you and me just how fun you’ve had).

    Being a stay-at-home parent requires you to wear many hats. Moving from hobbyist to craftpreneur requires even more. So why not wear this one, as well? For you, friends, a little free e-book of a newsboy cap to make from your scraps. I call it the “One-of-the-Many-Hats-I-Wear Hat”. Juggling as much as we do doesn’t leave a lot of time for blow-outs and curling irons: A bad hair day is a good hat day, right?

    And then go ahead and cross stitch your business degree from the School of Hard Knocked Hand Knits. Enjoy!

    { 13 comments }

    book: city quilts

    by kath_red on September 12, 2010

    in Quilting, Reviews

    City Quilts: 12 Dramatic Projects Inspired By Urban Views By Cherri House. Stash, C&T Publishing (June 16, 2010).

    Cherri house is known for her geometric designs using bold solid fabrics and in this book she takes these two main ideas and showcases her series of 12 quilts around a solid ‘city’ theme. She discusses her inspiration, her fabric choices and her design methods – and with her simple and achievable quilt designs this makes this book perfect for the beginner to intermediate quilter who wants a modern and fun design without a lot of fuss.

    If you followed the City Quilts blog tour then you will have discovered a few gems along the way. Fat quarterly interviewed Cherri House as did naptime quilter, and true up discusses the fabric.

    { 1 comment }

    what a super cute bag – you can make one too – yes indeed – the instructions are right here!

    { 1 comment }

    September/October brings change of season, and fresh starts and frivolity and seriousness too. So for a break from whipup realtime I am introducing a few weeks of guest bloggers to liven up your crafty experience. To bring you something fresh, and hopefully invigorate you to make and do and be and think! Its going to be a fun few weeks so come along for the ride.

    I want to kick start this special guest blogging series with an essay about blogging from my hometown compatriot Bianca. Bianca blogs at Sadie and Lance where she collects and recollects many fleeting crafty pursuits, cooking adventures and the odd observation. Bianca is also responsible for the goodness that is the toy society.

    I’m delighted to be writing a guest post here on Whip Up. I’ve been racking my brains for what to write. Something personal was requested. Hmm tricky, I’m not usually all that personal on my blog. But after returning from an amazing craft camp weekend, with relative strangers, it’s suddenly so obvious. I want to celebrate the amazing connections this online world of craft brings.

    Recently my blog ticked over into its’ sixth year. During these past five years I’ve shared many things on my blog, new (to me) craft, the odd how to, triumphs at the sewing machine, motherhood and whatever yummy food is my current flight of fancy. You know, all the usual suspects. My blog is nothing special, it is my personal notebook of my fleeting craft hobbies, started to keep in touch with my real life craft friends when I moved interstate. What is special about my blog, and no doubt yours, is the mysterious way it has brought unexpected friendships into my life, kicked me out of my social comfort zone and unlocked a whole new world of shared experience through craft.

    The blurring of my online/offline lives first started when I swapped a jar of my homemade chilli jam for a jar of homegrown and homemade pesto. We sent the jars via the post. The night I received mine, I sat down to a dinner of chicken and pesto pasta – as recommended by the maker. As I ate the first mouthful I realised, that other than being an apparently talented crafter and keen cook who has a blog, I knew nothing about the person who made the main component of my dinner. It was an odd feeling.

    Turns out that dinner was delicious – and the maker is now counted as one of my good friends. It was so unexpected, but at the same time so welcome. Obviously we had things in common, shared experiences, a love of craft and food and a common online craft community.

    It’s not only the friends that end up spilling over into our offline lives, there are plenty of real friendships felt online too. I never imagined a connection via a computer could feel so real. But you must have felt it too? The joint celebration when a fellow blogger receives well deserved recognition for an amazing piece of work, the shared outpouring of grief when a fellow crafter suffers a personal loss, the chorus of outrage when a favourite blogger has been copied – it’s all so real.

    When I started my blog, friendship was never a consideration. Now, five years down the track, it’s what keeps me blogging. The thrill of finding a new blog I “click” with, the nerves before meeting a complete – yet oddly familiar – “stranger” in person. Friends once only ever known via a series of words and images on a computer screen are now people I invite into my home for my son’s birthday party, to hang out at the park, to my birthday drinks or who I share a house with for an indulgent weekend away of craft.

    I feel so lucky.

    [Image courtesy tutti frutti]

    { 6 comments }

    who knew melon seeds could look so good! Check out little treasures and her series on creating organic and natural jewelry pieces. Melon seeds jewelry tutorial.

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    Am loving the style of this fashion blog - Honestly…WTF – with some DIY thrown in here and there.

    We featured their friendship necklace recently – and here is a pompom garland diy. Also you must see their color block moccasins.

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