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AMA issue 219

Digital Subscriptions to Art Monthly Australia only $60: From May 09, issue #219, Art Monthly Australia went online.
Enjoy the latest edition of AMA at your screen-convenience.
AMA’s digital edition is exactly the same as it appears in print, along with bonus search, hyperlink and print functions.
View subscription options and free trial issues of AMA. Its a fabulous magazine for those interested in Art.

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Subscribe & win

Subscribers to the digital edition will gain online access to over a year’s worth of back issues (starting from March 2007).

+Those who sign up before July 30, 2009, will be in the running to win our 21st anniversary commemorative print (priced at $1250) by celebrated Australian artist eX de Medici, appropriately titled It’s a Global World (2008). View online here.

mollie flower tutorial

roman sock has a neat tutorial on making these mollie flowers.

mollie flowers

rockin’ refashioned baby gown

love this baby gown refashioned from a rock t-shirt. Tutorial here.

refashioned t-shirt

Mendocino summer dress pattern

Heather Ross is offering this free dress pattern – download the pdf here.

mendocino dress pattern

sprout baby blanket

love this sprout baby blanket pattern which arrived in my inbox with the latest classic elite yarns web-letter.

blanket

homemade poster paint

part of the unplug your kids project – these homemade poster paints.

making paint

Petite Spring Nests

lovely tutorial at indie fixx These little nests would look just lovely as a centerpiece on your table. You could even line them with tissue or parchment paper and use them to hold your dyed eggs or jelly beans.

spring eggs

A week of socks: triangle socks

The pattern for these scrap yarn Triangle Socks by designer Maaike Vondenhoff is a ravelry download.

triangle socks

book: The Expectant Knitter

The Expectant Knitter: 30 Designs for Baby and Your Growing Family by Marie Connolly, Potter Craft (November 11, 2008)

In a world full of books full of knitting patterns for babies, this one is trying hard to be different. Marie Connolly has structured this book in terms of a pregnancy, with the easier projects designed for making during your first trimester when you might be feeling ill and tired, and during your last trimester when you might be feeling round and full of baby, and the more challenging projects to make during your second trimester when it is easier to concentrate and you may be feeling pretty good.

Projects include lots of things for the baby, a wrap shawl for a pregnant mama, and interestingly, a coat for your dog. There are baby blankets and quilts, hats, cardigans and jumpers, and even some toys. There is a nice range of patterns to suit babies in both warmer and cooler weather, from personal experience it is very frustrating to want to make something for my baby, but the pattern or the size is out of season!

It is a little difficult to judge which size to make the patterns in this book, though, as there are only a few child models in the book, and unfortunately many of the clothes are either too big or too small for the model, which makes it awkward to really see how the pattern is supposed to fit properly.

Sprinkled throughout the book are lists of advice for a pregnant mama, including medical and health advice. I could not see any references for any of this information, and it seems that much of it is from the author’s personal experience as a mother. While some of the advice is meant to be whimsical and funny, including instructions to buy extra yarn or snuggle up on the couch to knit baby socks to counter morning sickness. However I am uncomfortable with unreferenced medical advice turning up in a knitting book.

All that said, as a very new knitter I am keen to knit lots for my own baby, and the baby socks, leg warmers, daddy socks and raglan sweater are firmly on my To Knit list!

About the reviewer: Kate is a busy mother of four and has far too many craft projects on the go at any one time. These could include, but are not limited to, crochet, sewing, dyeing, paper making, spinning, felting and bookbinding. Kate has challenges in the areas of finishing things, saying no and craft supplies storage. She makes babyslings in her freetime – find them here.

make your own mobile studio

bitter betty shows us how to convert a vintage suitcase into your own mobile studio.

mobile studio

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