What a clever idea: simply fill a wooden box with wooden kebab skewers and you get a universal knife block!
Links:
Universal Knife Block
via: CRAFT Flickr Pool Weekly Roundup
…compilation of tutorials
What a clever idea: simply fill a wooden box with wooden kebab skewers and you get a universal knife block!
Links:
Universal Knife Block
via: CRAFT Flickr Pool Weekly Roundup
I know filet crochet with strewn little flowers for any length of time, but when I found an instruction I had to give it a try:
It’s fun! ;-)
On the photo you see my first try, I’m thinking of crocheting a tote for me with this pattern ;-)
Links:
Filet Crochet with Strewn Little Flowers (Filet Crochet Patterns. Part 2. Design your own 3-D filet crochet pattern.)
When I saw these place mats I was compleeetly thrilled: that’s exactly what I love so much!
She seems to use as well fabric as paper – many of these self coloured.
And I do love to work with paper, e.g. at my paper shopping bag or my paper Crazy Quilt ;-)
Links:
Fabric/Paper Place Mat (Fall Fiber Place Mat Tutorial)
Here at unikatissima:
Paper Shopping Bag
Paper Crazy Quilt
Did you already hear about the great video where they tried to visualize the warmth of gas with knitting?
Wonderful!
And I like the making of as well ;-)
While you’re at it, perhaps it’s time to see the knitted video again?! ;-)
Links:
Knitted World Gas Commercial (Natural gas commercial) (without words)
via: Prachtig reclame filmpje met breiwerk!
Making Of Natural Gas (French with English subtitles)
via: Knit Stop-Motion Commercial
Here at unikatissima:
Knitted Video
I find this ring most beautiful, it is braid from five strands of two silver wires each and the beads are attached at the ends.
Simply yet striking.
Is seems that it looks also wonderful if braided from copper wire – there was some copper wire laying around here somewhere…
;-)
By the way the braiding with five strands doesn’t seem to be very difficult.
Links:
Woven Silver Wire Ring (Woven Wire Cluster Ring)
How to Make a Braid Using More Than Three Strands (English with very helpful step-by-step photos)
I never knew how to shape such beautiful hearts – until I found the tutorial and learned how easy it is.
Great!
Links:
Easy Polymer Clay Hearts (E-Z Heart Lesson)

(Click for an overall picture)
I’ve begun to knit a summer lace shawl for myself – and because astonishingly I don’t find it boring there’s a little chance that I will finish it ;-)
But the chance is little and so I present it already ;-))
What I like best is that the base is a black-and-white chart that I designed myself (PDF file below at the links) and that most people would connect with filet crochet or cross stitch :)
It reads soo much easier ;-)
Please click the photo at the top to marvel at the still unfinished shawl: I’m working it up from the narrow side, the orange thread at the side marks the point where the pattern from my chart ends.
I want to knit the pattern three or four times.

The lace patterns tends to slant, the item therefore has to be blocked very carefully.
But of course not until finished ;-)
How-to:
The chart only shows the rows on the right side.
I worked the filled squares from the chart with two knit stitches,
for the empty squares I knitted two stitches together and made a yarn over.
The rows on the wrong side are purled, even the yarn overs.
Note: The last yarn over has to be maintained, therefore you need edge stitches, i.e. add a stitch on both sides of the row.
The edge stitch will be slipped if it is first of the row and knitted if it is last.
And that’s all there is to it ;-)
Other methods: Eehm, after I’ve written all this I found the article about filet knitting while surfing, where she presents and compares different methods to make the pattern with the holes.
So if you don’t like mine try this one ;-)
Another pattern:
Before beginning something big as a shawl needless to say that I played around and tried another self-designed chart (PDF file below at the links).
That is the pattern (if you want to work it you can download the PDF file (see links below)).

Here I worked the filled squares of the chart as two knit stitches and the empty ones as two stitches knitted together and a yarn over (= the hole ;-)).

And here I worked it the other way around to see what I like better: I worked the filled squares of the chart as two stitches knitted together and a yarn over and the empty ones as two knit stitches.
But of course you can do a lot of different things from these charts, you can e.g. really filet crochet or cross stitch, but also bead weave, colour knit etc.
Best if you look again at my former blog entry concerning this topic ;-)
Links:
unikatissima diagram ‘flourishes’ (PDF, ~210 KB) (the chart for the lace shawl)
unikatissima diagram ‘skopje’ (PDF, ~60 KB)
Here at unikatissima:
What Can You Do With Filet Crochet/Cross Stitch Embroidery Charts?
If you still have parts of the phone book you used to make the card holder you can complete your desk with a phone book pen organizer ;-)
And if you need a pen holder but don’t like this one, there are others here in the blog ;-)
Links:
Phone Book Pen Organizer (Recycle a phone book into a pen organizer)
via: Recycled Phone Book Pen Organizer
Here at unikatissima:
Card Holder
Entries containing the word ‘pen holder’
pencil holder
Doesn’t this chocolate painting look stunning?
And the way she describes it it seems to be quite simple ;-)
Links:
Chocolate Painting (Simple Chocolate Painting Technique)
I don’t paint (not again something new ;-)), but if I painted I’d paint with moss ;-)
Links:
Moss Graffiti
Moss Graffiti
both via: Moss Graffiti