Showing posts with label Locker Hooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Locker Hooking. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Week #2

Hello!  Welcome to week two of the Redesign project.  Rollers and Brushes this week for the the wall in the kitchen.  I'll have a photo update next week about the kitchen.  If you missed week one read this article first.  It explains the whole plan.

What I'd like to talk about this week is more of a share.  As some of you may know I'm a bit obsessed with rugs and different ways to make rugs.  I just love them and more than anything I just love that if you are willing to put the time in, you can make one of your own!  Last night while surfing I found a fantastic site!  I am so drooling over how simple and fun their process is, and it wouldn't take long at all to make one of these beauties.  Check out Vecco and all of their awesomeness!

Another way to make your own rug with little investment and easy to find tools is to crochet a rug. Check out these beauties on Etsy.  All you need to crochet your own rug is strips of material, cut or torn into 1" strips (sheets work very well) and an extra large crochet hook.  Sugar Bee Crafts breaks it down for you.

As the redesign as I have the time project continues check back to see what kind of rugs I make for my own home.  Will I Vecco?  Crochet?  Toothbrush Rug?  Needlepoint?  Locker Hook?  Punch needle? So many to try!

Next week a tutorial on Needlepointing a basket with yarn and plastic canvas.



Thursday, June 21, 2012

Locker Hooking - a DIY anything project

The Craft studio has been busy.  I am the kind of person who can put a project down and come back to it later.  In the mean time I usually start another project.  I realize that creatively sometimes I just have to stop and find the inspiration to come back to a project refreshed and revived.  Otherwise my work is sloppy and no good.  


I am currently working on two Locker Hooking projects.  Each of them will take a considerable amount of time and energy so I am letting them.  Like a good cup of coffee, you have to wait for it to cool a little, you can't just chug it down.  It is this rationalization that has allowed me to take my time with my crafting projects guilt free.


Back to Locker Hooking.  No - locker hooking isn't some "skeezy" practice in seedy locker rooms, it is a sad and unfortunate name to a craft I really enjoy.  It comes from  hooking  loops of material up through rug canvas and then locking them in place with string. 
Locker hooking is such a versatile, and durable craft that it has become a main inspiration in the MBU - DIY Craft Studio.  Not only are the materials cheap, but you can recycle an old bed sheet into your new placemat, or pillow, or bracelet, or rug.  I just love that.  You are folding laundry one day and decide that you just hate a certain shirt &  you are short a bath mat, then viola! New bath mat.  


My most recent completion was a hot pad for the kitchen.  My MIL gave me a "jelly roll" of the cutest fabrics.  I knew that I wanted to make something useful with the fabric, but it had to be small.  I decided I would use a #6 canvas (because I had some), and cranked this little baby out in my spare seconds over a few days time.  I have 3 kids and can only craft in very small bursts, so spare seconds it is.  If you had peace and quiet then you could make on in just a few hours.

The project that is currently waiting for further inspiration is a wall hanging I call "jewels in the snow".  Here is a close up picture of it in progress:
See the rug canvas up at the top, between the white?  I also used #6 canvas for this project and different bulky yarns. 
This leads me to the project that has highjacked my time from the wall hanging.  The project being 4 super ugly chairs sitting around my table.  They are hand-me-downs that I gladly accepted because my oldest got stuck in the broken down "rushing" in our even older chairs.  Which I plan to fix later - but that is another blog post :)  Anyway, the chairs are oak and could be nice but are in various states of "ugh", because the finish is peeling.  So I am currently sanding them one by one and will refinish them, but this time they will be completed with beautiful locker hooked seat pads.  Check back for a tutorial of the chair project.



You'll need 5 things to Locker Hook a beautiful project:
  1. Rug Canvas
  2. Locker Hook
  3. Locking Medium (string)
  4. Yarn, Roving, or Cotton material torn into strips
  5. Tapestry Needle
There are many web sites where you can order these materials, one of my favorites is colorcrazy.com.  There you can find materials, patterns, clearer explanations  of locker hooking, videos, books, you name it - it's there.  The author of the books and site Theresa Pulido also gives a great history of the craft  as well.  Locker hooking is a fun, durable craft, that can add a lot of beauty to just about anything you want to make. Check it out!