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The Domestic Wildflower

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Jenny Gomes

Learn to Crochet in 15 Minutes

February 20, 2017 by Jenny Gomes 4 Comments

This post will show you how to crochet in 15 minutes. It will demonstrate how to make a slip knot, how to chain, and how to crochet a versatile, simple stitch. The best part? You don’t even need a hook. Read on for the tutorial, beginner, and you’ll be crocheting in no time!

Learn How to Crochet in 15 Minutes | Tutorial from The Domestic Wildflower click to learn how to crochet with your fingers in just 15 minutes with this super simple tutorial. No abbreviations or complicated steps!

Crochet is typically done with a hook but when you use giant yarn, you can use your fingers with ease. Once you master crocheting with your fingers, you could choose to pick up a hook and make something with smaller scale yarn.

People often ask me why I don’t knit. The reason is that I just haven’t learned yet 🙂 Knitting and crocheting are different ways of doing the same thing. Crochet is faster, takes more yarn, and requires one hook. Knitting takes a bit more time, less yarn, and two needles.

The yarn I use in this video is from Love Fest Fiber’s and it is called Tough Love. It is felted, super strong, sturdy, easy to work with, and as you’ll see in the video, it is very clear for a beginner to see where they are supposed to create a new stitch. It is about as big around as a dime in diameter (that’s pretty big!) so you’ll be able to see clearly what to do when.

In the video I don’t use any terms or abbreviations that you might not be familiar with and I show you the simplest way to get started. The video is about 10 minutes is all- watch it newbie! 

***

If you want to take those new crochet skills to the next level, Wildflowers, I want you to grab this completely free downloadable step-by-step guide. I’m an English teacher in my “real” job (did I tell you that?) and I really pride myself on writing easy to understand instructions. This PDF will explain HOW to take a ball of giant yarn like the Tough Love yarn from Love Fest Fibers and make a chunky wool basket, like those below.

Download the step by step guide!

Felted Wool Basket | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read the full tutorial for how to crochet a felted wool basket in giant yarn in under 2 hours!

Felted Wool Basket | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read the full tutorial for how to crochet a felted wool basket in giant yarn in under 2 hours!

Felted Wool Basket | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read the full tutorial for how to crochet a felted wool basket in giant yarn in under 2 hours!
The basket fits 5 wide mouth pints just fine 🙂

Imagine how happy you’ll be gifting a homemade basket like this! To help you out, I made a super simple, printable PDF that you can grab for free 🙂

Download the basket step by step guide!

All signed up? Think your friends would want to join you? I’d LOVE it if you shared this post out with your friends on Twitter , Facebook, and Pinterest. The more the merrier, right, Wildflowers? This is going to be a party! B.Y.O.B of course…Bring Your Own Basket 😉 Can’t wait to see you all there!Learn to finger crochet in just 15 minutes with Jenny of The Domestic Wildflower | check out this blog post that teaches you HOW to crochet in minutes; no hook required!

Filed Under: Craft

Inspiration for a Wildflower Ebook

February 16, 2017 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

This post will share an inspiring little collection of essays, those that have been the best loved on the blog, and how to get your hands on the ebook.

It is currently February, and we have had a wet, long winter by all accounts. It is kind of dreary out, I’m sick of sweeping up the dust from the wood stove, and I’m really missing fresh tomatoes and strawberries.

I’ve written many encouraging essays for this blog and for other sites that had absolutely nothing to do with canning, sewing, or the like. When I started this blog it was when I had a one-year-old and a three-year-old, and I needed a creative outlet that I could do silently when they were napping. The sewing machine was too loud, cleaning also was too loud, and I found that a wave of words flowed forth every day at nap time. It felt so good to write whatever was on my heart and since you can’t encourage a toddler to be potty trained or inspire them to eat their veggies, I had to inspire you Wildflowers, I guess.

I compiled into an ebook all the essays that have been best-loved, pinned and re-pinned, and shared all over.

Get the ebook here! 

Yes! I Want Instant Access!

If ebooks aren’t your thing (they weren’t mine until my youngest started noticing that my lamp was on to read a paperback- now I have to read on my phone, much to my dismay) I would be so honored if you’d share this post with your friends on Facebook (hallelujah for a break from political shares!) Pinterest (my fave!) or otherwise.

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Thank you, readers, for helping me make this blog my favorite way to spend nap time.

The cover image for this ebook is of me of course, and I’m wearing the back interest tank I made for this sewing post. It’s one of my favorites 🙂 Thanks to Della of Circle Bar Photography for always making my projects look way more polished than they really are. She’s the best.

Inspiration for a Wildflower Ebook

Here’s to springtime is right around the corner, Wildflowers!

Filed Under: Living

Practical Giant Yarn: Extreme Yarn for Everyday Use

February 13, 2017 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

This post shares the best yarn for a textile that you can use every day without fear of pilling, shedding, or dissolving. I’ll share how I crocheted with my fingers (hello extreme arm crochet!) and made a throw for my living area that I can just as easily wear as a chunky scarf when the snow returns. Read on for the tutorial!

The Best Giant Yarn for Everyday | The Domestic Wildflower click to read about the very best giant yarn that you can get to use for textiles. This post also shares other yarns in the same size range and their uses. This is such an informative post! Read it now guys!

I have been utterly in love with giant yarn and have made an effort to share what I know on the topic here on the blog. I made a gorgeous throw for a cousin’s wedding gift here and learned that the results of using that kind of unfelted yarn is a dramatic, hefty, but very delicate textile. It can’t be washed, and is prone to pilling and is best displayed on an accent chair or guest bed where it won’t get handled all that often. It isn’t like it will fall apart in your hands, but I think the pilling will age the item much faster and will look old before its time. It is a lot like cotton candy, in a sense. It is voluminous, delicate, and beautiful to look at, but lacking in the substance required for the every day. I got it from the Knitting Revolution Etsy shop and the product is stunning and service perfect.

Practical Giant Yarn: Extreme Yarn for Everyday Use | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read which giant yarn is the very best for a durability as well as beauty.

Get the pattern to make this giant throw here!

I made a thick and thin throw with great success and modeled it after a super expensive woven lust object shared on the savvy Copy Cat Chic site. This was a far more practical choice as the yarn is spun (and the fibers are hence connected much better together) and it made a wonderful gift for a friend. The big poofs, however cloudlike and dreamy they are, are prone to pilling a bit and if you have a cat, toddlers, or other critters like a messy mate, then it might not be as wise of a choice. If I didn’t have a cat that would knead it, or kids that would use it as a superhero cape the moment my back was turned, I might have kept it. I got the yarn from Hookaholics Handspun on Etsy, and their service and product was amazing.

Practical Giant Yarn: Extreme Yarn for Everyday Use | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read which giant yarn is the very best for a durability as well as beauty.

Get the step by step PDF guide for this thick and thin throw blanket for free right here, Wildflowers!

Enter Knit 1 Share 1 by Little Dandelion. This is the pinnacle of giant yarn; it is beautiful, very soft, and felted so it will NOT pill, not dissolve, and is actually quite durable. Jacqueline Fink is the mastermind behind these “bumps” (as the skeins are called) of woolen beauty, and if you want to see her in action, look on her YouTube. Not only is she sweet, clear, and devoted to her craft, she shared with me a little bump and shipped it all the way from Australia for me to try out.

I really struggled with what to make once I received the creamy yarn. It is SO soft, so much softer than you imagine it being, that I could NOT make a round basket with it. I worked up the base of a basket twice and took it out. It would have looked rad I’m sure but I hate the thought of wasting the softness on an item I’d rarely touch.

I also wrestled with what stitch to use. I only know how to crochet, not knit, and I have noticed that in the giant yarn world, there’s very little crochet represented. I don’t know why that is but I wanted to make something that LOOKED crocheted. The other items I have made this season didn’t necessarily look as if they were crocheted and I wanted this one to be different.

I decided against using a hook mostly because I gave the one giant hook I own to a student in the local FFA woodshop to copy for me. Out of necessity and for experiment’s sake, I crocheted by hand. This actually was fast and simple, and being able to use my pointer and middle fingers to pull the loops through made it a piece of cake.

I chained the width of my bed and mocked up a couple options. I decided (finally) that as the width of my bed would result in a bed runner or a scarf sized item, I’d proceed with that size. I chose a double crochet stitch created in every other stitch to get the most height I could with the limited amount of yarn.

Here’s my Periscope broadcast saved to YouTube where I show my struggle to decide and the beautiful yarn in motion.

Each row is about 5 inches tall and I was able to make it 3 rows plus one row of single crochet in every other stitch that ended about ¾ of the way from the end of the row. I just shorted each stitch manually a bit in this final row and you hardly notice that the row just sort of disappears rather than ends where it ought to at the end.

The end result is a soft, dramatic, very sturdy item that is gracing a vintage rocker in my living room. When the snow flies again, I’ll wear it as a show stopping scarf. Swoon-worthy, winter wonderland photographs forthcoming 😉

Practical Giant Yarn: Extreme Yarn for Everyday Use | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read which giant yarn is the very best for a durability as well as beauty.

The cost of this yarn is significant, there’s no denying it. However, for the weight of the yarn, the shipping distance, and the unparalleled quality, it is well worth it. I know it would be a significant investment for any crafter but giving a unique heirloom that will last forever is an awesome thing.

Practical Giant Yarn: Extreme Yarn for Everyday Use | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read which giant yarn is the very best for a durability as well as beauty.

A whole bump is enough to make a full size blanket for a bed, so you wouldn’t have to join (connect the ends of one skein to another) and you’d be sure to have enough for the project. For dreamy inspiration, check out Little Dandelion’s instagram here and see what I mean by “dramatic”.

Little Dandelion also sells giant knitting needles (if I owned them, I’d display them on a wall the way some people do fishing poles or oars) and her K1S1 yarn comes in a variety of dreamy colors.

This whole love affair that I have with giant yarn that can be whipped into something gorgeous in no time flat culminated in a basket that I created using Love Fest Fiber’s Tough Love felted wool yarn. This yarn is a bit scratchy, so you wouldn’t make a baby blanket out of it, but you definitely would make a basket, or a dog bed, or a rug, or a floor cushion.

The BEST part of this particular basket and yarn is you don’t need a hook. That’s right; NO HOOK. You can finger crochet the whole basket in about 2 hours.

Get the chunky crochet basket mini masterclass here from The Domestic Wildflower!

Does this pink dreaminess have you ready to make one yourself? Download my completely free step-by-step PDF guide to make one yourself! 

Get the chunky crochet basket mini masterclass here from The Domestic Wildflower!

Download the pattern to make this exact basket (in almost any color you want!) that’s written in super clear, plain English. For free. Right here 🙂 

What giant yarn projects have you tried, Wildflowers?

Filed Under: Craft

Grapefruit Shrub

February 2, 2017 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Here is a beautiful, pink, fresh tasting shrub recipe that is easy and uses a vinegar I haven’t showcased before: champagne vinegar. Read on for the recipe!

Grapefruit Shrub Cocktail | Recipe & super helpful video tutorial! Shrubs are a yummy fruit concoction that is so good in mixed drinks! Watch her make one!

My favorite way to lighten up a snowy, dark February is with citrus and this simple recipe does exactly that. Shrubs are syrup made from fruit, sugar, and vinegar. This is a no-cook shrub recipe so expect just five minutes of prep time. It needs to sit on your countertop for a week, so make it on a Sunday to be ready for the next weekend.

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You will need:

1 red grapefruit, sliced into half-inch rounds

1 cup of sugar

1 bottle (200 ml or 6.8 ounces) champagne or other mild-flavored vinegar

Add the grapefruit slices to a half gallon mason jar or another nonreactive container. Cover with sugar and shake to coat. Add vinegar and cover with a lid. Let sit on a room temperature countertop for 5-7 days, strain into a clean vessel (a mason jar is ideal) and store in the refrigerator.

To make a beautiful, pink grapefruit shrub cocktail, combine over ice (perhaps in a wide mouth pint jar)

1 part grapefruit shrub

3 parts sparkling water

An optional 1 part/shot of tequila or vodka

Cheers to welcoming in springtime!

Filed Under: Cocktails

5 Giant Yarn Projects Ebook

January 31, 2017 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

This post will share the 5 Giant Yarn Projects Ebook, the projects within, resources for scoring your own giant yarn (and giant hooks!) and inspiration to get started with giant crochet projects.

5 Giant Yarn Projects by Jenny Gomes of The Domestic Wildflower | This ebook is so helpful! It explains the different types of giant yarn out there, which kind you really need to be wary of, and gives great project ideas. Each project explains in plain English (no pattern lingo here!) how to make a variety of throw blankets, a felted wool basket, and a scarf. Grab this ebook today & happy crochet-ing!!

First of all, if you want to grab this ebook and don’t have time to read the rest of the post, get it here! 

So as some of you know I have been blogging about giant yarn and crocheting with giant yarn for the better part of a year and consistently, those posts and pins on Pinterest did really well. I decided to compile everything I have learned about giant fiber and crocheting it into an ebook.

In the ebook, that is about 30 easy to read pages, I share 5 main project ideas with links to where I got the yarn, what to look out for, which projects you might want to skip and why, where to get giant hooks, a couple companies I think you would love to support, and plain English, step by step guides for all 5 projects.

I teach you how to make a couple different throws, a scarf, a basket, and a bed runner.

If you haven’t crocheted before, I gotcha covered. Here’s my super simple video tutorial where I teach the stitches I use in most of my beginner-friendly projects. You can learn in only 15 minutes!

 

Need more inspiration? Here’s the projects you’ll learn how to make in the ebook!

Learn how to crochet this beautiful thick and thin rustic throw blanket!

This thick and thin throw is fast, easy, and DIFFERENT- it isn’t your run of the mill yarn or “look” …you’ll want to make it if you are into fluffy soft textiles, big texture, and creamy yarn.

Felted Wool Crochet Basket | The Domestic Wildflower click to see how you can finger crochet this gorgeous wool basket in under 2 hours, with NO HOOK, even if you've never crocheted before. Read the post now!

This project is one of my most popular because a basket is so USEFUL (mine held cloth diapers until very recently, since my son finally conquered the unfortunate falling in the toilet set back from a few months ago, and now it holds my daughter’s ballet clothes!) and it can be done in under 2 hours!

The Best Giant Yarn for Everyday | The Domestic Wildflower click to read about the very best giant yarn that you can get to use for textiles. This post also shares other yarns in the same size range and their uses. This is such an informative post! Read it now guys!

This projects explains exactly which yarn is the best of the best and why AND how to get your hands on your own.

Giant Yarn Throw Tutorial | A Domestic Wildflower click to read the full tutorial for how to make your own knitted or crocheted giant yarn throw including a pattern and sources for beautiful wool yarn!

Felted Wool Basket | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read the full tutorial for how to crochet a felted wool basket in giant yarn in under 2 hours!

Expect photos like this inside, so you can SEE what you are supposed to do, every stitch of the way.

Practical Giant Yarn: Extreme Yarn for Everyday Use | The Domestic Wildflower click through to read which giant yarn is the very best for a durability as well as beauty.

 

Want to make these beautiful projects?

Yes! I Want Instant Access!

 

Filed Under: Craft

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Shrubology Ebook

Shrubology: Refreshing Homemade Fruit and Vinegar Syrups for Cocktails
Make easy, no-cook fruit & vinegar syrups for cocktails & mocktails! This ebook shares crowd pleasing recipes and simple to understand ratios so you can make a shrub on your countertop any time- without a recipe. Dive into these Prohibition Era drinks today!

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