I'm just a seriously non-crafty person.
Maybe if you took up a craft related to other interests, like forging swords.
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I'm just a seriously non-crafty person.
Maybe if you took up a craft related to other interests, like forging swords.
I look at Susan's link, and I swear it's like someone said, "Ok, now that you can make cereal with milk, let's do crepes Florentine and eggs Benedict with fresh bread toast and gooseberry jam."
Totally. I figure if I started knitting today and kept up with it, I might be able to make that jumper by the time Annabel's hypothetical younger brother or sister is ready for it. And we're currently planning to wait three or four years before creating such a sibling, given my decidedly non-Prairie Muffin attitude toward my fertility.
I like knitting, but I haven't had the time to do any since I finished my first! ever!...the scarf for Kara.
Maybe if you took up a craft related to other interests, like forging swords.
Now, that would be cool. But I want to learn to fight with one first.
I'm such a tomboy for a romance writer and lapsed figure skater. I'm probably the only writer of Regency historicals on the planet who, if given a choice between my heroine's wardrobe and my hero's weaponry, would pick the gun without hesitation.
I would just bristle at my husband suggesting a hobby for me, particularly more than once.
That is almost as bad as someone saying "You're looking a little pudgy around middle. Maybe you should go to the gym."
I love cross-stitching. It goes slower than crocheting but you can make pretty pictures and frame them.
I like cross-stitch, but I always end up spending a lot of time getting blood out of the canvas. I'm much better off with blunt needles.
My husband has become obsessed with me learning to knit.
The actors playing Pompey (the pimp) and Mistress Overdone (the madam) in Measure For Measure are knitting a scarf and crocheting a blanket respectively. It's so very odd to come down into the green room during Act 4 and see them in their very modern, very out-there costumes & make-up, happily working with yarn. It's all so 21st-century domestic. I need to take pictures.
I'm much better off with blunt needles.
I like the sharp ones, especially with a small weave Aida and/or even-weave fabric. Finger pricks - ahh, good times.
My preferred hobby for meditation is jigsaw puzzles, but a lack of flat space that is safe from both cats and alternate uses makes it difficult. I've tried the puzzle caddies, but you still need a flat place to put it on to work, and cats still hop up and say, "Whatcha doin', Mom? Were you doing something with these little pieces, Mom? Do you mind if I lay down right here, Mom?"
I've done crochet, but I always lose my place in knitting. Crochet doesn't have the requirement of remembering which way you were going. I've also done handweaving, counted cross-stitch, and bobbin lace, but until I get new glasses--and decide if I'm going to break down and go for bifocals--they're more grief than I like.
I'm a process person more than a project person, ie, I like learning how to do something but I'm not necessarily inspired to continue the process to the end. Which is why there are so many half-finished projects around the house. Including one that I've been working on since college. The cloth is doing to rot away before I finish doing that miniature prayer rug.
I love cross-stitching. It goes slower than crocheting but you can make pretty pictures and frame them.
My big, burly, weight-lifting, football-coaching dad has been doing this since he was coaching at Ole Miss. He was told it would relax him and give him something to occupy his time besides yelling at people. I suppose it worked. I used to have a cross-stitch thing he did of all the teams in the SEC.