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The Wool Palette: REVISED EDITION with STARTER PALETTE RECIPES, 115 pages, step-by-step instructrions for creating 67 kinship colors from three primary dyes, over 60 full color photos and illustrations

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As Featured In

St. Nicholas Value by Value, ATHA Newsletter 186: 12-13, December 2010/January 2011

 

 

My Creativity Resolution

I will suspend the rules in order to explore
I will explore in order to play
I will play in order to create pieces that express myself
to venture beyond what I have been taught
to open doors I did not know were there
to immerse myself in color and form
to cross over, to prod, to swerve, to jump
where white is not white
where black is not black
where even gray is purple

by April DeConick, March 2010

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Entries in UUncle Sam Doll (2)

Monday
Jun132011

Uncle Sam Doll finished

Wow do I like the way that the Uncle Sam doll turned out.  He is 26 inches tall and 7 1/2 inches across at the base.  He came together with lots of changes along the way.  I guess that is why I cannot draw and sell patterns unless I hook them first. 

I didn't know that he would be one half red and the other half blue when I started.  I thought he would have a red and white striped hat and that his pants would be a red and white checkerboard.  His coat was going to be blue. 

But that is not what happened once I started hooking him.  Like all my mats and dolls, he took on a life of his own and communicated how he wanted to look.  He wanted a flipped up collar, so that went in as I hooked.  He is half red and half blue with stripes on his right side and stars on his left.  And his shoes, they had to have star buckles. 

He also wanted real hair, so after everything was hooked, I took some leftover roving I had and prodded it lightly into his hairline and beard. 

And most surprising of all is his back.  I took the leftover strips of wool and sewed them together in a stripe formation.  Then I cut the back and bottom out and hand bound it onto the edge of the mat, all the way around.  With this method, there is no need to turn the doll inside out, or fight with burlap showing through at the edges (I hate that!). 

I have him standing prominently on my fireplace mantel.  He is my only Fourth of July decoration.  Guess this makes an excuse to go out and get a few other things.  Maybe a tiny flag to put in his hand?

 

Tuesday
Jun072011

Making progress on Uncle Sam Doll

So here he is two days into the project.  I spent several hours yesterday hooking this Uncle Sam Doll while Alexander played at Stomping Grounds.  It was a wonderful afternoon because we met Martha Lowry and her grandson there.  So while Martha worked on binding one of her pieces, I worked on Uncle Sam and the kids played.

I decided to bead the edges of his collar and coat.  I wanted to bring beading into the piece, but thought I would do it with checked pants.  That looked awful, so I went to the coat edges instead.  I think I like it enough to leave it.