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Shop Update - Micro Macrame Kits

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Micro macrame owl tutorial and kits by Knot Just Macrame

It's no secret that putting together kits isn't my favorite job (unless they're fun kits), but I recently had some (reluctant) help, so I've been on a kit-making binge.  There are 41 micro macrame kits in my Etsy shop right now, including owl kits in no less than five different colors!

I restocked some old favorites, too, including Hydrangea kits in French Lilac, the colorway shown in the Hydrangea Bracelet tutorial:

Hydrangea Micro macrame bracelet tutorial by Knot Just Macrame

There are kits for the Leaves Bracelet tutorial in several popular colors including the Sage one shown in the tut as well as the colorful black version with bead and cord like this:

Cord and bead kit for Leaves Micro Macrame Bracelet tutorial by Sherri Stokey

It's never too early to start on holiday presents, you know (yep, I did it - I went there).  In case you need just a little more enticement, Donna over at CraftArtEdu.com is having a FLASH sale through Wednesday, October 1.  Use code "flash25" to save 25% on any one class (details here).  I have some pretty cool kits to go with the Micro Macrame Wrap Bracelet class there, including some Halloween ones!

Happy knotting!!

Fall Daisies

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Micro Macrame cord and bail by Sherri Stokey with Humblebeads pendant.

Daisies have always been one of my favorite flowers - soft and pretty without being overly showy.  When I saw this pendant by Heather Powers of Humblebeads, I was definitely smitten.  Not only is it a daisy, but it's done in my favorite colors of teal and olive green with a dash of mustard yellow.  I've been on a kick lately with knotting half knot sinnets in several colors of cord to make a braid that looks a lot like kumihimo, so I pulled cord to match the pendant.

Micro macrame cord and polymer pendant.  Knotting by Sherri Stokey

I knotted it together into a spiraling micro macrame cord.

Micro macrame cord knotted by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

Then I decided it needed a little something special, so I knotted a matching bail to suspend the pendant.

Knotted micro macrame necklace with daisy pendant in teal and mustard.

I was having such a good time playing with these colors that I made a couple pair of earrings, too!

Micro macrame earrings by Knot Just Macrame.

Aren't these great colors for autumn?

Macrame necklace by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.



How to Get From Apples to Giraffes in 7 Easy Steps

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Micro macrame bracelets by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

Even people close to me are confused as to just how my thought process works.  We can be having a conversation about low blood sugar and I'll interrupt with a comment on the cutest aviator glasses for Carter (true story).  I know there's a method to my madness, but it isn't always apparent to others.  So today I'm going to let you inside my mind for one brief, horrifying minute:  Here's how you (okay, how I) get from apples to giraffes in 7 easy steps.

Sage green colorway kit for Leaves Micro Macrame Bracelet Tutorial

It all starts when I'm putting together more kits for my Leaves Micro Macrame Bracelet Tutorial in this sage green colorway.  It's the strangest combination, really, and it technically shouldn't work.  The cord is more of a turquoise kind of color with a lot of blue in it, while the beads have a definite yellow tinge.  Shouldn't work at all, but it does:

Leaves Micro Macrame Bracelet done in Sage colorway.

Then I start wondering what that cord and bead combination would look like in the Hydrangea pattern, so I have to stop everything and make one up.

Hydrangea Micro Macrame Bracelet done in Sage colorway.

Which leads to trying the beads with a different color of cord.

Hydrangea Micro Macrame Bracelet done in green with marina.

And then I wonder what would happen if I use some unexpected cord color.

Hydrangea Micro Macrame Bracelet done in green with marigold cord.

And before you know it, I'm mixing all the cord colors.

Hydrangea micro macrame bracelet by Sherri Stokey.

Then I notice that the darker color makes little divisions of the flowers and the bracelet looks totally different.  The flowers look more distinct and the diamond connectors almost disappear.  And I wonder what would happen if I rearrange the cord colors.

Knotted micro macrame bracelets by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

And then I notice all the texture in those bracelets and I wonder what would happen if I focus more on the knotting, but keep using the same cord colors and beads.

Knotted micro macrame bracelet by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

Then I look up and it's three days later and we're out of milk.  Oh, and somewhere in there I made up kits for the first three colorways and there are some earrings in these colors around here somewhere that I need to put on earwires and photograph.

And that, my friends, is how you get from apples to giraffes in my world.  

Micro macrame bracelets by Knot Just Macrame.

Micro macrame bracelets by Knot Just Macrame.

The New Artisan Component Marketplace

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Macrame necklace by Sherri Stokey with ceramic leaf pendant by Marla James.

I'm going to let you in on a little secret.  You know all those wonderful heads and pendants (like this oak leaf from Marla's Mud) I'm always showing you?  (Yes, I may have a slight bead buying problem, but that's a discussion for another time.)  There's a new online marketplace just for artisan made pieces - Artisan Component Marketplace.  You won't find any factory produced knock offs there because each shop is juried before being allowed to sell on the site.  That means each and every one of the pieces you find listed there will be hand made by the artist.  

Artisan Component Marketplace screenshot

You will find ceramic and porcelain, handpainted wood and lampwork as well as mixed media and metal.  There are seed bead components made of tiny glass beads woven together in intricate patterns, pendants made from polymer clay and clasps made from wood.  There are all sorts of little treasures from some of my favorite artists, so when I had an offer to do a guest blog post for them, I jumped at the chance.  

You're going to have to go there to see what I wrote, but I will give you a hint:  it involves Marla's ceramic leaf pendant and a little free macrame tutorial.  Have fun!  Oh, and I made up a fancy new, handy-dandy bar for the bottom of my guest post - what do you think?

Sherri Stokey









A Collaborative Experiment with Bead Weaving and Micro Macrame

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Micro macrame by Sherri Stokey with polymer cab by Lindsay Starr

Do you remember my friend, Lindsay Starr?  She's the creative genius behind Phantasm Creations and does some of the most amazing bead work I have ever seen.  I did a trade with her last year (you can read about it in this post) and we decided it was time to do another one, this time with a twist.  We would each start a piece and then send it to the other person to finish.  

I had been hoarding a face cab she made and decided it would be fun to do something with that.  Me being me (with a micro macrame obsession) it stood to reason that I would have to do something with macrame, so I knotted two pieces the size of the cab.  As you can see from the photo, the front piece is a bezel with a hole for the face to peek through and the back is a solid circle of knotting.  I sandwiched them together and did some more knotting to get this:

Micro macrame bezel on a polymer cab

I didn't exactly know what I was doing, since this was my first attempt at something like this.  I learned some things I will definitely do better next time, but I like the way she turned out.  The way the knotting snugs up around her face makes me think of a woman in the cold with her hood drawn up close to keep her warm.  

Knotted micro macrame circles by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame

I wanted to give Lindsay a little more knotting to work with in case she needed to bring it back into her design, so I knotted a couple more circles keeping with the theme.  It will be most interesting to see what she makes with these.  And meanwhile, she send me these beautiful pieces:

Beaded pieces by Lindsay Starr of Phantasm Creations

Gorgeous, right?!  The flower and leaf (and maybe the time of year) made me think of Day of the Dead (okay, that's probably one of those thought transitions that only I would follow, but it makes perfect sense to me).  I decided to try something really different and attempt to knot a skull.  I know!  Ridiculous, right!?

Beaded pieces by Lindsay Starr and macrame by Sherri Stokey

No, it's not a white strawberry and yes, it is going to be more skull-like before I'm finished.  You will just have to come back and see.  

While she was waiting for my packaged parts to arrive in the mail, Lindsay was without a project and asked me for an assignment.  Me being me (my latest catch-all un-apology excuse), I suggested she do something with a sugar skull and a Day of the Dead theme.  

Day of the Dead sugar skull necklace by Lindsay Starr of Phantasm Creations.

She nailed it, didn't she!  I told you she was awesome.  While you're waiting to see our finished pieces, you should head over to her blog and check out her other pieces.  Prepared to be amazed.  And don't forget to come back and see what we do with our collaboration experiment!


Celebrating Autumn - Octoberfest 2014 Blog Hop

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Octoberfest 2014

My friend Rita of Toltec Jewels is hosting her third annual Octoberfest Blog Hop today and I thought it would be fun to join.  She asks only that participants do something - anything - to celebrate autumn and blog about it.  I've been enjoying autumn for the past several weeks, and what's more autumn than apples?  A friend has over twenty apple trees and sent home a whole bunch of apples for us.  

apples

After conning my daughter and her friend into helping, we peeled and chopped apples until we couldn't stand it anymore.  We ended up with a huge roaster (the giant one I use for Thanksgiving turkeys), a huge dutch over and a large crock pot full of apples.  I added a little sugar and cinnamon and a splash of apple juice and set them all to cook for hours and hours and hours.  The sugar in the apples caramelizes and the apples break down and when all is said and done, you end up with apple butter.  

Homemade apple butter

We ended up with something like 15 pints of apple butter and still had bags and bags of apples left.  I've been slicing them and drying them in my dehydrators every night for a week now.  And honestly?  I am not sure when I'll ever be able to even LOOK at another apple.

In the weekend between apple butter and dried apples, my husband and I took a trip up through the Rocky Mountains.  It's one of our favorite things to do in the fall and we always try to time a trip when the leaves are turning.  
Autumn in the Rockies

My photography skills are just not good enough to capture the beauty, but I always try.  Notice the gorgeous waterfall in the distance in this one?  We hiked up to get this view and it was so worth it!

Mountain waterfall

My favorite, though, is always the vibrant yellow.

Autumn in the Rocky Mountains

Vibrant colors of fall

Brilliantly colored leaves

A while back I found a great variegated cord and used it to make a chain of leaves (the class is available here if you want to try it).  I was never quite satisfied with the outcome, so I set it aside.  After being inspired by the mountain trip, I dug it back out and made a few changes.  At a suggestion from a friend (thanks, Lindsay!) I used some lizard leather to make connectors and added some swags of colorful glass seed beads between the leaves.

Micro macrame leaves and hand made leather connector

I also made a clasp to match and sponged on some of the necklace colors.

Clasp

And I ended up with a colorful autumn necklace with cascading leaves, funky leather connectors and multiple strands of beads.

Micro macrame necklace by Sherri Stokey with knotted leaves, leather connectors and multiple strands of beads.

And that, my friends, is this year's ode to autumn from me.  I hope you'll take some time to visit the other participants below and see what they did.  And be sure to swing by Rita's site and tell her if you like her blog hop!

Toltec Jewels(Hostess)


Spiral Fossil Disc Meets Micro Macrame: Art Jewelry Elements Component Reveal

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Micro macrame necklace by Sherri Stokey featuring a ceramic disc from Starry Road Studio.

If you follow the Art Jewelry Elements blog (and if you don't, you really should!), you know they do a monthly component challenge and giveaway.  I was one of the lucky recipients this month and I received one of Karen Totten's Spiral Fossil Discs!

I have a bit of an obsession with Karen's work.  Do you  remember the necklace I made with one of her bird and branch sets in this post?  Her ceramic pieces are amazingly detailed and beautiful and she continually comes up with new and different things to keep it interesting.  Here are some Starry Road Studio beads I have in my treasure trove:

Ceramic beads and pendants from Karen Totten of Starry Road Studio

See what I mean?  Anywho...(sorry, I got distracted by the beads for just a minute there) Lindsay Starr was also lucky enough to get one of the discs this month (and yes, her stuff is another obsession of mine as demonstrated here and here).  She had her piece finished soon after she got the disc and shared it with me.  I like to keep pushing my limits with macrame to keep it interesting, so I thought I would see if I could mimic what Lindsay did with beads, but with knots.  This is her piece (photo used with her permission):

Beaded necklace by Lindsay Starr of Phantasm Creations.

In an effort to mimic but not copy her design exactly, I started with an antler tip that my dad gave me and knotted around it.

Deer antler tip with macrame knotting attached to a ceramic disc.

I've seen this technique before in some South American macrame designs, but I hadn't ever tried doing it myself.  They typically use a waxed cord which gives it a little tackiness and I wasn't sure how the process would work with the unwaxed nylon cord I use.  I made sure I knotted my first row very tightly around the antler (which is actually the bottom row in this photo).  The antler angles out a little bit at the top, so that first row of knotting actually holds the antler in place.  

Linsday chose a y-shaped yoke for the top strap of the necklace in order to cover as little of Karen's disc as possible.  I chose to do two separate straps of macrame, but I kept them narrow around the disc for the same reason.

Macrame knotting attached to cermamic spiral fossil disc by Karren Totten.

In keeping with the sort of rustic, organic feel of the piece, I chose some carved bone beads to use directly above the disc in a light color to pull in the color from the antler tip.  From there I added some basic square knots in the teal colored thread.

Micro macrame necklace by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

The beads I used in the strap are recycled glass from Ghana. They are made by crushing discarded glass and adding a colorant.  The powder is poured into molds and the stem of a plant is added, which burns away during the firing leaving a hole for stringing.  The beads are fired in a wood burning earthen oven.  The look is crude and primitive and perfect for this project.

Half knot sinnets make spiral micro macrame knotting

I used simple half knot sinnets for the bulk of the necklace straps.  The spirals catch the light in interesting ways and draw the eye to their twists and shadows.

Deer antler pendant micro macrame necklace from Knot Just Macrame

At the end I added a few more glass beads and a simple brass hook closure.  I think it's a fun piece and I've really enjoyed the study in "compare and contrast" with Lindsay's necklace.  I hope you'll visit her page, then stop back to tell me what you think.  What similarities did you spot?  What differences?  Which elements worked better with beads and which did you like better with knots?

I hope you will also join me in visiting the blogs of the other participants to see what each of them has done with the Spiral Fossil Disc:

Monthly Winners

 
AJE Blog Team




Collaboration Unveiling (Sort of)

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Beaded bits and a macrame skull

Do you remember this post from last month telling you about a collaborative project my friend Lindsay Starr and I were doing?  She sent me these:

Beaded components from Lindsay Starr

And I sent her these:

Macrame components by Sherri Stokey

Our challenge was to make something using the other person's pieces and our own techniques.  Lindsay had hers finished in no time at all:

Collaboration of bead work and macrame

I'm just going to show you this little teaser here.  If you want to see the whole piece she made, you'll want to pop over to her blog.  It's worth the trip, let me tell you.  After she set the bar so high, I was really sweating my piece using her beaded components.  For some reason I was set on trying to make a sugar skull and since I've never tried knotting one before, it was a lot of trial and error. 

My pieces are usually fairly simple, but I wanted something much more complex for Lindsay.  I struggled.

Trial.
Another trial layout.

I struggled a LOT.

Yet another trial layout.

I put the skull in and I took the skull out (I did the Hokey Pokey....).  Nothing "felt" right.  I finally ended up with this:

Finished layout?

I'm still not quite happy with it.  I think now that I have to remove the top coral colored circle with the seed bead flower in it.  Or maybe move it more to the left - I'm not sure.  At this rate, Lindsay might get this necklace in time for next year's Day of the Dead.  It's a good thing she's patient. 

Beadwork and macrame collaboration.



Learning

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Macrame bezel knotted around a cabochon

I have such news! I have taken my first lessons in macrame this week, and I'm positively twitterpated!  I have long admired the style of macrame I think of as South American.  I really am not sure where it originated, but I see quite a bit of this style from people from Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay, etc.  The pieces I'm talking about are usually done with waxed cord and natural stones as opposed to the nylon bead cord I use and the glass seed beads.  The emphasis is on the knotting.  The style is less "fussy" than mine, maybe.  More natural, more organic.

I don't mean to imply that folks in other areas of the world don't do that style, because some certainly do.  In fact, my teacher is from Estonia.  If you follow the world of macrame, you may have come across some of the work of Percy Palomino Tomayquispe.  I don't want to filch any of his photos to put them here to show you, so I'll just give you this link to his Facebook page.  Prepare to be amazed.

Anyway, back to my story... we don't have a local bead store in my town (the nearest is about 150 miles from here) so classes for me would require travel.  And I'm a homebody (okay, some would make an argument that the correct term would be recluse).  Either way, I've never taken any macrame classes or any jewelry making classes either, so when Percy announced that he would be doing online classes, I jumped at the chance.  

Macrame failures.

Turns out I'm not the world's best student.  I asked Percy to teach me bezeling because I've never quite been able to get it down as well as I'd like.  Those two pieces in the photo above are my first two failures even after Percy's lesson!

Knotted macrame bezel.

Third time is a charm though, and I finally nailed it.  After a second lesson, I also got the back done to hold the cabochon in place.

The back of the bezel and cabochon.

It may not look like much, but I am learning and enjoying every second of it.  And even if I'm not the best student, I am a determined one!  I'm also thrilled to have such an opportunity.  I grew up in the TBI (time before Internet), so it is still a big deal to me that we can interact with folks from the other side of the globe with such ease.  What a learning opportunity.

Shop Update

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Micro macrame bracelets and earrings by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

I really have to stop doing this to myself.  I would rather be making jewelry than listing it, so I end up with a big pile of pieces sitting here beside me staring me in the face.  If I had an assistant (or a genie), I would make them do all the photography and listing.  And probably shipping, too, because that's just how I'd be if I had an assistant (or a genie).  Meanwhile if you're looking for me, I'll be here all afternoon listing pieces in my Etsy shop like all these sparkly bracelets in teal, blue and green and matching earrings.

And these blue earrings:

Micro macrame earrings in blue by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

And some sage green earrings:

Lacy hand knotted micro macrame earrings in sage by Sherri Stokey.

And a brown, turquoise and blue bracelet:

Handmade bracelet - knotted micro macrame in brown, turquoise and blue.

There's more, too, so if you've been waiting for some new things to hit my shop, here's your chance!



The Evolution of Woodland Plaid

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Micro macrame knotting by Sherri Stokey.

It seems the holiday season is upon us whether or not we agree that a year could possibly have passed since the last holiday season.  Red bows look pretty against bright green trees, but in jewelry I am not a big fan of those traditional colors, so I started playing around withmore muted versions.

Micro macrame bracelets by Knot Just Macrame.
 
I chose cool blue greens of spruce and softer berry tones.  

Micro macrame with beads by Sherri Stokey.
 
I added some woodsy browns to ground the colors and ended up with these:

Micro macrame bracelets in muted holiday colors.

It's always fascinating to me how  the same beads can look so different when tied in another color of cord.  I also like to take the same combination of beads and cord and use it in different patterns.  For this one I used all three colors of cord together.

Woodland plaid in micro macrame by Knot Just Macrame.

And I came up with a pattern that reminds me of a woodland plaid.  And that, of course, led me to add a woodland creature (from Dreams and Elements).

Macrame bracelet by Sherri Stokey with owl from Dreams & Elements.

Now if the woodland elves would come get these things listed in my shop, I could get on with my holiday baking!



My Holiday Gift to You: A Free Micro Macrame Tutorial

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Micro macrame bracelet DIY tutorial from Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

I'm in the mood for spreading some holiday cheer, so I'm giving you a little gift:  a micro macrame tutorial that will teach you how to make this twisted bracelet. This one is pretty easy; in fact, I think if you can tie your shoes, you can probably make this.  Really!  Are you ready?  Here's what you'll need:


To recap:  scissors, glue, pliers, cord caps (4-5mm inner diameter), a clasp (I used a lobster clasp & ring, but you could use a toggle instead) and a jump ring for attaching, 3 colors of .5mm nylon bead cord (like C-lon or Superlon) and 1 color of 1mm Tex 400 cord.  Hint:  if you're confused about cord sizes, check out this post.  Cut cord:  for a 6" piece of macrame, I used 60" lengths of the .5mm cords (1 piece of each color) and a 22" length of the Tex 400.  Straighten the cords (covered in this post if you need instructions).  You can adjust the lengths of cord for the length of the piece you want, but you'll have to do the math.


Let's get a little closer in on the knots so you can see better.


Easy, right?  You will notice the knots starting to spiral as you go along and that's exactly what you want.  Once you have the length of knotting that you want, tie off the end with an overhand knot and glue on the caps.


And that's a wrap!  Happy holidays & have fun knotting!

Twisted Micro Macrame bracelet from Knot Just Macrame.

P.S. (because I always think of something more to say when I'm supposed to be finished) I added a little bead dangle to dress mine up a bit (polymer bead by Shane Smith).  

P.P.S.  For some reason the videos aren't showing up in the emailed version of this post.  If you can't see the videos, you probably won't think this is a very good tutorial.   Please go to the actual blog post and give me a chance to change your mind.


Online Micro Macrame Classes on Sale: Enabler Alert

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Enabler alert!!  This is just a quicky post to let you know about an awesome sale on my micro macrame classes at CraftArtEdu.com.  ALL of them are on sale through Sunday (December 21, 2014) - up to 33% off!  (Details here.)


You can find the whole list of my classes here, and don't forget the free tutorial in my last post!   Happy knotting!


Christmas Traditions

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I'll warn you right up front, this post has nothing to do with micro macrame.  It is the time of year when my thoughts turn toward family and friends and I would like to share something special with you.  My grandfather, Papa Arnie to me, was a first generation American, both of his parents having immigrated as children.  Our heritage is Czech and it is most apparent when we fix holiday meals.  Christmas dinner just wouldn't be complete without potato dumplings and sauerkraut.  Papa tried to teach several of us how to make dumplings over the years but none are as good as his.  A few years ago I took step by step photos and documented every thing he told me.  Papa has since passed away, but this is his recipe:





We usually serve our dumplings with roast turkey (although most of my grandparents liked goose) and we always have to put some of the "drippings" from the bird on the table to be spooned over the dumplings.  You also have to have sauerkraut with them (that's a rule).


If you manage to make enough that there are leftovers, they're really good cut into smaller pieces and fried for the next meal.

I get a little sentimental this time of year and the absence of most of my grandparents seems more apparent during the holidays.  I try to remember fondly all of the celebrations over the years rather than dwell on the loss.  And if I get a little maudlin, it only takes a glance at this sweet face to remind me just how good life is.


I hope your holidays are beautiful and filled with love.

A New Micro Macrame Cuff

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Micro Macrame knotting by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

My latest experiment in micro macrame knotting involved a whole lot of cords.  I wanted to shake things up a little, so I thought I'd try turning everything on its side - literally.  I worked this bracelet across instead of up and down, which meant I had to start with 112 cords across.  

Micro Macrame cuff in progress.

I did some beaded loops on one edge of the cuff to add some texture.

Beaded border for micro macrame cuff.

And a leafy design bordered by lines of knots and beads.

Beaded macrame cuff style bracelet in blue by Sherri Stokey

The cuff style bracelet is about 1.5" wide and fastens with a tube bar clasp.

Leafy vine pattern knotted in micro macrame

I'm excited all over again about micro macrame all over again!!

Beaded macrame cuff style bracelet in blue from Knot Just Macrame


Beading Back in Time - a Blog Hop challenge!

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Beading Back in Time Blog Hop Challenge Header.

My friend Lindsay Starr and I are partners in beading (you might remember some my posts about her here, and here, and here).  We like many of the same things, like beads (of course).  We both have a fondness for silly sci-fi tv series, for example, and we're both crazy about dinosaurs.  Throw all of that together and what do you get?  A blog hop, of course!!

So here's the scoop:  we got so excited and carried away with the idea that we had to break it down into four challenges and we figured we would space them out over the year to give participants time to do something fun with each one.  The first challenge will cover history before us, meaning anything pre-human.  

Imagine a world covered in primordial seas dotted with organisms completely alien to us; bizarre things with no apparent heads, mouths or digestive organs. Even the land under our feet is foreign, the continents massing together and then drifting apart at least three times over millions and millions of years.  There are a few creatures around that we might recognize, like sponges, anemones and jellyfish, but for the most part, this world is a very different place.

Ancient life.

Fast forward a few (million) years and take another look.  There's been an explosion of life.  The seas teem with fish and large reptiles rule a land covered in huge forests of ferns and conifers.  There are creatures so fantastical they are beyond the scope of our imagination.

Fantastical prehistoric life on land and sea.

Fantastical prehistoric life in the skies.

Not quite accurate prehistoric creatures.

Our challenge is this:  during the month of January, create something inspired by this theme.  Use any medium you like and draw inspiration in any way that moves you, whether it is the earth, the seas, the creatures or even something more abstract like the seemingly impossible characteristics of the organisms.  Use a fossil in your design or make up your own dinosaur - whatever you want.  Then meet Lindsay and I back here on January 31st to see what everyone made.

And most of all, remember to have fun with it!

A Tip for Neater Micro Macrame

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Micro macrame cuff bracelet knotted by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

One thing that will make your finished micro macrame pieces look better is neatness.  Those rows of tiny knots need to be as even and straight as possible if you really want the wow factor.  In this design, I've used two rows of double half hitch knots to underscore the beaded edging at the top and again to finish off the cuff at the bottom.  Keeping the rows spaced tightly together is a must.  So, how do you get your rows close?


That's my nifty little tip for neater knotting.  I hope it is useful for you.


A Behind the Scenes Look at the Making of a Micro Macrame Class

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Public domain photo

Putting together an online class might sound glamorous, but believe me, it isn't.  At least not in my world.  I hardly ever sit around in my mink coat with that sexy just-got-out-of-bed-looking-perfect hair and makeup smiling lovingly at the camera.  This is probably closer:

Public domain photo.

I am a one woman operation.  It's just me here.  Me and only me.  That means I have to do things like try to take pictures of myself doing the micro macrame knotting.  Sometimes I just don't have enough hands. So how does it work?  Let me give you a peek behind the scenes:  First I experiment with designs.  And most of the time, what I start with doesn't look much like what I end up with.  Take this cuff for example:

Not up to par macrame knotting.

I shouldn't call it a cuff, really, because I never finished off the ends.  It wasn't up to snuff, but I did learn quite a bit from it.  See that top edge?  That's where I attached all of the cords for the piece using larks head knots on a holding cord.  Turns out, that doesn't work very well.  The holding cord doesn't have enough body to support the knots without deforming and losing the crisp lines I was looking for.  So, not a success, but lesson learned.  The row that looks like x's worked well, as did the straight lines of double half hitch knots.  Good to know.  Beads work.  LOVE the scrolls at the bottom.  

So, how to attach all those cords to start?  I could use something other than a cord, like a piece of wire, but it would have to be substantial to do what I want it to do and then how would that work for my finished cuff?  It wouldn't.  The trick, then, is to come up with a different way to attach the cords...

Beaded edging on micro macame cuff.

Aha!  That lead to this fun beaded edging and I really like it!  Problem solved.  And I love the addition of the leaf outlines in the body of the cuff.  But now the bottom edging I had planned, the scrolls, didn't seem to work.  It just didn't "go" with the rest of this pattern.  Tuck that away for the next cuff project...

Micro macrame cuffs by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

Well, yay!!  Now that I have a design for my class, it should be all easy from here.  Right?  Not so, my friend.  The navy cuff I made first is very small and barely fits my small wrist.  That probably won't work for most folks, so I decided I'd better add one pattern repeat.  I added the extra cords and did the cuff again in coral (and don't even ask me about the decision process behind the choice of coral - sheesh).  Anyway, the cuff turned out huge!  What?  How did that happen?

Turns out the pretty navy blue cord I used is not the same size as the c-lon or superlon bead cord I usually use.  It says it is .5mm cord, as do the c-lon and superlon, but the proof is in the pudding, kids.  The blue one and the green one are made with the same number of cords.  I did them both within days of one another, so I can safely assume that my knotting is probably fairly consistent.  The only difference is the brand of the cord.  Another lesson learned.  

This all led me to making one more cuff to make sure my size assumptions were correct.  I have to be sure before I put it in a class - people are counting on me to know what I'm talking about!

Oh, and taking pictures of all of the cuffs together like that not only led me to analyze the flaws in each one and compare and contrast, but also got me off on a tangent taking pretty pictures...

Micro macrame cuffs by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

I'm so easily distracted.  Seriously, I have the attention of a toddler (at best).  But the rest of the class should be easy going, right?  Uh huh.  You obviously forgot who you were dealing with here.  So, I'm doing my thing, knotting and stopping to take pictures and moving around the house with my work board and my camera and my light box following the natural light...

Camera on tripod with light box.

Because if I don't take advantage of the natural light, then I have to move to my even-more-ghetto setup involving a daylight bulb and a light box sitting on a speaker.  True story.

Light box set up using daylight bulbs in stand lamp.

Throw another couple of kinks into the mix like saying the wrong knot in one of the video clips - you wouldn't think that would be such a big deal, would you?  But I didn't catch it until I was putting together the class.  Which meant I'd already finished the bracelet and couldn't just reshoot that little bit.  I had to make a whole new bracelet and work it clear up to the step where I messed up in order to refilm those few minutes.  And that's why I have a green cuff.  I could have made another one in coral so that the video clip would have been exactly right, but I don't really like coral (back to that whole decision making thing when choosing the color in the first place) and more than that, I really don't like making the same thing twice.  Especially not back to back.  So if you see the class, I don't want to hear a word about the two cuff colors.  I meant to do that.

*Sigh*  Are you still with me?  I wonder sometimes if it's just me or if other people's lives go like this?  You should know, it's a minor miracle I ever get a class produced!  Even after all this, I had to redo the narration twice because you could hear me inhaling.  I'm not a loud breather usually - really, I'm not!  You wouldn't have known that from the first go-round, though.  And I learned (we won't go into howI learned) that I can't re-record just part of the class without it sounding like two different women did it (call me Sybil).  And it turns out if I record a 30 minute class twice through back to back it makes my throat a little hoarse (not sure why that would be true, either, because believe me, I've talked way more than an hour straight before).  So if you notice my voice getting a little funny towards the end of the class, I don't want to hear about that, either.  I meant to do that.
Colorful micro macrame cuff design for new class by Sherri Stokey.

After all that, though, I did manage to get the class to the editor and she gave it a thumbs up!  It might be available late this week - I'll keep you posted!


The New Leafy Cuff in Micro Macrame Class in Online Now!

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Leafy Cuff in Micro Macrame online class by Sherri Stokey screenshot

I am thrilled to announce (despite my many trials and tribulations detailed here) the release of my new Leafy Cuff in Micro Macrame class!!! That's right - it's LIVE!  The lovely folks at CraftArtEdu have the class up and running and what's more, it's on sale!  As a matter of face, all of my micro macrame classes there are on sale! 

Leafy cuff knotted in micro macrame original design by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

Go!  Find a class & learn something (that old dog/new trick thing is just a vicious rumor).  It will be fun!

 
PS.  Psst, hey Buddy... over here.  Yeah, you.  Over here.   You don't think you got what it takes to make one of these?  Nobody ever. has. to. know.  Get a ready-made one right here and I promise I'll keep it our little secret.


How to Cut Multiple Cords at One Time - An Easy Tip for Micro Macrame

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So here I am all excited to share this wonderful invention with you and you're all like "Huh, why is she so excited about a piece of cardboard with some screws in it?" Because it's the greatest invention of all time - how's that!  Okay, maybe not the greatest because the whole Internet thing is pretty good, too, but it's up there in the Top 20 anyway. 

If you have to cut multiple cords of the same length, like the 50+ cords needed for my Leafy Cuff in Micro Macrame, you're going to love this.  All you need is a piece of wood a little longer than the length of cords you need and 3 screws (or nails).  This one has screws that have no grooves on the top 1/2" or so of the screw.  I think you'd want to use screws like this or just nails - something that won't snag and catch your cord like a regular screw.  


So take one screw and put it equidistant from both ends, off to one side.  Then place the other two screws as far apart as you want the length of your cords to be, with the center screw in the center of them.  So if you want 2 foot cords, you'll want to place each screw 1 foot from the center.  It probably makes more sense if you look at my photo than for me to try to explain it.  

In my example, I have screws set for 2 foot cords and 3 foot cords, as they are some of the most common lengths I've been cutting recently.


Isn't that great!?  I'm telling you, you might not think it's all that fabulous, but if you had to sit here and measure out hundreds of 2 foot cords, you'd be gushing, too.  Oh, and did you spy the little Dachshund nose in the beginning of the video?  That's my supervisor.

A recap for using the micro macrame gizmo - make a knot in the end of your cord and put it over the center screw to anchor it.  Pull your spool of cord out around the screws at the ends of the board.  You will end up with two cords for every time you make a complete circle and go past the center screw so you can keep count if you need a specific number of cords.



Once you've reached the number you need, cut all of the cords at once by cutting right above the center screw.


You can easily cut 50+ cords all at the same time.  You can thank me later.


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