Maker of sock critters, shaker of cocktails, baker of occasionally edible experiments involving peanut butter and chocolate. If you'd like a customised cuddly critter, tweet me @makeitwednesday



Wednesday, April 27, 2011

A vampire rabbit, a rice monster and a demon chef walk into a cafe...


...Purple Peanuts Japanese Cafe, to be precise. It's a funky little spot on Collins Street (near the corner of Spencer St) in Melbourne, and it's now home to these guys, who are all made from recycled materials. Look around next time you're ordering lunch and you'll see them waving demonically from the walls! And while you're there, have a close look at the chef, Daigo...and then a second look at the red furry guy on the right. Hmmm. Black-and-white checked chef's pants...long black dreadlocks...I do believe they have quite a bit in common! Peter, the cafe owner, asked me to make a critter "that looks a bit like Daigo" and that's what I came up with. Although Daigo was not red and furry last time I checked!

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Rabbit with fangs



IF YOU TOUCH ME
I'LL KILL YOU
CAUSE I AM
THE WHITE RABBIT

There, that should explain everything you need to know about this deadly critter.

PS If vampire bunny looks vaguely familiar to you, it might be because he's been haunting your nightmares or eating all your socks. Or it might be because you first spied him here, before he'd been vamped up.

PPS "Rabbit with fangs" is a Magic Dirt song. It's where the above lyrics come from (and this post's title, too). It is awesome. You can check it out here.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

So I felt like posting about a robot...



NANG NANG NANG
BEEP BEEP BEEP
I do not compute.

Admittedly that is not my best haiku but it sums up how I feel right now, after

1: intending to post about another knitted critter - a blue robot - and realising I have no photo of it, and no idea where the critter itself is, either

2: thinking, "okay, that was retarded of me but never mind, I'll just post these pics of a felt robot I made a few years ago instead, at least that's within the spirit of the intended post" and then

3: not being able to rotate said pics so you can look at them without twisting your head (or your computer) sideways. Gah. Me and technology are NOT FRIENDS. And yes I KNOW that should say "technology and I" but, meh. Even the robot looks like he would not like technology - he's holding a pen, not a computer!

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Knit one, purl one, ah, forget it

Knitting has always seemed like craft on another plane to me, a high-up one that's more or less unattainable unless you have a grandma / kind, elderly neighbour who can teach you how it's done. I see all these women shoving needles in and out of long bits of wool and producing something that isn't just a tangled mess and I think, wow, that is AMAZING.

So a few years back I decided to teach myself how to knit using one of those ''teach yourself how to knit" DVD and magazine combos (you know, the kind where the first issue is at a "special introductory price of just $2" and the subsequent issues are "just" $12 each). It wasn't easy. The instructor on the DVD sounded rather like she was an automated air hostess teaching passengers about the safety features of the plane, and despite her calm demeanor, for the most part I felt like the higher plane of knitting was crash landing with me in it. My first knitting session featured a lot of swearing, plenty of tangled yarn and me yelling "pause...PAUSE!...rewind...PAUSE!" at my craft-tolerant husband, who had heard my cries of frustration (from the depths of the back garden, most likely) and came running in to see if he could help by operating the remote control while I watched the instructional DVD.

Eventually I got the hang of it and even learned how to switch colours so I could knit stripes. I had grand visions of knitting my own jumpers, of becoming one of those women who could knit while they were watching a movie, never once taking their eyes off the screen, of investing in high-quality cashmere and making beautiful scarves using decorative stitches...

Then I realised how incredibly slow I was at knitting, and how it gave me RSI, and how expensive super-nice wool is, and I put aside the very beginnings of a black-and-green striped something and went back to making critters and drinking vodka instead.

I came across the black-and-green striped something recently (I started it so long ago I have no idea what it was originally intended to be), added a few bits and bobs and turned it into this little guy, Bug - so named to remind me what an absolute bugger knitting is!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Twiglet says...

Remember, craftsters, sleep is an important part of the creative cycle!