Author: Anna

How to Knit a Rainbow in Six Steps and 96 Hours

I recently finished up one of the trickier pieces for my upcoming show, and thought it would be fun to show a little step-by-step post about how I knitted this big guy.

rainbow_start

(This isn’t a pattern, though—as you’ll see, I just figured it out as I went, and didn’t worry too much about counting rows, etc.)

Step 1: Carve an arch shape out of a block of foam.

rainbow_step1

Step 2: Measure how big around the arch is, decide how many stripes you want in your rainbow, calculate how wide each stripe should be, and knit a few samples to check.

rainbow_step2

Step 3: The bend in this rainbow isn’t rainbow-y enough, so let’s see if stretching it out will have any lasting effect on the foam. (It does!)

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Step 4: Continue to knit some stripes until they are long enough to cover the length of the rainbow. (This knitting part takes forever, so you probably want to have a few movie rentals on hand.) Pin them in place.

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Step 5: Get out your tapestry needle, and let mattress stitch do its magic on the first couple of seams at the top. When you get to the more bend-y stripes at the side of the rainbow, think really hard, and decide that you need to make wider seaming stitches on the upper stripe and shorter stitches on the lower stripe in order to make them bend properly and conform to the foam shape.

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Step 6: Finish knitting, knitting, and knitting the rest of the stripes. (Have I ever mentioned that Radiolab is a great podcast to knit to?). Then, hold your breath as you sew up that last seam…

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…and it actually worked! It’s a knitted rainbow, without funny scrunchy bumps!

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It was the hugest relief to know that I didn’t just waste four days of nonstop knitting making this guy. Now it’s onto knitting a herd of mini unicorns to slide down the rainbow. Also remaining are a river, a cloud, a possible cornfield, and tons more. Just about a month left to do it all!

Naughty and Nicey Class at Purl Oct 16

I’m excited to say that I’ll be teaching another toy knitting class in NYC in October—this time, at Purl in Soho!

Just in time for kooky homemade Halloween costumes, we’ll be knitting Naughty and Nicey on October 16th!

naughtynicey_purl

Here’s the class description:

Knit Naughty or Nicey with Anna from Mochimochi Land

Saturday, October 16th, 2:00pm – 5:00pm

Learn basic toy knitting techniques to make a set of toys that can double as a quick Halloween costume! Anna Hrachovec of Mochimochi Land will show you how to use double-pointed needles to make Naughty and Nicey – an adorable devil and angel pair that you can be worn on the shoulders – from her book Knitting Mochimochi. Techniques covered will include knitting small circumferences on DPNs, stuffing, picking up stitches, and mattress stitch. You will just have to choose whether to start with the angel or the devil!

The cost for the class is $75 if you already have a copy of Knitting Mochimochi, and if you buy the book with the class, you get $5 off!

To sign up, call the store during business hours at 212-420-8796.

Tiny Strawberry has a Caption!

Thank you for your caption suggestions for the TIny Strawberry! They were so much fun to read, and it was difficult to pick a winner. (I had about six favorites.) The winning caption is…

tinystrawberry

Though he may look a little seedy, the only mischief this tiny berry’s getting into is a spoonful of strawberries Romanoff.

Melissa suggested that cute line, so she gets a free pattern from the Mochimochi Shop!

I thought the captions were a blast, so how about we do another one this week?

Tiny Strawberry

tinystrawberry

Winning caption:
Though he may look a little seedy, the only mischief this tiny berry’s getting into is a spoonful of strawberries Romanoff.

This time instead of a free pattern for the person who suggested that I make a tiny strawberry, I’ll take a tip from Roger Ebert and give away a free pattern to the best caption to this photo! Leave your caption in the comments (one per person please), and I’ll choose the best caption on Monday. Cute and funny will win!

A New Subdivision

The real estate market is booming on the floor of my apartment.

showprep_houses

As you might have guessed, this is part of my upcoming show! I thought a little pastel suburbia would be just the thing to be enemies with the city on the other side of the tracks. I’ll probably add some mischief involving chimneys later—the tiny jailbird is standing in for a potential masked burglar.

I had a minor crisis last week over whether sidewalks and driveways should be gray or white. With some help from Twitter people (yes, I’m into Twitter these days in a minor way), I finally settled on white with gray cracks. (It should look much more tidy with everything sewn down, of course!)

Juxtapoz and Roger Ebert

This is just too wild—in the same week (last week), my work was featured on Juxtapoz and tweeted by Roger Ebert!

juxtapoz

Helen Soteriou interviewed me for Juxtapoz, which (if you don’t know) is a popular online art magazine. It was so much fun to do an interview for an arts publication, so I was thrilled. Thank you Helen!

And then Roger Ebert (ebertchicago on Twitter) posted to a photo of one of my Tiny Things Conversion Factories! He asked for a caption to the photo, and his 200,000-plus followers were happy to oblige. (Many of them made references to to grandmothers and psychedelic drugs.)

ebertchicago

I agree that it looks extra weird without any sort of title or caption, so I’m just happy that it caught Mr. Ebert’s interest. Thank you to my Twitter friends for alerting me to it!