Happy 10th Blogiversary, ReveDreams

Ten years ago today I made the first post on this blog. It was a brief Welcome post, with the first “real” post four days later: a bunch of animals I’d crocheted with embroidery floss.

Since then I’ve published something like 450 posts, with not quite 400 currently published after a cleanout a few years ago. Amigurumi crocheted from embroidery floss or yarn, with my own or others’ patterns; crochet outerwear and household items (including my basket fixation of a few years ago); a wide assortment of sewing projects including many pouches and bags; a surprising number of embroidery projects; and many one-off posts about other crafts I tried.

Of course, recently I haven’t published at all. My only post of 2020 was the inevitable mask-sewing post, and the majority of my 2019 posts were journal prompts rather than posts about things I’d made. I haven’t had the impulse to blog, probably in part because I can always share on Instagram, for far less effort.

However, I didn’t want my tenth blogiversary to go unmarked, so let me show you what I’ve been up to these past months…..

On New Year’s Day 2020 I started working on learning to draw. My previous attempt to learn to draw had been 5 years earlier, for the first few months of 2015. I don’t remember why I decided to make the new start – my journal is silent on the matter and my husband tells me I was admirably low-key about it – but this attempt has gone orders of magnitude better than the previous one. In particular, I am still doing it, and I’m pleased with my efforts.

Two drawing highlights of the last year-plus:

I started drawing a mushroom every day in my planner on Feb 4. This was inspired by a video by struthless, though my daily drawing subject was not nearly as specific as his. I’m continuing this year, with daily snails.

In October I did a daily drawing challenge, combining drawing prompts from Inktober, DoodleWash, and Creamtober with an overall theme of Fantasy Landscapes. It was a significant commitment but I was able to finish all 31 drawings within the month and I was really pleased with a number of them. My goal aesthetic was ink drawings with color accents, and while it took a while to get there I ended up with a few that were exactly what I envisioned.

On January 18, 2020, I started watercolor painting, a fact I know only because I wrote it in my planner – again my journal has no mention of it, and there’s no photographic record. This was a product of having been watching watercolor tutorial videos on YouTube just for fun (though who knows where that came from!), taking an art class in January that included Japanese ink brush painting, and seeing watercolor feature in some of the drawing tutorials I was watching. I’ve painted versions of a lot of photographs and other illustrations, and done many video tutorials.

Two watercolor highlights of the last year-plus:

I have been gradually filling a sketchbook with animal paintings, mostly animals whose faces appeal to me. There are many pages left!

Around the turn of the year I started painting overwrought planetscapes, the sort of thing you’d find on the cover of a science fiction paperback or prog rock album.

And of course I sewed and crocheted, and did random other crafts in 2020. Many fabric masks, several zippered pouches, crocheted Christmas ornaments, my first-ever candle wreath, a set of tea shelves made from tea boxes, and my 2021 planner!

I think have a few more posts in me this year; although I’m clearly not holding myself to any posting minimum, I’m also not ready to shutter this blog.

Looking back, looking forward

I realized this afternoon that I let my fifth crochetiversary (in mid-November) and blogiversary (March 31) go unremarked upon. Sometime earlier last fall was my fifth anniversary with the Sew-op, as well. It made me think about how much has changed for me in the last five years.

When I started this blog, I had just realized I didn’t want to stay in mathematics, but had no idea what my next career would be. I was a week or so away from first meeting the man who became my husband, and we wouldn’t start dating for over eight months.

2011 was incredibly productive for me, though I was still working full time as a mathematician the whole year. It was my second most prolific year by measure of entries into the catalog and third by total number of posts (popping up to a very close second if you prorate). Surprisingly little of it was older work getting blogged about retroactively – I simply did a lot.

My most productive time was when I was semi-attempting to be a professional craft designer and teacher, roughly April 2013 to April 2014. I lacked the requisite passion and grit to make that happen, and discovered I really dislike sewing to order. I had already begun web development, learning enough to modify this blog’s theme and proceeding from there. I joined my little startup in February or March of 2014 and tried to make that work.

At the beginning of last year I decided to abandon the steady, frequent posting schedule I’d been more or less maintaining. That was absolutely the right decision. The nomadic piles of stuff in my sewing room are gone now, after a little work that was worth blogging about and a lot that wasn’t. I have plans to get through more longstanding projects during this quarter of the year, which will get me all but dug out of old project plans.

After that? Next month I begin a new job. I’ll be doing web development full time in an office. Reflecting on 2011 makes me wonder how 2016 will turn out. Being on the computer all day at home makes it hard to get off the computer; working for a start-up and freelancing without succeeding financially, and then also job hunting, makes it hard to think you should ever stop working. 2016 won’t be as productive as 2011 – for one thing, I was single for the second half of that year – but I’m hoping to simply do a lot again.

FYDP Final Roundup

The first quarter of 2014 has drawn to a close, and with it Finish Yer Dang Projects, our challenge to do or dump all those partially completed crafts that have aged to perfection. You can see all of my weekly updates as well as posts about FYDP projects under the tag FYDP.

rainbow soap

I have one last FYDP accomplishment.

  • Made rainbow soap. It may be weird colors that look more like an unappetizing jello mold than soap, but it’s rainbow soap.

We trimmed the edges off after I took this picture, which helped a bit.

Total accomplished projects:

  1. Mending: 7
  2. Non-mend sewing: 5
  3. Elimination: 11
  4. Website updates: 6
  5. Crochet: 3
  6. Other crafts: 1

Continue reading FYDP Final Roundup