Happy blogiversary, ReveDreams

third birthday cake Three years ago to the minute I made my first post on this blog. The post, in its entirety, is one paragraph titled “Welcome!”

With this post I inaugurate the craft blog ReveDreams.com. The posts will largely be about sewing and crochet, with a healthy dose of quilting and embroidery, and smatterings of other fiber and non-fiber crafts. The current schedule has me posting Mondays and Thursdays, and I hope to have a good mix of completed projects, works in progress, tutorials and patterns, links elsewhere, and contemplations of practical matters (from systematic investigation of technique to useful ways to store materials). I welcome comments, suggestions, and questions, even if they come a long time after the original post, and whether or not they are relevant to the post at hand!

Other than the posting schedule, this is still current; it’s just not concrete enough to plan around. Over the last month I’ve thought a lot about my purpose in blogging, prompted partly by the full-tilt schedule I’ve kept recently. This is my 53rd post of 2014 and we’re 90 days in — that’s over four per week! I like having new posts every other day, but that rate does not allow consistent high quality. Since it is also easy to have neither frequency nor quality, my paring back needs to be purposeful.

I’ve also been thinking about what would be best for me in terms of site organization and navigation, Ravelry, and Facebook. One thing at a time, though. Today let’s just talk about posting goals. This doubles as a recap of many of my favorite posts from the past year.

ReveDreams Posting Goals

  1. A new pattern in the store monthly: Not only a new pattern, but a pattern presented with creative photos a la the Sluggos, Snouty Hippos, and Big and Little Pi.

    sluggo chase hippos laptop Big and Little Pi

     
  2. An in-depth technical or educational post or series monthly: This could be as simple as exploring the needle join or identifying a mystery stitch. However, I like to really dig in and produce pieces that compare a variety of methods, such as double crochet turning chain modifications or ways to work single crochet in the round (in particular, ways to join those rounds), or that teach techniques in depth, such as useful knots for crafting or how to embroider crochet pieces.

    NJ in second st 1 knotted detail dc swatch rainbow

    round samples together slip knot 2 embroidery-on-crochet

     
  3. Something fun monthly: This could be a free pattern or tutorial, quick and easy (magic chain in crochet, back seat cupholders) or more involved (miniature Christmas trees with decorations, bicycle handlebar saddlebags). It might be a free extension to a pattern for sale, like the One-Eyed Sluggos. Or it might be a photo spread, like the recent Ami Folklore pair or the more distant Assyrian Monsters shoot (of which most of the photos are on Stumpy’s Facebook page).

    magic chain bracelets cup holder from side tree decorations

    mini saddlebags 2 one-eyed sluggos in the leaves scene 1 of The Sorcerer's Apprentice on ReveDreams

     
  4. Web curation monthly and behind the scenes: There is a lot of useful, interesting, and inspiring material in the World Wide Web, and especially if I had to spend a lot of time separating the wheat from the chaff on a particular subject, I like to share my findings with you. This is a key component of most of my static pages: Learn Crochet is self-contained as long as you don’t want videos, but I link out not only to videos but to additional instructions given with words, photos, and diagrams, as mine are. I plan to continue to expand and refine that resource as well as Sewing Tidbits, Scrap Users, and Learn Hand Embroidery. Although I include relevant links in many of my posts, on the blog my curation is concentrated in my First Friday posts, of which I most want to emulate two done in the last six months: art journaling with fiber, which featured other crafters’ work, and mythical origin stories of crafts, which involved a lot of needle-in-haystack research (pun intended, but only retroactively). Look for more descriptive titles on those posts henceforth.

    sc 2 Do Distill Depict stitching spider-19263_640

     
  5. Spontaneous, irregular posts of projects and thoughts worth sharing: This will form the remainder of my posts, with no quota. I want to share my creations and experiences, but will apply the Mr. Ed Rule and speak only when I have something to say. I’d expect very occasional posts on productivity, organization, teaching, or other ancillary subjects, and for most of the posts in this category to be projects. A few favorites from the last year: first overlay crochet project (and pattern review), bassist monster, and embroideries from my husband’s drawings.

    blocked overlay B bassist contemplation stitching

Incidentally, the part about comments from my initial post is still true — don’t be shy, even if the post is almost as old as the blog itself!

Craft warfare

[Posted with accompaniment by loud chickadees exploring my deck.]

I’ve recently put in a lot of time writing a business plan, and sewing items to sell to benefit the Sew-op, which has rekindled my interest in having an Etsy shop. As a result, I find myself thinking a lot about my goals and desires. Overall, my goal is to make my living through craft. More specifically, well, that part is in question. Of course there is teaching, but there’s a limit to how much of that I can do, and it lies below the threshold of livable income. There are pdf patterns and potentially books, but can I get to the point of solvency fast enough with those alone? It seems doubtful. I’m considering my three main crafts.

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Sewing is my endurance craft. I can and have stayed up all night doing it. I love to make do and customize. I don’t love cutting, but can usually get myself through it. Every electronic gadget that comes into my possession gets a bag. My items may end up slightly imprecise; I lack the gene that allows perfectly aligned corners in a patchwork quilt, or carefully adjusted sizes in a lining and outer fabric so there won’t be extra fabric to spread out. I love the idea of upcycling and remodeling clothes, although in practice I don’t have a lot of inspiration for projects, and design sometimes gets trying — don’t even ask how long it’s been since I started designing a sewn summer hat.

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Crochet is the craft that plays to my design strengths. It doesn’t need the precision of sewing, and I find it easier to apply my geometric intuition to it. The difficulty of engineering crochet is just right to make the challenge fun and interesting, though I have several unmet goals and on one have decided sewing just makes more sense. I am a fairly fast crocheter, but I get tired of making the same thing repeatedly as is needed for design — often the design challenge feels completed well before the design is actually ready to share with others. Sometimes I have to bribe myself to buckle down and finish. Often it comes down to not wanting the time I’ve already spent on the item to go to waste.

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Embroidery is the craft I lust after. I have a number of ideas for large-scale art embroidery pieces, though the details are not worked out. I enjoy embroidery, though I am slow and typically get tired of it well before a large scale piece is finished. If I hadn’t had a deadline I was determined to meet, my embroidered spaceman would probably never have seen the light of day. This also means any large-scale piece would have to be done for love more than for money. On the other hand, I’ve been jonesing for a small-scale embroidery project for a good two weeks now, but can’t seem to come up with something I really want to do.

There’s not one craft I want to do all the time — and wouldn’t it be easier if there were? To graft my lust for embroidery, adaption to crochet, and endurance for sewing into one fruitful tree! “Find your niche and focus on it” is one piece of business advice I have seen over and over again. As it is, though, my living will have to be cobbled together from multiple sources. I do feel that my subconscious is working on a solution, but meanwhile I’ll have to muddle on however seems best.