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Showing posts with label Kumihimo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kumihimo. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 May 2015

Kumihimo & bead flower necklace

Kumihimo is one of those repetitive-action crafts that can be very calming. I find it great for pain-management. It distracts me from worrying about myself, without demanding so much concentration that it wears me out. I can do it for hours.

As a result, however, I can end up with yards and yards and yards of pretty cord. This has been the case recently. I've been playing with designs on the kumihimo board (and using up a bit more of granny's stash of embroidery threads). I made this length from four skeins in two different shades of pink. I had completed it before it occurred to me that pink really isn't one of my top colours, and I now had well over of a metre of attractive cord to find a use for!

 Once again, I was saved by the wonderful Sarah Millsop (now of  www.beadsdirect.co.uk ). I saw her on TV demonstrating this pretty beaded flower design. I had the seed-beads in pink and blue in a set that someone had given me. The larger blue "cat's eye" beads (I believe that is the correct term for those beads with the shimmer across them?!) I scavenged from a re-cycled bracelet. Another moment to revel in up-cycling!


I made three of the flowers - mastering the technique! Using these in combination with three lengths of the kumihimo cord created this asymmetric necklace. The flowers are attached with jump-rings, and had to be connected to all the cords they crossed - otherwise they pulled the piece out of shape. I'm quite pleased with the finished necklace, and very satisfied that it used the entire length of that particular piece of kumihimo cord!


I'm off to start knotting again :-)
Hx

Monday, 4 November 2013

Kumihimo-ho-ho

I saw the technique for Kumihimo (a Japanese form of making decorative braids) on a craft programme last year, and immediately fell in love with it. There is something about the repetitive action which is quite hypnotic. To me it has the same appeal as knitting - repetitive, relaxing, therapeutic!

 I persuaded Hubby that I would really like the Kumihimo disc as a Christmas present, and as he didn't have the faintest idea what I was talking about, we agreed that I would buy it myself and he would give me the money. That's actually quite a good system to make sure your man buys the right gift! The downside was that as soon as it arrived, he snatched it from me, wrapped it up and put it under the Christmas tree - only fair, I suppose, since it was supposed to be a Christmas present.

But come Christmas morning, I was ready and  armed with a selection of my late grandma's stash of embroidery silks before we even got to opening the wrapping.

There are good demonstrations of the technique available on youtube, so I won't go into it here, but as you can see I've been having fun playing with colour combinations in 8- and 12-strand  formations.



Initially I was working very hard to create pieces that were exactly the right length for a given project. Then I heard a really good tip - just make a really long length, and cut it to the desired dimensions! That's turned out to be invaluable advice. I now make braids using whole skeins of embroidery thread. I end up with a length of one-and-a-half to two metres, which can be cut according to need. I then seal the ends to prevent them from unraveling. Originally I was using super-glue to do this, but recently I have found Fray-check works just as well. (Personally, I have always found super-glue a little intimidating - too many stories when I was a child about people who had stuck their fingers together, I expect!) I then squash the ends between ribbon-endings, and they are ready to connect to jump-rings or findings.


Recently I have been playing with using different mediums - ribbon works well. I also tried adding beads, with limited success. It's not that the technique was difficult, simply that I was using seed beads on a thread which was too fine to hold in the kumihimo disk. I've ended up with a bracelet, half of which looks fantastic, and half of which looks like it's been mangled in an industrial machine! I guess that's the perfect excuse to keep practicing!

H.x