Finished project!
Feb. 6th, 2013 12:48 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I finished my project for
imadeathing! Last night, actually, and the deadline is today so, just made it.
I picked the prompt Supernatural, Salt. For those that aren't familiar with the show, the main characters use shotgun shells filled with rock salt to disperse ghosts. Almost immediately I could picture this scarf in my head; I knew exactly how I wanted it to look, and couldn't wait to get started on it. I used Red Heart yarn, beads, and felt, and made the pattern up as I went along. Though, in all honesty, it's a pretty easy pattern to figure. :)
The most time-consuming part was hand-sewing all the beads to the finished piece.

The whole scarf is 6 inches wide and 76 inches long. Long enough to wrap around and also have a nice length left hanging at each end. One end of the scarf is a box of rock salt and the other end is a few shotgun shells, and the middle is the rock salt being poured into the shotgun shells. I had to redo the shells a few times before I felt like I got something that resembled shells. Hopefully they resemble shotgun shells to everyone else, lol.
I found felt letters at AC Moore that had a sticky back, so that saved a lot of time - I don't think I would have been able to cut out such nice looking letters by hand. I also stitched them down to make them a little more secure, since I have no idea how they'll stand up to being washed. I was going to add more details to the 'box', but my embroidering skills are non-existent, so, plain box it is!


Close-ups of the beading. The beads I found - which were all different sizes and shapes and varied a bit in color - were a pretty good approximation of rock salt crystals, in my opinion. Unfortunately, they also blend into the color of the scarf a little too well, lol. They're a bit hard to see in person, unless you're really close, and almost impossible to see in the pictures. I only added them to the ends of the scarf not the middle, and sewed them on so that there was a lot together at the ends, but then they spread out and faded into the crochet. The fact that they match the yarn so well helps with that, lol.
I'm not sure what I'll do with it, since we don't need scarves down here in NC, but it was really fun to make. I enjoyed coming up with the concept, and figuring out how to make it work, and seeing it take shape the way I wanted it to. It really got me interested in creating my own patterns!
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I picked the prompt Supernatural, Salt. For those that aren't familiar with the show, the main characters use shotgun shells filled with rock salt to disperse ghosts. Almost immediately I could picture this scarf in my head; I knew exactly how I wanted it to look, and couldn't wait to get started on it. I used Red Heart yarn, beads, and felt, and made the pattern up as I went along. Though, in all honesty, it's a pretty easy pattern to figure. :)
The most time-consuming part was hand-sewing all the beads to the finished piece.

The whole scarf is 6 inches wide and 76 inches long. Long enough to wrap around and also have a nice length left hanging at each end. One end of the scarf is a box of rock salt and the other end is a few shotgun shells, and the middle is the rock salt being poured into the shotgun shells. I had to redo the shells a few times before I felt like I got something that resembled shells. Hopefully they resemble shotgun shells to everyone else, lol.
I found felt letters at AC Moore that had a sticky back, so that saved a lot of time - I don't think I would have been able to cut out such nice looking letters by hand. I also stitched them down to make them a little more secure, since I have no idea how they'll stand up to being washed. I was going to add more details to the 'box', but my embroidering skills are non-existent, so, plain box it is!


Close-ups of the beading. The beads I found - which were all different sizes and shapes and varied a bit in color - were a pretty good approximation of rock salt crystals, in my opinion. Unfortunately, they also blend into the color of the scarf a little too well, lol. They're a bit hard to see in person, unless you're really close, and almost impossible to see in the pictures. I only added them to the ends of the scarf not the middle, and sewed them on so that there was a lot together at the ends, but then they spread out and faded into the crochet. The fact that they match the yarn so well helps with that, lol.
I'm not sure what I'll do with it, since we don't need scarves down here in NC, but it was really fun to make. I enjoyed coming up with the concept, and figuring out how to make it work, and seeing it take shape the way I wanted it to. It really got me interested in creating my own patterns!