24 January 2012

Watermarks?!?

watermarks?!?

What the heck is that new watermark doing on my photos?!?

I have awesome readers who alert me when they notice one of my patterns appearing on another site, often uncredited. (Crediting the original author is good, but it doesn't make it acceptable to republish someone else's work in its entirety, particularly without permission.) I don't have time to police the web, and it's not something I want to spend what little free time I have doing. Chasing down thieves cuts into riding, photography, writing, designing, dreaming, making, sleeping...

Plus, I think it would spoil my mood more than the winter doldrums already do.

However, there are times when plagiarism is downright unacceptable. The most recent offense was the theft of an entire photo tutorial (and all the bandwidth to go with it) by a site that does nothing but plagiarize content of others and stuff keywords with current hot topics in the hopes of getting more hits and more ad clicks. The blog author, or scraper, to be more precise, then took it a step further by posting a link to the stolen content on Pinterest. From there, the link was repinned 503 times (so far).

How neat to design something so popular! But then to have all the traffic go to another site, and all of this at my expense. You might say I was just a little uptight. A little.

I pay for my blog and my photo website out of my own day job money. I have no outside ads. I have no income as a result of blogging. I turn down offers of free product in exchange for mentions. I blog as a hobby. A passion. I am thrilled when other crocheters can supplement their own income by selling snowflakes they make from my patterns. But I never set up this blog so thieves could make a living off what I pay for and what I create.

Okay, rant over. Now on with the good stuff. Thanks for being patient if you got this far.

What do you do when you learn someone has stolen your copyrighted content? And yes, your published content IS indeed copyrighted because you pushed that little orange button that says "publish." Or whatever color publish button you push on whatever blog service you use. Copyrighted means you have the right to lay down the law as to how your content is used, or, in this case, reused.

Unfortunately, scrapers don't give a hoot. They've probably paid for a class that taught them how to identify high-traffic pages, find the source code for such, copy it and paste it into a blog, which they then commercialize by adding outside ads that pay for clicks. In other words, they are being paid, if they get traffic, to steal content. Often without permission. Strike that. Almost always without permission. That's why they don't ask. They know the answer would be no.

Also unfortunately, many of these thieves are in countries where the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is not respected. Some are of cultures where copying is considered the highest compliment. They are not taught from birth that to take something that belongs to someone else is wrong.

Although there is nothing you can do to prevent someone from stealing your blog content, other than not publishing it (or making all content password protected, which turns off most readers), there are steps you can take when you find it has happened to you. Many blog posts have been written to help others victimized by plagiarism, but I believe there can never be too many informative blog posts about this topic, and I want to help everyone I can to do what they can to get illegally copied content removed.

Again, this is not a process I want to be spending my precious time doing, and I would advise others who have been violated to maintain a similar attitude. Nothing will thwart your creativity more than using what little time you do have chasing people who are going to steal whether you go after them or not. Set a limit to how much time and effort you want to put into it, and don't cross your line. Don't let it eat you up. Don't let it keep you from publishing wonderful blog content. Actually, I guess there are some things you can hold back and make available only to special readers if you don't want it spread all over the internet by scrapers. I plan to do that with some of the patterns in my new 2012 PDF snowflake pattern booklet. More about that on February 6.

Bottom line, don't let the theft of your original content keep you from joyously and successfully creating more original content. Keep being who you are and doing what you do best, and do not let blog theft ruin your day.

1. Find out how to contact the offender, if possible. Some blogs do not have any way to contact the thief. They do that intentionally. What to do in that case will be covered in Step 2. When you have the email address of the offender, send an email stating simply, no emotions, no exclamation points, no threats, just a simple and direct, firm request to remove content from link provided. I don't even say please. Just remove the plagiarized content immediately, and I include the link. I include my full legal name and my website address so there is no doubt who is making the request.

Some writers suggest you thank the owner for finding your content interesting enough to republish. You may do so if you desire. I don't and have no regrets.

In most cases, the offender will comply, often with an apology, and sometimes they might ask if they can keep the content if they link back to you. That's up to you. For me, NO. BIG NO. I specifically state in EACH pattern items may sold or whatever, but the pattern is not to be sold. I'm providing it for free. How fair is it for someone else to be paid for it??? Plus, the whole theft thing... But that's emotions trickling through, and we're supposed to keep emotions out of it.

I don't explain my reasons, I just repeat the request to remove the illegally copied content.

2. If there is no way to contact the blog owner, homework is required. Put the domain name in the appropriate blank at Whois.net, and send your email to the address listed.

3. You'll have to do Step 2 if you get no response to Step 1.

4. If you still receive no response, then it's time to go over the scraper's head. Contact the site's host, which also is provided on Whois.net. Most hosts have copyright policies and will remove plagiarized content. Even foreign blogs are in jeopardy of being shut down if they have a host who abides by copyright laws.

5. If you were ignored when you contacted the offender, it's time to get tough, keeping in mind you do not want to spend all your free time doing this. Choose your battlegrounds wisely. Contact advertisers on the scraper blog, and inform them, with proof and no emotions or wordiness, the content they are sponsoring is stolen. Most advertisers will act upon this information. AdSense supposedly is really good about this.

However, beware of ads placed by the scraper directing you to their real site. If the ad is for a new and improved PDF service, particularly with multiple typos and poor grammar, you've just been scam spammed. You've provided a valid email address to someone who probably will sell it to scammers, as well as attempt to scam you themselves. Some fake blogs are set up specifically to draw traffic to their real scam sites and increase their rankings in search engines, as was the case with my most recent theft.

6. If the fake blog that plagiarized your work falls into the Step 5 category of smoke screen, there isn't much more you can do than provide all the information about the illegally copied content to major search engines. Search engines (Google, Yahoo, Bing, etc.) do have strict policies in place regarding plagiarized content, and they will block plagiarists as well as bloggers who use loaded keywords. That means inserting a popular movie star or politician in your keywords just to bump your traffic isn't going to win you any search engine friends and will instead get your IP address banned.

File a notice of infringement with search engines. Instructions are found on each search engine website, usually via one of the links at the bottom of the page. This action scares the daylights out of scrapers because it shuts them down as far as traffic, even if they try to start over with a new blog.

I was delighted to find even Pinterest has a policy regarding plagiarism. I have taken the suggested actions at that site and filled out the appropriate paperwork. I have not received a response at this point, but the offending illegal blog post has been removed, and any remaining Pinterest links will now be dead. This result alone was worth the ten minutes it took to follow the instructions on Pinterest.

UPDATE: Pinterest notified me approximately 26 hours after I submitted my complaint that all bogus links have been removed, and all pinners (all 500 of them!) have been notified why their pins were removed. (Pinners likely didn't know they were posting a plagiarized photo and link.) How awesome of Pinterest to follow through so quickly and to take that extra step!

If none of the above works, legal action or closing down your blog is the next recommended step, but I hope to never have to take either of those steps. I hope other bloggers who have been copied never have to take those steps. That's not what blogging should be about. We're doing this because we enjoy it, not because we want to spend the rest of our lives being the guy with the big stick. (Hmmm, wouldn't a baseball bat be just perfect... sorry. Emotions back in check.)

Once you've successfully completed any of these steps, sit down with a cup of your favorite hot beverage (because it is, after all, winter, here in the US) and start thinking about your next blog post. With a smile. You deserve it.

* * *

UPDATE: Here is the most helpful link I've found so far (after publishing this post) with instructions for what to do when you find you've been plagiarized.

Following is a list of some of the articles I used to find out what to do when my content is illegally copied. Each gives excellent information. I sincerely hope the links I'm providing are the actual authors of the content. In my research, I stumbled across so many scraped blog posts about plagiarism, my mind was reeling!

Daily Blog Tips
Pro Blogger
Greg Laden's How Not to Get Caught: Don't do it!

You copied WHAT???

23 January 2012

Snowflake Monday

SnowMon50

Yet another member of my family hits the half-century mark today. Happy birthday, Bro!

You inspired a couple of new greeting cards! Funny such inspiration didn’t happen when I reached that milestone!

I'll wear whatever color I feel like!

Humor aside, this is not today’s snowflake. Instead, I have a special snowflake with a very fun variation and a completely different name next week. I named the snowflake after a favorite peak long before I finished writing and testing the pattern for the variation. Although there is a feminine name associated with Uncompahgre, the variation deserves a royal name all its own. Hope I’ve piqued your curiosity!

Uncompahgre Link-up

When I first designed this snowflake, I was very excited by how beautiful it looked when connecting multiple snowflakes in one project, and I absolutely love the lacy scarf I worked up with beaded fringe and in many different colors.

Mighty Uncompahgre

Uncompahgre Peak

Uncompahgre Peak

Uncompahgre Peak

Uncompahgre Peak

Uncompahgre Peak

Uncompahgre Peak, at 14,309 feet, is the sixth highest mountain in Colorado. The name is a Ute Indian word describing water, translated as “Dirty Water” or “Rocks that make Water Red.” A fritillary butterfly discovered on the mountain in 1978 was given the name of the mountain, and the species is considered endangered.

Uncompahgre Peak is the skyline’s dominating landmark above the basin where The Lizard proposed to me in 2005. Seven months fresh off emergency back surgery and knowing I would be Miz Liz within the next couple of weeks, I climbed to a saddle between Heisshorn and El Punto to take in what The Lizard claimed is the best view in all of Colorado. To this day, it remains my favorite hiking destination in Colorado.

Heisshorn/El Punto Saddle View

I didn't have a wide enough angle lens in 2005 to capture the entire view in one shot, Uncompahgre to the left and Matterhorn and Wetterhorn to the right.

You may do whatever you'd like with snowflakes you make from this pattern, but you may not sell or republish the pattern. Thanks, and enjoy!

Uncompahgre Peak Snowflake

Finished Size: 5 inches from point to point
Materials: Size 10 crochet thread, size 8 crochet hook, empty pizza box, wax paper or plastic wrap, cellophane tape, water soluble school glue or desired stiffening agent, water, glitter, small container for glue/water mixture, paintbrush, stick pins that won't be used later for sewing, clear thread or fishing line


Uncompahgre Peak Snowflake Instructions

Make magic ring.

Round 1: Ch 2 (does not count as dc), 18 dc in ring; sl st across starting ch 2 and into starting dc. Do not pull magic ring too tight.

Round 2: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 1 dc in same dc, *sk 2 dc, 2 dc in next dc, ch 3, 2 dc in same dc; repeat from * around 4 times; 2 dc in same dc as starting dc, [ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of staring ch 2] ([ ] counts as final ch 3 sp).
If you're not reading this pattern on Snowcatcher, you're not reading the designer's blog. Please go here to see the original.

Round 3: 1 sc over post of final dc of Round 2, *ch 8, 1 sc in next ch 3 sp; repeat from * around 4 times; ch 8, sl st in starting sc.

Round 4: *1 sc in next 8 ch sp, ch 3, 1 sc in same sp, ch 5, 1 sc in same sp, ch 7, 1 sc in same sp, ch 5, 1 sc in same sp, ch 3, 1 sc in same sp; repeat from * around 5 times. Do not sl st into starting st.

Round 5: *1 sc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 1 sc in next ch 5 sp, ch 5, 1 sc in next ch 7 sp, ch 7, 1 sc in same sp, ch 5, 1 sc in next ch 5 sp, ch 3, 1 sc in next ch 3 sp; repeat from * around 5 times. Do not sl st into starting st.

Round 6: *2 sc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 1 sc in same sp, 2 sc in next ch 5 sp, ch 3, 2 sc in same sp, 1 sc in next ch 7 sp, 1 hdc in same sp, 2 dc in same sp, 1 tr in same sp, ch 2, sl st into top of tr, 1 tr in same sp, 2 dc in same sp, 1 hdc in same sp, 1 sc in same sp, 2 sc in next ch 5 sp, ch 3, 2 sc in same sp, 1 sc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 2 sc in same sp; repeat from * around 5 times, bind off and weave in ends.

Finish: Tape wax paper or plastic wrap to top of empty pizza box. Pin snowflake to box on top of wax paper or plastic wrap.

Mix a few drops of water with a teaspoon of water soluble glue in small washable container. Paint snowflake with glue mixture or desired stiffener. Sprinkle lightly with glitter. Wash paintbrush and container thoroughly. Allow snowflake to dry at least 24 hours. Remove pins. Gently peel snowflake from wax paper or plastic wrap. Attach 10-inch clear thread to one spoke, weaving in end. Wrap fishing line around tree branch (or tape to ceiling or any overhead surface) and watch the snowflake twirl freely whenever you walk by! Snowflake also may be taped to window or tied to doorknob or cabinet handle.

full moonset over Uncompahgre Peak

20 January 2012

Wordless Unveiled

It's baaaack!

My camera was still in the shop this week, so I didn't have anything freshly mind-blowing and eye-popping to insert on Wordless Wednesday. So I plugged in a few archive shots from a gallery of serious manipulation and garnered a few humorous comments.

bedroom window

Mostly, people wanted to know: What the heck is that?!?

prismatic

Well, it's sort of like a really old commercial from back in the days of the dinosaurs. Remember the frying pan, egg dropped in, frying, right before your eyes? "This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs. Any questions?"

blind shadows

This is my bedroom window. With a blanket over it. Because it's winter. That's the sun coming through the blinds. I thought it looked cool. So I took a few pictures.

leopard skin

This is my bedroom window on the equivalent of drugs - PhotoShop. Any questions?

to quilt, or not to quilt

Monday was supposed to be the day I finished up my snowflake quilt for the 2012 Denver National Quilt Festival. But my bedroom, which is where the sewing machine currently resides, is too dark. Because there's a blanket over the window. My friend Ruthie asked why I don't put a sleeve on the blanket so I can hang it from a rod and let the sun shine in when the weather outside isn't frightful. I made the mistake of confessing to hanging the blanket with thumbtacks. Besides, it snowed Monday.

Ruthie threatened to send her two-year-old granddaughter to do some redecorating for me.

"Thumbtacks indeed!" she scowled.

You thought Wordless Wednesday made you dizzy...

This is my bedroom window. This is my bedroom window on drugs. And thumbtacks. Any questions?

19 January 2012

Reptilian Snow

Cortez loves snow.

I'm working on my final pattern for this year's booklet to raise money for the Colorado-Wyoming Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

This one will be called my Lizard Head Pass Snowflake. You think lizards and snow don't mix??? Check out this photo!

Cortez can't wait to go back to Crested Butte!

17 January 2012

Wordless Wednesday

A blanket hangs over the blinds.

watercolor

blind shadows

warped

twisted and twirled

just wow

colorized

my newest filter

Unraveled

once upon a time

Wasn't sure I wanted to write this post. Wasn't sure I ever wanted to reveal the secret. But here we are.

Ten years ago tomorrow, my adopted son took an unauthorized field trip. My son ran away. Seven months later, my 14-year-old adopted daughter followed suit.

I think almost every nearly-18-year-old yearns for freedom, independence, a place of their own and no parent watching over them like a hawk. I certainly did. I flew the coop at 15 but was returned to sender about three hours later by my dad's best friend. The Chief of Police.

denim sweet denimI was upset because my dad didn't want me wearing jeans. (I wore them EVERY day.) I wanted to pick my own clothes! His reply? "Why didn't you just ask?!?" To this day, I'm still attempting to claim the Queen of Denim crown.

My son's desires weren't quite as easy to fulfill. He wanted to return to his roots. He wanted an end to his pain. He wanted answers. Oh, and he wanted to smoke cigarettes without mom getting on his case.

Both of my kids (as well as seven others I fostered who weren't available for adoption) came from difficult backgrounds. Both were adopted at an older age. Both had special needs. Both struggled with memories of their former lives. Both wanted answers I didn't have. Both wanted normalcy. And both wanted the holes in their hearts to go away.

I went into adoption thinking I could heal anything. I thought with enough love, stability and structure, the pain would subside. I thought I could love away the sense of abandonment and betrayal.

Because I had some baggage of my own. The woman who gave birth to me abandoned my family when I was four years old. I didn't understand why she left me. I kept waiting for her to come back. Thirty years later, when I finally met her, I wondered why I wasted so much time wondering. I was blessed to grow up the way I did. My new mom, the one with three kids of her own who married my three-kid dad, is the most awesome mom in the world. To me, she's my mom. She's the one I aspire to be like. She raised a mixed brood not all her own and never made us feel as if we were not hers.

Team Colorado badge designed by meI thought I could do the same. I dreamed of ending the cycle of abuse. I took in what they called "throwaways." The older kids no one wanted. The "unadoptables." I wanted to be like the family in "Who are the DeBolts, and where did they get 19 kids?" I wanted to be a mother, and I couldn't do it the conventional way. So I rescued older special needs children. Or at least, I tried.

I prayed to be entrusted with children who needed to be loved. And that's exactly what I got.

I've learned over the years some pain doesn't go away. Some damage doesn't heal. I've learned some ghosts never stop haunting.

This is a year of anniversaries for me, and I thought the skeletons in the closet were long gone. I'm happy now. Really! I'm married to the most wonderful man on the planet. We have jobs, a home, a garden, bicycles, cameras, a computer, crochet hooks, plenty of yarn and thread and some of the most beautiful mountains, wildflowers and sunrises in the world. What more could we possibly want??? What more could I possibly want?

For my kids to be happy. For the pain to finally go away.

When I first began writing this post, it was supposed to be a tongue-in-cheek explanation for unraveling a sweater tomorrow. I thought I could come up with a couple of giggles and breeze through tomorrow the way I've survived the anniversary the last five or six years. Current real-life circumstances, however, prevent laughter. I will not share details. I've always believed my children's challenges are not my dandelion seeds to scatter in the wind.

Unraveling is a healing thing. I know because I've done this before. I had been working on a beautiful snowflake sweater when my brother died. He never saw the sweater. He likely didn't even know I was making it. Because it was the project in my bag when the phone rang, I guess it absorbed the pain I couldn't bear. I couldn't look at the sweater. It hid in a thick bag in a box in a corner, surrounded by other boxes so I never had to look at it.

Until the Winter 2010 Ravelympics. I had struggled with the Winter Olympics every four years because I love the Olympics, and I love winter sports. We had tickets for three events in Salt Lake in 2002. But my brother died. I went to a funeral instead. I wrote an obituary instead. In retrospect, I'm so honored my family chose me to write it. Yet at the time, it seemed to be one of the most painful things I'd ever had to endure. Perhaps, in part, because just three weeks earlier, my son had run away, and I still had no clue where he was, whether he was even alive or if I would ever see him again.

third medal!!!The Ravelympics give knitters and crocheters the opportunity to win electronic medals for competing in events such as Skelegurumi, Mitten Moguls and Sock Hockey for projects started and completed during the Olympics. In theory, you work on projects while you watch athletes triumph. I have no television, so I got a LOT done. I earned 11 medals. Because snowflakes don't take long. Almost like cheating.

It gave me a chance to love the Olympics again. It released the painful memories trapped deep inside for eight years.

let the healing beginMy favorite medal, my most meaningful medal, was not a snowflake. For the Aerial Unwind, crafters were to unravel an incomplete project with little chance of ever being finished so the yarn could be crafted into something new. I unraveled the sweater I'd been working on when my brother died, and something about the process brought a part of me I didn't know had died back to life. Creating something new, something cherished, something finished, something enjoyable, from what had once been so painful to look at, was like rebirth for me.

And so now, I am doing it again. The Summer Olympics likely will feature another Aerial Unwind, but this particular project can't wait until summer. It will happen tomorrow night.

I had been knitting a sweater for my son for his 18th birthday. Simple stockinette stitch, nothing complicated, because I was trying to finish it in time for his birthday, just two months away. Wednesday night he came home two hours late. Thursday night he came home about four hours late. Friday night, he never came home.

I've seen him six times since then. He says now he's sorry. He says he wishes he'd made different choices. Now that he's gotten to know his birth family, he says he understands how much I sacrificed. He says he appreciates what I did. What I tried to do.

Yet he's still running.

Neither of us can undo the past. Neither of us can change what has happened.

But I can change this sweater. I can undo this UnFinished Object, this UFO. Tomorrow night, it becomes a great big giant ball of yarn. Thursday, that ball of yarn goes to charity. Within a week or so, that ball of yarn will be something keeping a homeless person warm during Colorado's frigid winter. New life. Rebirth. A hole filled. Hearts soothed.

Thursday is the first day of the rest of my life. I intend to spend it well.

soon to be freed tweed

16 January 2012

Snowflake Monday

Grays Peak Snowflake

I began this flake in about June of last year but got bored with it and never finished. Until New Year's Day. One of my resolutions was to finish up all my abandoned snowflake patterns. Mission accomplished!

I discovered a great way to finish up snowflakes that don't have the umph I need to keep going. Start over in an exciting and inspiring color. Voila!

My prototype was being worked in gray as a Gray's Peak Snowflake and as a companion snowflake for the Torreys Peak Snowflake. Blue and white do so much more for this snowflake, I thought I'd go back to the drawing board for Grays. But when I worked up a third (and fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh) flake in gray, this time with sparkles, I fell in love with the color all over again.

Grays Peak and Torreys Peak

Grays Peak is just across the easy saddle from Torreys Peak. At 14,278 feet, it is the highest summit of the Front Range, which runs north/south from Casper, Wyoming, to Pueblo, Colorado. The Front Range was so named because it's generally the first mountain range you see when traveling west from the Great Plains. The Front Range provides a somewhat mild climate along the Colorado metro area from Colorado Springs to Fort Collins by blocking and holding some prevailing storms, which also makes winter recreation very popular in the higher elevations.

Grays Peak also is the highest point along the Continental Divide. The Lizard is enamored with a mountain bike race that travels the Continental Divide from the Canadian border to the Mexican border. He wants to participate in the totally self-supported three- to four-week race one day, but his wife says no.

Grays Peak was named by botanist Charles Parry, the first white man to climb the peak, to honor his botanist colleague and teacher Asa Gray. Asa was one of botanist John Torrey's pupils. Asa relinquished his doctorate of medicine to pursue botany, and he did not see the mountain named after him until 11 years after Charles ascended it. Asa traveled west to collect plant samples for Harvard twice, and both times he climbed the mountain named after him.

The Asa Gray Award is the highest honor given living botanists by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists. Asa Gray is considered the most important American botanist of the 19th century. Last year, the US Postal Service designated a first class postage stamp to honor him.

You may do whatever you'd like with snowflakes you make from this pattern, but you may not sell or republish the pattern. Thanks, and enjoy!

Grays Peak Snowflakes

Beaded Grays Peak Snowflake

Grays Peak Snowflakes

Grays Peak Snowflake

Finished Size: 5.5 inches from point to point
Materials: Size 10 crochet thread, size 8 crochet hook, empty pizza box, wax paper or plastic wrap, cellophane tape, water soluble school glue or desired stiffener, water, glitter, small container for glue/water mixture, paintbrush, stick pins that won't be used later for sewing, clear thread or fishing line

Grays Peak Snowflake Instructions

Make magic ring. (This magic ring will need to be big and stay fairly large after tightening.)

Round 1: In ring work *1 sc, 1 hdc, 1 dc, ch 3, sl st in top of dc, 1 hdc; repeat from * around five times; sl st in starting sc. Pull magic circle tight, but leave opening big enough to allow stitches inside it to lay flat.

Round 2: Ch 18 (counts as 1 dc and ch 15), *1 dc in next sc, ch 15; repeat from * around 3 times; 1 dc in next sc; ch 10,1 dtr in 3rd ch of starting ch 18 (ch 10 and dtr count as final ch 15 sp).
If you're not reading this pattern on Snowcatcher, you're not reading the designer's blog. Please go here to see the original.

Round 3: 1 sc around post of dtr just made, 1 hdc around same post, 1 dc around same post, *in next loop work 1 dc, 1 hdc, 12 sc, 1 hdc, 1 dc; repeat from * around 4 times; in next loop work 1 dc, 1 hdc, 11 sc; sl st in starting sc.

Round 4: *Ch 2, 1 dc in next dc, 1 dc in next dc, ch 2, sk next hdc, sl st in next sc, 1 sc in each of next 2 sc, 2 sc in each of next 2 sc, 1 sc in each of next 2 sc, 2 sc in each of next 2 sc, 1 sc in each of next 2 sc, sl st in next sc, sk next hdc; repeat from * around 5 times, omitting last sl st of final repeat. Do not join.

Round 5: *Ch 3, sk next dc, 2 dc in next dc, ch 3, sl st in next sc, ch 5, sk next 5 sc, 3 dc in next sc, ch 2, 3 dc in next sc, ch 5, sk next 5 sc, sl st in next sc; repeat from * around 5 times.

Round 6: *Ch 3, sk next dc, 1 [dc] in next dc, ch 3, 1 dc in 3rd ch from hook (dc picot made), ch 5, 1 sc in 5th ch from hook, ch 6, sl st in sc, ch 4, sl st in sc (tri-picot made), ch 3, 1 dc in 3rd ch from hook (dc picot made), working back in main body of snowflake 1 dc in same dc as [dc], ch 3, sl st in next sl st, ch 7, 3 dc in next ch 2 sp, ch 10, sl st in top of last dc just worked, 3 dc in same sp as previous 3 dc, ch 7, sl st in next sl st; repeat from * around 5 times; bind off. Weave in ends.

Finish: Tape wax paper or plastic wrap to top of empty pizza box. Pin snowflake to box on top of wax paper or plastic wrap.

Mix a few drops of water with a teaspoon of glue in small washable container, or use desired stiffener. Paint snowflake with glue mixture. Sprinkle lightly with glitter. Wash paintbrush and container thoroughly. Allow snowflake to dry at least 24 hours. Remove pins. Gently peel snowflake from wax paper or plastic wrap. Attach 10-inch clear thread to one spoke, weaving in end. Wrap fishing line around tree branch (or tape to ceiling or any overhead surface) and watch the snowflake twirl freely whenever you walk by! Snowflake also may be taped to window or tied to doorknob or cabinet handle.

Bighorn Sheep with Grays and Torreys Peak in the Background

13 January 2012

Friday Funny

I laughed so hard at the end of this! Makes me want to go play the game!!! Marcus and Hannes Knutsson did a GREAT job!

12 January 2012

Legacy

threads

Crocheting on the commuter light rail train has been the spark for many wonderful conversations with strangers. Passengers have told me about crocheting or knitting mothers and grandmothers, sisters and aunts, daughters and cousins, and even an uncle and a grandfather.

Many people don't know what I'm doing.

"Is that knitting?" they might ask.

"Is that tatting?" one curious woman ventured.

"How do you go so fast?" is a frequent comment. Wish I could ride my bike as fast as my fingers can fly!

"How'd you learn to do that?" is another common question.

My grandmother taught me. I was the only one of seven kids who showed an interest, and I'm still to this day the only one in the family crocheting, knitting, sewing, quilting and hoping to learn to tat one day.

"You need to teach someone to do that," one onlooker directed. "This is a dying art. This is a legacy. You need to pass it on."

I'd always known a part of my grandmother lives on because I have something that once was dear to her. But I'm not sure I really put it into legacy perspective until this particular conversation. Somehow, the woman perceived I didn't have children to pass this talent to.

I taught my adopted daughter, but I don't know if she remembers any of it or uses it. As far as I know, my grandmother's craft goes to my grave with me.

Except via this blog, my grandmother's passion doesn't die, really. My blog is not the legacy a parent dreams of leaving to children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren; this is not the traditional way of passing along a family heirloom.

Yet Snowcatcher is a legacy nonetheless. I'm sharing my grandmother's love of thread, crochet, designing and creating, as well as my own passion for snowflakes, and these treasures are going a heck of a lot further than either of my adopted kids may have been able to take them.

Modern technology is helping me bridge the gap and keep alive the pearls of creativity I received from my grandmother.

Ever felt like you were hanging by a thread?
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