Gingerbread Man Brooch

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Download PDF HERE   Head: With Honey and H hook, make magic circle, or ch 3 and sl st to 1st ch to form ring. Round 1: Ch 2 and work 10 hdc into circle. Sl st to top of 1st hdc to join. (10 sts) Round 2: Ch 2, work (2 hdc) 10 times. Sl st to top of 1st hdc to join. (20 sts) Round 3: Ch 2, [(2 hdc), 1 hdc] 10 times. Sl st to 1st hdc to join. (30 sts) Do not break off. Continue to work in rows for the body.   Body: Row 1: Ch 2 and hdc in same space (go thru both loops to avoid making a hole), 4 more hdc evenly across. (5 sts) Turn. Rows 2-3: Ch 2, 5 hdc. Turn. (5 sts). Do not break off. Continue to work on one of the legs.   Leg #1: Row 4: Ch 2, and 2 hdc evenly, leaving remaining sts unworked (2 sts). Turn. Row 5: Ch 1, skip one hdc, and (3 sc) and sl st in last hdc. Break off.   Leg #2: With wrong side of the cookie facing you, insert hook into 2nd to last hdc of body Row 3. Row 1: Repeat Row 4. Row 2: Ch 1, turn. 3 sc in 1st stitch. Sl st in last st and break off.   Arms: Insert hook where head and body join and work moving away from the head. Row 1: Ch 2 and hdc in same space. Hdc in next hdc. Turn. (2 sts) Row 2: Ch 2, and hdc in same space. Hdc in next hdc. Break off.   Repeat Rows 1-2 on the other side of the body.   Weave in all ends, making sure especially that there isn’t a big hole in the middle of the face where your magic ring was.   To work the white Icing, insert hook into crotchal area (I find this is the most logical place to hide any inconsistency), and with White, sl st evenly along the edge of the cookie. Exercise control while you sl st around. These sl sts should NOT warp the cookie in any way. If your cookie is starting to curl inward, you are sl st’ing too tightly or too far apart. You do want the sl sts to look as uniform as possible. When you go all the way around and get back to the crotchal area, I cut the yarn and just pull the tail all the way up and out of the top of the cookie and then use a tapestry needle to weave it back down to the back of the cookie to tie off and weave in the end. I think this looks more clean than breaking off the normal way, but you can figure out what works best for you, too. To work the Smile, use Pink and sl st evenly along the spaces between Rnd 2 and Rnd 3 of the head, which form a perfect smile guide. Break […]

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My Crocheted Gingerbread Village at Imagiknit

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If you’ve been following my social media at all, you’ll know that I designed and crocheted this little pastel gingerbread village for my local yarn shop, ImagiKnit, here in San Francisco. With a full-time job, I definitely would not have been able to pull this off without help from two of my trusty crochet elves and my bff. It was a team effort! And we made a village! Here’s a video of it in action, because the coolest part of the display is the yarn-bombed electric train! The little people/elves that inhabit this village were heavily inspired by Mochimochi Land’s gnomes. I made little wire stands for them so that they could stand up in the display. Manda helped me lay out the village, and we decided that a Big Tree in the center would be perfect. Time was really not on my side, so while I would’ve loved to crochet a tree, I decided to yarn-wrap a styrofoam cone instead. Still cute! And no snowy village is complete without abominable snowmen or yetis! This pattern is based on the Abominable Snowman crochet class I have on Creativebug, but this one is a bit smaller and constructed slightly differently. While I was taking photos of the window, a woman and her son were watching the train go around. When her son realized that the monster was eating a person, he said he didn’t like it! Sorry, kiddo! I hope that if you’re a Bay Area local, you’ll get a chance to stop by ImagiKnit. If the train isn’t going, just ask them! I’ll provide links to various crochet patterns in this project in the next few blog entries.

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