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More Artisan Crafts News

DA Knitters December Collection

=dAKnitters:icondAKnitters: reports, December 2
Check this months great new submissions!

ArtisanCraft Club - Submissions 2009 - Vol. 39

#ArtisanCraft:iconArtisanCraft: reports, December 2
This week's member submissions. Again, we are showcasing many awesome crafts, so be sure to check them out!

Altered Art And Assemblage

`2dazed:icon2dazed: reports, November 30
Featuring Altered Art And Assemblage

The Artisan Crafts Gallery, edition 91

`feetpeet:iconfeetpeet: reports, November 29
A selection of some wonderful and unique deviations submitted to the Artisan Crafts Gallery over the past week.

Weeky Feature 24 - Dinosaurs

=MyntKat:iconMyntKat: reports, November 27
This time it's all about dinos!

Origami Contest Entries

#ArtisanCraft:iconArtisanCraft: reports, November 26
All entries for our Origami contest, beautiful pieces of artisan craft for you all to enjoy.

ArtisanCraft Club - Submissions 2009 - Vol. 38

#ArtisanCraft:iconArtisanCraft: reports, November 25
This week's member submissions. Again, we are showcasing many awesome crafts, so be sure to check them out!

The blueprint of... Red Tailed Hawk 2

`Myana:iconMyana: reports, November 23
We're taking a closer look on an Artisan Crafts deviation and how it's made.
Today we are dissecting a wooden hawk!

Feature: Ties of Friendship

=llifi-kei:iconllifi-kei: reports, November 23
Presenting 10 funky friendship bracelets made by 10 deviants from around the community! :boogie:

Artisan Crafts News This Week

Madeby-me: Members' Submissions for November 2009

~madeby-me:iconmadeby-me: reports, December 3
Just another bit of beautiful crafty art.

Weeky Feature 25 - Monkeys

=MyntKat:iconMyntKat: reports, 2d 3h ago
Monkey monkey monkey monkey monkey monkey MONKEY!

ArtisanCraft Club - Submissions 2009 - Vol. 40

=MyntKat:iconMyntKat: reports, 10h 46m ago
This week's member submissions. Again, we are showcasing many awesome crafts, so be sure to check them out!

WEB POSTER EXHIBITION

~absdostan:iconabsdostan: reports, 2d 20h ago
This web exhibition of 50 posters by the hungarian artists Krzysztof Ducki, Istvan Orosz and Peter Pocs accompanies the traveling exhibition "Hungarian Karma" which is currently at the Viborg Stiftsmuseum, Denmark, 2009.10.23 - 2009.11.22. Text and pictures were kindly provided by Peter Pocs, who wrote about the exhibition
It is already 20 years ago that the political system changed in Hungary. During this period a lot of things changed, but we could not really use the feedom we got as a gift. In the euphorical year of 1989 we started to design political posters which reflected to not only the Hungarian, but to the neighboring countries as well. A lot of things did not resulted as we thought, hoped and would have liked. Months and years passed away and our optimism flew away as well. The exhibition "Hungarian Karma" is a time document of this last 20 years.
The context of the posters is explained in an article by the writer and journalist Peter Nyholm, reprinted from the catalogue.

Artisan Crafts


The Difference Between Crochet and Knitting

=ArielManx:iconArielManx: reports, January 23
I often receive warm complements on my knitting. I love getting compliments! However… I don’t knit. I crochet. :giggle:

There are some crocheters who get in a bit of a huff when someone assumes they’re knitting (and I’m sure there are knitters who get in a similar huff when someone assumes they’re crocheting!). I am not one of them. I’m sure that to someone not familiar with needlecraft, crochet and knitting seem very similar, if not identical. Some may even think they’re interchangeable words for the same thing. So I am never offended, and just gently correct people. But since it does happen on a somewhat frequent basis, I thought I would take a moment to explain the basic differences between the two crafts.

(Please note: this article is not intended to be a tutorial on how to crochet and/or knit. There are a number of tutorials here on dA, as well as tons of websites and online videos that can help you learn. You can also usually buy an instructional kit at any craft store for $15 or less. I also make the disclaimer that I just barely know how to knit, so if I have made any mistakes in my knitting research, please correct me privately and I will make amends in a public comment.)

The primary reason people confuse crochet and knitting is that their end product is essentially the same – a piece of fabric created from interlocking loops of thread or yarn. As always, the devil is in the details, and that’s where the differences lie!

Crochet is done using a single tool called a crochet hook. No matter what you are making you only need one hook. Hooks sized for working with yarn are typically made from aluminum, plastic, bamboo, or wood; smaller hooks sized for working with thread are usually made from steel. The sizes range from just 0.60 mm in diameter for working with very fine thread, to 19 or 20 mm in diameter for hooking rugs out of strips of fabric or many strands of yarn held together.


Knitting is done using a minimum of two tools called knitting needles. Socks and other round or tubular (non-seamed) objects require either circular needles (two needles connected by a cord) or a set of four or five double-pointed needles. Needles are typically made from aluminum, plastic, bamboo, or wood. Sizes range from 2 mm in diameter to 25 mm in diameter.


To start a crochet project, you attach the yarn or thread to the hook with a slip knot. You then pull the yarn through the loop on the hook to create what is called a chain stitch. You continue making chains until you have enough for your foundation chain, which you will work your first row of stitches into. Note that the chains are all hanging off the hook – the loop on the hook does not count as a chain.


Knitting projects are started by a process called casting on (sometimes it’s also called binding on, and there are a number of different ways to do it). There is no foundation to work into as there is in crochet; those first stitches you cast onto the needle are the first row of your project, and they’re all in play.


This is about as far as I can get in knitting and still have it look decent, but I’m sure you can see already just from how the two processes start that they’re very different.

When you crochet, you usually have only one stitch active (on the hook) at any given time. Make a stitch, move on to the next one, no worries. When you knit, you have an entire row of stitches active (transferring them from on needle to the other as you make each stitch in a new row). If you drop a stitch off one needle and don’t get it transferred to the other, that dropped stitch will cause a run in your fabric, just like on snagged pantyhose, and all your hard work is ruined. In crochet, there’s no way to drop a stitch. You can easily miss one, and that can mess you up later down the road (what makes you think I speak from experience?!), but you can usually find a way to fudge and recover that lost stitch and no one’s the wiser – plus the fabric won’t run!

When you’re finished with your project, finishing a crochet project is very simple – you cut the yarn, draw it through the final loop on the hook and pull snugly to form a knot. Done! In knitting, you have to bind off all the stitches on the hook one by one before making that final cut and pulling the yarn snug.

The processes of knitting and crocheting make for structurally different fabrics. If you’ve ever snagged a knit sweater on, say, the wire spiral of your notebook (what makes you think I speak from experience?!), that one snagged stitch will often pull and pucker the fabric. If the stitch actually breaks, your sweater could develop a run. Snag a stitch in a crocheted item, and while it won’t be pretty, odds are that only that stitch will be affected by the snag – and if it breaks, the rest of the item will usually hold together (at the least it will hold together enough to give you time to fix it). I have a crocheted afghan on my bed made by my husband’s late great-grandmother – there are a few broken stitches, but the afghan is tough enough to withstand our tossing and turning and kicking it to the floor every night. This is not to say that crochet is better – that same structure that makes the resulting fabric so sturdy can sometimes make it stiffer and denser than knitted fabric, which may be a bad thing depending on what you want to make. Knitted fabric typically has more stretch and give.

One of the greatest differences between crochet and knitting is that knitting can be done by machine, but crochet can’t. True crochet stitches cannot be duplicated by a machine, making it a unique craft that can only be done by hand.

There really aren’t many projects that are exclusive to either crochet or knitting. However, you are much more likely to find fine thread work done in crochet. In its early days, the craft of crochet was done in only in fine threads to produce lace, with tiny hooks. Since knitting needles simply don’t run as small as crochet hooks do, lacey knitted pieces are usually made from very lightweight yarns as opposed to threads. And because crochet tends to produce a ‘bumpier’ fabric than knitting does, you see a lot more knitted socks than crocheted ones.

So which craft is better? NEITHER. Crochet and knitting are both wonderful needlecrafts that produce beautiful things. They both start with just some yarn and a little imagination, and the end result is something amazing – they’re just different paths to get to the finish line. It’s all a matter of personal preference. It’s up to you to decide which one you prefer, or if you even have a preference – now that you know the difference.

Here’s a selection of some fantastic deviations in both knit and crochet.

Knit scarf and crocheted teddy blankie by :icondragonkissses:

Crochet scarf and wrist warmers by :iconnot-broken:

Knit blanket by :iconaliledesma:

Crochet fuzzy monster bag by :iconnesapotamia:

Knit dice bag by :iconfoxymitts:

Crocheted lace by :iconmurabayashi-harukaze:

Knit lace by :iconfoxfay:

Crocheted doily by :iconsereda:

Knit shrug by :iconradioactive-orchid:

Crochet Molly Weasley sweater by :iconcherokeecampfiregirl:

Knit Jayne Cobb hat (it's cunning!) by :iconwoozalia:

Crochet hat by :iconkabidesigns:

Crochet Faberge egg by :iconmeekssandygirl:

Knit sheep plushie by :iconwenchfaery:

Crochet Care Bear by :iconsher-a:

Crochet drider plushie by :iconlordonisyr:

Crochet neckwarmer by :icontaralynnjane:

Devious Comments

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:icontaralynnjane:
i often get the same comments :D In fact I just heard a local radio station dj talking about how they were all the same and I just laughed. Great article!

--
Rabbit Troop Sucks!
I am an admin at =dAKnitters check them out!
:iconarielmanx:
Thanks! :laughing: One of my favorites was when I sent a crocheted baby afghan to my cousin for his daughter, and included a care instruction card that said "crocheted with love" and he wrote a lovely thank you card thanking me for the "knitted quilt". Oh well! :D

:ohnoes: I had your neckwarmer on my list of deviations to feature and missed it! :cries: Dammit! I can't add it here but I'll edit my journal to put it in. :hug:

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:star: Taking Crochet Commissions! [link] Note me for details! :star:
:icontaralynnjane:
aw thanks! no biggie :hug: I have instructed all my friends, and most of my family already knows about the differences. That is just too funny :D

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Rabbit Troop Sucks!
I am an admin at =dAKnitters check them out!
:icontthealer:
So when are you going to start tatting?

--
Don't take life too seriously... Nobody comes out of it alive, anyway! :nod:

Art is like Love, unless it is shared,and viewed by others and appreciated, it has no mutual return, it is empty and hollow, and lonely.
TThealer
:iconfoxymitts:
:dance:

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A bit of applied maths: If you integrate a stitch with respect to wool, you get a row, integrate again, you get a pattern.
:iconglunac:
I've seen both done & yes I am one of those that often gets the 2 terms mixed up.
People often call my paintings "photos" or "pictures" & I just take it as a compliment; but how can you mistaken the two.

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Malapropism is my fiend.
:iconkabidesigns:
Great

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Karina - Kabi Designs
Art in Polymer Clay

Etsy Shop Online
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:iconwoozalia:
I've learned the basics of tatting, but I have a LOT of practicing to do before I'm ready to actually make something! (postable, anyway! ;D)

One day, though, One Day!


Harena of ~woozalia

--
. o O (What's a Hypertwin?)
:icondhaskoi:
Awesome article! My own mom still calls what I do "knitting" instead of crochet, despite the number of years I've been doing it. ^_^ I just go, "Knit, who knits? No one here." She usually picks up the hint.

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"A lifetime can be two days long; it needs only a birth at the beginning and a death at the end."

dAKnitters (crocheters, too) [link]
:iconwoozalia:
Fantastic article! And yes, I remember when I was a Demonstrator for our local AC Moore (loved that employee discount! :w00t:), I had to straighten out a few people on the difference!

And I agree, there's no point in getting huffy; t'would be like if one of us confused php with perl (not a stitch, but programming languages)! ;)


Harena of ~woozalia

--
. o O (What's a Hypertwin?)
 

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