Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Synchronized Swimming Trio Suits

Many of you are aware of my background in synchronized swimming.  For those of you aren't aware, I joined the sport in the fall of 2005, my freshman year of college.  I met my best friend Jessie through the sport as well as all of my post-college friendships through that team.  I could have swam competitively (not synchro) in college somewhere else, but I wouldn't have been happy.  After my senior year in HS I was burnt out on swimming.  Synchro made me love the water again.  I will always hold a special place in my heart for that sport (regardless of how poorly I did in it).

With that mushy stuff out of the way, St. Patty's Day weekend was one FULL of synchro activities.  Jessie still coaches the college team and needed help on some trio suits for nationals which was the following weekend on March 20-23 (yaaay last minute bedazzling!). THEN on St. Patty's Day was the Age Group's Spring Fling meet at the pool by my house and I volunteered to judge (I used to coach, but it was too much for me and had to step down - I miss them, but it was the right choice for everyone).

So here goes a post about how Jessie and I "made" these suits.  Please know that this was our second time making synchro suits, we are not experts, so any and all suggestions on how to make this process easier is much appreciated!!

First, the girls had to find the base suit on which we would apply rhinestones/glitter/etc.  They found some epic suits on SwimOutlet.com.  They are Metallic V-2 Backs, color Purple.  (After seeing these in person, I bought one for myself.  Not to bedazzle, but just to make myself feel pretty at the pool).  Once they came in the mail, Jessie bought/gathered the following...
  • Rhinestones with glue on the back
  • Jones Tones fabric glue
  • Glitter (that matched the colored rhinestones - this is key!!)
  • Cardboard
  • Paper and pencil
  • Chalk
  • Paper towels
  • Some sort of rhinestone appliqueing gun/utensil (we used wood burning utensils... NO JUDGING, IT WORKED... and we couldn't afford new equipment...)
  • Yarn
  • Tweezers
  • Tape measure/yard stick (both work best)
  • Safety Pins
  • Wine and Girl Scout cookies (this is a must).
First, sketch out your ideas.  Several ideas are a good plan so just in case your first idea didn't pan out, you can try something simple.  

The pattern we went with was the top one.  The bottom three didn't pan out as well for us. We opted to not do the back bedazzling either.  I joked it looked like fancy fart lines and that just ruined it for us, haha.

The first big stripe didn't look good/was requiring more glitter and glue than we had so we opted to go with squiggles of glitter and straight lines of rhinestones.

With the cardboard, you want to stretch the suit over it so it's taunt, but not over stretched (don't want to ruin the suit, but you also don't want the glue/rhinestones to crack when the girls put them on.  Synchro suits are traditionally tight... keep that in mind).

Some suits require some weight so it doesn't pop up in the process.  We used candles because that's what I had available.  Weights would work too.

Once you have the suit stretched, grab your yarn and place it on the suit about how you want the rhinestones to look.  Use the yarn first because it doesn't mark the suit at all and can easily be moved, adjusted.  We cut the yarn at different lengths on purpose to make it look better.

We played with the width between the yarn multiple times.  This was the final decision.

We had three different sizes of suits, so when you're making designs please keep this in mind.  If you have various sizes, the designs on the front of each suit are going to have to be slightly bigger or smaller so they don't look weird when they're standing next to each other.  We measured the distances of each piece of yarn, the distances between each piece, as well as the distance from the edges of the suits (example: 2" above the Dolphin logo).  Once we were satisfied with the placement of the yarn, we used chalk to mark out the line on which we'd place the rhinestones.

To remove the chalk we used a wet paper towel.  But we didn't remove it until the rhinestones were all securely on the suit.  Yes, we know it wasn't entirely straight here.  It's OK.

Once the chalk is on the suit, take your tweezers and place the rhinestones, all various sizes and colors, it all depends on your mood. We used three different sizes and three different colors.  All the suits have the big clear rhinestones, the medium clear, and the small clearish/beige ones.  However, depending on the color glitter the girls would be getting for their squiggles, the extra rhinestone embellishments would match their glitter.  So this suit was the purple/pink glitter, so the rhinestones were pink. Once the stones are all on the chalk lines (not secured on yet! JUST PLACED ON LOOSE. So don't kick it or your stones will FLLLLY) use the yard stick to make sure they are all as straight as you want them.  Since we didn't want them zigzagging, we used the yard stick to make them as straight as possible.

Easier said than done. Jessie did a good job though.

Straightening out some more.

Once they're straight or in the pattern you want, this is when we got out our wood burners.  I fully recognize that people usually use a rhinestone gun or some sort of craft gun, but this is our first experience with rhinestones.  In college, we hand sewed on our suits strings of sequins (WHAT ENTHRALLING PARTIES US SYCHRO LADIES HAD OOOOOHHHH YEAH) so don't judge too harshly.  Jessie researched online the appropriate temperature but we held the tip on the top of the stone until we felt it slide a little (not too hard or the tip might slip and burn the suit - you really don't want that!).  The sliding sensation is the glue on the rhinestone melting.  

Firmly, but carefully placing the tip of the burner on the top of the stone. 

This is the LONGEST step of the process.  It took us forever to rhinestone one suit.  So if you're lucky enough to have multiple people working on these suits, have them use the pre-cut yarn, the pictures, and the tape measure to set-up the next suit (placing the rhinestones and ensuring it matches the suit currently being rhienstoned.

Here's what a suit looked like with the rhinestones all attached.

This is the second suit which was blue, not purple.

When the rhinestones have cooled (they can burn you too just after being applied, so be careful!) grab your fabric glue and add a row of swirls.  After each row of glue has been added, pour glitter on it. When I say pour, I mean dump, cover, saturate, smother, drown, etc.  After being involved in this sport at several levels, I can honestly say there is no such thing as too much glitter.

Make sure your swirls match.  Some of mine were clumpy, had a twirl, etc.  Use the wet paper towel to wipe away anything that doesn't match and try again.  It matters. Don't half ass it.

Our glitter/glue combination took about 8 hours to dry.  So here's all three suits while they were in their glitter drying stage!

So pretty!

But... it wasn't enough.  We had rhinestones left over and we wanted to tie in all three colors on each suit.  So we took the small colored rhinestones and put all three along the color of each suit.

Ahhh... much better.

Once it's been 8 hours (or more, depends on the glue's recommendations), shake off the excess glitter.  We put it on newspaper and poured it back into it's proper container so we can reuse the glitter (this stuff isn't cheap).  Do any touch-ups with glue/glitter as needed to ensure they match as much as possible.

Now... for the fun part.  WINE AND GIRL SCOUT COOKIES! Om nom nom nom nom!

Time to drink that much earned wine!

If you've made suits or something similar and have better suggestions, please let me know!  We're learning and are always looking to make this easier on us. =)

And here's what they look like all done and on the girls at Collegiate Nationals! Aren't they just an ADORABLE trio?

The beautiful trio at 2013 Collegiate Nationals held at Stanford University, CA. Great job ladies!!

Monday, March 25, 2013

Here Piggy, Piggy, Piggy...

A couple weeks ago I made a flying pig for a co-worker that was really awesome to me and is leaving =(

I never go with traditional colors. Phfft, a pink pig.

I got the tutorial for free from here.  It was my first Double Pointed Needles project (legit project, not practice) and I really loved making this pig (the wings sucked -- but that wasn't the tutorial's fault, it's because I'm not great at SSK).

So I made another one  for a friend's birthday.....

The blue was super slick. Not as easy to knit as the yellow one.

His legs were 2 rows longer than the tutorial (experimenting)... regret doing that.  He looks like he's sliding into home plate.

Still super cute.

And then another....

The eyes are in white, but it's so colorful it's hard to see here.

I did a much better job following the tutorial for the legs.  His are spot on.

His wings suck.  Three pigs later and I'm STILL not good at that part. Hmmph.  

This one was for another friend, but the hubby commandeered it as his own (he really liked the colors). 

I think the yarn color makes him look like a pinata. But as long as he's happy...

Still have two more to make before moving onto another knit pattern!





Saturday, March 23, 2013

Springtime for ...

A couple weeks ago two of our friends came up and we spent the day frolicking.  I'm not a great photographer, but she is and had recently bought a new portrait lens for her Canon Rebel something.  I have a Canon Rebel something as well and joined her in picture taking outside with my two furry friends.

Since I tried to knit some eggs tonight and just got frustrated as they turned out holey (how appropriate!) I'll share some of my picture skills.

The hubby likes to point out that I overexpose my pictures (guilty as charged) so any advice on messing with settings on a digital camera to prevent that is much appreciated!

Outside? Mmmm...




SHE'S POSING. Man, she's a beautiful cat though.

I think this is my favorite of Bailey from that day.






What's this?


Another goodie of Bailey.


She sees something she likes.

Just kidding. This is how people NORMALLY see her... a streak running away from them.

Playing on the rocks.


I was carrying Domino back from the HVAC system into the sunny area near us.  I candidly pointed the camera at her and got this.  I love it. It's so... her.


Tried the candid shot again.... didn't work.


I didn't have the best angle, Jessie did, but Bailey started rolling on the rocks and looking super cute.



Domino was put in time-out because she kept trying to run away.

Comments welcome!

Thursday, March 21, 2013

I should have never made two.

I leave two bunnies for ONE week.... and this is what happens.

It is a cute family portrait. Only the blue one is mine.  The rest are Easter gifts. =)


Sheesh!  "Hoppy" Spring everyone!

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

When I dip, you dip, we dip.

I've been working on Nina a lot lately, so Pinta has been glaring at me in judgement the whole time.  Since she's older and needs more love, I decided to make a cover for her (something I've been meaning to do but kept forgetting) to keep the dust out.

Remember those KitchenAid Covers I made? Well, I used the same principle for it but I didn't want to make it the same boring one fabric.  I wanted to make it similar to this, but not exactly the same. So it inspired me to do a quilted block for the cover.  But I did use maxi piping again (I kind of fell in love with that stuff).

I found a really cool bear tracks block on Pinterest and modified it so it was tracks walking up and over my machine.  I added a solid stripe next to it so it would be a bear walking under the night sky.


I only did four but looking at it now I could have done six or eight and it would have looked better. Oh well.

Originally, I was going to use this as an excuse to work on my machine quilting skills with Nina, but I opted to be SUPER nerdy.  Can you tell what I did? No? Well... maybe you tell what they are from looking at the side piece of the cover ....

The dork inside me is giddy. (It's Orion the Hunter).

I started in the middle and pinned the heck out of it with the piping in between the two pieces.  Seriously, the more pins the better for this.

See the Big Dipper? I know, there's about an inch gap from the bottom.  I'm OK with that, but I'll have to add an inch next time.

You can see the Little Dipper now (that thread is from the piece of fabric place holder, not my cover).  Get why the tracks had to be bears? The original constellations (Ursa Major and Ursa Minor) are shown as bears, not cups or anything dipper-related.

Orion didn't come out as well he should have. My mistake when sewing them together.

Technically, this is reversible but I really made this side pop so... no need to see the other side. =) Happy sewing!

OK.... fine! Here's the other side. But there are no fancy stitches or piping, just plain crazy cat lady fabric....



Feedback welcome!

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Sir Hops Alot and Blue Bunny

Since November I've been knitting non-stop.  I blame this pattern.

I found it on Pinterest back in October and thought it was the CUTEST thing ever.  However, when I read the pattern instructions it scared the hell out of me. It might as well have been in Chinese.  So, I taught myself via YouTube channels and friends how to knit.

My most recent adventure was finally taking the leap from scarves to knitting a toy on straight needles.  I found this adorable knit bunny pattern (thank you Pinterest!) and it seemed easy enough for me to make. 

Introducing... Sir Hops Alot!
And Blue Bunny!

I used this tutorial to make Sir Hops Alot and Blue Bunny.  I used a long pair of size 4 straight needles to make Sir Hops Alot, but that ended up hurting my wrist.  So, my Blue Bunny was knit on size 8 circular needles which made it a lot easier.  Highly recommend that (although, I don't recommend buying circular needles with 36" cables. The cables get twisted and it frustrated the crap out of me. Newbie mistake!)

To make the ears, I followed the instructions in the tutorial for decreasing and increasing the stitches, but I used this video as a guideline to make it a different color on each side.

I didn't like how she did the normal ears.  It looked too... ehh. I really wanted to add some flare to it.  Another project I'm working on had me whipstitch another knit swatch to the ears to give it two tones, but I thought was still phfft.  Tried to make it a little "me" I guess.  Plus the faceless bunny look was going to give me nightmares so I added some eyes, nose, and some whiskers.

Also, the same blog posted a new tutorial on an easier bunny... but I haven't made that yet.  It's cute, but I like mine more.