04 March 2015

How I Make Embroidered Balls

A big shout out to Mel, who reminded me that I had taken photographs of the process of making an embroidered ball last October. I have been meaning to write up the instructions. So Thank You, Mel for giving me the kick I needed!

Start to finish minus how to embroider. If truth be known, I really don't know how to embroider. I just wing it. We will talk about embroidering later on in this post.

This is how a wool covered ball comes into existence:

Supplies needed:

2 bottle caps
metal bits or small beads
tape
plastic bags
felted wool sweater remnants
thick cord
crochet cotton thread
regular sewing thread
embroidery thread
needles and pins
sharp scissors

You'll need two plastic soda bottle caps or bottle caps about that size, some little metal junk or plastic beads and some tape. If you don't want your balls to rattle, don't bother with anything to put inside the two caps. If you want your balls to rattle louder, use metal bits. The heavier the bits, the louder the rattle. Do note that the rattle, even using metal bits, is not terribly loud.
These caps came from a plastic water bottle. The metal bits are from a broken clip. You can use whatever is sitting around that will fit inside your bottle caps once you've taped them together. In some balls I have used a bead soup consisting of mostly plastic seed beads and other very small beads. The beads make the rattle sound like maracas, but the sound is not loud at all. Metal caps would work also. Your caps need to be the same size so they fit tightly together.

You'll also need three plastic grocery bags. Any old plastic bags will work: bread sacks, potato bags, noodle bags, any clean plastic packaging. I use grocery bags.

If you're using bits for a rattle, stuff them inside one bottle cap and tape the two together. Like this. Give it a shake to see if you like how it sounds. If not, undo the tape, readjust things and try again.

Once you are happy with how it sounds, start taping the grocery bags around the bottle caps.
Layer one.

Layer two.

Layer three.
The ball should fit comfortably in your hand. If you want a larger ball, add more plastic. If you want a smaller ball don't put as many layers.
You get to decide the size of your balls! 

You will need some thick cording of some sort. This is acrylic macrame cord that is about 1/4 inch thick. Any old thick cord you have laying around will work. I've used much thicker macrame cord, sisal rope and seams cut from sweaters and other cast off clothing. 

You need to take your thick cord and give your plastic ball a few wraps of it. No need to cover all the plastic. You'll know you have enough thick cord when your ball magically becomes more roundish~!
Now you need some thin cord. This is crochet cotton. Any thin cord will work. Acrylic yarn, crewel embroidery thread, whatever you have a lot of. Cause it does take a fair amount of thin cord to cover the ball. I happen to have a lot of crochet cotton. Use whatever you have! 

Start winding and 

keep on winding till you've covered the ball sufficiently.  No need to completely cover your thick cord. Just make sure you don't have any big gaps between the thick and thin cords. You'll need those thin cords to sew the wool onto.

You'll need some thick sweater fabric. This blue wool was once a sweater. Acrylic sweater material will work also, but wool is much, much easier to sew! You'll want to felt the wool sweater in the washing machine on the hottest water setting, then throw that puppy in the dryer. You'll want the label on your sweater to say 100% wool.  Solid colors work best but I have made balls with a houndstooth pattern that turned out quite nicely. So use whatever you have!
Acrylic sweaters WILL NOT felt. Don't even bother trying!

To begin, cut either a triangle shape or a circle out of the wool. Measurements are not important. Eyeball it. No bigger than what you see in this picture. 

Start where your thin cord ends so you can tame that end. Put your wool shape over the end and pin it down so it lays against the ball. I usually put a pin in each point of the triangle and go from there. If you jab the pins in completely they won't fight with the thread.

Neatness isn't a requirement. I actually don't know how to sew any more than I know how to embroider. As you can clearly see. Sew your wool shape to the ball with regular sewing thread. Color doesn't matter either. Use what you have!

Cut another shape that will butt up against the first shape sewn on. Pin it in place and sew it to the ball. 

Repeat that process. You'll have to figure out what shape is required and cut it accordingly. Wool is very forgiving so you really don't have to be exact about it. I always keep the scissors handy to snip off whatever isn't working. Make sure you sew each piece you add to the one next to it.

Just keep adding to it.





When you get to the end you really should leave a larger hole to fill than what you see here. It's easier to cover the stitching with the embroidery if you don't have lots of stitching close together like this ball has. It probably won't matter if you are a neat seamstress. I am not!


And your ball is now ready to be embroidered!
It amazes me that they always turn out round!  It is like magic!

We're going to talk about embroidery.

Embroidery is not hard to do. You can teach yourself by watching youtube videos or visiting some embroidery blogs on the world wide web. There are a lot of places to find out the different stitches and how to do them.

Any embroidery thread will work for this project. If you'd prefer to applique your ball, feel free to do so! I've had great success with that as well.

How you decide to decorate your ball is totally up to you! I find that the chain stitch is my stitch of choice for wool balls. It goes quickly and I've mastered it. It also is a bold stitch that doesn't hide in the wool like the straight stitch does sometimes.
I always use all six strands of embroidery thread! You can use however many of the six strands you like. 

Here's the finished wool ball. 
I try to put my embroidery stitches over the stitches holding the cover on. You won't be able to put knots in your embroidery thread, not unless you want knots to show. To make sure the embroidery thread stays, start your first stitch as far away from where you want it to come out as the needle will allow. I like long needles for this. And hide the ends by putting them securely under the wool cover. The longer the thread you leave under the cover the less likely it is to come undone.

My balls are generally about the same size as a tennis ball...give or take. Some are a tad smaller, some a tad larger.

Here are some other finished wool balls.

These three are embroidered with crewel embroidery yarn. The orange one has an acrylic sweater fabric cover. It was a bear to sew.

These are all wool. The two yellow ones are cashmere sweater fabric. It works OK, but the thicker the wool, the easier it is to embroider the ball and the smoother the ball ends up. You can also see one of the houndstooth wool fabric balls. 

The two yellow balls have nubby cotton sweater fabric covers. Again, not as easy to embroider as the thick wool covers.




A couple of DOD balls with felt applique instead of embroidery. Both of these balls are about the size of a softball which is a lot bigger than a tennis ball.








There are no patterns to follow for the embroidery. I just go for it with the embroidery and end up with what I end up with. 

These balls could maybe be used as dryer balls. I haven't tested any of them to say for certain they'd hold up to the abuse of the dryer. 

I can tell you the cats LOVE playing with them!

They'd probably make pretty good dog toys also, if your dog wasn't a big chewer. I've not tried them out on Fred dog cause he'd have the covers off in no time at all! 

You could also use them as baby toys.

This is how I make embroidered wool balls. I hope this inspires you to make your own recycled wool balls!

Thanks for reading!
Remember...
be good to one another!
It matters!
Peace
831


02 March 2015

Playing Catch Up

Hello Readers!

Been awhile since I posted the goings-on in my world. Figured I'd better get on top of it before it got away from me. Not that I've accomplished a great deal since the last time I was here but I may have a pickup on the arting. One never knows with that muse of mine, what she might decide needs to get done!
That, and I am fighting sleep again. With me it's either too much sleep or not enough sleep or I'm sleeping when the rest of the world is awake. I'm sleeping while the rest of the world is awake right now. Been this way for about a week now. The ONLY good thing about sleeping while the rest of the world is awake is that when I'm awake, everyone else is asleep and I know there will be no distractions. Well, other than laundry and dishes...but we all have to deal with the housework! And I do hope yours is going according to plan!

I have been busy making books. Sometimes I'll be doing nothing exciting and ideas will hit me. I was cleaning the kitchen a week ago or so when I picked up an orange juice container and said, "I bet I could make a book or two out of this!" Random thoughts! I washed out the carton, sat it in the drain rack and went on with my day. Later the same day I finished off another carton of orange juice and did the same thing with it.
I didn't drink a gallon of OJ in one day! The first carton was finished the day before and being the lazy person I am at times, that carton was still sitting on the cutting board on the counter. The other carton in the fridge was only about half full. I hadn't touched it in a few days and opened the new carton thinking the other one was the new carton. I'm not only lazy sometimes, I'm very spacey most times!
At any rate, some books did get made from the two OJ cartons!  Sometimes the muse is spot on!

This one is 2.5 inches wide and 6 inches tall, sewn in the japanese stab binding. It has about 30 pages of orange writing paper. The tablet they came from says it is bond paper. I sewed it with orange embroidery thread.

This one came from the Minute Maid carton. It is 4 x 4 inches with orange and white writing paper. The two colors are stacked every other page. There are about 40 pages. Sewn in japanese stab binding with orange embroidery thread.

This one is from a Shurfine OJ carton (the cheap stuff---still quite tasty!). It's 3 x 4 inches, again with orange and white writing paper. This time the there are three segments of paper. Orange all stacked in the middle. It is sewn with orange embroidery thread in the japanese stab binding.

This one is 2.5 x 3.5 inches with about 50 pages of white writing paper. This is my least favorite of the four OJ books. Again it's sewn with orange embroidery thread in the japanese stab binding.

I like how the OJ carton books turned out. They feel good when in the hand. That waxed paperboard is easy to cut on the guillotine cutter, it bends nicely to accommodate the binding method and I still have some remnants of carton left to make some tiny books.

I did say I have been busy making books.
I needed to make some things out of maps for the gift shop in Lucas so I dragged out a map of Kansas and covered some cereal box chipboard in them. 

Kansas City
I thought I would get more than six covers from one road map. And I would have if I would have put words on the inside of the covers instead of the blue paper I put there instead. 

Wichita
The back covers of each of these books is more map of other towns in Kansas.

This one shows my part of Kansas.  Where the four red lines meet is Stockton, where I live. Lots of open space in my part of the state! 

All three of the books are 5 x 6 inches with white computer paper pages. There are sewn in the coptic stitch with embroidery thread. I was really pleased with the stitching on the orange. I used variegated thread and it all lined up beautifully! Unlike the green ones which were also sewn with variegated thread. There are five signatures of 8 sheets of paper in each. 
I have a whole basket full of road maps that need to be used! There will be more map books, I'm sure!

I showed you all one lone ball like these in a post previously. These are smaller than that lone ball. There are nine balls hanging there. All made with 1 1/8 inch circles. They are about 3 inches across. These, along with the map books are headed to the gift shop in Lucas.

A book in progress. This one gave me trouble so I abandoned it for the time beings! I have only made two other books in this way. Neither of them were totally successful. This one isn't either! Matter of fact, I made two page blocks for this pink poodle cover and neither of them fit properly. And I'm having trouble with how the damn thing goes together! I've watched a couple different videos about making this type of book but more study will need to be done before I finish this one. I'm also thinking that pink poodle cover might become something totally different than a book. I just don't, at this time, know what will happen here. You'll just have to stay tuned till it happens.

Another embroidered ball. 

Same ball, different shot.

Again, same ball, different shot.

I really like these swirl patterns on this ball. I think the next one done with this design will be done in shades of one color. Blue perhaps. 

I finished a couple of bowls. Terrible shot of the bowl! Sorry bout that. (My laziness showing! :) ) This is one of the bowls that needed a makeover after my having stored them improperly. I did an experiment for the inside of this bowl. My sister gave me some terribly smelly stuff that one generally puts onto the backside of an aquarium. It makes a frosted pattern on glass when it dries. My bowl isn't made of glass. (I'm not one to always follow the rules either!) My bowl is paper mache painted with wall paint and varnished with paint that was specifically made for glass. Different than the stuff I got from my sister. I decided to just go for it. It'd either work or it wouldn't. 
I really should have taken heed to the advice given, to go outside to work with the aquarium stuff. I think even the cats and the dog were a bit stoned after this experiment! I actually put the bowl on the front porch for the next two days! The kitchen (where my painting table is) stank to high heaven for a few hours even after I put the door open for half hour or so. It was cold outside! Couldn't let the house air properly. 
And as you can see, it didn't really work like I had hoped it would! 
I still like what it did do though. 
This bowl is cereal bowl sized. I really don't know the dimensions of it. I know it's cereal bowl sized though because I used one of the bowls I usually eat cereal out of for the mold! 
I have four different colors of this aquarium stuff to experiment with. I know that it does what it is supposed to do on acetate, clear plastic. My sister did that experiment. 

I also finished the little words bowl. paper mache again. This one is little, only about three inches across and couple inches deep. It is painted red inside and out. Outside is solid red, no words showing through. I painted the very top of the rim with gunmetal gray paint.

I still haven't located the bag of shredded money so the other three bowls that need some help are sitting on the shelf, waiting patiently. 

I got a new size Q crochet hook. This basket is about 7 inches across, three inches deep, crocheted with the Q hook. I used 1/2 inch red elastic for the 'yarn'. It is stretchy...somewhat. The basket is from the left over elastic after I finished  

this rug. 
Someone brought me a big box of elastic sometime back. I think it was my mother who brought it but I really don't remember. The elastic was in long lengths on plastic spools. A few were on cardboard spools. Lots of different colors! More of some colors than others. This rug is about 26 inches across. I used the Q hook on it too. 
Most of the elastic came from the 1960s and 70s. I called it underwear elastic. That's what it reminded me of! It was certainly of no use as elastic at this late hour of the game. All this elastic has been taking up a whole drawer in my cabinet for a couple summers! I'll be keeping this rug. Fred dog has already claimed it as his. He sleeps on it. It is on the carpet in the bedroom because if it is to go on linoleum, it has to have a rubber mat underneath it. 
Now I have to figure out what the heck to fill that drawer with!

The drapery basket is getting taller! I thought about tearing this all out and beginning again with the Q hook but changed my mind when I realized how crazy that was! I'm using a J hook to do this basket and it really is a tight squeeze with the drapery material. I'm going to keep plugging along with this one and eventually it will be done...or I'll run out of drapery material and it will still be done!

I have made two embroidered balls since the last post. The other one I showed you earlier was started on the 20th of Feb. I know this because I took it to my sister's house for my brother's birthday party. I was sewing the cover on it then. It was probably done in the next two days. That means that 

this one was probably started on the 22nd.

Same ball....

Same ball. My oldest sister wants to see some finished balls. She's only seen the covers being sewn on! She's moving into a new house and she's sure she needs one or two of these (sight unseen) to sit in a bowl somewhere. I'm sure she needs a lot more than one or two of them! 

Apparently books are still on the radar! I cut some book pages earlier today. This is only about half of the ones I cut. The other half are white computer paper. I thought that box of computer paper was all white paper. I was surprised and somewhat pleased to find this green paper in the bottom three inches of the box! 
I'll be keeping most of these pages for a book I'm making for myself. I need a new day book. The one I'm using at the moment isn't working. I haven't written in it for a couple of weeks. I need to get back into the habit of writing in it every single day!

play Wednesday big love Thursday be all

I noticed those are the words on the wall behind that stack of papers in the picture above. They are spelling words my grandson needed to learn when he was a first grader! He's now a 7th grader! 

Play big, love, be all!

Thanks for hanging in there to the end!
Remember....
be good to one another!
It matters!
Play big!
Love all!
Peace
831


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