Free Awareness Ribbon Crochet Pattern

Awareness Ribbon Pattern

I did come up with this ribbon pattern, but I obviously don’t have any rights to the charities or organizations that the colors can sometimes mean. If you’d like to know more about what color ribbons are associated with which kind of awareness, (There are a lot and it’s neat!), then check out this wiki page!

I’ve decided to share this pattern for free, so if you share it with a friend I’d like for you to mention me and/or link it back to where they can find my site! Let me know whatcha think! Thanks!    ~Starling

Awareness ribbon 3 type

I use an F hook (3.75 MM) and either Red Heart yarn or Caron Simply Soft yarn.

With main color: Ch 26, sc in 2nd ch from hook and in next 9 ch. 2 sc in each of the next 5 ch, sc in the last 10 ch. Fasten off. If you’re wanting a more slender ribbon, you can stop here and cross the sc row in the way it naturally wants to bend to form a ribbon shape. Sew it in place with a yarn needle and weave in ends. If you want a border or a more pronounced ribbon, proceed to the next step.

Awareness ribbon no border

Cross the sc row in the way it naturally wants to bend to form a ribbon shape. With border color: Jn with a sl st in one of the top stitches of the ribbon. Ch 1, sc in the same st and around the border of the ribbon except for in the four bottom corners and the middle point where the ribbon crosses. Sl st in the two stitches in the middle up-side-down ‘V’ instead of sc and this will pull the ribbon into a better shape. Then to shape the corners of the ribbon squared rather than round, you’ll put 3 sc in each corner. Jn with a sl st in the first sc and fasten off. Weave in ends. (I use a yarn needle to weave in all the ends of my projects.)

Awareness ribbon border

Add a safety-pin to wear it on your clothing, or sew it into place in all kinds of creative places!

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Illusive December

Why didn’t anyone tell me how awesome Zelda is before now?!!! I’ve only been playing Ocarina of Time off and on for a week now and I’m already getting sucked into Link Obsession! Must…have…more…rupees…. RUPEES!!!!!

Christmas is coming up fast, so I’m spending a lot of time crocheting gifts in a time limit; which I’m NOT good with, haha! Crafting season is now in full swing!!! There should be plenty crochet pictures after the holidays, though! I’m not getting as much time as I want to experiment with my new gaming hobby, but I am playing several different things a little every day that I’ll be able to blog about later: Castlevania, Devil May Cry 3, Lego Harry Potter years 1-4, and Lego Pirates of the Caribbean. I’m enjoying them all so far!!

I’m working on finishing an older Supergirl trilogy that I had been trying to get a hold of for years now, and I finally have all three, so I’ll chat about that when I’m done. I’m all caught up with the Journey into Mystery and have the one coming out tomorrow on preorder! Loki! Lokilokilokilokilokilokiloki!!!! Aaaaaaand…I’m caught up with The Mighty Thor comics now and anxiously awaiting the next volume to release! I LOVE Thor!

I’m getting a pile of new comic volumes for Christmas, I’m thinking! My husband asked Santa for a Swamp Thing theme because Swamp Thing is AWESOME! Yeah! So I’m gonna have a lot of comics to blog about after the holidays as well.

Man, my little crocheting digits are killing me! Ice! I need ice!

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Gaming: Seduction and Introduction

Gaming: Seduction and Introduction 

My husband is a seasoned gamer who glides smoothly through the story line and makes it impossible for me not to look up from my own hobbies to follow along with every single cut scene that comes along. The quality of games has come a long way from the ones I used to love when I was younger, and there is no sign that the progress is ever going to slow down!

I get glued to the games my husband is playing like some kind of awesome interactive movie that lasts as long as we want it to. Before I realize it I find myself pointing out suggestions:

“Try over there!”

“Oh! What did he just do to you? Why? Well get him! I HATE HIM!!! YEAH! Yeah, shoot him in the face! RIGHT IN THE FACE!!! Oh, I didn’t know you could tea-bag them for good measure!” *snort*

“Hey, go back! There’s a cat. Pet that cat! Hey? Hey, Valtiel? Can you pet the cat? Oh, you can! Awe, kitty…”

And those are the games that have subjects I normally wouldn’t seek out on my own. If he picks up a Lego game I might as well give up and kick back to watch the entire game.

It helps that my husband is very patient about my attentions, and he even seems to enjoy it that I get roped into what he’s doing. If you’re reading this and longing for your loved one or pal to get into gaming then I would suggest you start by getting them hooked and interested! Be patient and allow all the questions. Take some time to explore and investigate the things they’re curious about. I loved realizing that there are things to peek my interest and a way to interact with them that makes me feel like a part of the team rather than a nuisance.

I guess that’s as much explanation as you need to put together that I am the newest of N00Bs that there can be. I just never considered that I might ever care to pick up a controller or invest in the systems that came and went over the years. Then my husband turns to me one day, as he had many times in the past, and asks, “Do you wanna try playing one of the games I have?”

This time, however, I pause instead of just giggling at how sweet he is to pretend he wants to play games with a ‘girl’, and I look at him. He’s serious. Has he always been serious? I think so! It finally dawned on me that I’m investing almost as much time in some games as my husband, and I had to ask myself the same question: Do I want to try a game? I was shocked to find that the answer was, “Duh, yeah!” Then my husband croaked in shock. Well, okay. He didn’t croak, but many could probably imagine his surprise after six years of me just watching and leaning away from the controller insecurely every time he asked me. He had already been counting his blessings that I encouraged his gaming and got excited when he gave a bad-guy what they had coming.

So I decided that I would like to start gaming, but where in the heck should I begin? My husband, who I will often refer to now as my ‘gamer sensei’, *snort*, can run circles around me in gaming and would probably wind up carrying us the whole game. I have these horrific daydreams of him sighing deeply in boredom and falling asleep while I’m desperately clicking and twisting away yelping, “Help me again! Come back! Which way do I go? What do I hit again? Where the hell am I???”

He insists this wouldn’t be the case, and maybe it wouldn’t, but first things’ first: How the heck do I use these new fangled controllers? (We’re talking for the PS3, here.) OMG! The last time I played a game they were two-dimensional with one direction to go and a shoot and jump button. Now I wait for Valtiel to walk off so I can stare, wide-eyed, at the two joy sticks and four buttons for each hand-  *turns the controller slightly*  -I mean SIX buttons for each hand!!!!

I finally broke down and admitted the first reason for my hesitation to my gamer sensei. We talked about what games might be rewarding enough not to be discouraging to me as a beginner. *cough*  Kids games  *cough*  Yet I don’t want to be board with a storyline that won’t hold my attention, either. We have Gamefly, and it really, really is worth it! Games are soooo expensive, especially as quick as Valtiel flies through them, and now I’ll be able to experiment with so many games without fearing making a horrible mistake and being turned off of games in frustration.

Gamer sensei had the answer!  “You love the Lego games. I know that in Lego Batman 2 you don’t have to use the top trigger buttons (R-1, R-2, L-1, L-2) much, if any at all, and you can use the directional buttons on the left instead of having to use the joy stick. You also don’t have to move the camera angle. That’s what you’d usually do with the right joy stick. You can use the left joy stick to move as well, however, so you could get familiar with the 3-D game concept with the directional buttons, get acquainted with the four right buttons first, and then much later start using the joy stick to move. Then it won’t be nearly as intimidating.”

If none of that makes sense then have your gamer sensei read it so they’ll be able to understand what types of games they need to suggest that will have the same types of options as Lego Batman 2 that I just explained. I wasn’t really sure what Valtiel was talking about to begin with until I started playing and he explained as we went.

Well, let me tell you: Lego Batman 2 is great! I still am not using the joy stick full-time yet, but I’ve been having so much fun with the choice of Lego Batman 2. Now, my advice for the new gamers and their sensei:

My husband sat with me patiently and gave tips every time I mewled or squeaked and told on the bad guys for chasing me. For all you new gamers out there, I’d say that step one is to start paying attention to the different games that your experienced gamer buddy is going through and allow yourself to get caught up in the fun. For the sensei’s out there, pay attention to the things that ‘hook’ your partner into the game so that you can seduce them into curiosity and make them feel like they’re already part of your team. Use patience and try not to bark at them at all for dozens of questions. Remember that’s a good sign, and you don’t want to spook them into avoiding you and loathing the games that take you away from them. It can easily become a bonding experience rather than a life long relationship battle. Explain what ‘fighting a boss’ means so that you’ll have quick lingo that they’ll understand for you to communicate that you can’t focus for a few minutes or you’ll get frustrated and loose. Remind them that it’s not always like that and that casual game play is okay to explore and communicate with one another.

When the N00B is ready to try a game, you’ll need to pick a game that is light hearted and encouraging. Remember the main point is to become comfortable with the controller to whatever game system you’re planning to start with. I’ll be adding game reviews from an overly positive new gamer’s point of view from time to time along with what I enjoyed about each game and the things I found most confusing and/or difficult about the games.

If you know of games that fit the criteria of the beginner games I’ve been describing, or if you have any suggestions for beginner games, feel free to leave a comment that tells us all which game it is and for what system it’s for. Old or new systems and/or game suggestions are all welcome!

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I must get back to exploding Lego bad guys with Lego Superman’s heat-vision stuff!

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Free Crochet Pattern Sites

There are all kinds of free patterns you can get online to keep yourself entertained, surf for specific things you’d like to create, or even just browse around when you have no idea what you’re wanting to do next. I find the yarn companies that want you to have plenty of projects so you’ll use their yarn are very helpful, so look up your favorite yarn brand and see if they have patterns catered to your yarn type! Many of these sites will let you create an account so that you can keep a list of your favorites. I’d say it’s totally worth it, otherwise you’ll find the most awesome pattern and then several weeks later you’ll have no idea where you saw it. I would suggest keeping a list of your favorite crochet sites on the same page in the back of your binder (scroll down on this link to find out what I suggest using a binder for) and keep your user name and password for each of those sites right there with it. I used to get so frustrated before I began to do this because I would make a list of patterns I loved and wanted to save to work on later when I ran out of things to do but then months would go by and when I went back I couldn’t remember my password! I eventually just picked a day and visited all the sites creating accounts with the same user name and password and now keep it in my binder as well!

Sometimes you’ll need to find and click on “free patterns” if the site has both free and $$$ patterns. Also, don’t forget to narrow your search to crochet projects so that you don’t keep finding knitting patterns you like a third of the time and then getting frustrated when you realize it’s not for crochet. There’s plenty for crochet alone!

Here are my all time favorite pattern sites. I may add to them anytime I find another awesome one!

www.lionbrand.com

www.redheart.com

www.crochetpatterncentral.com

www.raverly.com

www.naturallycaron.com

www.bernat.com

www.sugarncream.com

Don’t forget, though, that many times you can find patterns to buy that can be just what you were looking for in an upcoming special occasion. Keep up with your favorite pattern creators just as you do your fav. free patterns sites so you don’t miss out on their new stuff! I personally use Etsy because I have access to all kinds of different individuals with completely different style! I search under patters, and then the project type is crochet, of course!

www.etsy.com

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Crochet Equipment

These are the things I use most often while crocheting. Becoming familiar with these things will help you understand the difference between yarn and crochet hook sizes.

3 crochet hooks (sizes F/5-3.75MM, K/10 ½ -6.50MM, and N-9.00MM) Small pair of craft scissors Yarn needles Bread bag ties or trash bag ties Yarn (Type depends on project. I’ll explain.) A binder and page protectors

Hooks: The smaller the number/letter, the smaller the hook. These three hooks give me a very wide variety of projects to work on.

If you’re interested in making lace stuff or even very tiny doll clothes you’d probably need a smaller crochet hook and a type of yarn that resembles thread, but I don’t work with things that small. I find I can make things as small as Barbie clothes and finger puppets with the smallest (size F) hook.

I make average projects, such as blankets and hats with the middle (K) hook.

When I am impatient I use the large (N) hook and chunky yarn. I have made many hats with this and blankets simply fly by in bulky/chunky yarn. I can’t seem to get this large hook to work out interchangeably with other yarn types, though, like I do with the first two hooks.

Yarn: I get all my yarn from Wal-Mart. Sadly, however, not all Wal-Marts have large craft sections, so I can go to the one in town for regular yarn but have to go to one twenty five minutes away to pick up chunk yarn.

Small Yarn: I don’t work with the super tiny thread stuff, but like I said, if you are wanting to make something smaller and smaller, go for it. I wouldn’t suggest starting with it, though.

When I make small things, such as the doll clothes and finger puppets, I get the Caron Simply Soft 6 oz Medium (4) yarn. It says on it, if you look at all those little pictures, that you should use a 5MM hook and it should be able to make some kind of blah blah sized blah…yeah. I never paid any attention. I just experimented. It all seems to be the same size to me, just different colors, so find your brand of yarn that is this size at your favorite store and use it accordingly. I find that all the Caron yarn at Wal-Mart seems thinner and works really well to make small things. Also, when I want to make a fancy, rich, soft afgan or shawl I will use my medium hook to go faster, but use this yarn instead of the next yarn I’m going to tell you about. Baby blankets out of this turn out super cute, but I get too impatient most of the time to do anything with the small yarn and hooks except small projects. Don’t say I didn’t warn you if you decide to make a queen size blanket and it takes you thirty years. Okay, so maybe it wouldn’t take that long, but still. That’s what it feels like to me. (Changing the color up sometimes helps break monotony when using small yarn for large projects.)

  

Medium Yarn: The medium yarn I use says it’s the same size, but it’s a different brand and I think it feels a little rougher. It’s the Red Heart brand. It’s not unpleasantly rougher, it just doesn’t look as rich as the Caron Simply Soft and the Skeins (The thingy of yarn) is bigger but cheaper when compared to the Caron. It says it’s supposed to be used with an I 5.5MM hook or something of that nature, and that it is medium 4. I use my middle sized hook (K) hook with this and make everything from hats to blankets. This is what I consider the average/regular/normal/medium projects equipment. Lion Brand Yarn makes this really soft, fuzzy Homespun stuff that says it is Bulky (5), but I don’t believe them. I don’t use the large hook with it because for me it works out the same as medium yarn so I use that hook instead.

  

Large Yarn: I said earlier that some Wal-Marts carry this kind and others don’t, though I notice most all carry at least a few of the top two or three yarn-types. Chunk yarn will say chunky or bulky on it. It’s just really fat and huge, like the N hook I use on it. I think Homespun makes the Hometown USA bulky 6 yarn that I use, but I threw away the paper from around the last bulky yarn I used. So, here’s a link to that other yarn you’re seeing in the pictures next to the other Homespun yarn. I make hats and blankets out of this and it goes. Really. Fast. Beware, though, if you try to cheat your way through mittens or smaller projects with bulk yarn it may not work for you, haha. Like if you make a little baby blanket it will be so thick the baby will scowl at you for trying to make him/her, or the blanket might even be so thick it will look more like a billboard than a floppy blanket. A doggy sweater in chunk yarn would suddenly make your dog look like a fat, matted sheep. Your kid would force on that sweater and then be stuck in a starfish pose, having to turn sideways to walk through doorways.

 

Yarn Comparison:

  

Bread bag/Trash bag ties: Patterns are always telling you to mark a stitch, which is just inserting some kind of ’thing’ into a certain stitch so that if you’re working in circles or rounds you remember where you started and where you want to end. It can save you a lot of trouble in case you lose count because you can go back to the marker and start counting your row where it really began. You don’t have to get a fancy thing-a-ma-jig to do this. I use those twisty-ties, which also make it much easier to secure them ‘cause they just twist. Besides, it’s not like I really put them back on the bread. I just twist it and stuff it under the loaf; and who takes the time to twist those onto your trash bag instead of just creating four corners and tying them together, really? You could even just use a little cut of yarn and loosely tie it. Just use a different color than the yarn you’re working with or you might get confused.

Scissors and Yarn Needles: You know what you’ll need scissors for; waving them at your house plants and demanding that they stop sucking up all the air you’re breathing out faster than you can inhale what they’re exhaling. Oh, wait. I mean you’ll use them to cut the yarn.

Yarn needles are big, fat needles. You might want to add eyeballs to a doll you make or something of that nature and yarn needles are great for this. Sewing needles just fail at helping you with yarn. They fail. Now the biggest, most helpful thing I’ve ever learned is that when you weave in your ends, (which means at the end of a project you have all those little tufts of yarn that you’re supposed to tuck in and hide), I use a yarn needle. I leave the yarn long enough to attach a yarn needle and then use that to weave it in until it disappears. Before I started doing this I could NEVER successfully use my hooks or fingers to weave in and hide the yarn efficiently enough.

Binder and page protectors: I quickly began accumulating patterns that I printed out from free pattern websites online, which I’ll share later in another post. I also create patterns of my own all the time. Another thing I will do is put my favorite patterns from crochet magazines and ones that I buy online in there too so I can keep them nice and organized. A very helpful tip is to print out (or tare out from the back of one of those magazines) a long list that describes how to do all kinds of different stitches that you don’t always memorize. Sometimes I’ll even have a brain fog and suddenly forget even the most basic thing I do all the time. Keep that handy to remind yourself how to do all kinds of different stitches. Also, all those free pattern websites you find and that I’m going to list? It will be worth it to create an account for yourself on each of those to keep up with your favorite patterns. Make a page for yourself that lists each website, your user name, and the password you chose, ‘cause those get confusing really fast, even if you use the same one ‘cause you’ll find you will sit there for hours browsing through them and adding them just to forget your password or user name later and that is not cool…

You may wanna take pictures of the projects you complete and put ‘em in there too. Why not? You worked hard for this. Keep it ready to show off when you take a little tote to the doctor’s office to wait on a loved one and sit there crocheting and someone says, “Now is that crochet or knitting? My (mom, grandma, friend, sister) does that and I’m jealous. That is so pretty…” Then whip out your binder and show them the picture of what you’re working on, and then other stuff you’ve done. They’ll try to run away and wonder what in the world they got themselves into, but it’s too late. You get to show off now. Then tell them to come to this site and learn to crochet and they’ll read this part about what happened to them and it will be funny.

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Free Crochet Pattern Sites

There are all kinds of free patterns you can get online to keep yourself entertained, surf for specific things you’d like to create, or even just browse around when you have no idea what you’re wanting to do next. I find the yarn companies that want you to have plenty of projects so you’ll use their yarn are very helpful, so look up your favorite yarn brand and see if they have patterns catered to your yarn type! Many of these sites will let you create an account so that you can keep a list of your favorites. I’d say it’s totally worth it, otherwise you’ll find the most awesome pattern and then several weeks later you’ll have no idea where you saw it. I would suggest keeping a list of your favorite crochet sites on the same page in the back of your binder and keep your user name and password for each of those sites right there with it. I used to get so frustrated before I began to do this because I would make a list of patterns I loved and wanted to save to work on later when I ran out of things to do but then months would go by and when I went back I couldn’t remember my password! I eventually just picked a day and visited all the sites creating accounts with the same user name and password and now keep it in my binder as well!

Sometimes you’ll need to find and click on “free patterns” if the site has both free and $$$ patterns. Also, don’t forget to narrow your search to crochet projects so that you don’t keep finding knitting patterns you like a third of the time and then getting frustrated when you realize it’s not for crochet. There’s plenty for crochet alone!

Here are my all time favorite pattern sites. I may add to them anytime I find another awesome one!

www.lionbrand.com

www.redheart.com

www.crochetpatterncentral.com

www.raverly.com

www.naturallycaron.com

www.bernat.com

www.sugarncream.com

Don’t forget, though, that many times you can find patterns to buy that can be just what you were looking for in an upcoming special occasion. Keep up with your favorite pattern creators just as you do your fav. free patterns sites so you don’t miss out on their new stuff! I personally use Etsy because I have access to all kinds of different individuals with completely different style! I search under patters, and then the project type is crochet, of course!

www.etsy.com

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