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Rosemary’s Hedwig

I realized that I had never gotten pictures of the Christmas gifts I made for everyone up – I had to keep them a secret because well… I wanted them to be a surprise.

Rosemary, my sister, this year got a crochet Hedwig.  I’ll quote my notes from my Ravelry project page directly, because I think it says my thoughts about the project well:

Heavily modified Nelson the Owl from Fresh Stitches, almost so that I wouldn’t call it the same pattern.

Different stitch count on body (made body taller and less squat), different stitch count on head, I didn’t do the color changes, sized up the wings, improvised my own feet so that there were toes, no ears, made eyes slightly different. Basically, only thing not changed was the nose. Changed the colors to reflect a snowy owl, made body white, didn’t do the color changes on the belly, embroidered little “ends of feathers” onto body after crocheting, made an improvised set of feet with bobbles turned inside out. 

I still think Hedwig looks funny without ear tufts, but since snowy owls don’t really have ear tufts, that’s fine. She reads as a snowy owl, so I guess that’s all that is needed.

Rosemary was happy with it, and all told the project probably only took me at most, probably 5 or 6 hours all told.  And that was mostly because I was being fiddly with things, and ripped back a few times to adjust.  I also was fiddly with the seaming, so that took longer.  I still think it came out crooked, but don’t tell my sister that – Rosemary has a “thing” about objects being symmetrical  and I already had to convince her the eyes really WERE the same size.

Making Pomander Balls and Decorating for the Holidays

Things are happening around here lately.  On the professional front, I have a a due-date on Dec 21 – I’ve got a week and change to get things done.  Let’s be frank – it’s going to be close.  But I’ve already got a lot of the math done, and one of the sleeves done, so I think I’ll be good on turning this in on time.  It helps that the sample I’m making is only for myself – the company makes their own samples, so I don’t have to have my sample quite done by the time the written pattern is in.  The hard part?  My math has to be spot on.

Michael and I went and got a tree last night.  It’s fat and pretty and now dominates the apartment.  It smells of pine trees.  After we brought home the tree and set it up, Michael took to stringing lights right away, but I had some emails to send.  When I turned around after (well I’m not quite sure how long…) I’d finished, the apartment was a glowing belighted place.  Michael did a good job.

The only thing left for me to do was make a Pomander.  What’s a pomander?  Well, sources argue about its origins, but around the 15th century they were being used as air-fresheners in more fortunate homes.  Made of cloves and oranges (both expensive items) they were a classy way of spicing up the air.  I learned to make them in Sweden when I was abroad, though they pop up all over Europe and the United States.  I can’t vouch for anywhere else (so international readers, pipe up if you know what a pomander is, or if it has a different word).

What you basically do is take whole cloves, and poke them into any hard-skinned citrus fruit like oranges, clementines, mandarins, and more rarely lemons and limes.  They work like an air freshener, infusing the air with orange essential oils and the smell of cloves.

He’s the process of making mine:

What you’ll need: a medium sized orange
(one that looks nice and smells even better), about .75 oz of cloves,
string and a toothpick, small knitting needle or small grade nail.
Tie string around the orange.  I wrapped mine around several times,
securing the string each time I got  to where it crossed.
I had eight lines running around.
Some people like to use ribbon; if you go that route,
add it at the end so the ribbon doesn’t get  stained with orange juice.
Secure with a little glue.
For now, just mark where the ribbon is supposed to go so you don’t put cloves there.

Use the toothpick or other poke tool to poke holes in the
orange where you want the cloves to go. This makes it
easier not to break the cloves.  I like to use a few cloves to
secure the string so they don’t slip around.  Then, trace a design
onto your orange with the cloves.  I just followed the string.
You want to use as many cloves as you have. The more cloves
in the orange, the less likely it is to mold.  Also, the more fragrant.
Hang your pomander.
As it ages it will shrink, and you might have to push the cloves
further in or tighten the string/ribbon.

Have fun!