Doily #3 / Crochet Lace Repair

I picked up this lightly damaged crocheted lace from my mom last December just to see if I could repair it. Having recently done some fairly complex lace work and some stranded colorwork recently, I figured that I could probably figure it out.

Original piece with damaged sections visible in center left, lower left, lower middle, and upper right

I did some research first-found a lot on how to repair crocheted blankets and a lot of shock and awe around being able to cut crocheted fabric without it unraveling in the way that knitted fabric does. I found one free and useful guide: https://pieceworkmagazine.com/repairing-mamas-crocheted-tablecloth/

I used that to get myself started. The tip to enlarge the hole in order to have enough to bury the ends of the original thread was a good one. I changed that slightly to enlarging the hole enough to have good places to bury the ends of both the new and original threads.

I used a different thread color because I couldn’t exactly match the original color and tpi (twists per inch) and if it was gonna look wrong, I wanted it to look wrong on purpose.

First attempt to match the original color at center top
Detail of purple thread repairs
completed piece

Atticposting #3: smoke alarms

The house came with approximately a bajillion (eight) expired smoke detectors installed in the three required locations. There were a couple of types: one set wired into a security/fire alert system, and then a mix of other bolt ons. They all had differently sized base plates with differently spaced screws in a mix of installed-with-drywall-anchors and just-kind-of-there holes.

The new smoke alarms matched a few of the existing holes, so I installed those there. That left all of the security system base plates just kind of there. It’s not worth it to me to yoink the security system which means covering it with some sort of plate which will look janky no matter what I do–

baseplate and companion hole with just barely visible screw hole tabs

[due to events and situations, two years pass]

Okay, time to do something about this. The new base plates are larger than the existing ones, so the screw patterns don’t align. However! The holes for the smaller plate are just inside the plastic for the larger plates letting me drill some new holes without requiring me to fabricate anything.

Two differently sized base plates, both viewed from the back. Left: security system. Right: new smoke alarm baseplate with smaller screw hole pattern marked.

New holes drilled, I checked the clearance between the back of the smoke alarm and the screw head (acceptable), and installed them.

Looks right, which is good enough. Now to do this for all of the others!

Installed larger base plate with the same mismatched screws that the original baseplate used.

socks #6

Having made a bunch of socks previously, I decided to try a DK sock. Instead of using a pattern, I indulged in hubris and winged it. Turned out extremely comfy.

thicc cozy socks

Needles: size 2 / 2.75mm

Yarn: cozy color works super wash merino DK aubergine

Cast on stitches: 13 stitches on each of 4 needles

Pattern: top down using a 2 stitch by 3 row knit/purl checkerboard

Tension: extreme

arm warmer repair

The washing machine ate one of my arm warmers

Mangled arm warmer on the right

Process

  • find all of the live stitches
  • put them on double point needles
  • sort out which loose strands are associated with which row
  • knit the thumb in accordance with the pattern (forgot what pattern I’d made them from, I just looked at the other hand and estimated it)
  • replace the two broken/missing strands
  • bind off and bury the ends
Top and bottom of the repaired arm warmer

The replacement thumb is a little different than the original but it fits more according to my tastes.

Related: the washing machine has eaten a few things, so I think that there’s a rough spot in the plastic rim that’s grabbing things, so I’ll investigate that soon.

Atticposting #2: mini fake gravity registers

Due to some choices made by the previous owners, the (forced) air ducts to the attic spaces are at floor level, which means that no standard $5 at the store stamped register grate will fit in a normal way, or a way that looks good. They are also a nonstandard but modern size, which means that a replica gravity register won’t look right because the repros are way too big.

So the obvious choice is to custom make some mini gravity registers.

The design was based around a few minimum sizes:

  • be at least a little thicker at the top of the baseboard than the thickness of the baseboard itself
  • be bigger than the hole in the wall

and some maximum size constraints:

  • stick out as little as possible
  • not be more than an inch bigger than the hole in any direction so that the attachment screws will hit framing instead of being sunk into drywall
  • be entirely made out of salvaged wood

and the most important constraint:

  • must be cute

I spent a while thinking about how to implement louvers. Considered 3D printing something or perhaps salvaging a louver box from an old grate, but decided against adding complexity and went with a slide in panel. That does limit the air control to all or none but it can’t be beat in terms of reliability and ease.

Easy one first

I cut two identical triangle pieces for the sides routed in a slot on the long vertical edges. I also made a pretty standard mitered frame with glued corners out of some salvaged edge trim. Once the frame was dry, I routed in some Decorative Edge into the inside edge and smoothed the interior corners. Then I glued the frame to the hypotenuses of the sides and clamped it to dry.

Frame and sidepieces in the glue-up

While that was curing, I cut a piece of panel to use as the air dam. I also prepared a piece of decorative expanded aluminum for spraypainting by lightly sanding it and scrubbing it off with alcohol before standing it up in the “spray booth” box.

While that was drying, I primed and painted the woodwork.

Then I decided that the best way to attach it to the wall was to give it little tabs. I made a simple nearly-solid model and printed it off. Then I cut notches into the sides, positioned so that the tabs would just stick out above the top edge of the baseboard once it was installed. I also installed the grate by stapling it in place from the back.

Back of the frame with grate and tabs installed.

The air dam got a leather handle, about 1/2″ by 5″, also stapled on from the back.

Altogether, it looks like this.

Register installed with air dam slightly lifted.

I have to make a second one that fits into a corner. Post about that one when the wall that it’s going on is completed.

Atticposting #1: Window reconstruction

I got here by finding The Problems when I went to replace a section of water damaged wooden wall paneling under the window in the attic. In my hubris, I removed the 1950s era mouse-turd-filled insulation to replace it with some modern recycled glass and put my hand through the windowsill…

Let’s go, this won’t take long!

First: grabbed image so that we have some vocabulary in common:

Vocabulary.

However, note that I’m dealing with a vinyl window here and that creates a sort of frame-within-a-frame situation.

Ultimately, there were several parts to this project:

  1. Remove the various trim pieces (wood on the inside, aluminum on the outside) before removing the window in order to assess the damage and scope of repairs
  2. Figure out how to replace the parts that needed replacing
  3. make those parts and install them
  4. Put the window back (including exterior trim) and caulk it
  5. Assemble new interior trim

The interior trim came off relatively easily. It was nailed and caulked into place, both with a heavy hand and some help from rust, which is a pattern I’ve come to expect from this house. The aluminum trim on the outside was screwed and caulked into place and after cutting the caulk, came off easily. After removing the screws and sash clips(?) from the window, it also came out pretty easily.

At an earlier point, the upper sash in the window had started hanging crooked. With the window out and down where I could easily reach it, I determined how to fix this (re-set the spring) and the immediately broke the thing that holds the spring, thereby making my problem worse. Replacement parts not immediately available, I’ve put the problem off by cutting a dowel to a length that holds the sash in place.

1. Assess the damage

It was pretty clear from the start that this was a water damage problem. When I bought the house there was an air conditioning unit wedged into the window that had as far as I could tell been there since around 2001 and had been allowing water inside the the whole time. It was also larger than the opening of the window and had forced the bottom part of the vinyl window frame away from the side parts-literally stretching it out of shape. I suspected that was the main source of the water, but there were also holes in the caulk between the bottom part of the vinyl window frame and the aluminum cladding that were situated directly above the worst of the damage. It’s unclear if the a/c unit contributed to that or if it was just 20 years of rainwater getting in. I did not find any other incursion points.

Left: rotten windowsill. Right: rotten framing.

The wood disintegrated when I touched it. In order to have any faith in the sturdiness of the framing, I decided that it would need to be replaced. This entailed removing the sill (cut it in half and it popped out, which it definitely should not have done because the nails at the ends had rusted to nothing), removing the worst sixteen inches of the horizontal frame, and about ten inches of the vertical frame.

At this point I had run out of daylight and called it a night.

2 Replace parts

I was not going to be able to buy replacement windowsill at the local hardware store- but I did have some 2×10 laying about from a workbench project. That was a little bigger than the original sill piece, so I cut it down to size and shaped it using a router, miter saw, and belt sander. It’s not the neatest job, but it got the job done.

Top: removed windowsill. Bottom: hacked to size replacement.

The framing pieces were just straight sections of 2×4 cut from leftovers.

It seems like I didn’t take a picture before I put the new insulation in, so the following picture shows:

  • new sill, installed by cutting it in half and then gluing it back together in place. After the glue cured, it was shimmed to the correct angle, and then nailed through the shims to the framing. This definitely isn’t the right way to do it, but I didn’t want to take the entire frame out of the wall.
  • replaced horizontal framing visible in the right side. The right end of the old framing and the left end of the new framing share the end of the vertical 50/50 and are glued together. The right end of the new framing occupies the entire width of the vertical on that side in order to mimic the original construction.
  • Vertical piece not visible behind the insulation. It is glued to the original framing on both ends.
  • Every newly created joint was also given a triangular brace for additional strength and stability as represented by the green triangles.
It’s a vibes based glue-up, okay?

3 Put window and trim back in

The window and aluminum trim went back in as easily as they came out. The aluminum required some gentle persuasion with a hammer due to discrepancies between the old sill piece and the new sill piece but not any more persuasion than removing it required. I then caulked the daylight out of it, shut the window, and called it a day.

Window installed on top of new sill with wall panel installed underneath.

Doing this work also required removing the tiny wing wall that separated the bedroom area from the tiny bathroom area, so that’s why there’s a vanity just hanging out right there. You may find yourself asking, “where was there even room for a tiny wall there??”

4 create and install new interior trim

Well! There wasn’t room for a tiny wall there. There still isn’t. But because there is a bathroom there, there must be a wall there.

The window framing was also originally sized for the wall to be finished in drywall. The wall is instead finished in wooden paneling, so there’s about 3/8ths inch of framing sticking out beyond the surface of the wall. The previous owners solved this by just sort of gluing pieces of quarter round to the edge of the casing trim until the gap was closed.

window frame protrusion from finished wall

The window also extends above the level of the ceiling. The previous owners just sort of stuck a piece of wood up there.

I framed in the wall just enough to be able to proceed with the fiddly work of creating window trim. This has involved creating:

  • a lower stool
  • a marginally different upper stool
  • a lower apron
  • fitting vertical casing in an unusual manner
  • offset pieces to soak up that 3/8ths of an inch

Purchasing window stool at the hardware store was unreasonably expensive- and didn’t even meet the shape of this window. So I made the upper and lower stools out of 1×3 inch poplar by using a router to create the rounded edge and a combination of sawing and chiseling to create a profile that matched the window/wall.

The upper stool was designed to close the gap between the head of the window and ceiling as well as support the ceiling itself. The material that the ceiling is made out of is so soft that no fastener can be secured to it and in some other places is collapsing under its own weight, so I made sure to affix the stool to the lathe-like strips that the ceiling is attached to. This created a sort of ceiling sandwich, which will hopefully be stable.

I created the apron (no piece even available to buy locally) out of salvaged baseboard. I routed some notches into the back of it so that it would clear the extended framing of the window.

routed out back of window apron

I then created the offset pieces out of door jamb. The pieces I bought had a rectangular profile about 3/8ths by 1″, real dimensions, and had one corner neatly rounded off. I cut these to length as needed.

I prepainted all of the pieces as I intended to do some fairly complicated paint work on this frame, and I’ve found that in general prepainting everything makes assembly much much faster by reducing final painting to just filling in the nail holes.

Window stool, apron, and offset pieces (purple) glued together

With the upper stool and lower stool and apron assembly installed, I then fit the vertical pieces (one offset piece and one casing piece). I did not make pieces for the right side because I have not yet completed the wall over there and thus I do not have the final dimensions of the casing on that side of the window. After that I used some more salvaged baseboard to create trim that fits the odd curve between the top ceiling and angled ceiling.

The completed corner and window look like this! I’m really pleased with how it’s turned out.

one whole completed corner

I am waiting to do the touch up paint on the nail holes until I’ve created every nail hole in those colors.

Socks #5

I started making socks earlier this year. I’ve mostly been working my way through the Year Of Socks by Stephen West and my most recent pair was the Striped Tiles pattern, which I found excruciatingly boring. The legs turned out much looser than I prefer despite the foot being sized nicely.

The silver stripes are a silk based yarn and they’re a little less hot than the 100% wool ones I’ve made.

I made another pair from a different pattern in the collection (Painting Triangles) from the same yarns that I used here for a friend.

Spinning Head #2

I have made several improvements to the spinning ‘wheel’ since the last post. The major issues that I encountered were that it was spinning much faster than I could draft the fiber, and the pull onto the bobbin was very inconsistent. This made it very difficult to get the approximately fingering weight yarn that I wanted with any consistency. I approached this problem from several angles.

From left to right: braked end of the pulley with nylon brake cord, the maiden, and the drive pulley

Bobbin improvements

  • made the brake channel wider
  • made the ends slightly smaller relative to the flyer

Brake improvements

  • The leather strip I was using was way too sticky and stretchy.
  • replaced the leather strip with two loops of nylon cord

Drive pulley improvements

  • increased the size of the drive pulley in order to decrease the amount of spin for the same rate of treadling

With these changes, the consistency of the resulting yarn from inch to inch immediately improved and it was much easier to get the size I intended.

I also added a little hook to the maiden closest to the orifice so that I’d have a place to wrap the live end around to pause it.

Hook with which to pause work

I also purchased some flax fiber to practice on, but I’m waiting to start that until after I’m done with the wool.

All of the wool, first at the top & most recent at the bottom.

Blockface stamps

I asked my dad to cut for me a set of parts for the BLOCKFACE stamp kit. I got one in oak plywood and one in acrylic, so I finished them two different ways.

Oak Plywood

  • sealed them with approximately three layers of shellac, dripped on. The shellac soaked into the charred sides and disappeared and this did significantly reduce the amount of char falling off.
  • next time I would tape off the side that will get the adhesive, and then put the parts in a bowl with some shellac and soak them before laying them out on a nonstick surface to dry. Then I would assemble them
  • assembly was mildly finicky but didn’t take long enough to be annoying
  • cleaned up the tray a little to use it for storage by replacing the back with colored card stock and taping the edges with iridescent washi tape
  • ETA 10/19: the cardstock backing didn’t survive being stuck in my bag for three weeks straight in part because the char on the edges of the tray denatured the fancy tape, so I laminated the card between a piece of veneer and the tray to make a sturdy backing and then sealed the back and sides of it with shellac.
Blockface type sets: oak plywood top, acrylic bottom

Acrylic

  • sanded the easy to access edges down to smooth them and remove some of the gunge, resulting in a nice frosted look when looking down into them
  • cleaned up the tray as above (the tape is sticking just fine to the acrylic)
  • gonna give it to a friend

I’m having a great deal of fun making shapes and patterns with it. I have not done much lettering, but my sketchbook is very small relative to the letters.

Sketchbook page: blue ink stamped in a brick pattern above a scale pattern made out of C shapes

I think that the set would benefit from a d=10mm dot. Yeah, it’s got the 10mm square, but sometime you just need a dot.

Sketchbook page: a row of blue zeros with yellow crossbars above several rows of blue U shapes that are progressively fading away towards the bottom of the page
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