Posted: January 30th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Home design, Locally Made, Make This Now, Supplies, recycle, reuse, sewing | Tags: Best websites, Brooklyn Blog, Cheap crafts blog, Cool Blog, craft blog, Craft your future, Crafting tutorials, Design blog, diy fashion blog, fashion blog, raven burgos, Stealing design theft | No Comments »
Speaking of ikea hacks, i found this DIY light box hack that Im totally going to do. If you read my blog you know I use a lot of Japanese sewing books, the issue is that they require that you trace the pattern you need. Because they put at least 5 patterns on one sheet tracing can be apain in the ass, heres where a light box can and will come on handy.
Boris recycles his daughter’s old changing table into a lightbox. Love how it closes in a compact little thing.
“I made the Sniglar baby changing table into a light box. My wife, for a few years now, likes to practice sewing for our daughters. She buy a lot of books containing patterns she has to reproduce on white paper which she then uses to cut the fabric. It’s not easy to reproduce those patterns onto the paper.
As our youngest daughter is now two and a half years old, we do not need any more our Sniglar changing table, and I decided to transform it into a light table for my wife. I first thought to keep the table structure as it, but finally, I prefered to use the two level of the table to make one foldable table. I first fixed together the two vat with a long piano hinge. Then I stuck aluminium foil into the vats to reflect the light and I fixed four neon tubes into it. A few meters of cable later, I then closed the vats with two white and opaque plexiglass panels and that’s it.”
Via: Ikeahacker
Raven Burgos
Posted: January 23rd, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Craft, How to, Inspiration | Tags: aran fishermans sweater, Brooklyn style blog, Cheap crafts blog, Cheeky Stitch, Cheekystitch, craft blog, Crafting tutorials, Design blog, Do it yourself, how to follow a knitting patterns, How to knit, knitting, knitting stories, novice knitting | No Comments »

I was at a friends house a couple of weeks ago and one of get guests had a handknit chunky sweater, I swear you must have needed like 25 gauge needles to knit that thing, it was so thick it mad me sick. It was from The Gilded Age, an incredibly expensive line of high end rugged mens clothing I covet. ( apparently they will be coming out with a ladies line Im sure wont compare to the mens , because it never does)
So I set out to price the thing, turns out I couldnt even locate the sweater online, much less its price. Iits like the thing appeared out of no where to make me sad. Every 100$ cashmere i found could potentially run me, hmmmm, I dunno 1200.
Like the good crafter that I am I set out to figure out how I would acquire my very own cashmere sweater. So I decided to knit one, even though I have never knit anything more complicate than a scarf.
I decided on a pattern first, I looked at many many cheesy patterns, lamented that Japanese sewing patterns would be too much of a challenge to me. It difficult enough to decipher sewing patterns. I settled on the eternally stylish Irish fisherman’s sweaters, in my fantasy I saw myself wearing this an an old lady with a grandchild balanced on my knee, in my fantasy I’m also a cartoon, but whatever.

This was perfect, I got the pattern at Downtown Yarns in New York City. Its a Yankee Knitter Design pattern for and Adult Aran Sweater. The pattern seemed complicated, the sales woman assured me it wasnt anymore difficult that any other sweater. I choose to believe her.
Next was finding the cashmere yarn. The pattern called for about 13 skeins in my size, I use a size small. I looked all over the nets and luckily found somebody who was selling yarn on ebay for 16 a skein, which would bring my sweater cost to about 200$. its not cheap but its not 1200 either, and if i was buying a thin cashmere sweater in a store I could expect to pay that if not more. So that’s how I justified spending 200$ on yarn on a project I may or may not finish. if your like me you make preemptive strikes on craft/fabric/and art stores, I am well stocked but rarely finished projects. I have about 20 unfinished projects and a dozen or more possibilities.
So armed with needles, yarn, pattern I cant read, and a case of dyslexia, I go forth!
Posted: August 5th, 2009 | Author: raven burgos | Filed under: Brooklyn, Film, How to, Inspiration, reuse | Tags: Animal print rug, animal rugs, Brooklyn Craft Blog, Cheap crafts blog, Cheekystitch craft blog, Chic craft blog, Cool Blog, cool Diy blog, craft blog, Diy urban garden blog, Fall color trend, Fall Home trend, fashion blog, home decor, Home decor blog, Home Inspiration, home inspiration blog, How to make cool stuff blog, New York Urban Gardening blog, raven burgos, rugs for small apartment, sewing blog, vegan animal print rugs, Zebra print rug | No Comments »

Every where I turn ( ok many blogs I frequent) seem to have acquired a taste for black. As an underemployed city dweller who rents i have a small apartment and not a lot of money to make some fo the improvements or purchases I think would improve my space. Recently I moved and decided to paint my doors a high gloss black, next is Zebra rug. Check out my apartment inspiration






Pretty cool right?