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October 6

Monster Eyes Slippers

monster eyes slippers

Wow – check out these great crocheted monster eyes slippers! I love them – too bad my wife can’t make me some (she lacks the skillz).

Premier Yarns has branched out into some geek crafts for us to enjoy! They created a pattern for these awesome monster eyes slippers you see above and are giving the pattern away for FREE on their website.

And… they have offered all Geek Crafts readers a discount on any purchases made at Premier Yarns – use the code OCTG33K during the month of October to get 10% off any purchase of Dream yarns (the yarn used in the pattern).

Now, go out there and make some monster eyes slippers and show us the finished result!

October 1

New Moon + Mario Mushroom Wrist Warmers

Knitter extraordinaire Vickie Howell has designed not one but two awesomely geeky sets of wrist warmers, and both patterns are free online! This week she published the Alice Wrist Warmers pattern over at CRAFT:, inspired by the upcoming New Moon movie… these would be perfect to complete your Twilight-inspired Halloween costume in style!

And her Mario Mushroom Wrist Warmers are a favorite from last year that are just the thing to knit up as the temperature drops. This pattern is available in kids’, women’s or men’s sizes and includes a handy (and cute) charted image for creating your mushroom.

September 17

Red Queen costume for Dragon*Con

My friend Ruth Suehle sewed, beaded, wired, embroidered, and stamped herself an incredibly intricate crown-to-toe Red Queen costume for this year’s Dragon*Con — and won the Best Journeyman prize for her handiwork!

photo by Weston Clowney; all other photos by Ruth Suehle

I asked her how she made it, and she had lots of details to share…

When I first decided to work on the Red Queen’s costume, I had only one picture to go on. This one. I was planning to wing it for everything below the waist.

My first step was to figure out if I could do what for me would be the three hardest things: Get my hair that red without bleaching it, cover my eyebrows without shaving them, and make the collar stand up like it should. With the answers (respectively) of Manic Panic, this drag queen’s video, and “umm…I’ll figure it out with some stiff interfacing,” the project was underway.

After I got started, the photos from the August issue of Vanity Fair came out with the full-length shot. They also included one that showed her tights, bloomers, and shoes. That meant more work to do! Fortunately, I found the tights on yandy.com (that site is not SFW!) and a pair of usable boots at a thrift store, which I painted gold.

I didn’t get my hair quite flaming red, but I can attest that Manic Panic Rock ‘n Roll Red will get you pretty red over medium-dark brown hair with no bleaching.

Fabric breakdown by part:

Bodice: gold taffeta with black tulle overlay. Sides and back of blue panne velvet. Detail in ribbon, lace, and trim.
•Hand-beaded top using wire, ribbon, beads, and findings. Matched detail as closely as possible (for example, counted 20 sets of pearl drops).


•Blue sleeves attached to bodice. Ribbon on sleeves hand-beaded.

Overskirt: Gold taffeta stamped to resemble pattern in original costume.


Underskirt: Red taffeta.
•Black hearts created from satin with Wonder Under adhesive.


•Gold hearts machine embroidered, cut, and sewn loosely in centers of black hearts.

Shirt: white cotton with navy tulle overlay. Yellow/gold stretch knit sleeves. Detail in beaded ribbon and white cuff trim.
•Black webbing hand-knotted with 80 yards of embroidery floss.
•Gold sleeves are attached to undershirt.
•Shirt is attached to corset foundation.

Crown: foam sheet, wire for shaping, rhinestones, textured paint, gold

Skirt foundation: (not pictured) white muslin and boning

Bloomers: Burgundy cotton with machine-stitched scallop hem

Color choices
The colors are a bit different from the first pictures that came out to the Vanity Fair photos as well as those I’ve seen from when the costumes were on display at Comic-con. More vibrant, for one. And in that first one, the upper sleeves and undershirt looked to me to be clearly blue, whereas in the others, they appear to be black. I usually wouldn’t be excited about combinations of blue and black, but since I’d already bought fabric, that’s the way I went, and I think it works.

Thank you so much, Ruth! You can see another shot of the Red Queen (with the Mad Hatter!) here.

August 27

Yoda Hat + Market Bag

My friend Heather Mann is always making great stuff (like the Star Wars finger puppets Renee posted about last week) but my favorites from her lately have to be her Yoda crafts. She made this fantastic fleece hat and wrote a tutorial for it on her Dollar Store Crafts blog — the total cost for the project is under $1!

Heather also did a Star Wars swap over at Craftster recently and made this awesome appliqued Yoda market bag in Jedi robe colors for her partner. You can use her instructions and this free morsbag pattern to make one for yourself, too.

Heather’s hat tutorial has totally inspired me to make a head-to-toe Yoda costume for my one-year-old daughter Pearl for Halloween. I’ll post more pictures when I’ve made my version — I’m figuring out the robe, snake and walking stick right now!

July 17

Crocheted Pygmy Puffs

http://www.craftster.org/forum/index.php?topic=313272.msg3601446#msg3601446

I am seeing so many cool Harry Potter crafts this week in honor of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince opening this week (which I will be watching in an hour – yea!!!!!!!). Craftster user norecliner, along with her mom and sister, crocheted a boxful of Pygmy Puffs and then handed them out at the movie theater! They used a pattern from Ravelry (not sure which one, so here’s a list) and did such a great job using different textured yarn.

http://www.craftster.org/forum/index.php?topic=313272.msg3601446#msg3601446