Meet Mr. Munk as the three monkeys have dubbed him. He is made with Bernat Pipsqueak yarn. It is one of my favorite go to yarns for super soft, fuzzy, cuddly stuffed buddies. When I crochet I am usually doing other things as well so it becomes very difficult to get an accurate count. This yarn is very forgiving you don't have to worry about being exact as long as the shape looks right. Being a perfectionist I will continually rip out row after row if a mistake is visible so having a yarn that hides any mistakes is fantastic. :) Plus it is just so amazingly soft!
Mr. Monk is not my own pattern since pattern writing is not a skill I've obtained yet. I used this Little Bigfoot Monkey pattern from Amigurumi To Go's blog. It's a well written pattern, the only big change I made was to decrease the neck rows and add additional rows to the middle of the body. There is a video tutorial but as I did not watch it I cannot attest to it's quality. She has a few other Little Bigfoot animal patterns as well. I think the elephant and pig look super cute, I plan on making them for Christmas presents.
Minky and Satin are my two favorite baby blanket materials for sewing projects. One of the besties is doing a sea turtle themed nursery, with teal and white. So, of course I had to make a minky blanky. I used teal and white minky, cut to the size I wanted. I then sewed them wrong sides together with a 1/4 inch seam. Now normally I am to impatient to bother with pinning, but minky is the exception to that, you must pin like crazy! I then took a stencil I made from a hibiscus image I found on a stock photo website and used a quilting pencil to draw the hibiscus in the corner on the white side. I stitched around the image using turquoise for the top thread, and white on the bobbin. I stitched with the white side up so that the turquoise thread was on the white fabric and the white thread on the turquoise fabric. I sewed on a cute sea turtle patch in the middle of the hibiscus. The border is satin blanket binding, I used a decorative stitch and changed the bobbin to turquoise as well so that it is visible on both sides.
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My other recent baby project was an elephant lovey. I made him out of extra teal minky and some baby flannel,using an elephant coloring page printable for a pattern. I sewed ribbons onto one ear and the other I filled with pieces of a plastic bag to make crinkle noises. He has some oops' but I am happy with the concept and hopefully my next attempts will turn out flawless.
Fold a piece of minky in half so that the pattern fits then cut out the elephant, make sure to leave a seam allowance or pic an image that will allow for one. Cut a length of ribbons and burn the ends with using a match or lighter so that it won't fray. Fold the ribbon in half and pin the edges to the wrong side of the elephants rear end so that the ribbon lays on the fabric. That way when you turn it, it will be on the outside. I angled mine so that it would point down. Then stitch right sides together leaving a small opening to turn the fabric. Turn the fabric and hand stitch the opening or use an invisible stitch. I then used a decorative stitch to make the eye and a straight stitch for the eyebrow.
Cut four 3/4 circles for ears. For one ear cut lengths of ribbons for "taggies". Pin them the same way as the tail laying on the fabric, pinned to the wrong side. Sew around leaving a small opening for turning. Turn and use a decorative stitch to attach the ear. I folded the raw edges of my opening under and stitched that when attaching the ear. You could do two like that or the other crinkly. For the crinkly one I did the ear the same without the ribbons and after turning stuffed pieces of a plastic grocery bag inside before attaching and stitching closed. I have read that you can buy a crinkly fabric online, and some people suggest using cereal bags, washed then dried and cut up. Make sure to line the ear up so that when you are stitching to stitch over the stitches from the other ear.