A Short History of Fuzzy Brushed Amigurumi
In response to a question asked regarding my post of
Fuzzy Hello Kitty, I mentioned the history of the Brushed Amigurumi Technique. There was a little confusion (lack of clarity on my part) and the commenter thought it was my technique, but no, I'm not so clever as that. ;o)
It occurred to me that there are a lot of newbies who might not know about this cool technique and how to achieve it so.... here's my history of brushed amigurumi and how to get these results. :o)
(I've noted here my recollections which I have verified as best as I can with net research.)
Who's on first?
As I remember, my first encounter with this idea was in 2007, the first year I was making amigurumi. Wibit, aka Roman Sock had made a fabulous Pomeranian, and described her method of getting that marvellous furry effect by brushing mohair, or mohair blend yarn with a wire pet slicker brush.
http://littlegreen.typepad.com/romansock/2007/09/my-pomerianians.html http://littlegreen.typepad.com/romansock/2007/09/free-to-a-lovin.html Roman Sock's adorable Crocheted and Brushed Pomeranian
You can get the free pattern here:
http://littlegreen.typepad.com/romansock/files/pomeranian.pdf Roman Sock posted a tutorial on how to brush crocheted fabric, including the results with several types of yarns, here:
http://littlegreen.typepad.com/romansock/brushed-crochet.html The Next Mentions of Using a Pet Slicker Brush
The next mention of this amazing brushed yarn technique, that I remember seeing, was from Roxycraft, who has a terrific photo tutorial on how to achieve a fuzzy look with ordinary yarn and a slicker brush.
---link to Roxycraft's photo tute ---
http://tamiesnow.typepad.com/roxycraft/2009/06/tutorial-making-brushed-amigurumi.html And later she did a crochet-along for a very cute fuzzy panda, with video tutorials.
(sorry, that pic won't post - click on the first link to see the panda)
--- links to Roxycraft's crochet along and video tute ----
http://blog.craftzine.com/archive/2009/09/crochet-along_fuzzy_panda_amig.html http://blog.craftzine.com/archive/2009/09/crochet-along_lesson_one_-_the.html http://blog.craftzine.com/archive/2009/09/crochet-along_lesson_two_-_ass.html And there was also chezmichelle's fuzzy critters and information. Possibly around mid 2008? Around the same time that I saw Roxycaft's, or maybe a couple of months before. The wee fellow directly below was crocheted with bamboo yarn, which chezmichelle said gave an excellent result.
Link to chezmichelle and her cute free patterns here:
http://www.suncatchereyes.net/Fuzzball.html Unfortunately, like many of us who had blogs on vox.com, chezmichelle lost hers when vox disappeared and much of her info seems to be unavailable.
(except for a few bits and pieces, without photos, through the wayback machine's web archive
http://www.archive.org )
P.S. to the vox.com issue - I did transfer my blog to blogspot.com - I have never had the time/energy to fix the look of the early posts, whose formatting got rather messed up in the process of the transfer. But at least the content is all there.
What kind of yarn fibers work well?
It seems as though you can use this brushing technique with most yarns, but best to test your yarn by brushing a swatch before starting a project. Some will work better than others. I've seen wonderful results from wool, bamboo and acrylic yarns, and I'm sure other fibers will work well also. Cotton yarn may not yield the results we want, but I haven't tried it so can't say for sure. I've used Caron's Simply Soft, Vanna's Choice and Bernat Softee Baby, acrylic yarns, and all worked well. I'll post a wee limbless kitty soon (hopefully) that I made with Simply Soft. The outcome was very soft and silky. Vanna's Choice came out wonderfully fluffy and fuzzy (see my
Fuzzy Hello Kitty).
It's very simple to do, and really magical! A very nice crocheted or knit amigurumi suddenly becomes a fuzzy, furry, cuddly softie! Okay, maybe not suddenly, it's a bit of work to get it to a really fuzzy state, but it's still like magic to me! :o)
xposted to
weloveamigurumi.livejournal.com and
theknittycat.blogspot.com