Showing posts with label quidditch ravelympics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quidditch ravelympics. Show all posts

Friday, August 10, 2012

Project Showcase, week... erm... Week Ravellenics!

The Ravellenics are in full force and you snakes are really bringing your A-games! I have yet to cross the finish line myself (naughty! ;D), so if you need a bit of inspiration too, check out these lovely medal-winners by our housemates:


A stunning granny square lap blanket by MaTrish.


Beads and variegation in Giovannina's scarf!


A beautiful sparkly bracelet by Euchronia.


Let's get some weaving in here with Alrischa's scarf!


And an adorable wee argyle vest by terik!

Go for gold, snakes! WHOOO!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

I'm posting a Dungeon update. I am on a horse.

Yes, this is me, posting an update!

I will now pause while you all pick yourselves up off the floor from shock.

Okay, everyone up, ready to go?

Soooo sorry I haven't been around here in a bit. I've been marking posts in the Dungeon especially for this moment. Here they are, nice and out of order, dating back as far as the Ravelympics. :) If you don't want to click all of this, scroll down below the list for the short of it.



The Short of It:

There were birthdays. We had lots of cake. We did really awesome in Ravelympics. There were lots of hotties, some Ravenclaws, and we're just as cool as always. :)

Until next time!

Monday, March 1, 2010

Ravelympics Quidditch Announcement

zanahoria12 would like to make sure everyone knows the following:

1. Make sure all your projects are listed as "Finished" ("frogged" is acceptable for Aerial Unwind projects).

2. Make sure you leave a note for Z12 in the Quidditch pitch letting her know about your Dyeing and Spinning projects (as they generate stash pages and won't come up in the project searches).

3. Make sure everything is tagged with "Ravelympics2010" and "teamslytherinquidditch".

4. If you have questions, ask!

Friday, January 22, 2010

Photography for Serpents

Hey there, snakes! This is TurpentineChai, your Quidditch Seeker! Let's hear a hiss for Team Slytherin!

As Seeker, one of my more important tasks involves a photo montage. As a photographer and web designer I must confess...I hate to see a beautiful project go to waste on an awful photo. I'm here tonight to give you the best tips I've learned over the years to really show off those stitches you slaved over. Not to mention...its no secret that the better looking photos tend to get higher grades...they just present better!

FIRST, PRESENTATION:

Whenever, WHENEVER, possible...get something alive in your shot. For anything that can be worn by a person, shoot the picture of a person wearing it. For anything not to be worn, find a small child or a cat to hold it. Bring some life into the shot. Clothing demands humans, supply it with them and your project page will pop with life. Put those socks on some feet! Steal somebody's kid to cuddle that stuffed animal! Pile scarves on your cat! Anything! I don't want to see flat socks...ever!

For a knitting project, I suggest presenting at least two photos on your Ravelry project page. In photography, there's what's called the "hero shot" and the "style shot". Both are great for really showing off a project. The hero shot is a picture that contains your project, uncluttered and clearly shown. This is your mittens against a simple back ground, your sweater on a person standing straight in a basic pose, this shot shows what you've got. This is when you want to feature the true color, the interesting sleeves and so on.

Here's a hero shot of my "Irish Pubs Are Cold" fingerless mittens:



Then there's my favorite, the style shot. This is your Slytherin scarf draping over a velvet cape clad shoulder, your toy set up in a cute scene, your potions book covering on a candlelit desk. The shape and color of your project isn't as important as the mood you want your project to have here!

Here's my style shots:



And:



Now are these mittens exceptionally better than anything else in a pub? No...but I knit enough fingerless mittens that having a different mood to these make the project more interesting to share. I get PMs from people asking for the pattern despite there being a thousand fingerless mitten patterns out there because the mood in the pictures strikes a chord. Think of knitting magazine layouts, is that sweater really THE ONLY SWEATER TO LOOK GOOD ON A BOAT? No! But if you're somebody who looks at the picture and thinks: I could be like that fun and adventurous boat lady, you're more likely to knit it.

This is definitely true with some things more than others. Handknit socks flat are not very attractive but its amazing how much that changes when you put them in a person and then put that person in somewhere interesting. Browse a sock pattern book sometime, you'll see all kinds of different scenes to inspire a mood. Feet look like feet most of the time, but sock designers are always coming up with a way to make these feet more worth buying the pattern for than those feet and let's be honest. IT WORKS.

For things that aren't obvious, like a hat which tends to be the same size as most hats, include some contextual item, preferably something in relation to the object. Did you knit a tiny blueberry muffin? Go to the store and pick up some real blueberries for the shot. It'll show the size and be cute...and cuteness is always graded highly.

Try out different settings, sometimes you might want to take a project out about the town to find a place to add something to the shot. I've had lots of luck with finding another local knitter in need of project shots and the two of us making an afternoon adventure out of a backpack full of FOs, several coffees and a camera. Sometimes you can even find a budding photographer who will trade some semi-professional looking photo shoots for a pair of socks. It may seem like a lot just to show off a project, but it'll make those OWLs look amazing!

Did I mention, always put clothes on something living?

Okay, time for TECHNICAL BITS:

I can't say it enough...natural light, natural light, natural light.

Natural light will make the colors in your project truer and more vibrant. While sunlight is amazing, you do have to watch out in direct sunlight. You can get a glare, especially in glossy yarns that is unflattering. I find a slightly overcast day is great and a sunny windowsill is better...because I don't have to go outside.

So even if you cast off from that shawl at 3am and want to turn it in RIGHT NOW, be patient. Your knitting will thank you later if you show it in the best light. A built in flash is made solely to trick the world into taking bad photos...I swear, professional photographers pay camera companies to trick people into using them so nobody will ever realize how simple taking a good photo can be.

Now, for advanced lighting or people who don't want to wait or for vampires really into showcasing knitting, you can build a lightbox. They do wonders for stash photography and really showing off handspuns. Here's a great how-to for making a cheap one: http://www.strobist.blogspot.com/2006/07/how-to-diy-10-macro-photo-studio.html

Once the lighting is good, you want to crop it like its hot. Keeping the camera steady, get in close for some shots. Try out the Macro setting on your camera! (Its the little flower.) You spend time making gauge, practicing your stitches, and maintaining tension so why would you not get in close to look at them? Knitting and crochet are beautiful when they're finished and where else except on Ravelry can you know everybody who looks at it will truly appreciate that beauty? If you're doing something with complicated stitch work, you should always try to have at least one shot showing that off in detail on your project page.

Take elevnty-billion photos. If your camera is digital, there's no reason to settle for an "okay" shot. Take a hundred if you must! You can sort them on the computer later and narrow it down to an amazing handful. Its much easier to find the winners in a big batch then to settle for the most decent in the four pictures you took.

Edit them in Picnik if you don't have a photo editing software. Its free, amazing and works great with Flickr. Play around with it a bit to see how it feels. If you're following the above steps, you shouldn't need to do much other than occasionally cropping in closer or adjusting the temperature to match the scene.

Um...I feel like I had more but that's all I can think of right now. I want to see uniform montage photos that will put Ansel Adams to shame! Feel free to burn me with any photography questions!

RESPECT YOUR KNITTING, GIVE IT THE PHOTOGRAPHY IT DESERVES.

One last thing...be grateful you aren't in Gryffindor. Red yarn is notoriously a pain to photograph.

Your Seeker,
Bleu...TurpentineChai

Monday, January 18, 2010

Quidditch Uniform Details

This information is all available in Posts #607-609 in the Quidditch Pitch thread, but for ease of finding later, here is a rundown on the Quidditch Uniforms for the Ravelympics.

Your esteemed (*snort*) Captain has had been struck down by inspiration! (No seriously...I had to pick myself off the floor after I ran to the boy in the back room to share my idea...oops). And I have been dying to share the idea for about a week...but waiting a bit felt right...so I did.

Because we, as the sly, ambitious, cunning, scheming, and plotting types, use our brains at a near constant rate in order to remain ahead in life, our Team Uniforms, (a.k.a. the thing you'll be theoretically wearing while crafting for the Ravelympics) will follow a single theme: Simple Head Adornments.

When I say simple, you should be able to craft this item in about a week or less so that you're ready for the Ravelympics (though I realize that by posting this early you have significantly longer than a week to craft your uniform). So, think about what you can pull off in a week or less, and starting thinking about how to fit in head adornments.

What do I mean about head adornments? Something that decorates your head in some way. We all have a head. Presumably we all have at least some of the part of the head's accessories (eyes, ears, eyebrows, nose, rounded dome part that may or may not have hair on it). You could make a hat, like a House beanie or House beret, a headband like a Calorimetry or a Kells Headband, or get creative and make half a Grandmother's Favorite dishcloth and call it a headscarf. You could make a hood like the Riverbanks or a Snood or if you want ease and simplicity, just a strip of garter stitch long enough to wrap around your head will do. Crocheters: creativeyarn has some awesome crocheted head-adornment patterns...and they look pretty simple and quick to me!

But it must be a head adornment. No scarves, unless it's a hooded scarf, like the POW! Hooded Scarf, because your neck is not your head (logical, yes?). A cowl is okay, if it can also be used to cover your head in some way, like an Ice Queen If you can do either of those patterns in a week, I expect great things from you for the Ravelympics. Just sayin'.

What pattern you choose is up to you as long as you decorate some part of your head and you can get it done quickly. If you're not sure if what you're thinking meets the requirement, run it by me first. If you need House Colors, talk to [abycat](person). She's the Sharing Beater in charge of getting people the yarns they need.

Now, the "One Rule" this term. You must use **BOTH** House Colors. That is, green and some sort of silver/gray-like color. This can be achieved with a great varigated or self-striping yarn, but it might be easier to go for separate yarns. Up to you. You may also include black or white-ish/natural colors as accents as long as they comprise no more than 10% of the total project.

Your projects must be done in time for the beginning of the Ravelympics on February 12th...so you can shoot for beginning around the 5th of February if you want, though you could start right now if you'd like. And for fun so I can spy, please tag your project, whatever it is, with "slyquiduniform" (that's my own request, not from our esteemed Coach, GazeboGal and Assistant Coach, though they may love to search it themselves.)

Please direct any questions via PM....and post pictures! Your Seeker, TurpentineChai, must post a photo montage of our Ravelympics participants wearing their uniforms by February 20th and anyway, your captain loves pictures:) I don't know if she has anything special planned for the montage, but I'm sure if she has a special photo orientation in mind, she'll let us know.