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Yesterday I made an inventory of the socks I have available for making sock monkeys. Doing this made me think of all the things I do to make a Mars Sock Monkey. Here’s a short list of the steps I take to create a sock monkey with a knitted hoodie:

Steps to making a sock monkey

  1. Sock selection
  2. Sock cutting and sewing
  3. Stuffing of body beginning with legs, then armstail and ears
  4. Attachment of safety eyes
  5. Sewing opening where eye fasteners went in
  6. Hand sewing of mouth, ears, arms and tail to body

Steps to making a knitted hoodie

  1. Graphic design
  2. Yarn color selection
  3. Knit pattern creation
  4. Knitting of body front
  5. Knitting of body back
  6. Knitting of sleeves
  7. Sewing body front, body back and sleeves together (4 pieces)
  8. Picking up stitches from right side sweater neck and knitting right side hood piece
  9. Picking up stitches from left side sweater neck and knitting left side hood piece
  10. Sewing back sides of hood pieces together using Mattress Stitch
  11. Sewing tops of hood pieces using Kitchener Stitch

Ta-da, you have a sock monkey with a hooded sweater! This process takes me about 4-6 days but the results are so worth it. I’m planning to do a tutorial on how to make one so stay tuned for that! :D

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I’m excited to be working on my own sock monkey! I’ve named her Xochitl, meaning flower, which is perfect because her sock print has lots of pink flowers. For her sweater I wanted to come up with something totally new and challenging. I also want something that I can take off easily. Yay, removable clothes!

When I was thinking of ideas I remembered this sweater with zigzags I used to have when I was small that I really liked. I actually found a photo of me wearing it! And as I was looking online I found something that I thought I’d like to try that would look really cute.

This is funny: the sweater design I found online and my old hooded sweater! They are somewhat similar.

This is what the design above looks like fitted for a sock monkey. It’s a hooded cardigan! Now I have to decide what colors to use. Stay tuned! :)

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I’m sure you’ve heard lots about Twitter. It’s an exploding social network, but in a way it’s unlike most other social networks. My boyfriend got me to sign up during it’s early stages and it hadn’t been until now that I started using it again (Maribel Made on Twitter). At the time I used it on my phone, but it seemed sort of pointless then. Using it on the web is much more useful! Anyway, I had to find out what was the big deal was with it nowadays.

I’d have to say that after one week of using it, the way I consumed information on the web changed! I can’t quite put my finger on it, but search seems antiquated now. I think I’d rather learn something of interest from someone I stumble upon on Twitter and follow. And I have. Lots! In such a short amount of time too.

So I thought, why now share my Twitter finds with the world. For this I thank all the artistic people I’m following. With no further a due, I give you my initial Twit Finds weekly column!

This week’s Twit Finds:

  1. Spoonflower fabrics -  Custom fabric on demand anyone? I can’t wait to use this service!  Katty Neill has some great fabric designs. I heart this birdie one the best. :) (via @kittyvane)
  2. Little Bird illustrations by Kate Wilson - I really like the pointillist aspect…plus they are so cute! (via @littledoodles)
  3. Fugu sock monkey by Mitsumori Toy Design - Amazing art dolls by toy designer Hatsuko Mitsumori (via @CampSockMonkey)
  4. How to Make Dorset Buttons from CraftStylish- My love of buttons couldn’t help bookmarking this on delicious. The detailed photos are great! (via @CraftStylish)
  5. Happy Tree Gang by lemonshortbread on Etsy - Very pretty collectable art cards with lots of imagination.
  6. Sock Monkeys a history by Snively - Of course I have to know about the history of the sock monkey. Great blog! (via @CampSockMonkey)

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Another recent order called for a monkey sweater with a Scottish Thistle. Truthfully I didn’t know what a thistle was until I googled it. It’s a prickly looking flowering plant, which I have definitely seen before. This is when my fantasy of being a botanist comes to mind and I wish I knew the names of a 1000 plants!

When I was thinking about the design, I thought about doing something asymmetrical because it’s a plant but since it wasn’t an ordinary thistle, but the emblem of Scotland,  I decided to design a symmetrical graphic to give it more meaning. This little jumper made me think a lot! It made me realize that I need a broader range of colors if I really want to get complicated. :)

I’m not sure the background for these pics is working for me. I’m still experimenting.

Bonnie’s Scottish Thistle hoodie

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It’s a recent development that I now make sock monkey sweaters for reasons beyond learning the basic construction of the knitted sweater. Now that I know more of the fundamentals, I can move on to the finer details of a knitted garment!

A recent client asked me to make a custom monkey wearing a hooded sweater with a dinosaur! The most I had ever done before were stars and hearts, which are much simpler designs, but this called for something more intricate and asymmetrical so I had to do more planning and designing. This is the process I went through to create the “Dino” sweater.

I began by creating a drawing of the dinosaur in Illustrator. I had to think about how it would look since the toy would be for a 2 year old baby so I didn’t want it to look too scary. I was thinking of something simple, fun and with a cute look. The baby was also a boy so I worked with colors like blue, yellow, green and red. Nothing girly here! Kawai, yes! :)

Then, using the original drawing as a guide, I placed it on top of a grid as a transparency and added Xs to the boxes which showed any piece of the dinosaur (using layers, also in Illustrator). If you’re familiar with pixel art, then this is exactly what I did. I created a “pixel” by pixel dinosaur on a grid! Of course, the image above is round and fine and the grid is square and jagged so for some of these pixels (or Xs) I had to consider whether that X really belonged there or not. It was really more of a personal call. I later converted the required Xs into colored ones to tell where I would switch from one yarn of color to another (see fair isle knitting).

“Dino” knitting pattern

Now the knitting part begins! This is where it gets tricky. Every box within the grid indicates a knit stitch. Remember that the piece is done in stockinette stitch so all stitches on every row will face in the same direction, unlike garter stitch where every other row alternates. The white and grey rows represent the right and reverse sides of the fabric. The boxes with the Xs show where the dinosaur will appear. The black Xs show the outline of the dinosaur I included in the design and the colored ones represent the actual dinosaur and the color of yarn I’ll be knitting with in that particular stitch.

Symmetrical designs are much easier to make. Something asymmetrical like this requires more attention to which side of the fabric you’re facing because if you’re facing the right side you’d start knitting the row as the pattern calls from the right, but if you’re facing the back or reverse you’d begin from the left. This is something that took me a while to comprehend, but once I understood it, it made a whole lot of sense! Keeping track of color changes, paying attention to where you are in the row and knowing which side of the fabric you’re facing are probably the most important things to know when knitting a colored, asymmetrical design. Just understanding some of the basics makes the rest so much easier. ;)

Final “Dino” sweater front piece

Jed’s short sleeve “Dino” hooded sweater front and back

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Photoshop’s got to be my all time favorite piece of software! I get so much use out of it. Nowadays much of its use goes to everything Maribel Made product related and drawing.

I began making mockups of future sock monkeys for custom orders, but now that it’s become more efficient to be able to see a glimpse of the finished product I will probably do these for more and more monkeys. It’s actually great because it speeds up my production time and I save myself the pain of going back and forth on ideas, which tends to drive me crazy!

Custom order monkey with dinosaur sweater

What I did was prepare outlines for the monkey in Illustrator which I then opened and played with in Photoshop adding sock pattern and experimenting with colors. In my ideal world though, I would love to have a special software to do this.  It would have an infinite amount of patterns for the sock, different sweater combinations, accessories (and if I didn’t make these with links to buy) and knitting gauge measurements depending on sock dimensions. Wow! I can just imagine it.

I sure love projects with endless possibilities! Although, for me it’s best to keep the possibilities in a controlled environment otherwise my mind can run loosely and I would just loose my focus…then nothing would ever happen. :(

Custom Edwin design

Talking about accessories, I think my monkeys would love a bunny from Dollmore as a pet! So Kawai!!

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As I was exploring Berlin, DE last week with old friends and enjoying the nice hot weather with super cold beers, I got the warm feeling of summer coming ahead. So when I got back to London, I thought of going down to Brick Lane to scout out some henna to create a mendhi for myself (just in time for my b-day trip to California)!

I found a few options at a small grocer on Old Bethnal Green Road and bought the recommended Al Qamar CONE Henna Paste. I was expecting to buy the ingredients to mix, but this seemed like a much easier and faster solution. The guy behind the counter was right. This is by far the best £1 I’ve ever spent! There is no waiting for the paste to set and no messing with home-made cones, which made it super easy.

I was pretty happy with the end result. It’s a very nice dark reddish-brown color. You can tell that the design is darkest, where I began, on my hand so next time I’ll try removing parts of the henna towards the bottom first that way the design carries the same tone of color all through out.

This is what the design looked like before the paste was washed away.

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Living in London without corn tortillas is hard! Most of my diet consisted of corn tortillas and I didn’t even know it. Now my diet consists of pasta, pizza, fried chicken and the occasional fish. Oh man, that’s why I was thrilled to get a package from back home in El Paso, TX! Did I mention I also miss pozole? Where do I find hominy around here!!

The package contained: 8 bags of dried chile de arbol (for super hot salsa), 2 large packs of Mission corn tortillas (!!!) and about a dozen rolls of pink, black and white Omega 100% nylon thread, which Mom bought in Mexico, for crochet (abuelitas must have used this thread back in the day).


Some of Mom’s hand crochet tablecloths…

The chile will last me a while, the corn tortillas have all been eaten (even the broken ones I used to mindlessly discard in the US), but I didn’t really have something in mind for the thread until recently. That is something I will blog about later, though.

All this thinking about what to do with this thread made me think of the amazing tablecloths my Mom crochets with it. They are beautiful pieces of art! I’m so blown away by them and it seems like she finishes them in no time because she’s always working on something new. I have no idea how she does this. She invents most of her patterns and she can replicate pieces just by looking at them…just by looking at magazines written in English, which she can’t understand! Mom is so good; I think crochet is one of her favorite things to do, maybe besides sewing.

These photos were taken in 2002 so, as you can imagine, there are plenty more now!


Pineapples!

Work in progress

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Now I know why it’s so exciting to be working in secret. I can’t wait to get this batch of sock monkeys out the door! I had a great response from my last sock monkey, Eriko, and I hope that these little guys will be enjoyed just as much.

These new Mars Sock Monkeys, which I named Lulu, Frankie, Stella, Ben and Sheena, were half-raised in Seattle and London because I bought the socks in Seattle before I moved and put them together here in London. They are international jet setter sock monkeys!

I should be finished with all five this week (four of which will go for sale) and hopefully do a photo shoot by the end of the week if weather permits. I’ve been thinking of a theme and will need a few props. I also have a few other unveilings. One being the new sweater design below, which I modeled after a polo shirt. This is Lulu’s puffy short sleeve hoodie. The rest you’ll have to wait and see!!

Lulu's puffy sleeve hoodie

Here are some London raised next generation monkeys to be…

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I never would have thought I’d be making sock monkeys, let alone selling them online or let alone knitting them sweaters! It’s a weird and funky combination I have grown to love. I remember as a child sewing clothes for my dolls so it’s not that surprising to me that I would do the same as an adult.

And how did this come about? I knew how to do basic knitting because my mom taught me a very long time ago. Ah yes, even before the knitting revolution took hold and everyone (including myself) started going to Stitch ‘n Bitch groups to yap (or bitch) about how you and your knitting were better than everybody else. Well I wasn’t the best knitter and I didn’t care for such nonsense, but I did always want to learn to knit something that would fit a human being. The only problem was that I’m not the type of person that can knit for very long periods of time; I get bored easily doing the same thing over and over, but then it hit me!

These sock monkeys looked naked and cold (because I care very much about inanimate objects) so they would make perfect test subjects (de cariño) because they have tiny torsos! My dilemma was solved and now I’m learning how to properly make knitted clothes that on a large scale could potentially be made for a human, but are actually fit for a sock monkey. Did that make sense.

Eriko Sock Monkey

That is how Mars Sock Monkeys came to be. Now I have to complete the part of the equation where Mars Sock Monkeys equal a sort of living, but that’s what I’m looking into now. Did I mention I love designing them? It’s so much fun picking out colors and giving each monkey a distinctly different look and personality, not to mention giving them a name! As one of my cyberspace friends said (because that is where I live)…they are my “hijos.”

See the Mars Sock Monkey Collections:

Spring 2008
Summer 2008

Eriko Sock Monkey

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