It is so weird to me how you north americans are so freaked out about nudity. I hope you got over it. And I'm happy to know you were able to enjoy the class. I loved doing Life Drawing in my time, I was never good at it, but I noticed large improvement in very short time.
$200 14 years ago !. You couldn't find one operational in 2023 for that -- barely covers the cost of new needles esp if you live in Canada and have to pay the exchange and pricey shipping .
Please could you tell me the pink piece you have already laying down on the table before your cut it ,how big it's and how many times folded..? Thanks jean
Thank you. I had the 2000qi for years and never took the time to figure it out. Just got my 2010. The first time I tried this after watching your video, it worked. Thank you!!!
Thank you. I just received my Juki today and it is about to get thrown outside. The instructions are awful and I have tried using the threader about a hundred times. Even after watching this video, I was only able to thread it once.
Don't feel bad. I know how to use the threader, but default to threading it without assistance because it's what I'm used to doing on my other machines. It's an unnecessary feature.
Dish Net Instructions Supplies: - 3 yards nylon netting (Buy 1 yard of three different colors.) - 12 or so clothespins - Scissors, ruler and pen OR rotary cutter, mat & and ruled cutting template (You won’t need to mark the netting if you use the rotary cutter and template.) - Yarn needle - Cotton crochet yarn - Iron Step 1: Press your netting with an iron on low heat to get all the kinks out. Step 2: Once smooth, fold each piece of netting into eighths and secure with clothes pins. If using a scissors to cut, use a ruler to mark the netting every 5 1/8 inches. Cut seven strips out of each piece of netting, adjusting clothespins as you go. Do NOT unfold the netting. Step 3: Stack three different colored pieces together. Fold the stack of netting in half lengthwise and press with an iron on low heat. Unfold to reveal the crease you just made. Cut folded ends across the width. (short ends.) Step 4: Use the yarn needle and a double thickness of crochet cotton to stitch up the middle crease with a running stitch. Step 5: Stitch to the end, then pull the crochet cotton to gather the nylon. Pull cotton tight and wrap three times around the stitch line. Double knot and cut crochet cotton close to knot. Step 6: Poof out your dish net into a ball by separating the layers of netting. Trim stray pieces of netting with scissors if necessary. Step 7: Give as it as a gift, or use your dish net to wash the dishes or fresh veggies, scrub the tub or bumper of your car. When slightly damp, these work as great lint removers, too. Enjoy!
As she said, they break down. Into tiny bits of plastic. That go down our drains. And where do you think that plastic goes? Right back into our water supply and the oceans. People, we have microplastics showing up in FETUSES now. Please don’t buy this material. Make scrubbies out of renewable, sustainable materials like hemp or natural loofah if you care about your children and grandchildren. Their survival tomorrow depends on our choices today.
Hi! Lovely craft, but I must share that those are NOT "dragon boats", those are call Hishikazari and are parfum sachet ornaments (I do not know the right translation, but "kashari" means "ornament"). The dragon boats are ornamented boats that race in the river during the Dragon festival.