Friday, February 22, 2008

Bento box lunch set- finished!

I don't even want to tell you how long it took to finish this project. It started as a simple bento box cover for my night job, when I was temping from place to place. Then I decided I needed a carrier for my water bottle.

I am usually not very girly with flowers and all, but I love Victoriana. At the time I started this project I was making flowers a lot and selling them to a local hatmaker to pay the bills. I was constantly doing piece work in between working two regular jobs, and I did it two holiday seasons in a row. However, doing this massively improved my crochet skill. Since I was sick of the flowers I was making, I went online and found some other patterns for myself- I'll try to find the link to give credit. And somehow, those flowers and leaves (a combination of large and small roses, violets, and matching leaves) ended up on my project.

As I worked on this, I was reminded of how many people see black hair as somehow inferior because it doesn't hang loose on it's own- it's wooly and relatively stiff. Yet African hair has a sculptural quality that lends itself to braiding, fading and geometric cutting. I realized that crochet is the same way. It's in many ways stiffer than knitting. It can drape, but not with the same ease. A lot of people see this as a flaw. But in truth, crochet has a sculptural quality that lends itself really well to the floral motifs on this lunch set. The design is both sturdy and delicate, rugged and feminine. Essentially, this set is my masterwork. It brings together my vision of myself as a worker, a steampunk, a neo-Victorian, a crocheter, a woman, a feminist, and a person of African descent. If for some reason I could never crochet again, I could still be happy- because I came up with these designs on my own and put them together in a new way.

4 comments:

knitwhit said...

consider yourself stroked!

Yarn or Death said...

It's really exquisite. If you make the pattern available, I want to make one.

georg said...

Quilting, knitting, and crochet are all different ways of getting fabric- there's also netting and loom knitting and weaving- and all ahve different results, and they all have their own unique beauty. To me, the key is finding the treasure of each, and use whichever tool makes the most sense to get what you want. One is never better than the other- they have different strengths. I tend to obsess on one then the next, but when I want end product to be This- then I'll use the best tool for the job.

Anonymous said...

Awesome.