Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Zombie Wooble

My grandson is hooked on Woobles. I'm crocheting another for him for his 11th birthday. It is a Zombie and Zombie baby from the Minecraft video game. A Zombie in this game is the most common mob and it is hostile. In Minecraft, a mob (short for "mobile entity") is any living, moving creature or non-player character in the game. Zombies spawn in dark areas and attack by slowly approaching the player and punching them. These monsters will aggressively hunt and attack you if you get too close. Defeating them often yields valuable loot or experience points. Granted, I do not understand how they spawn or how they treat their young if they are that hostile... Curious about how zombies spawn? Check out this article and scroll down to the spawning section.


My goal is to make a Daddy Zombie and a baby zombie. Whoops, perhaps they are a Mommy and baby Zombie...? When I looked this up, according to AI:
Zombies in Minecraft do not have a specific gender. While their appearance resembles the default male player character, ... the game's original creator designed almost all mobs in the game to be genderless.

    Making the main body progresses really quickly for me. The following photo shows the top half of the zombie's body. He is crocheted from the top down - dark green top toward dark blue bottom. I can finish the main part, complete with eyes and stuffing in very little time. Adding the tiny appendages and the detail embroidery are what slows me down, even though the instruction are very clear and specific on placement.


    I followed the instructions carefully to attach the big Zombie's plastic safety eyes and to embroider his mouth and nose. In retrospect I  should have stitched his nose and moth in a color other than the dark green, perhaps black, to have it show up better on the variegated green. But I was faithful to the directions and perhaps this color palette is more true to that of the characters in the game. When I researched the "correct" color palette for a Minecraft Zombie, all the images do show a rather subdued nose and mouth.



    I moved on to make the baby zombie. His face has embroidered eyes rather than plastic ones and he has no nose or mouth. Simple as it was, I messed up the first time with the eyes and had to unstitch and embroider them farther up. I think it really does make a difference, otherwise I would not have bothered.



    Here are my completed Zombie and Baby Zombie. These are my sixth (and seventh?) Woobles. After the photo are references and links to my previous five.


    Wednesday, June 24, 2026

    July Flags and Pinwheels Completed

    For the piecing and assembly of the Flags and Pinwheels banner for July from Shabby Fabrics see my previous post dated 6/11/26. This post is about the FMQ, labeling, binding, and completion of the July banner.

    Flag Blocks
    FMQ on  flag blocks was wavy lines on the stripes to simulate the flag waving in the breeze. The wave is in every other stripe, namely the cram colored ones and also in the teal borders at the top and bottom of the flag. I used the deep wave side of my Handi-Quilter Wave F ruler.  The 4" wavelength worked out perfectly for the 12" width of the flag; I used the shallow 0.75" height as being the right proportion for the width of the stripes on the flag. For other info I have complied on Handi-Quilter wave rulers and their reissue under other names, check out my blog post for 10/1/25.



    The sawtooth star section has straight lines set ¼" in from the outer edge seams. This offset seemed to bring out the star more than a stitch in the ditch would have and I like that the center seems to puff up.

    Pinwheels
    FMQ on the blades of the pinwheel blocks was inspired by Week 2 of a dot -to-dot video class by Angela Walters. On the outer edges I free-formed some curvy lines and vortexes to represent the airflow streams around a spinning pinwheel.



    Sashing and Outer Borders
    The gingham sashing between the flag and pinwheel blocks is FMQd with a simple zigzag echoing the 45° slant of the gingham. The stitching is not very noticeable but that's OK. For the outer borders I have always like piano key borders. I decided to modify this border by varying the spacing of the lines. The closer lines seems more like "stripes" when they alternate with the wider gaps. I got bored with doing these ruler-guided lines (¼" and ¾" apart) after the first side though, so I mixed it up. There is no rule all four borders need to be the same. 


    Something different was needed for the top and bottom borders. What better goes with stripes in July but stars? I used the smallest 1½" star from my my Amanda Murphy star template set make stars on the top and bottom borders. 


    I started in the middle and worked outward toward the left with just the tops of the stars, back inward toward the right with just the star bottoms, switching in the middle to continue star tops toward the right, then all the way left toward the middle to finish the star bottoms. No breaking thread, right! Except, I ran out of bobbin thread during this "continuous" process. Aargh! Photos show star border near completion and after it is all completed. In retrospect I wish I had used a heavier thread so the stars stood our more. The side piano borders have double stitching out and back. That may be why the stars look a bit weak by comparison. Oh, well, lesson learned and something to keep in mind for the future.



    Labels
    My tradition is to make my labels from grosgrain ribbon which I embroidered on my 20+ year old Pfaff. I have a stash of grosgrain ribbon of course, but it is not in a color or width I wanted. I miss JoAnn's. After a commando raid to my local Michael's I learned they did not have grosgrain ribbon. Seems like all the general population seems to want is wired ribbon or satin ribbon.  The clerk in Michael's did not even know what grosgrain ribbon was. I wound up having to order it from Amazon. Though not as convenient as a car ride away, I eventually did  get my grosgrain ribbon delivered the next day from Amazon. The assortment I bought was QingHan Grosgrain Ribbon 5/8 Inches 40 Yards (20 Colors x 2yards). I am used to buying Offray as a familiar brand name, but the quality of these ribbons was fine. I should be really set for grosgrain ribbon for quite a while. 

    I embroidered my labels for the back lower corners, choosing navy for the ribbon color, even though originally I was looking for ecru. I embroidered them in ivory and set them on the diagonal in each lower corner. They read DIC_JULY_2026 and FLAGS_AND_PINWHEELS.  July stands for the theme month of the banner, not the month I completed it.


    Completed Banner
    This is the front and back of the seventh banner I have completed in this monthly themed series. I am just beyond halfway there to having an entire year of months represented. To preview how the July banner will look I snapped a photo and hung it outside my sewing room in a designated spot that I switch out monthly. I will change it back to the June banner, since the Strawberries theme has about a week of display time still due.




    Here are my completions thus far for this series from Shabby Fabrics.

    • JAN    Snowmen and Snowflakes (2/10/26)
    • MAR  Shamrocks and Irish Chains (4/6/26)
    • APR   Bunnies and Carrots (3/6/26)
    • MAY   Roses and Pansies (9/11/25)
    • JUN    Strawberries (9/6/25)
    • JUL    Flags and Pinwheels (this post 6/24/26)
    • AUG    Bees and Sunflowers (9/21/25)