Showing posts with label QR code. Show all posts
Showing posts with label QR code. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2012

More Failed Stitches and Folds Covers

With the deadline fast approaching, I still have little done with my sketchbook. Ahhh. Basically, I have to make this work tomorrow evening.

Last week, after making the cloth Mette Ring (and digging into my fabric stash) I decided to try piecing together fabric covers for my book. My idea at the time was to find any and all random (flat) craft projects I made in the past that didn't have a place, and incorporate them into my book. Kind of a hodgepodge assortment of Things I Make. I took my yet unfinished quilt as an inspiration and pieced together blue/red scraps around a cross stitched QR code and my MMM embroidery. The result was two pieces I was not entirely satisfied with.

front cover




back cover

The plan was to crop these to fit the 5"x7" dimensions of the sketchbook. The front cover would look basically as is; the bottom would be skewed so the MMM was on the diagonal.

That's where I was -- completely stuck -- until, as I was falling asleep a few nights ago, I remembered my book arts workshops in college. My school had a hidden Book Arts program that would meet a few times a term in the conservation/preservation department in the basement of the library. I discovered it by chance my freshman fall and basically went to it all four years I was in college. At first, I was the only student in the midst a group of middle aged women (with the exception of the friend I dragged along with me). During my time a Dartmouth, things changed a ton: a new conservation/preservation director arrived, and the book arts program got a dedicated space in a higher level basement. More students attended. It really blossomed. I have to say, it is one of the things I miss most from college.

Anyway, I made so many books while I was there and I still have them, stored in a shoebox on my craft shelves. I brought it out with me to California and occasionally would open it up and nostalgically sift though my books. There was this one book with an accordion spine and some really interesting movement when you open the book and lay it flat. [This makes no sense! But I'll add pictures of it when I finish my book.] I thought of it while I was falling asleep that night, and knew that's what I wanted to do.

Unfortunately, those cloth covers do not jive with such a dynamic inside. They seem dowdy in comparison. Seeing those covers, I would never expect to find that inside. And I mean that in a bad way, not a surprisingly interesting way. So, those covers were scrapped.

It's always frustrating when you spend time on something and then, ultimately, it doesn't work. You want to salvage it in some way. You fixate on your original idea. Sometimes, you just have to scrap it, start over, and hope for the best.

Tonight, I made the new covers. Much simpler but more fitting with the inside. The bulk of the project is the inside which I have a vague idea of how I want to finish... it requires a ton of stitching on paper and hidden images. I think it's really too ambitious to finish in (!!) one evening, but I'll see how much I can get done. It's going to be a true Project Runway Make It Work moment, and I'll stay up tomorrow night as late as I need to in order to finish it.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Stitches and Folds: Failed Cover

Oh my. I can't believe it's January already, and my Stitches and Folds journal from the Sketchbook Project needs to be completed and postmarked by January 31st.

I haven't really thought much about this project. I have a vague idea of at least a few things I want to include, but haven't worked out the details. The one idea I actually started on was a cross stitched QR code for the cover. I wanted to do some stitching on paper, because I like the look of it, so I decided to stitch it directly on the cover. Current state:


One thing I've learned about stitching on paper is that it's good to puncture the holes first. As you can see on the left, it was a bit of a challenge keeping them in a grid... the first attempt failed. The second grid, on the left, was also not ideal. The cover is made out of a really soft recycled cardboard which is incredibly flexible, especially in the horizontal direction (that's the grain line of the paper). Each hole was very messy because the cardboard was so soft - making holes so close together almost ripped the cover in a few places.

To top it all off, the QR code doesn't reliably scan, which is a necessity. Not sure exactly why, and it's probably multiple things, including the thread not being thick enough and the cover being floppy and messy.

The Sketchbook Project allows you to re-bind and totally re-make your book as long as it falls within certain dimensions. I think that's the route I'll have to take. I really would love to stitch on paper, but I might have to stick with cloth or maybe a combination of the two.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Custom Cross Stitched QR code Patch

The latest offering in my Etsy store: a custom QR code cross stitched patch. Like this:


That one links to the address of my new Etsy shop: http://theMMM.etsy.com. (Try it out!) I have a patch on my backpack that translates to a tiny URL going to this blog. It's a great way to start a conversation about my site and crafting in general. People will ask why I have a QR code on my backpack and where it goes to... then look closer see it's actually cross stitched. They always want to try it out to see if it actually works, and it definitely does.

I put up a patch I previously made that says "analog" but I thought it would be fun to offer to make customizable patches that people can wear and have them link directly to their personal sites. It's a fun mix of geek and craft, and gives me another excuse to cross stitch.


These patches aren't super difficult to make, although they are time consuming. They're a lot less mindless than a lot of the stitching I do, because the pattern is psudo-random and you have to closely follow the design. Very meticulous work, but a super cool result.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Cross Stitch QR code with pattern

Updated  12/12/11: I have cross stitched QR codes now for sale in my Etsy shop!
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(See my original QR code patch!)

My first attempt at jazzing up a QR code. I've heard rumors that you can obscure ~30% of a QR code and it can still be read. For now, I've started with picking out patterns in the randomness of the code. For this one, I went through and found all standalone squares 1x1 or greater and changed their color. It looked fine on my pattern:


But not so great once I actually stitched it:


I think red was a poor choice of color (it looks like measles!) and the squares didn't translate so well with the X of the cross stitch on such a small scale.