Showing posts with label balls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label balls. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Juggling balls (Part 2)

These juggling balls are more time- and labor-intensive than the others, but you end up with a much warmer, more personal final product. They're basically hacky sacks, but for juggling you need 3+.

My first attempt / only complete set so far.

There are various ways of making these; the general idea is that you're making a soft cube, so you need six squares in some configuration, plus some space for the stitches to hold. I use two rectangles of suede for each ball, each 3 squares long (kind of like baseballs). You can also use three rectangles of two each, or two L-shaped pieces of 3 each. Or whatever else your little heart desires. All it really affects is the pattern of the colors.

1 red-orange and 1 sage green for each ball. The balls in my original set are filled with black beans, which produces a very pleasant noise. Now I'm trying to make some with jingly bells inside, which will sound sort of rattly when muted by the stuffing... kind of meh, but it'll provide variation. These are for use in juggling rhythms (I've gotten a bunch further since that video... exciting).

Materials!

I'm using doubled thread to sew the edges together, with about 1/4"-1/2" of edging. As with most needle-and-thread projects, this is sewn inside out, except for an opening, then inverted and finished.
Halfway through...

End of each rectangle attaches to the middle third of the other. Suede is a bit more finicky than the cloth I used before; I had to cut a small triangle from each straight edge where it folded around the corner of the other rectangle.

Flipped...

...and inverted. This is just to show what it should look like - a couple more sides need to be sewn before this can be finished. Not all my projects can be fantastic successes, and I ended up abandoning this ball because the suede was too thick and stiff to invert through the hole I had left, at least without undoing a lot of previous stitching. This also happened because I used smaller rectangles than before, which provides less leeway: 1.5-inch squares (so 5.5" x 2.5" rectangles, including 1/2" of slip), instead of 2-inch squares (7" x 3" rectangles). I didn't want to have to stitch up a whole side from the outside, as my attempts at "pretty stitches" usually produce the following:

These are the stitched-up holes from the first set, after stuffing the stuffing in. (Note on that: put in much more stuffing than you think you need, so that the ball is quite taut. Failure to do so will resort in a loose final product that expresses ennui, rather than exuberance. You want EXUBERANT BALLS.)

I'm happy sticking with these ones, as they are very aesthetically pleasing to me. Each has one rectangle of red-on-blue brocade, and for the other rectangle, they have burgundy suede, iridescent red/black cloth, and the reverse of the brocade (blue on red). Hey kids, patterning is cool. B)
Ugly stitches: EXTREME CLOSEUP

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Juggling balls (Part 1)

Warning: this post may provoke puerile giggling.

Last May, the excellent Bob tried to teach me to juggle. He lent me some balls for the day, and of course I immediately lost one. Now I seem to have recovered from those unfortunate associations, and have been learning to juggle for a couple of weeks. The results are surprisingly marvelous! (YouTube vid. Beware of ball hitting computer at the end...)

These balls are quite heavy, for two reasons: a) it makes them easier to handle as a starting set, and b) the fact that they work my hands/arms is a motivator for practicing. This set is made from latex gloves, filled with (dry) Quikrete. The bag coverings make them easier to handle and much more durable.

Materials: satiny bag, latex glove, Quikrete (and an empty medicine bottle for scooping)

Tie off the fingers.

I used maybe 4 scoops per ball; these photos are of a replacement ball (I lost one), and it ended up larger than the others because I didn't remember how much grit went into the old ones.

Hefty!

Satin-y! (Inside out, so it'll end up pretty. The bag is about twice as large as we need, so I twisted it around and stretched it back over itself, à la breadbags.)

Drawstring pulled tight and knotted; the last step is to tuck it into the fabric so the ball doesn't catch on things.

Final bonus: these make a very satisfying "tup" noise (now that I can actually keep them going without dropping them frequently).

Part the Second coming sometime, in which we explore the more effortful way of making these things...