It’s perhaps not as cool as a sports injury but, when you’re too excited to pace yourself, a repetitive strain injury is just as inconvenient.  I have been knitting for several hours a day for about two weeks with no ill effects but after making the bus’s wheels I had such bad shoulder pain that I had to take a break.  It seems feeble because all I was doing was winding yarn around a cardboard circle, over and over – it’s not what you would call hard work.  But there it is.  I’ve been stopped in my tracks 🙂
This is what I’ve got so far:
I decided to make the bus wheels by cutting out cardboard circles which are a little bit smaller than the required (guessed) bus wheel size, cutting a smaller circle out of the middle of them, and winding yarn around them like you would if you were making pompoms. Â Unlike when you’re making pompoms, you only need one cardboard circle per wheel, and you stop winding just before you get to the centre, leaving a tiny hole in the middle for the axle.
The axles are going to be old toothbrushes which just happen to be a little bit wider than the bus.
I didn’t have any black yarn but decided that doesn’t matter – groovy people like the Andersons would probably enjoy having different coloured wheels 🙂
When I’d finished the wheels I needed a floor to attach them to. Â I’m no longer following the pattern so this is an experiment which I hope will work. Â I’m winging it.
I drew around the bottom of the bus on cardboard and cut it out.
Then I cast on enough stitches to cover about two thirds (or nearly three quarters) the width of the bus floor. Â I haven’t proved this works yet, but the knitting will naturally get wider than the cast-on row and I want the finished piece to be slightly smaller than the cardboard so that it has to be stretched taut to cover it. Â It remains to be seen whether I cast on the right amount of stitches to make it work.
dot dot dot 😉
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vegan, vegetarian, crafts, knitting, paper crafts, sewing, homemade, homemade toy, model bus, model furniture, children’s toys






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