Kerrville Honeycomb Doily Origin Story

Crocheted Honeycomb Doilies

Hexie quilts are so pretty and simple, they’ve inspired many a quilter to take up paper-piecing. Quilters get into the slow process of hand-sewing the hexies together, and one day, they have sewn together enough motifs for a quilt top!

I’m all about flowers, so I studied the “Grandmother’s Flower Garden” version of a hexie quilt, where you make lots of motifs with a yellow hexie in the middle, and surround them with rounds of flowery colors. My thoughts went something like this: “Hm. I could crochet that, but crocheting a bunch of hexagons and sewing them together does not appeal.” That was the end of that.

Crocheted Honeycomb Doily

It was the end of that, until the summer of 2021, when my husband Charles invited me to come to Kerrville on one of his work trips. The idea was that I would enjoy a break from routine, visit a few bookstores, yarn shops, coffee shops, and so on, while he worked at an archeological field school.

We shared a nice town home with Charles’ colleague Gus and his wife Mel. The wonder of it all, was that Mel is a spinner and knitter! A yarn crawl partner! A coffee shop pal! A fellow bookstore afficionado! We visited The Tinsmith’s Wife, a large yarn, cross stitch, and needlepoint shop in Comfort, Texas. We stopped by The Sheepwalk Ranch and Fiber Arts Studio, a yarn shop, workshop venue, and sheep farm in Bandera County, promising “A Farm to Fiber Arts Experience.”
One evening, the four of us went to a pleasant party to socialize with archeologists, at an Airbnb house in town. The bathroom floor design at the house was a lot like a Grandmother’s Flower Garden hexie quilt pattern. The difference was, each hexagonal tile was surrounded by grout.

Inspiration for Crocheted Honeycomb Doily

Grout. Really?

Yes! The grout gave me a whole new perspective on designing with hexies. Suddenly I could visualize how to crochet the outline of a hexagonal space. The space could be open, or I could fill it with more stitching. It was a big mind-shift.

Crocheted Honeycomb Doily

I printed several copies of my photo of the hexie floor, sketched various ways to crochet the design, and wrote notes on the copies.

In the end, the best way to figure out a crochet pattern is to crochet. Late in July, Charles and I boarded a plane to visit our daughters in Boston. With no dogs needing to go in and out, no phone calls, no snacks calling my name, I had three uninterrupted hours to figure out how to crochet the hexie pattern.

The first draft was way too complicated. I had to rethink. I kept trying, until the method of crocheting the design became clear to me. It finally did. Yay! Here’s a photo of my moment of triumph, with the photocopy of the bathroom floor at the lower edge.

Beginning of the  Crocheted Honeycomb Doily

Today the Kerrville Honeycomb Doily pattern is for sale on Ravelry. Instructions include how to make the doily in larger sizes, and how to starch the doily. When you buy the doily pattern before March 31, 2022, you can download a Honeycomb Snowflake pattern free. No coupon code needed.

Crocheted Honeycomb Snowflake

Knit Advent Day 24

Suzann's knitted Advent calendar ornament, day 24

Number 24 at last! The bell is worked from a chart in garter stitch intarsia. It is worked from side to side, increasing and decreasing along the edges for the curve of the bell, the clapper, and the upper shape of the bell.

Suzann's knitted Advent calendar with ornaments

And here is the Advent Calendar all loaded with its ornaments. Wishing you many happy returns this holiday season, I look forward to seeing you in the New Year.

Knit Advent Day 23

Suzann's knitted Advent calendar ornament, day 23

This long, skinny triangle is shaped with short rows. I wanted to twist the triangle, which would mimic some icicle ornaments I had seen. Oops, when I twisted it, the wrong side of the knitting showed. There was nothing for it, but to knit another long, skinny triangle. I sewed the triangles together, twisted, then mounted the icicle onto felt.

* * *

Charles was working in Austin this week (in 2005), so the girls and I came along for fun. Eva and I went out the first evening to visit the wonderful Book People store, and then on to Half-Price Book Store. Half-Price Book Store has a lot more remainders and bargain new books than it had 25 years ago, when I first became a regular customer. The number of truly used books is pretty low, outside of paperback fiction. But it was great to browse without a particular goal in mind.

On our way home today, we stopped by the Bluebonnet Yarn Shoppe in Cedar Park, Texas. Judy, of Heavenly Babies, raves about this shop, and I can understand why. The shop is full of beautiful yarns, the atmosphere is happy, and the staff is friendly. We spent money there and it was fun. I recommend it. The address is 2800 E. Whitestone Blvd., but if you are coming from Hwy 183, you need to turn on Hwy 1431, between the Albertson’s and the HEB. It is in a row of shops next to a supermarket.

2021 UPDATE: the Bluebonnet Yarn Shoppe in Cedar Park closed several years ago.

Knit Advent Day 22

The only stranded color ornament in the collection is this Fair Isle snowflake. I like the shaded blues. That’s the great thing about using embroidery floss. There are so many shades and tints and tones of each color, that you’re bound to find the one you need. Granted, measuring only eight yards per hank, embroidery floss isn’t exactly sweater material, but it’s good for small pieces. I can imagine flowers crocheted from embroidery floss, perfect for embellishment.

Knit Advent Day 21

This is probably my favorite of the ornaments. I love the little poinsettia leaves, so cleverly knitted and sewn onto the felt backing. The gold sequins are the crowning touch. I also like the shape of the background felt.

Got a new book for myself today (in 2005): a compilation of seven Perry Mason novels in one volume, by Erle Stanley Gardner. For hours of reading pleasure, Erle Stanley Gardner rates as my favorite author of all.

Knit Advent Day 19

Short rows shape the heel of this stocking ornament. It’s knitted from the top down. I started the short rows with the top gold outline on the heel, then made a lot of very short rows for the cream-colored heel. The gold outline at the bottom of the heel is also a short row, and I had to do quite a bit of ripping out to get the gold rows to meet properly.

To get the perfect angle between foot and cuff, the short rows continue into the turquoise of the foot. You should be able to see how the first three turquoise ridges after the heel are short rows. The toe is decreased on each side, then bound off to give the classic stocking toe shape.

Knit Advent Day 17

Here’s another garter intarsia ornament, a plain Christmas ball with band around it, which was knitted from side-to-side. The ball is shaped by increasing or decreasing only at the edges. The colors in the band just jog over and back to make its curved shape.

If you compare it with the drum (Day 10) you can see the difference that internal shaping makes. I shaped the drum by increasing and decreasing inside the outlines of the drum. That method moved the red body and gold rims of the drum in a curved shape, without creating jogs. The drum was also knitted side-to-side.

Knit Advent Day 16

Garter stitch is easy to chart, because 1 stitch is as wide as the height of one ridge (2 rows). That means you can chart it on square graph paper, with one block equal to one stitch and one ridge (2 rows). The other nice thing about this is that you can shape the edges very easily by casting on or binding off along the sides of a piece.

That’s what I did to make this candle. The three pieces are just garter stitch, worked to a graph that was the shape I wanted. A little embroidery serves as a wick.