Material first
Cotton cord weight, yarn fibre content and candle wax type decide most outcomes. Each guide opens with the material choice before any technique.
A plain-spoken reference for people making decorative objects in Canadian homes. Material notes, step sequences and finishing details for macramé, crochet and hand-poured candles, written for the kitchen table rather than the studio.
Each guide follows the same arc: what the material is, what you need, the working steps, and the finishing and care notes. Canadian context — winter humidity, available fibre suppliers, and waste sorting — is noted where it changes the method.
Cotton cord weight, yarn fibre content and candle wax type decide most outcomes. Each guide opens with the material choice before any technique.
Sequences are broken into numbered stages so a project can be paused and resumed — useful when a piece spans several evenings.
How a piece is trimmed, blocked or cured determines how it ages. Care notes cover dust, light exposure and Canadian seasonal humidity swings.
Three documented methods. Read them in any order — the macramé guide is the gentlest starting point if you are new to working with your hands.
Square knots, lark's head mounts and cotton cord weights for a wall piece you can finish over a weekend.
Read the guide
Hooks, yarn weight and tension for small home pieces — coasters, baskets and a simple granny-square throw.
Read the guide
Soy and beeswax basics, wick sizing, pour temperature and the cure time that separates a clean burn from a tunnelled one.
Read the guideThe colour markers below are a reading aid used across the guides to show which stage a step belongs to.
Choose material, dimensions and colour before cutting or pouring.
Lay out cord, yarn or wax with the right tools within reach.
Mount a dowel, measure tension or prepare the vessel and wick.
Work the knots, stitches or pour in the documented sequence.
Trim, block or cure, then note care for the seasons ahead.
Use the form for editorial questions about the guides — a clarification on cord weight, a stitch that did not work, or a correction. This form runs entirely in your browser and does not transmit data anywhere.
Email: editor@meadowwindow.org
Mailing: Meadow Window, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Response window: Reader notes are reviewed weekly.