CruciFixed
Well-Known Member
Thanks David. I can get some inexpensive beads at Michaels I bet. I wouldn't mind doing a beadless one either.
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Christian Forums is looking to bring on new moderators to the CF Staff Team! If you have been an active member of CF for at least three months with 200 posts during that time, you're eligible to apply! This is a great way to give back to CF and keep the forums running smoothly! If you're interested, you can submit your application here!
Its not yarn but I wonder if it could be done with yarn?
Macrame is super easy. It really is.
I've recently considered taking up rosary making.. but yarn is definitely a new one and rather too unmanly for me.
As far as rosary making...the metal loops always get me as far as making a jewelry type of rosary. I have a hard time getting them the same size.
Me too. I mostly use a wood on string rosary when I pray. That's the one that I carry around in my pocket.I'm not a fan of wire-rosaries. They're too fragile. I'm moving on to cord for my personal prayer tool (with wood beads).
Me too. I mostly use a wood on string rosary when I pray. That's the one that I carry around in my pocket.
My only complaint about the wood+cord rosaries that I've browsed through is their lack of fancy crucifixes. They're all rather Spartan. This is the new rosary I have coming in the mail (with a new scapular and statue of Our Lady of Mount Carmel):
![]()
Ah! Marking the pliers! I'll try that. There is this little old lady that does not even have to look while making them & she has perfect loops everytime.I agree. That wire one is a pain. (Same person who taught me how to make the macrame rosary taught me the wire one. Ugh!!! I was making, and making and making little "eye-pins" with the little metal loops before I was *ever* allowed to slip even one bead on the "eye-pin" that I had made. Her perfectionism reared it's head once again! I guess she was a good teacher, but I know I couldn't be that strict though.)
Anyway, try getting the rosary making pliers from Our Lady's Rosary Maker's. (It has little teeth that hold the wire, and an actual "space" (near the wire cutter portion) that can be used to show how much wire is really needed for the closing loop (Lady would snug the bead on the wire in that space to cut just the right amount of wire before she would actually cut the wire. Must admit that I never quite got that right, but I know that it can be done because two other Rosarymaker's do it too and couldn't understand why I couldn't understand it.) Also, you might try marking the spot on your pliers where the wire needs to be held for turning the loop--viola, loops the same size! (I guess that's "cheating" in a way but it worked for me.)
There is this little old lady that does not even have to look while making them & she has perfect loops everytime.
I invested in a video. It didn't help me much. Either it's a gift or you need to make several thousand before you can do it in your sleep. It's fascinating to watch someone that good whip them out. And they do whip them out!Yeah, I know. Same with the lady I spoke of. (Now *her* rosaries and chaplets, even her wire ones, are not fragile at all. I have some chaplets she made me that must be fifteen years old now and I always carry with me a Rosary she made for me--with a crucifix and middle piece gotten from a pilgrimage to the HolyLand--that she made me as a gift for the Holy Year in 2000. I particularly like her "bow" connectors for the crucifix and middle piece. (They're like a figure eight and I can't even tell where one end begins and where one end ends.) I think she makes her own chain too. (*I'm* the one for shortcuts--she isn't. I can't even *hope* to be as good at rosarymaking as she is.)