Friday, February 20, 2009

Spinning at Common Threads

Lori, Karen, Margie and I made the pilgrimage today to Common Threads in Encinitas for some spinning fun.  There was a great turn out - nine ladies in all.  As always, we had a great time sharing spinning stories and knitting adventures.

Before all spinning journeys, I search through my entire spinning stash with the hope of identifying the perfect spinning project for the day.  As I was searching through my stash this morning, I was overcome with indecision about what colors and fibers to bring.  After a few minutes of hemming and hawing, I just grabbed a few different things and off I went.  I ended up spinning a 80% superfine merino/20% tussah silk blend in a colorway that I call "Tourmaline."

Tourmaline - merino/silk


I spun this yarn using the fractal striping method that Janel Laidman described in the Summer 2007 issue of Spin-Off Magazine.  I am really pleased with the look and hand of the final yarn, and I can hardly wait to start knitting with it.


Tourmaline Handspun

Monday, February 2, 2009

Spinning Workshop with Janel Laidman

On January 31, a group of us spinners got together at Lori's house for a workshop led by Janel Laidman on how to get the most out of your handpainted rovings.  During the workshop we learned several techniques for splitting handpainted rovings prior to spinning in order to reduce the stripy look.  All of the rovings we used were handpainted by Lori, who has an amazing color sense.  We spun for about 5 hours, and in the end everyone had some very beautiful yarns to take home with them.


Handspun

I have already decided that my yarns are destined to become Lynne Vogel's Starry Night Scarf.  I purchased the pattern from her Etsy shop back in December, and have been wanting to cast on since then.


Handspun

Sunday, January 25, 2009

TNNA 2009

My sweetie and I were fortunate enough to make it to TNNA's winter show in San Diego last weekend.  In the words of Anne of Green Gables, there was plenty of "scope for the imagination" to be had by most.

 San Diego


We attended "Sample It" on Friday night, which was a great opportunity to see new products by some of our favorite fiber industry folks.  The best part was that you could buy samples of these items.  I snatched up a Flat Feet kit from Conjoined Creations in a wonderful pink and purple colorway.  This kit was very smartly designed and even included a copy of their latest pattern book and double pointed needles so that I could start knitting immediately.

 Conjoined Creations - Flat Feet Kit


I also picked up a sample kit from Eucalan, my favorite wool wash company.  They have a couple of neat new products out, including lint remover sheets (perfect for the hand spinner) and single use wipes for those knitwear + food accidents on-the-go.

Eucalan Kit


 On Saturday morning, I attended a class on "Designing Sweaters that Fit" by Stefanie Japel, author of Fitted Knits and Glam Knits.  The focus of the class was on taking your own measurements and using them to design a top-down raglan sweater that fits your proportions perfectly.  This class was very useful, and certainly inspired me to start knitting sweaters from the top.  Thanks, Stefanie!

San Diego Convention Center


 After my class on Saturday morning, my sweetie and I walked around the marketplace.  We stopped by so many great exhibitor booths.  A few of our favorites were Interweave Press, Fiber Fiend, One World Button Supply Co., Bijou Basin Ranch, Hand Jive, Lantern Moon, and Tanglewood Fiber Creations.  We really had such a great time and we have already marked our calendar for next year!

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Holiday Knitting

I knitted for what seemed like hundreds of hours over the last two months in order to finish up Christmas gifts for my nearest and dearest.  It was such a blast!  The final tally was two hats, two neck cozies, and one scarf.  The scarf was the biggest challenge.  I knit it using my handpainted fingering weight superwash merino/tencel (50/50) yarn on size US3 needles.  Yikes!  The finished scarf was 440 rows long!  I really love how it turned out, but in the future I will keep in mind that fine yarn projects do take more time.



4×4 hat
4x4 hat - made with Knit Picks Essential Sock Yarn in Cocoa

Top-down hat
Top-down hat - made with Handmaiden Casbah Sock Yarn in Stone

Neck Cozy
Neck Cozy - made with handpainted superfine merino sport weight yarn in Stone

Entrelac Asymmetrical Neck Cozy
Entrelac Asymmetrical Neck Cozy - made with Trendsetter Yarns Tonalita

Buttonhole Scarf
Buttonhole Scarf - made with handpainted superwash merino merino/tencel fingering weight yarn in Limited Edition

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Dyeing up a Storm

I have been handpainting rovings lately, which is great fun! I absolutely love playing with new colors and imagining how they will look when they are finished and spun into yarn.

Here are some photos of the latest batch.

Shamrock - merino/mohair

Merino/Kid Mohair (70/30) in "Shamrock"



Chestnut - merino/mohair

Merino/Kid Mohair (70/30) in "Chestnut"



Tourmaline - merino/silk

Merino/Tussah Silk (80/20) in "Tourmaline"



Bryce Canyon - merino/silk

Merino/Tussah (80/20) in "Bryce Canyon"



Ribbon Rock Turquoise - BFL

Bluefaced Leicester in "Ribbon Rock Turquoise"



Desert Sandstone - BFL

Bluefaced Leicester in "Desert Sandstone"



Sorbet - BFL

Bluefaced Leicester in "Sorbet"



<Topaz - BFL

Bluefaced Leicester in "Topaz"

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Thankful

Happy Thanksgiving! My sweetie and I are planning to spend the weekend relaxing at home. I have already pulled out a few knitting projects that I hope to spend the majority of my time working on. One of my current projects is the Ivy League Vest by Eunny Jang from the Winter 2007 Interweave Knits. It is my first large-project attempt at Fair Isle knitting, and I must say that I am enjoying it. I picked this project because I wanted to learn how to steek my knitting, though now that I have cast on the front neck steek I am feeling a bit nervous about wielding a pair of sharp scissors near my precious hand knit garment. I am confident, however, that I will be able to muster the courage to press on once the excitement of having a finished garment hits.

Ivy League Vest

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Ravelympics 2008

Ravelympics


Whew! Seventeen knitting-packed days can be so exhausting! But also so enjoyable! This year was the inaugural year of the Ravelympics, and I very much enjoyed knitting and watching the Summer Olympics with all of my knitting sisters and brothers around the globe. I entered two projects in the challenge - the handspun lace curtain that I am knitting for our west-facing kitchen window (Event: WIP Wrestling) and an asymmetrical neck cozy for my friend Sarah (Event: Gift Knits Pentathlon).

Handspun Curtain


Asymmetrical Neck Cozy


I worked on both of these projects throughout the games. I suspected from the outset that I would not have enough yarn left to finish the curtain, but I knit on until the very end. Now I think that even if I had had the proper yardage, I would not have been able to finish such a big project in such a short time frame. It doesn't help that the lace pattern has a 16 row repeat that, for some reason, is all but impossible for me to memorize! Anyway, it was great to work on this project, which had been hibernating for some time. Even though I didn't finish it, I am optimistic that I will finish it soon. [Note: the curtain is about 2 1/2 times the length that it was in the above photo.]

The asymmetrical neck cozy was such a relaxing project. My friend Sarah came to visit a couple of months ago, and she asked if I would knit her something from a skein of my handdyed superfine merino yarn that she purchased. I was elated to make her a neck cozy, in part because I love knitting for other people! Also, she lives in the D.C. area, and winter can be quite cold. My hope is that the cozy will make the chilly weather a little more tolerable. I finished knitting the cozy only two days before the closing ceremonies, and I still had to decide on a button. After some thought, I decided to make a "thumbprint" button out of polymer clay. My friend, Barbara, was really the inspiration behind the button. She has been making polymer clay buttons like crazy over the past several months. In fact, Barabara and I have joined forces, and are now offering her buttons on our Etsy site. I baked the clay, glazed the button and finished sewing on the button with about 36 hours to go before the closing ceremonies.

I found the entire Ravelympics experience to be very enjoyable, and I am already looking forward to the 2010 games in London, England. Perhaps I will be there in person, knitting in tow.