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Archive for 2009

Then and Now

Last night we went to the opening of the new show at the Confluence Gallery & Art Center in Twisp.  It is titled “Then and Now: A Historical View of the Methow Valley” and was conceived and curated by Roxie Miller.  Roxie and her husband Carl live in Winthrop, and are very involved with The Shafer Historical Museum, also in Winthrop.  Roxie’s concept was to choose historical photographs and objects from the museum collection, and pair these with contemporary works by regional artists that are inspired by the photograph or object.  She also wrote a number of narratives about Methow Valley history that are displayed along with some of the photographs.

Our friend Michael Neiman, a woodworker who lives in Spokane, brought over one of his beautiful rocking chairs for the show:

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Roxie asked Rick if he would make a blanket chest to pair with a little chest they have in the museum that was made out of an old apple box.  He used walnut from a homestead tree in southwest Washington that had a large treehouse built in it; he had to be careful to find all the old nails and screws in the rough lumber before he started milling it down to finished dimensions – there was quite a little handful!  The panels are quartersawn European beech, and there is a layer of aromatic cedar planking inside on the bottom.

Washington walnut & quarter-sawn beech blanket chest

Washington walnut & quarter-sawn beech blanket chest

They brought in a loom that was donated to the museum by Kay Reiber, who set up a warp and demonstrated weaving during the opening.  She thinks the loom was built locally and is about 35 years old.  I brought in three of the shawls I just finished, which they will display with the loom during the show (and hopefully sell…).  The photograph on the wall behind the loom is of sheep grazing in the Pasayten Wilderness – evidently there used to be many large herds of sheep that were grazed in the high country around the valley during the summers.

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Loved this old seeder that was being displayed as a possible garden bench/storage box:

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Carl and Roxie Miller dressed for the occasion – there are a lot of Millers here in the valley, and most of them are related to Carl!

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This is really a terrific show, and especially interesting if you take the time to read the narratives and study the old photographs (the prints in the gallery are for sale, by the way).  It runs through April 11, 2009.

Afterwards, we went across the street to Tappi for dinner and to listen to one of our favorite local musicians, Chris “Breathe” Frue – playing solo jazz guitar on this occasion.  The mural behind him is very personal to the owner of Tappi, whose family came from some small islands off the northeast coast of Sicily.

"Breathe" Frue playing at Tappi in Twisp

"Breathe" Frue playing at Tappi in Twisp

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Spinning day at guild

It was raining here last night, which we figured was the kiss of death for our remaining snow… only to wake up this morning to maybe 6-8 inches of new fallen snow!  It may not last, but it sure was pretty…

new snow in late February

new snow in late February

Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers meet on Thursday afternoons from 1-3 pm in our very own building halfway between Twisp and Winthrop.  Actually the building was built by our fearless leader, Kay R., both for her own studio space and to make a home for the guild (we rent it from her for a very reasonable amount.)  The last Thursday of the month is “spinning day” – those who spin, do so and the rest weave, visit, etc.

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We have a library and lots of weaving samples along one wall, and each of us has drawer space to keep personal items and weaving supplies.  There are at least 10 looms and many of them are currently in use (not everyone has a loom at home, and all members can come in outside meeting days to work on projects.)  The floor is heated and there is lots of light.  It’s a wonderful space!

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mvsw-26feb09-4Diana M. is finally making headway on her green chenille yardage.  So happy!

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I was able to go on a Tuesday outing today, for the first time in several weeks.  It has turned warmish and melty over here so the question was where to find snow that wasn’t total mush, and could we avoid being rained on?

We went up the West Chewuch Rd out of Winthrop to the Sno-Park lot at the end of plowing, about 10 miles from town.  We were a small group today, only five, with 3 of us on cross-country skis and 2 on snowshoes.  This is a mixed use snowmobile and foot-powered sports trail, but it was well packed down and there was not a snowmobile in sight.  The skiing was remarkably good, actually – not icy, not too soft, not very fast but that was OK.  We went in about 2.5 miles to the Falls Creek Falls campground.  I love that name – the creek that comes down there is called Falls Creek, because there is a waterfall just a few hundred feet above the road, which is so aptly named “Falls Creek Falls.”

Along the way, we noticed there were cougar tracks going both up and down the road.  We had Otis along, who is Barb’s daughter’s dog (part Boxer and part Golden Retriever), so we had to make sure we weren’t seeing Otis tracks at first.  But a dog leaves a toenail print and a more pointed toe, whereas the cats have a very round print with only the toepads leaving a mark, as the claws are retracted.

cougar tracks in the snow

cougar tracks in the snow

The gang always stops for lunch at the turnaround point:

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Then we walked up to view the falls, which are still mostly frozen, but do have water breaking through in places now.  Barb was up there last Friday and said it was completely frozen then, so that is yet another sign that the thaw may be coming.  We experienced a mild chinook-like wind on the way out.

Falls Creek Falls

Falls Creek Falls

Felt good to get out on the skis today.

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There and back again

It was cold and rainy the first 2 days in Los Angeles – I almost didn’t bring enough clothes!  But we were working inside most of the time, so it didn’t really matter.  I managed to recall what I was doing 2-½ years ago and felt I was actually useful in helping my friend and former colleague get her new psychophysiology lab up and running.  Technology has changed, much for the better, since the last time we set up a new lab.  Very cool stuff.

Yesterday was still cold, but clear and beautiful – new snow in the mountains, no smog, green hills.  L.A. can actually be beautiful!  Here’s the view from Sybil’s office window at Cal State- San Bernardino:

fresh snow on the San Gabriels

fresh snow on the San Gabriels

It was also beautiful here today in Seattle.  I took a late afternoon walk to Sunset Hill Park over Shilshole Marina, with views across Puget Sound to the Olympic Mountains.

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I’m off to Anacortes to visit Mom and Dad tomorrow – then back home to the Methow on Saturday.  We had some new snow while I have been gone, so maybe I can still sneak in a ski or two.  Hope so.

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California, here I come

After having spent the last two days at the Madrona Fiber Arts Winter Retreat in Tacoma, I am off to California for 3 days to visit and work with a friend who used to be at the University of Washington and is now at Cal State San Bernardino.  So there won’t be any blogging for the rest of the week.

Madrona was wonderful.  I didn’t register for any classes this year, but met a lot of my friends down there, wandered the market (didn’t buy much, but talk about eye candy!), went out to dinner, sat around and knitted and talked.  Lots of fun.

Heidi Parra’s booth, of The Artful Ewe in Port Gamble, WA:

The Artful Ewe at Madrona

The Artful Ewe at Madrona

Vivian Hoxbro from Denmark, at the Teachers’ Gallery Friday night – she of Domino Knitting and Shadow Knitting fame:

Vivian Hoxbro with some of her work

Vivian Hoxbro with some of her work

I guess I should have taken more pictures.  I became immersed in the experience and forgot to document!

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Our spanking new website is now up for Swanson Woodcraft.  We worked with our ISP – Methownet.com and Medicine Wheel Website Design –  to do the development, and hope to soon add a Quicktime version of the DVD we had made of our Seattle house back in 2006 (it was a real showcase for Rick’s work).

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Projects underway

Actually, the first one up is a “project just completed.”  Last year, at a spinning workshop retreat on Orcas Island with Judith MacKenzie McCuin, we dyed some sock blanks.  Judith had sent some of her 2-ply Rambouillet yarn to a mill to be knitted up into tubular yardage, the tubes being about 6″ wide.  Each of us got about a 12″ piece, which were dyed in a “painterly” fashion – all were done in the same basic colors, though.  Once dried, these are then pulled out (un-knitted) into 2 balls of yarn, one for each sock.

I wanted to get these done for 3 reasons: (1) to actually finish a project I started a year ago, (2) to try out a pattern from Cat Bordhi’s wonderful new sock book, and (3) to show them to Judith next weekend when I see her at the Madrona Fiber Arts Retreat in Tacoma.  And, I hope to get a signed copy of Judith’s new spinning book!

So, Simple Coriolis slipper socks:

coriolis-socks-1

coriolis-socks-22I have also started a top-down raglan sweater for Rick, using some yarn I spun about 4 years ago.  He wanted a basic outdoor sweater to replace an old favorite bought in the Outer Hebrides many years ago.  I am using Karen Alfke’s Unpattern for the Top-Down Sweater, a big favorite of mine since it lets you design any size sweater from any weight of yarn, with neckline variations.

raglan-for-rick-underway

The wool is from the very first fleece I ever bought, back in 2004.  It was a multicolored Coopworth cross, which I divided into 4 color groups which were then sent out to a mill to be processed into roving for spinning (I also kept the coarser wool, which was all dark brown, separate).  I had about equal amounts of the 2 lightest shades and the darkest shade in the finer wool, so the spun singles from those were made into a 3-ply yarn, which is what I am using for the sweater.  It is only medium-soft, which will be fine for an outerwear sweater, but boy is it ever “springy”.  Lots of elasticity.

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Lady's fleece, sorted before making into roving

I am also getting to work on weaving some shawls.  These are similar to the ones I made last fall, of which only one remains out on consignment, so it is time to start building up some stock.  The warp is a handpainted mohair bouclé from New Zealand, which I get wholesale from Fiber Trends in Wenatchee.  I don’t think all the colors are shown there, by the way, but at any rate they are changing dyers so it will all be a little different pretty soon.  I am using various colors for the weft, mostly alpaca, which gives the shawls wonderful drape.  For the blue-green-black warp shown, I am weaving 2 shawls – the first one has been completed with a black weft, and the current one is using a blue alpaca and a kid mohair/silk yarn held together.

boucle shawl underway on the loom

boucle shawl underway on the loom

On the non-fiberarts front, today I designed an ad for Rick to place in the Methow Valley News annual Building Guide, which will be out in March:

swanson-woodcraft-mvbg-adThe website will be “up” Real Soon Now, at which time it will be announced here on the blog, with a permanent link on the sidebar.  That’s been another project underway, for the last month or so!

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Conconully

In addition to the Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers Guild, I am also a member of a fiber-arts guild over in the Okanogan Valley (Omak – Okanogan, about a 45 minute drive over a low mountain range, the next river valley to the east of the Methow Valley).  They meet every 2 weeks in each others’ homes, and a potluck lunch figures largely in the proceedings.  My friend Diana is also a member, as is a woman named Teresa who moved to Twisp from Tonasket last year.  So last Saturday the three of us made the journey over Loup Loup pass to a guild meeting in Conconully, which is a good half hour northeast of Omak; Conconully is a little frontier town on a lake.  Pronounced:  Con-co-NULL- ly. Our hostess, Eve, lives in the woods several miles outside of Conconully, and this was the first time we had been to her home.

Guild meeting at Eve's

Guild meeting at Eve's

Yes, that is a very large stuffed elk head in the background.  There was also a cougar waiting to pounce up on the stairway landing.

There was a lot of show-and-tell, including Sandra’s poncho that she had woven in a shadow-weave pattern with her handspun yarn:

conconully-3and Ingrid’s beautiful rep weave table runner and placemats that she just finished as part of a “color challenge” project the guild took on last year:conconully-21

Ingrid is a very interesting woman.  She is Swedish, and when she was younger she lived in Hawaii and was a marine mammal trainer.  They moved to Omak from Anacortes several years ago, and now live out on the Colville Indian Reservation in a little valley east of Omak, where she raises cashmere goats, Norwegian Fjord horses, and also has an aviary which I have not yet seen.  We have been to several guild meetings at her home, and she is a beautiful weaver.

Saturday night we went out to dinner at the Twisp River Pub with our neighbors up the road, then Rick and I drove up to Winthrop to see our friend Leah Larson play with Brad Pinkerton and Paul Gitchos.  Leah has a beautiful singing voice (mainly bluegrass) but that evening she was just playing the fiddle with the band.

leahbradpaul

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Busy weekend

Well, I have some catching up to do!  First off, Rick installed the display cabinet last shown here “underway”, and here is how it looked with the art glass collection it holds:

display-cabinet

art glass display cabinet

He’s now at work on a sideboard and wall of bookcases for friends down in Wenatchee.

I went over to the coast last Saturday to attend some social events.  Saturday night we celebrated my old friend Chris’s 60th birthday.  I have to be careful not to lay it on too thick with this “old” business, or she will be merciless when it’s my turn… (who am I kidding, she will be merciless anyway.)

birthday-partyThe next day, I travelled down to Gig Harbor with some knitting friends for an annual tradition called “Soup Bowl Sunday” at our friend Suzanne’s beautiful home.  There we knitted, talked, ate and laughed our way throughout a very enjoyable afternoon.  I also got a fabulous arm and hand massage that did wonders for the soreness in my left thumb.  She said it was a combination of massage and rolfing.  Thank you, Carolyn!

The last picture shows Janet’s Grey Mist cowl neck Bohus sweater, and one that Suzanne knit several years ago.  Both gorgeous!  I wore my Forest Darkness but failed to get a picture – it is still without buttons, but hopefully that situation will change soon.

Janet and Susanna had just returned from the opening of the Radiant Knits: The Bohus Tradition exhibit at the American Swedish Institute in Minneapolis.  They brought me a copy of the booklet that Susanna and Wendy J. Johnson published to accompany the exhibit; it is available only from ASI here and had a limited printing, so get your copy now!  They also produced a lovely set of notecards , which are also only available from ASI.

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soup-bowl-2009-3bohus-sweaters

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Resting comfortably

I don’t have much to report, except that Pushkin (the grey cat) finally seems to be feeling better.  We have been giving him amoxicillin with a dropper – a pink liquid, one and a half droppers twice a day – you can imagine how popular that has been.  He remained on hunger strike until we finally caved on the kidney diet food (for now) and let him have regular canned food.  Last night he and Teasel were even chasing each other around and ambushing each other a bit.  That’s a good sign!

resting-comfortably

Also, we found out that his kidney readings are basically unchanged from 2 years ago, which is great.  If we can get him past this bacterial hepatitis thing, he should be around for a while yet.

I’m off to the coast tomorrow for various social activities – Rick’s staying here to hold down the fort.

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