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Archive for the ‘knitting’ Category

Fall is here.  I love this time of year.  We are still having temperatures in the mid-60’s during the day, low 30’s at night.  The trees are starting to turn.  We have been over to the coast twice, each of the last 2 weekends, and the drive over the mountains gets lovelier every time we cross over.  I am actually starting to wear sweaters in the evenings.

I can also tell it is Fall because all of a sudden I want to start knitting projects.  I bought a couple of pattern booklets at Weaving Works when in Seattle and have knit a hat using some of my handspun yarn:

"Quincy" hat by Jared Flood

"Quincy" hat by Jared Flood

The pattern is by Jared Flood from his new book called “Made in Brooklyn”.  The yarn was a 3-ply I spun from a Lincoln x Romney cross (brown color) blended with a little mohair dyed orange.  I bought the batts from the breeder at a NW Regional Spinners conference a couple of years back.  My friend Carol fell in love with the hat last weekend so now it is hers!  It was a quick knit and I will definitely do another one, if not several more (p.s. you do need to know how to do a provisional cast on, and garter stitch grafting; the pickup of stitches for the crown, off the continuous edge of a Mobius strip, is a little unusual but not hard once you understand what is going on).

I have also started the classic Elizabeth Zimmerman pattern, Tomten Jacket, for me – also using handspun.  This is a garter stitch jacket with optional hood.  I am using a 3-ply yarn I spun from a “cleaning out the mill at the end of the season” blend I got from Stonehedge Fiber Mill about 4 years ago.  It is a blend of wool, alpaca and silk.  The above-mentioned Jared Flood blogged about his modifications for this jacket back in 2007, and I am going to use some of those suggestions to make it fit better.

And I am planning to start another sweater, Anhinga by Norah Gaughan, after seeing it on Teyani’s blog: Intrepid Fiber Wizard.  Thanks, Teyani!  It’s in Norah’s new book “Fly Away” – Collection No. 5.   I know I have yarn in my stash that will work with this pattern.  Just have to haul out all the boxes and rummage through them this weekend.

Back on the home front, they are starting to put in the fence posts across the back yard.

fence postsIt’s going to be even taller than we thought, starting out at 7 ft at the roadside and increasing to 9 ft on the right-hand end, due to the slope of the ground.  It will really provide a nice visual barrier, yes?  We also finished creating and mulching down another bed for the future perennial/shrub border to the lawn, and covered the area where we plan to have our vegetable garden next year with black plastic to (hopefully) keep the weeds down.

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I set up my Weck electric canner last week for the first time – in my case it is a Weck electric “dyepot”.  This thing is wonderful.  It is heavy gauge stainless steel, has temperature control and a drain spigot:

Weck dyepot

The project at hand was to overdye a woven shawl and a handknit shawl.  Both were originally made using a colorway in the New Zealand handpainted yarns I get from Fiber Trends, in a colorway not too many people besides me seem to like.  The company has changed dyers now, anyway, and I am not sure this color will be available anymore.  So anyway, I overdyed the two pieces, which were a yellow-green-grey-taupe mix, with about 60% blue and 40% violet at a DOS i.e. depth-of-shade of 0.75.   I was aiming not to completely obscure the color changes in the original yarn, but transform it to a blue green overall color.

The domino wrap, before and after:

domino wrap before dyeingoverdyed domino wrap

The woven shawl, before and after:

Sagebrush with wool handpaintoverdyed shawl

On the knitted wrap, I really like the way the mohair boucle and brushed mohair domino squares took up the dye a little differently from the plain wool squares.  It’s just a lot more interesting looking, besides being a better color.

As long as I am tooting my own horn, let me add that the knitted wrap is my own pattern which I call the Fats Domino Wrap.  I have been selling it with the yarns, which I get wholesale from Fiber Trends, as a knitting kit, mainly up at the Ashford Gallery in Winthrop, WA.  Fiber Trends is also promoting it as the Fats Domino Wrap/Shawl Kit with Pattern.  Fiber Trends is wholesale only, but you can order it through this link and it will be fulfilled by one of their participating retailers – the one nearest to you, I believe.  Fiber Trends provides a wide range of knitting and felting patterns under their own label, plus the full range of Naturally yarns from New Zealand, including the handpainted yarns I have used in the kit.

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Blogging is lagging behind the actual living of life, this week.  It’s been a busy one.  I will try to catch up over the weekend!

A week ago we went down to Vancouver, WA towing the new cargo trailer with cabinets for our friends’ living room remodel.  Rick spent much of the weekend installing cabinets and trimming out windows and doors:

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Here’s a shot from before the remodel – quite a difference, eh?

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Meanwhile, I went off to Portland, OR on both Saturday and Sunday to visit the Sock Summit at the Oregon Convention Center.  A lot of my Seattle friends were there, and one from Omak too!  This thing was huge and featured many famous names in the worlds of knitting, spinning and dyeing including some who rarely, if ever, come to conferences of this size (Barbara Walker, Meg Swansen, Priscilla Gibson-Roberts, Anna Zilboorg).  I had not pre-registered and did not take any classes, but just wandered happily around the marketplace with 150 vendors, many of whom were small dye houses with beautiful and unusual yarns and spinning fibers.  I also attended the Luminary Panel at the end of the day on Sunday, which was a not-to-be-missed opportunity to hear commentary and reminiscences from nine fabulous women who have certainly been inspirations to me over the past 25 years.

Brier Rose

Brier Rose

Sock Summit Market - tip of the iceberg

Sock Summit Market - tip of the iceberg

The Sanguine Gryphon

The Sanguine Gryphon

Too big to take pictures of really!

On the way home on Monday, being blessed with an empty cargo trailer, we stopped in Port Orchard where I bought a new (old, actually) loom which I found on Craig’s List last week.  More on this in a later post!

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We had a 4-day, 3-night visit to The Coast last weekend, a busy and sociable visit.  On the way over on Friday, we had dinner with old friends from Seattle who have built a new home at Suncadia, a planned development and resort near Roslyn on the east side of Snoqualmie Pass.  Their home is beautiful, particularly the tile work in the kitchen and bathrooms which they did themselves – it’s very individualistic and professional looking.

On Saturday we shopped for the dinner I was cooking that evening, which was a joint birthday celebration for Rick and his sister (they are 4 years and 4 days apart in age).  Here they are after having done justice to the roast lamb and accompaniments, including a lot of veggies from our own garden this year:

Kathy's 65th bday

Sunday was for knitting (for me anyway) with a group of friends who meet once a month.  I haven’t made it for the last 2 months, so it was great to see everyone.  Sarah had finished a beautiful Aran cardigan which she designed herself:

Sarah's Aran 2

Later that day I delivered 2 of my rag rugs to someone who had ordered them for her kitchen and then we dashed to the ferry to Bainbridge Island to have dinner with our friends who have just come up for summer break from southern California.  They keep a sailboat at the Eagle Harbor marina and live aboard when they are up in the Northwest.

Monday was for errands and business meetings, then lunch at Seattle’s Uwajimaya and a bit of book shopping at Kinokuniya Bookstore (Japan’s largest bookstore chain specializing in Asian language books).   I found a book I was looking for with interesting, rather free-form clothing that could be adaptable to handwoven fabrics – of course it is all in Japanese, but the schematics are good and it includes the patterns in an insert.

Then we were off homeward in the afternoon, arriving about 7 pm, back in the valley again.  Always glad to be home!

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I finished the top-down raglan for Rick yesterday.  Here it is washed and drying on the wooly board:

ricks-raglan

As mentioned in a previous post, this was knit from my own handspun – a 3-ply yarn where each ply was a different natural color from a multi-colored Coopworth cross fleece.  I used Karen Alfke’s “Unpattern for the top-down sweater“, an old favorite.

This is just a simple thing, but I enjoyed knitting it, it went quickly, I didn’t run out of yarn (in fact I have a fair amount left – always so important), and Rick really likes it.  He will be wearing it tomorrow.  I think this one will be around for a long time and meet the classic description:  just like an old favorite sweater.

I have also wound off two 6-yard warps, enough for 4 more shawls, and got one of them on the loom last night:

arctic-shawl-warp

These are handpainted yarns from New Zealand, and this colorway is called “Arctic.”  She must have been thinking of the aurora borealis?

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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.

fleece-sorted-2

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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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.

soup-bowl-2009-1soup-bowl-2009-2

soup-bowl-2009-3bohus-sweaters

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We had a dusting of snow the night before last, perhaps an inch or two, but it was enough to make the Alfalfa Loop track skiable (it had gotten pretty icy over the last couple of weeks, with no new snow).  We went out for 3 laps yesterday morning and it was good.

I finished a pair of simple grey socks for Rick that were started sometime last fall.  Knit in Koigu Premium Merino (KPM) that I had in stash:

Grey merino socks for Rick

Grey merino socks for Rick

Our favorite restaurant in Twisp, Tappi, has re-opened after months of being on hiatus.   They don’t have a website or I would provide a link.  The food is Sicilian Italian and focused around an authentic wood-fired pizza oven that the owner, John Bonica, had sent over from Italy and assembled in place in the restaurant.  They are only open Friday-Sunday nights with a more limited menu than before, but still, they are open!  Yay!  John says they will start having music soon… we used to love to go there and hear great jazz on the weekends.  We went up for dinner last night and each of us had 2 fabulous lambchops cooked in the woodfired oven in small cast iron frypans, served with a green salad with chevre and balsamic vinaigrette.  John also has a nice selection of Italian wines.

dscf0881

Our older cat, Pushkin, has not been doing well and we had blood work done last week, thinking his kidneys might be getting worse.  It turns out he has bacterial hepatitis, which must have come from something he ate, although that part remains a mystery.  We are giving him antibiotics and subcutaneous fluids, but he still seems pretty “down” although not as distressed as he was last week.  He’s also not eating much at all.  Definitely a worry for us right now.

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Bohus “Forest Darkness”

I have been steadily working away on a challenging knitting project for a couple of months now.  It is a kit I bought several years back from Solveig Gustafsson in Goteborg, Sweden.  The kits are re-creations of the original garments produced by the Bohus Stickning organization in Sweden, between 1939 and 1969.  The English translations for the kits have been done by my friend Susanna Hansson, a talented knitter, teacher and collector of Bohus garments.  Please do follow that link to Susanna’s website, where you will find a wealth of information about the Bohus garments and information on her classes and upcoming events.

My kit was for the pattern called Forest Darkness, with black as the main color.  It is worked in a fine gauge, yummy 50% merino and 50% angora yarn.  The yoke was a challenge, but isn’t it beautiful?  After the thrill of the color work, there were miles and miles of plain stockinette knitting – in black.  I just finished grafting the tubular bind-off at the bottom of the sweater.  It still needs blocking, darning in ends, and buttons (I am anxiously awaiting the arrival of buttons ordered last week on-line, and hope they will work for this sweater).

forest-darkness-wip

I was determined to finish this in time for the opening of an exhibit in Minneapolis at the American Swedish Institute.  It is titled “Radiant Knits: The Bohus Tradition” and will be exhibited between January 23rd – March 29th, 2009.  Solveig Gustaffson is coming over from Sweden for the opening weekend, along with Kerstin Olsson, one of the original designers for Bohus Stickning, and Kjell Andersson, who has developed a film about the organization.

Susanna has been deeply involved in putting this together, and the majority of the sweaters and other items will come from her personal collection.   A number of the kits will be available through the ASI museum shop.

Sadly, I am not going to Minneapolis, but hope to be wearing my sweater this coming weekend in honor of the event.

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Over here in the valley, folks refer to anything on the west side of the Cascade range as “The Coast.”  Last Friday we headed off to The Coast (a.k.a. Seattle) on the first day any of the mountain passes were open, following torrential rains, snow and mud slides, road washouts, and so on.  Stevens Pass was bare and wet, an easy drive, although the Wenatchee River was a muddy, raging torrent and there were numerous places where we could see water had been over the road, or at least running along side it.

We were there to pick up a glass order and other job-related materials for the woodworking shop, as well as see friends and family.  On Saturday we had dinner in Ballard with some friends.  On Sunday I met with a group of longtime friends – we meet on the second Sunday of each month for knitting.  Rick dropped me off and went on to visit with his mom and do some errands for her.

Janet and I are both knitting Bohus sweaters (more on this in a later post).  Here is the colorwork part:

Two Bohus sweaters in progress

Two Bohus sweaters in progress

I am afraid my flash rather washed out Janet’s “Grey Mist” cowl neck on the upper left.  Mine is called “Forest Darkness” and will be a cardigan.

Here’s a few of the knitters.  Hi everyone!

sunday-11jan2009-1sunday-11jan2009-2

We headed back over the mountains mid-afternoon.  It was foggy and soggy on the west side, but as often happens, there were clear blue skies on the east side… until we hit the pea soup fog somewhere before Wenatchee!  That lasted part way up the Columbia, where again we had clear skies and stars for the remainder of the trip.  A gorgeous moonrise greeted us when we arrived home – one day past full moon.

There is always a moment when we turn up-valley at Pateros, where the Methow River flows into the mighty Columbia, that I feel so welcomed.  We’re back, welcome home, back in the valley again!

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