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Archive for the ‘fiberarts’ Category

December doings

It’s been clear and cold here, with no change in sight for next week.  We still have snow but it is getting to be an icy, crusty affair.  It’s beautiful – but we’re getting anxious about lack of new snow for skiing and snowshoeing!

Meanwhile, since returning from Seattle at Thanksgiving, I finished up 3 rugs.  The first two shown below were done with Pendleton “worms”, a selvage edge trimmed from the sides of the Pendleton blankets as they are being woven (they later bind the edges with a wool cloth edging).  I have bags and bags of this stuff in a variety of colors, and this time around with the rug warp I think I will concentrate on using it and playing with the colors.

By the way, I have had several comments from friends/family that I never showed pictures of our new oak floor after it was installed in October.  So folks – THAT’S IT in the background of the rug photos below!

Pendleton "worms" - black, white and tan with orange accents

Pendleton "worms" alternating dark blue/purple with brighter colors

The next one was done with 9 colors of cotton corduroys and some lightweight denims.  I sequenced the 9 colors by sewing the ends of strips together at the sewing machine – most of the strips were only about 20″ long – and there are 20 repeats of the 9-color sequence in the rug.  A lot of work preparing the strips for weaving, but I like the effect.

9 colors of cotton corduroys and denims

I’ve also been spinning some beautiful dyed Blue-Faced Leicester top that I bought from Briar Rose Fibers at the first Sock Summit in Portland, OR.  I started this project in Seattle on my HansenCraft minispinner, and I am planning to make a 3-ply yarn which I hope will be enough to knit something for myself.  Actually I have finished all the spinning at this point and should be able to get it plied up this week.

Last night we went down to the Confluence Gallery in Twisp for an evening event called “Black Tie Methow Style.”   They had fabulous hors d’oeuvres, champagne and a no-host bar.  People got dressed up – but with bit of a twist in many cases.  Two of our favorite local musicians were playing jazz.  I didn’t get the best of pictures, but it was a lot of fun and we got to see and socialize with many friends we hadn’t seen for a while.  A nice kick-off to the holiday season!

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Holiday Shows

There’s a new show up at the Confluence Gallery in Twisp titled “Exquisite Craft.”  Rick and I both have some work in this show and there are many really wonderful things.  Anyone in or passing through the valley between now and early January, make sure to get off the highway (Twisp’s main street is one block east) and spend a little time there.

Rick's "Tallback Chairs" along with one of Peter Nawrot's tables

A display of my weaving

The Winthrop Gallery also mounted their Holiday Gift Show this week, but I am sorry to say I have no pictures.  Looks pretty good though and there are a lot of nice hand-made items.  This is an artist cooperative gallery in Winthrop of which I am now a member.

And this weekend saw the Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers Guild annual show and sale.  I didn’t get by there until the end of the day today, as I was teaching a knitting class down in Chelan, but it looks like a lot of people came by to see the work of our guild, and many of them also purchased holiday gifts.  So thank-you to all those folks!

We’re off early tomorrow morning for a week on the Coast so no blogging for me until we return after Thanksgiving….

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Short & Boxy

I haven’t been taking too many pictures lately, and blogging without pictures seems kind of lame.  But it isn’t like I haven’t been busy!

I am teaching the Topdown Set-In Sleeve Sweater class again (I taught it for the first time in the fall) – 2 groups, one on Thursday nights here at my home, and the other on Saturday mornings down at Uptown Woolery in Chelan.  I set it up as a 5-week series, although we are taking a break over Thanksgiving week.  With her permission, I am basing it on Karen Alfke’s Unpattern, although in the course of teaching it the first time, I came up with an alternate approach to planning and knitting the set-in sleeve cap.  By the way, these are knit in one piece from the top down – NO SEWING.  I love that.

Here’s a sweater I knit along with my first class – I used 8 skeins of Grignasco “Alaska” which I bought from a friend at a stash reduction sale several years ago.  It is a long discontinued yarn, so there was no chance of getting any more, and it was a close-run thing.  I had about 18″ (yes, inches) of yarn left when I was done!

Top-down Set-in Sleeve Sweater in Grignasco "Alaska"

I think Wilma would have liked it – she was fond of “short and boxy” sweaters!  And by the way, that is MY sleeve cap, not the Unpattern one.

We had a little bit of snow yesterday, and it was beautiful this morning when the sun first came up.

 

 

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Scenes from the Sale

It was quite inspiring to see so much excellent work at the Seattle Weavers’ Guild sale.  My head is swimming with new ideas – and, I came home with a few of my fellow weavers’ items as well.

In the “Home” department – towels, placemats and table runners, cloth napkins, etc:

Hundreds of beautiful scarves:

Hand-spun and/or hand-dyed yarn and spinning fiber:

Shawls, blankets and throws:

Basketry (on my “try some day” list):

I sold four of my “peerie blankets” and two of the plaited twill scarves, and am quite pleased.  Not sure yet exactly which items sold, because we left for home on Saturday before the sale was over.  A friend picked up my work on Saturday evening and is bringing it to me this week when we meet up in Port Townsend.

Speaking of which, I need to go pack…..

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More Peerie Blankets

We are dashing out the door for Seattle.  I have 13 scarves, 10 lap robes/throws (“peerie blankets”) and 2 wallhangings for the Seattle Weavers’ Guild show that runs Oct 27-29 at St Marks Cathedral on Capital Hill in Seattle (see sidebar for more info).   Unbelievable amount of work getting them all finished, inventoried and labeled!

Here are the 6 new little blankets, again all done with 2-ply Shetland wool:

Blue Corn Cafe yarns

Purples - last one off the loom!

Shetland natural marled yarns with shades of Green

Greens & Browns with Lemon Yellow

Beach and Surf

Shetland Sheep natural colors (undyed)

I also put 46 yards of rug warp on the loom last week, and wove 2 custom rugs to bring over to Seattle for delivery.  I am pretty happy with this 6-foot runner that my friends’ ordered for their kitchen:

It has been beautiful in the valley this week with lots of fall color, particularly the cottonwoods in bright golden yellow.  There is snow in the high country, too.  Here was the scene when we drove over Washington Pass last week:

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I’ve been pretty busy finishing up my things to take to the Seattle Weavers’ Guild annual show and sale at the end of this week.  I will take and post pictures of the new “peerie blankets”, hopefully by tomorrow.  Meanwhile, here is the information on the annual event for any of you out there who are near Seattle and would like to drop by!

These are images from the sale postcard – but it was quick and easy for this busy gal today!  I’ve also added a link to my sidebar for more complete information.

I will be there Thursday morning for set-up (the sale opens at 5 pm on Thursday) and also on Friday late afternoon into evening.

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Aquarium

Lots happening here lately, family stuff and getting ready for having hardwood floors put down on the main floor of the house.  The couple who built the house divorced partway through – he was the builder – and some things never were finished.  We have been living with painted subflooring for the last year and a half.

But I digress.  I have been weaving more blankets, not yet through the fulling process, and also finished up these plaited twill scarves in a new warp colorway I am calling “Aquarium”.

Aquarium with "Blue Ming" rayon chenille weft

 

Aquarium with "Blue Ming" tencel weft

 

Aquarium with Black tencel weft

Aquarium with Navy tencel weft

Aquarium with Teal tencel weft (made 2 of these)

I also made one with Teal rayon chenille weft, but a friend of mine saw these while I was still braiding the fringes, and snapped that one up before I even had a chance to take a picture!  I have been using the tencel more than the chenille lately, because it shows the pattern so much better, but people do seem to like the weight and feel of the chenille ones.

We decided to take up the larch flooring they had put down in the main floor bathroom (which is now newly done with linoleum) and the guest bedroom, so that all the flooring would be consistent on the main level.  Turned out to be an awful job for Rick.  The boards were about 6″ wide and maybe they were worried about cupping, because they glued them down with construction adhesive, as well as nailing them.  He had to cut them into 2-3″ pieces with a saw then chip the pieces up with a hammer and chisel.  Gag.

This left an uneven surface which had to be sanded and filled in the bedroom (new underlayment in the bathroom since that floor had to come up in height a bit).

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Rug Weaving with Judith

I’m back from the rug weaving workshop with Judith MacKenzie at the Rainforest Art Center in Forks, WA.  I brought my little workshop loom, a 20″ Macomber “Baby Mac” (model CP).  I wasn’t sure it was sturdy enough for the tight tension and strong beating for rugs, but it did OK, especially as we were just making samples.

The first thing we tried was flokati, a technique for making a rug that looks like a fleece without having to kill the sheep/goat to get it!  You weave distinct locks from a longwool breed with curl (not crimp), or locks of mohair from a goat, into a background web.  So we put the locks in every 4th shed, then wove 3 shots of plain weave between, with a warp and weft that were soft enough wool to felt (in this case, some of Judith’s 70% Rambouilet/30% mohair yarn).  Then you full (partially felt) the piece to make sure the locks of wool/mohair can’t pull out.

Here’s my sample underway on the loom:

We had three fleeces to choose from:  a Wensleydale sheep, a Lincoln sheep, and a mohair goat.  I wound up using all three, randomly mixed in on each row.

You can see what a beautiful, light-filled room we had to work in.  It was upstairs in what had originally been an Odd Fellows Hall.  We had help (strong men) carrying the looms and all of our other stuff upstairs the first day, and back down when we left.

Here are some of the flokati samples laid out on the floor:

The next day we put on a 1-yard warp of Judith’s bison yarn.  This is 50% bison hair (not the soft downy expensive undercoat) blended with wool.  It is kind of rough feeling but very tough for a rug.  The bison weft yarns had been dyed by Judith so we had a number of colors to work with.  The technique was pick-and-pick, which means you come up with pattern bands that form by alternating colors in the 2 sheds of plain weave.  The goal was to make a limited selection of colors (6-8) look complex by the way they were combined (optical blending) and the various patterns used.

Judith had 2 sample bison rugs, a small one hanging on the wall:

and a larger one she had on the floor at her house for several years.  This one was a lot softer and she said that was just from being walked on, not from washing!

I had some trouble maintaining even tension on my sampler.  I decided this was because my “shoestring method” of tieing on to the front apron rod just wasn’t holding under the tight tension and heavy beating needed to pack the weft down so it completely covers the warp.  So my sample was all wonky towards the end – curved and angled.  This can’t be fixed after the fact.  But at least I got to try the pick-and-pick technique.

Here is a shot of everyone’s bison samplers laid out on the floor (mine is bottom right):

The last warp we put on was 2 yards of a white 4-ply wool warp. This time I tied on to the front apron rod the conventional way (no shoestrings), with a surgeon’s knot that could be tightened until the tension was even across, then a second square-knot type tie.  It worked a lot better!

The idea was to try a number of techniques.  The first one was clasped wefts, a way to get 2 colors in one shed by “clasping” one around the other and then pulling that point through to where you want the colors to meet in the piece.  So you are beating a double shot of each color in each shed.

clasped wefts in a random pattern

Oh, we were weaving with the softer and less bulky Rambouillet/mohair blend yarn that Judith had dyed for us.  Still pretty sturdy but softer feeling on the surface.  I was enjoying this so much that I continued with some pick-and-pick patterns and will repeat the clasped weft pattern at the other end, making a square piece for a pillow top.

This is about as far as I got before we had to pack up and leave on Monday.  I’ll finish it at home.  Judith did demonstrate soumak and some knotted and pile techniques, and I may try them on the rest of this warp, but we’ll see.

On the way home I spent 2 nights with my friends at Lake Quinault (Lochaerie Resort, see sidebar).  The weather was gorgeous and Chris and I went for a hike in the rainforest on the South Shore on Tuesday.  On Wednesday I met Rick in Seattle and we spent the afternoon and evening with our dear friends who are currently living in Redlands.  Then home again after 8 days and 1000 miles on Thursday, back to the Methow!

We were supposed to go camping up in British Columbia with my Dad, but his Rialta RV developed an engine problem when he took it into Anacortes to have the tires checked.  So he had to have it towed to an RV service place and things were up in the air.  But now he is coming over here tomorrow (in his Prius with the cat) and we will just have some good times in the Methow Valley and surrounding areas.  So that’s my story for now!

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Fair results

I will be gone from home for most of the rest of September, so blog activity will be scanty at best.  But, I will take pictures!  First up is a rug weaving workshop with Judith MacKenzie out at the Rainforest Art Center in Forks, WA (on the Olympic Peninsula – yes, that Forks, with the vampires etc.)

Meanwhile, I got some nice recognition for my 4 entries to the Okanogan County Fair:

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Peerie blankets

I’ve been reading a series of mystery novels by Ann Cleeves which are set in the Shetland Islands,  a place we visited 11 years ago.  They have reminded me of the use of the word “peerie” which means little, or small.  I am used to hearing it in association with the small filler-type patterns in Fair Isle sweaters, but it has more general use, as “when I was a peerie boy…”.

So here are the peerie blankets or lap robes I have been weaving during July and August.  I finally got around to the finish work last week (braiding the fringes, then fulling them in the washing machine).  For the most part I am still working my way through my vast stash of 2-ply Shetland knitting yarn – I have it down to a science how much I need of 8 colors for the 3-yard warps!  Sometimes I have supplemented with Harrisville Shetland on cones, or other wool knitting yarns.

This one is different, though.  I was given 2 skeins of hand-dyed, hand-spun Romney yarn in shades of purple at knitting retreat last year.  Not the softest yarn for knitting, but she thought maybe I could “do something with it” weaving.  Indeed!  I used the hand-spun for the warp but did not have enough for the full width of the blanket/throw, so I supplemented it with Satakieli (a wool yarn from Finland) and also some Harrisville Shetland in the center section.

#6 with hand-dyed, handspun Romney yarn

This one was done with 2-ply Shetland left over from a kit I bought many years ago from Tomato Factory Yarn Co.  It was for the Alice Starmore design called Luskentyre, which is also found in the pattern book called The Scottish Collection (long out of print).  They must have given me a lot of yarn in the kit, because I had a lot left over.  I did supplement it with other similar colors I had in the stash.

# 7 Luskentyre

Here it is with the sweater.  The blanket was woven with a purple weft so it isn’t nearly as light in color as the sweater, which also included a lot of cream colored wool.

Here are two more. One was done in shades of black to mid gray with a light gray weft, and the other in shades of brown with a cream weft.

#8 grays

#9 browns

And finally, another blue one:

#10 shades of blue with teal weft

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