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Archive for the ‘fiberarts’ Category

I am so far behind in blogging it is hard to know where to start.  Part of it is laziness, part of it is lack of picture-taking.  I don’t know!  Anyway, since we last met in early December, we have been to Seattle for a week for the holidays, and then settled back in over here in early January.

I have a new spinning wheel!  It is a Jensen Tina II and belonged to a friend of mine in Seattle, who bought it in 2002 but hardly used it.  The finish was rather dry, so Rick put 2 coats of Profin on it and now it looks wonderful.  It spins like a dream.

 

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On January 7th, my friend Sara organized a “Roc Day” spinning day at Twispworks.  About 20 people came and we had a fabulous potluck lunch, in addition to the general cameraderie.  From Wikipedia:

Distaff Day, also called Roc Day, is 7 January, the day after the feast of the Epiphany. It is also known as Saint Distaff’s Day, one of the many unofficial holidays in Catholic nations.  Many St. Distaff’s Day gatherings are held, large and small, throughout local fiber communities. The distaff, or rock, used in spinning was the medieval symbol of women’s work.

In many European cultural traditions, women resumed their household work after the twelve days of Christmas. Women of all classes would spend their evenings spinning on the wheel. During the day, they would carry a drop spindle with them. Spinning was the only means of turning raw wool, cotton or flax into thread, which could then be woven into cloth.

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We have lots of snow this year.  It is going to be the best ski season, maybe ever!  The folks at Methow Trails are keeping it well-groomed as always.  We have one of the top Nordic ski trail systems (120 miles or 200+ kilometers) in the country right here in our little valley.  It is divided into four areas, all connected by the Methow Community Trail.

We had more fresh snow yesterday and last night, and here was the scene this morning from our back deck:

P1000590Piling up on the deck:

P1000595Curling off the roof of the shop building:

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I have been knitting more Mosaic Mojo hats.  Still haven’t gotten tired of these yet, as long as I have nice yarn to work with.

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And I finished a sequence knitting project, another cowl:

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A week or so ago I put a scarf warp on my 32″ Macomber loom, using some Missoni “Bombay” novelty yarn that I picked up at a stash reduction sale, and some rayon rik-rak on cones.  I put 21 yds on the sectional beam, enough for 10 scarves about 70″ long plus fringe.  Finished the last one yesterday, washed them and cut them apart, and they are hanging to dry.  Pictures to follow!

This past Saturday, we had our annual community association progressive dinner, which is always held on the ML King holiday weekend.  I was the organizer, and we hosted the main course at our house this year (appetizers at one house, main course at a second house, desserts at a third).  There were 41 of us and it was a challenge to fit it into our dining and living room!  We moved most of the living room furniture out to the shop or upstairs, set up 5 tables, and borrowed a bunch of folding chairs from the Winthrop Gallery.  Lots of fun!

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This seems to be a social time of year – we have had many get-togethers with friends and neighbors since returning home at the end of December.

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Weaving Rugs Again

I was running low on rugs after the guild sale, and after placing some at the 2 galleries down in Twisp, had only one at the Winthrop Gallery (a member-run coop gallery).  Then they sold that one last Saturday (which is a good thing, but yikes!).  So this past week I finally got the 50-yd rug warp on the sectional beam of my 48″ Macomber and am back in the rug weaving business.  I have all those bags of Pendleton blanket selvages we brought back from Portland, OR as inspiration!

R236 - 32" x 52"

R236 – 32″ x 52″

R237 - 32" x 29"

R237 – 32″ x 29″

R238 - 32" x 64"

R238 – 32″ x 64″

R239 - 32" x 60"

R239 – 32″ x 60″

This will be it until the end of the week, as I am headed over the pass today to the Skagit Valley for 3 nights with my Dad.

Also got some more Mosaic Mojo hats done since the last post:

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I really like the one shown below.  I have used Noro Silk Garden in the past – it is just the right weight and I love the feel of it with the silk and kid mohair in it, plus the way it changes color along the length of the ball of yarn is always a surprise and very effective in these hats.  But I can’t afford to buy Noro Silk Garden at full retail for hats I am selling in a gallery!  I have only used odd balls I picked up at stash reduction sales or sale bins in stores/online.  But I found some Noro “Silk Garden Lite” in my stash and although it is thinner, I found if I strand it with some Rowan Kidsilk Haze (or similar very thin kid mohair/silk yarn) it is just perfect!  So that is what I used for this hat:

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Got My Mojo Back On

Just a quick post to show photos of the Mosaic Mojo Hats I have been knitting the last month or so from my own pattern that is on Ravelry.  I don’t think I knitted up any of these for sale last winter, as I had kind of burned out on doing that.  But this year I was in the mood, and after rummaging around in the yarn stash, came up with a number of suitable left-overs and stash reduction sale acquisitions that would work.  Also, the yarn shop down in Chelan, Twisted Fine Wool & Yarn, was closing out Cascade 220 at 60% off.  That is often my go-to yarn for the solid color in these hats, so I picked up some good colors there last week.

Here are pictures of ones done so far:

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6 - 1516 also

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8 - 1518It is snowing here today and the Winthrop forecast is for 6-10 inches during the day, tapering off tonight, and then turning to rain/snow mix and getting drier over the weekend.  So we will see how well it lasts, but this should be good for the ski trails, especially farther up-valley.

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A Beautiful Display

Last weekend was the Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers Guild annual show & sale.  As usual, our guild meeting room was transformed into a beautiful display of our work.  We often fret that “we won’t have enough stuff” – ha!

We did a good job on the advertising this year – newspaper ads, newspaper article coverage, radio ads, and many flyers put up around Twisp and Winthrop.  There was a good turnout and it was quite successful!

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2015 Show & Sale

Well, it’s been a race to the finish but I did get everything done for my weaving guild’s annual sale this weekend.  So here it is… I will post some pictures of the event in a couple of days.  We also have friends from Ashland, OR coming to visit for 2 nights so it should be a busy and fun weekend.

2015 annual sale poster

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New Tie-Dye Silk Scarves

After we got back from Vancouver BC, I went to work on a new round of “Tie-Dye” silk scarves to get ready for the holiday season.  I pre-dyed 24 silk charmeuse scarf blanks about a month ago, so had a supply of different base colors.  I have gotten to like this better than using just a basic white scarf.

The frustrating thing about this is that I can’t always tell which neckties will transfer their dye well.  I will lay out a scarf, roll it up, put it in the vinegar water bath (6 at a time, actually) and then when I unroll it one or more colors may be just kind of anemic looking.  So I have taken to making a second scarf using just the necktie pieces that worked well the first time around, but adding in one or more new neckties and maybe doing some re-arranging of the layout.  This gives me two different but related scarves, and makes efficient use of the material.

In all of these pictures, the original scarf is on the right, and the second scarf is on the left.

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I got these done in time to take to an annual event I attend out in Port Townsend.  Whatever is left, I will disperse to the 3 galleries (Winthrop Gallery, Confluence Gallery, and D*Signs Gallery in Twisp).  I ordered more scarf blanks from Dharma Trading Co. and have plenty of silk neckties left, so I may do another round of these in early December.

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Workshop Weekend

This past weekend our weaving guild brought in Mary Berent from Eagle, ID (near Boise) to teach a 2-day workshop on “Combining Common Cottons”.  It was set up as a round-robin format, where each loom had a different setup and then we took turns weaving a sample on each one.  We had 10 people and 11 looms setup, so it was busy and kind of intense, but we got through it all.

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The idea is to combine commonly available and relatively inexpensive plain cotton weaving yarns with other types of yarn (novelty knitting yarns, more textured or heavy cotton yarns, linen, and other fibers – including mohair!) for a variety of reasons.  These could include:  making a more interesting fabric, making a fabric better suited to its purpose, saving money when using expensive yarns, not having enough of something you really want to use, etc.

Mary brought lots of examples:

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At the end of the second day, we took the entire length woven off each loom and discussed what we were seeing, before cutting them apart so everyone could take their sample home to be wet-finished and stored in our notebooks.

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We also asked Mary to give a 2-hour lecture Sunday evening that was open to all, not just our guild.  The topic was “Inspiration, Color & Design” and we had about 22 people in attendance down at TwispWorks.  This was the community outreach part of the grant we got from ANWG last year (Association of Northwest Weavers’ Guilds).  Again, she brought lots of samples for people to pore over.  I think everyone, including the non-weavers, found it interesting.

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I took her to the airport in Wenatchee this morning and am now home – tired, inspired, and ready for a vacation.  We head off for Seattle and Vancouver BC for the rest of the week, so that should fit the bill!

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Yesterday I had time to hem the towels I took off the loom last week.  I really like this colorway.  The Valley Yarns 8/2 cotton is from WEBS and so I am using their color names.  The warp was stripes of Shale, Willow Green, Madder Brown and Alabaster.

It is still amazing to me how different they look depending on both the pattern and tabby weft colors.  In general, I found a darker tabby was more effective than a lighter one.  Shale and Baked Clay both worked well as tabby.

Left: Baked Clay pattern and Shale tabby. Right: warp colors only.

Left: Baked Clay pattern and Shale tabby. Right: Madder Brown pattern and Alabaster tabby.

Lime with Shalae tabby; 2 different treadling patterns

Lime with Shale tabby; 2 different treadling patterns

Left: warp colors as pattern, Alabaster tabby. Right: Alabaster pattern, Baked Clay tabby.

Left: warp colors as pattern, Alabaster tabby. Right: Alabaster pattern, Baked Clay tabby.

Burnt Sienna pattern with Shale tabby on left and with Alabaster tabby on right

Burnt Sienna pattern with Shale tabby on left and with Alabaster tabby on right

Black pattern with Baked Clay tabby, 2 different treadling patterns

Black pattern with Baked Clay tabby, 2 different treadling patterns

The big Workshop Weekend is finally here – we go down to Wenatchee today to pick up our teacher, Mary Berent from Eagle, Idaho.  She is flying Boise to Sea-Tac, then catching the short hop to from Seattle to Wenatchee.

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Sequence Cowl

Last spring some friends turned me on to the new book “Sequence Knitting” (subtitled “Simple Methods for Creating Complex Reversible Fabrics”) by Cecilia Campochiaro.  This is more of a methods and ideas book than a pattern book, although there are directions for some of the sample projects.  It is also self-published and beautifully done – she created all the charts and I believe did all the photography herself.  The section at the end on working with variegated yarns, dyeing methods to get successful variegated yarns, and understanding color mixing and contrast, is excellent.

I started two projects back in June.  The first was a 2-color parallelogram similar to her Robson scarf but using a different sequence.  I have been stalled at about the halfway point for months and finally decided I just wasn’t happy with the edge where the colors are carried up, and that I probably wouldn’t wear it much.  So I ripped it out yesterday – so freeing!

The other project was a cowl using the Spiral method (knit in the round).  I chose the sequence (K4,P4,K2,P2) on a multiple of 12 plus 2.  This means the sequence pattern shifts by 2 stitches on every round, thus forming the spiral.  This particular sequence and stitch count yields a row repeat of 6.  Since I wanted to use 2 colors, I did knit an in-the-round test swatch to see how often I wanted to change colors within the 6-row repeat.  I wound up changing colors every 3 rounds.

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Here it is laid out flat:

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and as worn:

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I used 80% merino/20% silk fingering weight yarn dyed by Heidi Dascher at The Artful Ewe in Port Gamble, WA (she calls this yarn “Clackamas”).  302 sts CO on a US 5 needle.

I am so happy with this I am starting another one.  I also find cowls more easily wearable than knitted scarves that need to be draped or tied somehow to stay on.  There are variations of the same sequence with a shift of 1,2,3 or 4 stitches and it is AMAZING how different the fabrics look.  This time I am going to do the same sequence on a multiple of 12 + 1.  Stay tuned!

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The Okanogan County Fair was postponed this year because of the fires over in the Okanogan Valley to the east of our Methow Valley.  It is usually the weekend after Labor Day but there was a big fire camp set up there, and so the fair committee decided to postpone by 2 weeks rather than cancel.  It was last weekend (Sept 24-27).

This was a problem for kids back in school, and especially those raising livestock, as they aim to have optimal weight and condition by the usual projected date.  But it’s still better than cancellation!

Our guild (Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers Guild) put together our usual display, which features items woven for our current year’s challenge project.  This year the challenge theme was “Twill” and we had a wide variety of items, which made it kind of hard to display – but the women who put it together did a great job.  We got a “Special Award” for the display.  I am sorry I do not have a picture – I didn’t make it over to the Fair and seem to have deleted the picture that was sent to me by email.

I submitted 4 items for the spinning and weaving departments.  I got blue ribbons on all and some other ribbons on 3 of them.  The purple ones are Grand Champion and the yellow and green one is what they call a Special Award.

“Handknit from handspun cowl” and one of the crackle weave towels I just finished:

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Extended manifold twill shawl in fine cotton and tencel:

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I wrote a blog post back in April which shows and explains the shawl and the cowl.  You can find it here.

Down at the weaving guild room, I put on a third and final warp for the crackle weave towels and have been weaving away.  Took it off the loom today.

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This may be my favorite of the 3 colorways.  I will post pictures once they are finished!

I had to clear off my loom there because we have a workshop coming up in about a week and half and I will need my loom for one of the projects.  This has been my other major activity – I am the chief organizer and it has been a lot of work.  We are having Mary Berent from Eagle, Idaho (just outside Boise) come to do her “Combining Common Cottons” workshop and also give a slide talk for our guild and the general public down at TwispWorks.  It is a round-robin style workshop and we have 10 people signed up.  Each person has to set up one of the projects, so I had to make sure we had the right number of looms with the right attributes in the room – some of them are there now, some have to be brought in.  Also needed to make sure we have the right materials, and order what we didn’t have, etc.  This has been going on for a month and I am so ready to have it finally happen and be over with!

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