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Archive for the ‘fiberarts’ Category

A couple of weeks back we took a trip out to Port Townsend and then on to Lake Quinault in the Olympic Rainforest, to visit our friends who own a historic cabin resort on the North Shore Rd – Lochaerie Resort.  Rick had built a corner cabinet for the living room of their personal residence, so we drove the truck and brought that out for installation.

In Port Townsend, we ate twice (dinner on arrival, lunch the next day) at our favorite little restaurant, Hanazono Asian Noodle.  It is really good, plus we are Asian-food deprived over here in our neck of the woods.

the Taylor Street roll

the Taylor Street roll

udon soup bowl with many yummy Things in it

udon soup bowl with many yummy Things in it

Before heading out to the lake, we drove down to Quilcene to visit Taylored Fibers.  This is a small custom carding operation which I first visited last October.  I brought Barry Taylor a washed Corriedale fleece and an alpaca fleece and he is going to dye the wool in 2 different colors, then blend it with some of the alpaca to make me some spinning rovings.  I can hardly wait!

His “machine” was made by Pat Green in British Columbia and is probably at least 20 years old.  As you can see, it is not the home edition.  It can make either batts or rovings.

P1030618

P1030620

At Lochaerie, we had lots of down time with the new kittens, Walter and Skyler (both are females, but Walt was mis-identified initially, and they decided to keep the name!)

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the new corner cabinet - TV will mount in the wall above

the new corner cabinet – TV will mount in the wall above

We actually had reasonably dry weather for the coast, even though it was a little cold and windy.  On Sunday we went out and walked on the beach at Kalaloch.  It was blowing sleet down the beach at times, which may be one reason I wasn’t too into photography – but there were also sun breaks and it was beautiful.  We also got in a couple of nice walks in the rain forest, so different from our dry side of the mountains.

Back at home, I finished the 10 scarves on the Mardi Gras warp and took that setup off Kingston, the 32″ Macomber loom.

washed and ready for final pressing and trimming

washed and ready for final pressing and trimming

Then moved on to the new project, which I have to complete for our guild challenge deadline in mid-April.  The theme this year is “doubleweave”.  I chose a draft called Doubleweave Checks that has squares of double weave in a heavier cotton (8/2 in this case), separated by stripes of plain weave in both directions, using a lighter cotton (16/2 in this case).  The actual doubleweave checks should puff up when I wash these, making a nice thick absorbent towel.

doubleweave checks towel on the loom

doubleweave checks towel on the loom

close-up view

close-up view

This is way fun and I will be making more, to explore other colors, and other weights of cotton too.

Also this week we turned our attention to the Airstream trailer, now that it is warming up outside and we are comfortable working out there.  We took some “before” pictures.  It is so 1973 in patterns and colors and all the soft furnishings are also worn out and dirty.

the front lounge which makes into a double bed

the front lounge which makes into a double bed

twin beds in the center section

twin beds in the center section

lovely orange formica and dark walnut cabinets

lovely orange formica and dark walnut cabinets

refrigerator and storage across from the galley

refrigerator and storage across from the galley

Rick tore out the yucky dirty orange carpet and we picked out a Marmoleum (linoleum-type) flooring which should go in sometime in April.  I ordered new draperies from a place in Pennsylvania that specializes in replacement Airstream draperies:  J.P.A. Drapes.  Should get those by end of April or early May.  Then on Tuesday I took all the cushions from the front lounge and the twin beds to an upholstery shop in Wenatchee for re-covering.  I found some upholstery fabric we both really like at a decorator store  in old town Wenatchee:  Material Things.  They didn’t have anything at the upholstery shop that I liked, so I was really surprised and grateful that there was an alternative source!

And Rick has plans for the cabinetry – he is figuring out how it all goes together and what he can replace with new lightweight material in cherry.  It has to be lightweight so this is different than regular cabinetry.  All of that won’t happen right away, but at least the soft furnishings and the floor will be updated and clean by the time we take our first road trip in June.

 

 

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The Mardi Gras Warp

I put a new warp on for more scarves this week.  It is black with jewel tones, lots of sparkle and color.  This being March, I decided to call it “Mardi Gras”.  I have 4 groups of 16 threads across the warp (rearranging colors so it doesn’t get too stripey).  In each group of 16, for this warp, 25% or 4 threads are Classic Elite “Applause” that I bought from a friend’s stash reduction.  9 skeins of what must have been an expensive handknitting yarn for a whopping $7.00 (total, not each!).  It is a double strand – one black mohair and the other strand a rayon/wool/silk slub that is jewel toned and changes color along the length of the yarn.  The other yarns I chose to pick up the colors in that one yarn.

the Mardi Gras warp yarns

the Mardi Gras warp yarns

on the sectional beam and ready to go

on the sectional beam and ready to go

first scarf being woven with black alpaca

first scarf being woven with black alpaca

I am up to scarf #7 of 10 by today, each a different color weft.  It is so intriguing to see how different the warp colors play against each weft color.  Pictures sometime next week, maybe….

Meanwhile we are off to the real rain forest on the Olympic Peninsula for several days.

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I finished up 10 woven scarves from the Rain Forest warp last week, and had them washed, pressed and photographed by yesterday.  Here was the warp:

Rain Forest warp on the loom

Rain Forest warp on the loom

I wove them with a variety of yarns:  alpaca, baby llama, organic wool and rayon chenille.  They all came out nice and soft and drapy after washing; the alpaca and baby llama shrank the least in width, not too surprisingly.  They all shrank about the same in length off the loom and washed:  70″ as woven under tension, about 64-65″ after finishing (exclusive of fringe).

L to R: black alpaca, dark olive baby llama, very dark brown organic DK wool

L to R: black alpaca, dark olive baby llama, very dark brown organic DK wool

L to R: dark slate blue organic wool, brown wool boucle, orange rayon chenille

L to R: dark slate blue organic wool, brown wool boucle, orange rayon chenille

3 colors of rayon chenille

3 colors of rayon chenille

There was another one in the dark slate blue wool which I may keep for myself.

On the knitting front, I finished the corkscrew tassles on the other scarf (body of scarf was knit quite a while back):

fluted fabric scarf with corkscrew tassles

fluted fabric scarf with corkscrew tassles

Tazzles 2c

I’ve been doing some studio re-organizing and ran across a pattern I had purchased online, and some Noro Kureyon Sock yarn I had set aside for the project.  I am not sure why I had that sock yarn, as I am SO NOT a sock knitter!  Maybe it was intended for a woven and fulled (slightly felted) project.  Who knows.  Anyway it has now become this:  Noro Knots by Kieran Foley.

Noro Knots 1

Noro Knots 2

I started it with the size 8 needle he used, but felt it was a little too loosely knit, so started over with a size 7 (4.5 mm).  I wound up doing 6 repeats of the charts instead of the 5 repeats he did, and I think it came out about the same length.  I used all of 1 skein and about 1/3 of the second one, so I could have made it one set of chart reps longer.  Kureyon is a somewhat rough yarn (in my opinion) and the sock version is 70% wool and 30% nylon.  Still, when washed, it did soften up nicely.  I didn’t block it with wires or pins, just spread it out on the guest bed once soaked, rinsed and spun out to remove excess water.  Very fun to do and I did change around the colors as he suggested, to avoid getting regular repeats of the color sequence.  I think it is more interesting that way.

I am also not much of a baby-item knitter, but a couple of weeks ago I knit this up for someone special who is having her first child (a boy).  I used some leftover Queensland Merino Spray in 2 colors; the pattern is from a Debbie Bliss baby knits book.

Callie's baby sweater

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Fiberarts frenzy

I have been working on some scarf ideas that may make it as far as the pattern stage.  If not, at least it has been fun to “unvent” some things, and to bring along at least one project that has been languishing for quite a while!

First up is a 3-texture shaped scarf using a lightweight wool, a light mohair with glitter, and a lightweight kid mohair boucle.  I also shaped the tails, as I dislike fringe and wanted something more graceful than just a blunt end.  Working title:  Sedimentary Scarf (because this one reminded me of sedimentary rock layers).

3 differently textured yarns, and the swatch

3 differently textured yarns, and the swatch

Trial 1 of Sedimentary Scarf

Trial 1 of Sedimentary Scarf

The long tails came out WAY too long, so I have artfully pinned them up behind the drapey cowl part for the picture.  Next one will hopefully be “just right”.  I do love the colors in this one, though.

Next is a project I started a couple years? back.  It is a slip stitch pattern scarf (but not linen stitch) with attached corkscrew edging.  The first time I tried the edging, which came from Nicki Epstein’s excellent “Knitting on the Edge” book, they were knit individually and then sewn on.  Not fun mainly because of there being way too many ends to darn in when done.  I came up with a modification that lets me knit them as I go across each end of the scarf (this is after the body of the scarf is finished).  I had two scarves knitted in quite different colorways, but had never finished the edgings.  Well, the first one is done now, and I am working on the second.  Working title:  Corkscrewy.

Corks 1b

Corks 1d

Corks  1 fringe b

If I put these up on Ravelry, there will be a Big Announcement here on the blog!

I also finished a version of Hitchhiker by Martina Behm.   This is written for sock weight yarn, but I had been given a “challenge” skein of Mountain Colors  Weaver’s Wool Quarters last fall (350 yds in 100 gm, DK weight).  Actually a small group of us were each given 1 skein of this yarn with the challenge being to bring back something made out of it next October.  So I just knit away on a size 7 needle until I ran out!  It is definitely big enough to wear as a neck scarf, so I am pleased.

Hitchhiker in Mtn Colors 1

Hitchhiker in Mtn Colors 2

I have also been spinning up some of the rovings I bought at Taylored Fibers in Quilcene WA, on the Olympic Peninsula, last fall.

1/3 each merino, alpaca and BFL (Blue-faced Leicester)

13 oz. – equal parts merino, alpaca and BFL (Blue-faced Leicester)

50% merino, 30% bamboo and 20$ silk

16 oz. – 50% merino, 30% bamboo and 20% silk

first skein of 18 oz merino/alpaca/BFL with some silk noil

first skein of 18 oz merino/alpaca/BFL with some silk noil

I am building up a stash of roughly worsted weight handspun yarn to use as pattern weft in some shawls I want to do for my show at the Winthrop Gallery that opens at the end of May.

Which brings us to weaving!  After two months away from the looms, I am happy to say I put a new mixed warp for scarves onto Kingston this week, and am starting to weave again.  This colorway reminds me of the colors and textures you see in the rainforests on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State.

Rain Forest warp on the loom

Rain Forest warp on the loom

First Rain Forest scarf underway

first Rain Forest scarf underway

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As promised in my last post, I finished the Color Affection scarf by Veera Valimaki last week.  I am really happy with it!  I used a fingering weight yarn (10% cashmere) from Marianated Yarns on a US size 6 needle.

Color Affection Jan 2014 1

Color Affection Jan 2014 3

We had visitors from “the Coast” over the weekend – an old friend and her young daughter, who will be 3 years old in March.  They left “Daddo” and the family dog at home in Seattle, and came for 3 nights.  Unfortunately we have almost no snow this year, and it was pretty gray all weekend, but we still had a fine visit and some outdoor time.  The little one was easy to be with, talking a lot with a pretty good vocabulary, and a sunny disposition.

We got out the Norwegian kick sled that I bought at a friend’s moving sale last summer.  Mom and daughter went out on our loop road (which is pretty much a skating rink at this point) and before we knew it, the wee one was doing it on her own!

Kristin & Claire Jan 2014 1

Kristin & Claire Jan 2014 3

Here are some pictures from this morning, before they left to drive home.  We all went up to Sun Mountain Lodge to “see the animals” (the taxidermy collection) and the wee one was wearing pants that match my new scarf, so I got Rick to take a picture of us up there.

Kristin & Claire Jan 2014 4

Kristin & Claire Jan 2014 5

 

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FO: Brickless…and a WIP

FO: Finished Object.  What a pleasing phrase for a knitter!

“Brickless” by Martina Behm, available on Ravelry here.  It calls for 580 yards of Yowza – Whatta Skein! by Miss Babs, an indie dyer.  Actually she was at the first Sock Summit in Portland, OR where I bought the yarn I used for this project – but mine was “Twisted” from Blue Moon Fiber Arts in colorway “Thraven”.

Brickless - patterns and wingspan

Brickless – patterns and wingspan

still trying to figure out how to wear it!

still trying to figure out how to wear it!

WIP: Work In Progress:  another pleasing phrase, because it implies it is actually underway and headed for the finish line, unlike the UFO (Unfinished Object) which was started and then sadly abandoned.   I just started my first Color Affection shawl 6 days ago, and am into the third and final section with 3 colors and short rows.  This has been on my to-do list for a couple of years, and last October I purchased some yarn from another indie dyer, Marian of Marianated Yarns, that is perfect.  It is her fingering weight yarn called Scrumptious — a blend of 80% superwash Merino / 10% Cashmere and 10% nylon with 435 yards in 100 gram skeins.

Color Affection #1 underway

Color Affection #1 underway

OK, the colors are a bit of a departure for me, but I think I am going to like it.  I say Color Affection #1 because I can already tell there will be more in my future – that’s why some folks call it “Color Affliction” or “Color Addiction”.  There are more than 10,000 projects on Ravelry for this pattern and I am not making that up.

I am on hiatus from more active daily pursuits, due to having an outpatient micro-surgery last Tuesday to deal with a herniated disk between my 2 lower lumber vertebrae (actually the bigger problem is that those 2 vertebrae have slipped out of alignment…).  Doing OK except for muscle spasms in my, um, posterior, which are making life a tad difficult for now.

So I have turned my attention to several UFO’s which may become WIP’s once again – and as you can see, started some new ones too!

 

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A Gallery of Hats

Starting in early October I have been steadily knitting away, mornings and evenings and in the car, on my Mosaic Mojo Hats (see sidebar on Where to Find My Work).  I can average about 2 per week, and sold them locally at the two galleries and at the holiday gift show in Twisp.  I also sell hard copies of the patterns locally, and as PDF downloads on Ravelry.

It looks like the last time I posted any pictures of my personal hat production was in mid-November, and I swore to lay off of them after the first of the year.  Actually I don’t get really tired of knitting them since they are all different and I use high quality, colorful yarns that I pick up on sale or at stash reduction sales (meaning, really inexpensive!)  But in the New Year, it is time to move on to something else.

So here is a photo gallery of hat production since mid-November:

handspun brown alpaca & Briar Rose BFL roving

handspun brown alpaca & Briar Rose BFL roving

handspun multicolor cabled yarn & gray Cormo #2

handspun multicolor cabled yarn & gray Cormo #2

2 hats in 2 sizes using Cascade Handpaint & light blue Kid Classic

2 hats in 2 sizes using Cascade Handpaint & light blue Kid Classic

Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 Iris

Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 Iris

Lang "Mille Colori" & Kid Classic pink

Lang “Mille Colori” & Kid Classic pink

Lang "Mille Colori" & Cascade 220 teal

Lang “Mille Colori” & Cascade 220 teal

Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 dark purple

Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 dark purple

2 hats alike - Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 pale lavender

2 hats alike – Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 pale lavender

3 hats using the SAME COLOR and dyelot of Noro Silk Garden, but starting at different points in the color progression

3 hats using the SAME COLOR and dyelot of Noro Silk Garden, but starting at different points in the color progression

the other side of those 3 hats

the other side of those 3 hats

silk wool handpaint / dark red Cascade 220

silk wool handpaint / dark red Cascade 220

Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 light grey

Ondine pink/gray multi & Cascade 220 light grey

Noro Silk Garden (the same color and dyelot as above) / blue mix Cascade 220

Noro Silk Garden (the same color and dyelot as above) / blue mix Cascade 220

other side of the same hat - and FINAL one for 2013!

other side of the same hat – and FINAL one for 2013!

I am pleased to announce that I have cast on and am knitting a very cool shawlette:  Brickless by Martina Behm.  I am using a yarn from Blue Moon Fiberarts called “Twisted” which I had in stash – colorway Thraven.  Should be done by next week and I will post pictures!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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It’s all kind of a blur…

I haven’t posted in about a month and now we are leaving this morning for a week in Seattle – but I will try to make a quick update!  Since we returned to the valley at Thanksgiving, I have been a busy busy weaver, making the final push for the galleries and a holiday gift show in Twisp.  I already had warps set up on my two looms at home, so the first order of business was to weave those projects and do all the finishing work.

On Kingston (40″ Macomber) I had 12 yds of warp for a final run of the Lace Bronson placemats.    I used the same warp colors as in one of the first versions of these mats, since I had a potential buyer for up to 12 of them.  Found some fabric at JoAnn’s in similar colors, so here was the basic colorway:

warp colors and "bird fabric" to match the older mat pictured

warp colors and “bird fabric” to match the older mat pictured

I wound up making 12 of these:

"bird fabric" placemats

“bird fabric” placemats

4 of these:

blue floral placemats

blue floral placemats

and only 3 of these because I ran out of warp:

lavender floral placemats

lavender floral placemats

Moving back to the 48″ Macomber, I had a warp for 5 more plaited twill scarves in what I am calling the Pomegranate colorway.  I used 8/2 Tencel from WEBS for all of these:  black, shale, taupe, eggplant and navy.  They all turned out great!  It takes me as long or longer to twist the doubled-back fringes on these, as it does to weave them, so that gets a little tedious.

Taupe tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Taupe tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Navy tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Navy tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Black tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Black tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Eggplant tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Eggplant tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Shale tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

Shale tencel woven on the Pomegranate warp

These pictures were taken rather hurriedly down at Local 98856 in Twisp, where I was setting up for the “Handmade for the Holidays” gift show which runs Dec 14-24.  I have a nice spot in a corner window, and there are a lot of really nice handmade items plus garden-oriented items (Local 98856 is normally a gardening business).

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So by the second week of December I had finished placemats and plaited twill scarves, and was ready to move on to some of my “mixed warp” scarves.  I decided to make them a little wider than the ones I did last year – 8 inches on the loom, finishing out between 7-8″ after weaving and washing.

I also had Rick install the sectional warp beam on Kingston so I could use my AVL warping wheel in the way it is really intended – to make a 2″ section of warp at a time, then wind it directly onto the sectional beam under tension.  I had been a little apprehensive about trying this, but it turned out to be ridiculously easy and I was able to put on a 21-yard warp in a matter of hours!  It is 21 yards because the warping wheel has a maximum 3-yard circumference, and with 7 winds I get the 21 yards.  I would never attempt to make a warp this long for conventional beaming, especially with the sticky yarns I was using.

The first warp I called “Blackberry” and I got 9 scarves, each 72″ long plus a 4″ fringe at each end – and one more shorter one.

16 yarns used for Blackberry mixed-warp

16 yarns used for Blackberry mixed-warp

Blackberry warp on the loom

Blackberry warp on the loom

finished Blackberry scarves

finished Blackberry scarves

more finished Blackberry scarves!

more finished Blackberry scarves!

This past week I decided to go for one more set of mixed-warp scarves, to be sure I have plenty of inventory out there before we leave for the week.  I started winding the warp on Sunday night:

16 yarns used for the Bright Autumn mixed warp

16 yarns used for the Bright Autumn mixed warp

winding one 2" section onto the beam from the AVL warping wheel

winding one 2″ section onto the beam from the AVL warping wheel

the Bright Autumn warp ready to go

the Bright Autumn warp ready to go

finished Bright Autumn scarves #1

finished Bright Autumn scarves #1

finished Bright Autumn scarves #2

finished Bright Autumn scarves #2

finished Bright Autumn scarves #3

finished Bright Autumn scarves #3

I had these woven, off the loom and washed by Wednesday night (as a result of long days…) and yesterday had them trimmed, pressed, labeled and out to where they needed to go.

Somewhere in there I also made about 20 lavender eye pillows, using samples and leftover bits of handwoven fabric from past scarf projects for one side, and with silk fabric on the other side.  Didn’t get any pictures, though.  I am using a mixture of brown flax seeds and lovely organic lavender for the filling – the flax gives them a little heft and drape so they lie across the eyes nicely.

So now my work is done and I can relax, enjoy time with family and friends, and let my body recover.  See you in the New Year!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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20 Towels in 6 days

I had a weaving marathon going on down at the guild room this week.  I had previously wound an 18-yard warp for my undulating twill towels, and last Sunday (a week ago) I went down there and starting tying on to the previous warp.  I got it about 80% done, but had to wait until Tuesday to resume, since Monday was my day this month to staff the Winthrop Gallery.  So Tuesday I finished tying on, and beamed the warp, and wove the first 2 towels.

Yesterday (Saturday) I finished the weaving – ending up with 20 in all!  Each one about 32″ long before washing, excluding hems.  Here they are, laid out on the floor at the guild room, as one long length of cloth:

 

with my trusty 40" Macomber loom in the background

with my trusty 40″ Macomber loom in the background

I brought them home, stay-stitched and cut between every fifth towel (so I could break up the long run of cloth somewhat), and got them through the washer and dryer last night.  Today I am finishing the stay-stitching, cutting them apart, hemming and pressing, and getting ready to put labels on them for the annual guild sale coming up this week.

I don’t know if I would always want to work at this pace, but it is kind of interesting to know I can do it.

I think I forgot to post pictures of the placemats I finished a couple of weeks ago:

10 like these

10 like these

and another 8 like these

and another 8 like these

 

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Got My Mojo On

I have a backlog of weaving and knitting projects to report, but it seems time for blogging is scarce these days.  Anyway…. while on the road trip, I finished up the twisted fringes for 5 plaited twill scarves, which I took to the Seattle Weavers’ Guild sale on Oct 24-26, and then out to Port Townsend for an annual event.  The upshot is that I only have this one lousy picture, and only one of the scarves left (which is good!)

5 scarves completed in October 2013

5 scarves completed in October 2013

Also on the road trip, I got started on knitting more of my Mosaic Mojo Hats – see sidebar, pattern available on Ravelry.  Good thing, because I had 8 of them left from last winter, and sold 6 of them at the Seattle Weavers’ Guild sale!  So here are the new ones to date:

Cascade 220 "Soft Sage" & Creative Fibers hand-dyed from New Zealand "Schist"

Cascade 220 “Soft Sage” & Creative Fibers hand-dyed from New Zealand “Schist”

Cascade 220 & Cascade Cloud (wool & alpaca)

Cascade 220 & Cascade Cloud (wool & alpaca)

a discontinued Noro silk/wool yarn bought at stash reduction sale, and Rowan Kid Classic in rust and sky blue

a discontinued Noro silk/wool yarn bought at stash reduction sale, and Rowan Kid Classic in rust and powder blue

Dream in Color Classy handpaint bought at stash reduction sale, and Rowan Kid Classic in sky blue

Dream in Color Classy handpaint bought at stash reduction sale, and Rowan Kid Classic in sky blue

For the upcoming annual Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers Guild sale next week, we can only have knitted items for sale if we used hand-spun yarn.  So I rooted around in the hand-spun yarn box in my studio and came up with some good stuff.  At least 5-6 years ago at a spinning workshop with Judith MacKenzie, I made a multi-colored cabled yarn from these materials:

5 colors of merino top, a commercial rayon yarn, and samples of finished cabled yarn

5 colors of merino top, a commercial rayon yarn, and samples of finished cabled yarn

The dyed merino top was spun in a repeating color sequence, then made into a 2-ply yarn.  The colors randomized together in the 2-ply, usually one color with another different one, but sometimes the same color with itself.  The 2-ply was made to have the same direction of twist as a commercial rayon yarn (dark raisin color).  The final yarn was a cabled yarn of my handspun 2-ply with the rayon yarn.  I have had this around for years and never did anything with it, so now it is finally going into some hats:

Two hats from handspun yarn

Two hats from handspun yarn

The one on the right was knit with my cabled yarn plus a Rambouillet yarn which was made from fiber I got from Judith MacKenzie.  The one on the left was knit with my cabled yarn plus some natural gray Cormo which I spun up the past summer.

I am also on a roll with weaving projects.  I have another warp set up at home for more plaited twill scarves, and for more placemats on the other home loom.  This week I spent mostly at the guild meeting room getting another towel warp set up – 18 yards!!  I started weaving yesterday and have 7 of them done already.

new towel warp at the guild room

new towel warp at the guild room

 

"Treebark Towel" underway

“Treebark Towel” underway

It’s that time of year…holiday gift shows at both Winthrop Gallery and Confluence Gallery, plus I have signed up for a holiday gift show the last 10 days before Christmas at Local 98856 in Twisp.  I will be too busy to spit for the next month – oh, except for a certain wedding in Austin, TX and then Thanksgiving with family.

 

 

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