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16 Scarves

After we returned from Christmas on the coast, I wound 4 warps for the plaited twill scarves – that is, 4 different colorways, 2 of which were new ones I had in mind but hadn’t tried yet.  I can get 4 scarves from a 10-yard warp so I have been weaving away and now have 16 scarves woven:

but not finished.  I still need to twist the fringes, darn in ends and wash and press them.

I wanted to get this many done because I sold most of what I had before and during the holidays (not complaining!).  It saves me a lot of time if I can tie on each new warp and pull it through the heddles and reed, so I don’t have to re-thread etc.  But I am going to have to take this warp setup off the loom I am using because I need it for a workshop I am going to the end of next week.

The workshop, which will be held over in Seattle through the Seattle Weavers’ Guild,  is with Margaret Roach Wheeler, a native American of Chickasaw-Choctaw descent.  Do check out her website (Mahota Handwovens) –  I think her work is stunning.  She will be teaching us how she uses the Summer & Winter weave structure to interpret native American beadwork and quillwork patterns in her clothing line.   There are many beautiful examples on her website.  I am really excited to have this opportunity to learn from her.

Speaking of the loom I am using, I was having a fit around scarf # 10.  It is my Macomber “workshop loom”, the model CP portable.  Tie-up hooks were constantly popping off the lamms (the hooks connect the pedals or treadles to the lamm, which is a bar that connects to the jacks which raise the harnesses).  Also the harnesses themselves were hanging up and not dropping and I was getting messed up areas in the pattern and having to take work out and fix it constantly.  And it kept making a lot of loud creaking and squeaking noises.

Finally the light bulb went off in my head and I looked on the Macomber Looms and Me blog (also in my sidebar at right).  Sure enough there were a couple of entries about cleaning old grunge and dust off the jacks, and about Spiffing up your Loom.  I am not sure but my loom may have been sprayed with some WD-40 during a workshop last fall at our guild room – turns out this is a big No-No for Macomber looms.  So anyway, I cleaned up the jacks and the wooden slots the lamms slide in as best I could with a warp on the loom, using acetone and a rag, then applied silicone spray and vaseline (recommended for wherever brass parts touch steel parts).  The result was a much happier loom and a much happier weaver!  The last scarves went off without a hitch as fast as I could go.

I also include a picture of the handspun yarn I finished up a week or so ago.  This was from a multi-colored grey Corriedale fleece I washed, carded into layered batts (dark, medium and light in 3 layers to preserve some color variation in the spun yarn) and then spun over a period of time, mostly during the last year.  I finished it up as a 3-ply yarn and definitely have enough for a sweater (maybe 2700 yards of sport weight).  I am thinking traditional gansey style but need to do some swatching.  It is the most yummy, squishy and springy, soft yarn – I love it!

We will have 2 sets of visitors this week, so glad to see them!  Our first visitors arrived Friday night from Seattle.  Yesterday was a gorgeous Methow day and we went snowshoeing up in the Rendezvous area out of the Gunn Ranch.

Kristin is with child, due mid- to late-March, but she looks just like…. Kristin with a basketball on the front!

27 for Dinner

This has been a sociable weekend.  On Friday our friend and neighbor, Lynette Westendorf, celebrated her 60th birthday at Tappi restaurant in Twisp by having musician friends from the valley and from Seattle join her for a night of dinner and music.

Lynette's 60th at Tappi

Lynette is an Emmy award winning composer and pianist, the link to her website is above.

Saturday evening brought the progressive dinner that is a tradition in our new community (Wolf Creek Views).  Last August at the community association meeting I volunteered to organize it this year, and to host the main course at our house.  I thought it would be a good way to meet all the neighbors and for them to see our new home.  It’s a potluck, so once I figured out who could make it, I just had to assign who was going to bring what to each home.

We started with appetizers at one home (also new to the community, they just built last year), then progressed to our house.  We set the food out in the kitchen, but managed to seat everyone – all 27 of us!

12 around the large walnut drawleaf table in our dining area:

8 around the smaller oak drawleaf table that we brought down from my studio and set up in the entryway:

4 at the bar between the dining room and kitchen:

And 3 of us around the coffee table in the living room.  Worked great.

Then we progressed to a third house for coffee and desserts.  What fun!

Beautiful Snow

We had the predicted big snowfall a couple of days ago.  We had at least a foot of new snow here at the house, and it was snowing hard when we got up Wednesday morning.  It is almost up to the bottom of the Loki sculpture:

and here’s the buildup on the carport roof and in the driveway:

Rick needed to get out so he could go finish installing some cabinets, which fortunately he had transported to the client’s home the day before (because she is up on a ridge and he needed the truck and utility trailer to get them up there).  We weren’t sure when our friend Chuck the snowplow guy was going to show up, so Rick went to work with the snowblower.

Of course, that brought Chuck along – he had been up since 4 am plowing people out!

We got a fair amount again on Wednesday night, enough that we had to ask Chuck to come again yesterday.  I have been organizing a progressive dinner for our community association for this Saturday, and we will have 26 people here for the salads and main course that evening, so we are trying to keep enough space cleared for people to park!

This morning we went out for a nice long ski, about 2 hours.  The trails are in great shape.  We did a couple of loops on the other side of the Twin Lakes road, one of which had great views up the valley, and wouldn’t you know it – I forgot to bring the camera.  Sorry!

My sister asked about the cats, and I realized I haven’t given a Pushkin update for while.  We got him past the urinary tract infection last fall, but he is getting pretty elderly and we have to give him daily subcutaneous fluids now to keep him hydrated (progressive kidney failure, we have been through this before with previous cats…)  But he is still with us and he and Teasel spend most of the day curled up together.  She adores him.

I have been doing a lot of weaving, and  plying up my grey Corriedale handspun singles into the final yarn, and working out a true spiral top hat using short rows, to teach as a class, but no pictures yet – I will post when I have some finished items!

Last Post for 2010

We returned from 6 days on the Coast last Sunday, and our dear friends who are currently living in Southern California joined us here for 3 nights before heading back south.  We celebrated a 59th birthday:

They brought their 2 new cats, Tatti (a Maine Coon, still an adolescent and a big, sweet girl) and the Siamese kitten, Neko.  I’m not sure why my best picture of Neko was taken when she was asleep, because that was rarely the case!  She was very playful and hilariously entertaining.

There was only one “moment” when Tatti sneaked upstairs past our barrier and encountered a hostile Teasel (our female Bengal cat).  There was a lot of hissing, screaming and scrambling around.  We raced upstairs to find Tatti cowering in the bathroom, little fluffs of Tatti fur on the landing, and Teasel puffed up to about 3 times her normal size.  No harm done, though.

Rick and I went out for a fairly long ski on Monday which took us onto the Winthrop Trail and a view back down to the house:

Since then it has turned really, really cold – but clear and beautiful, especially in the mornings.

The carport is finished and we have both trailers (the Aliner travel trailer, and Rick’s utility trailer) and both our vehicles safely parked out of the snow now:

carport finished Dec 30, 2010

While away on the Coast, I finished the fourth of the swirl top hats.  This time I used a mosaic pattern from Barbara Walker’s Mosaic Knitting for the band and I am quite pleased with the result.  The yarns are Noro Silk Garden (the one showing color graduation) and Rowan Kid Classic in the same dark brown I used on the first hat.

And this week I warped up my small loom with a new scarf warp colorway that I had prepared before we left for Christmas.  I have finished the first 2 of 4 scarves I will get from this warp, and am working on the third one today.

Autumn warp with eggplant chenille weft

Autumn warp with black tencel weft

Tonight we go down to Twisp to join a group of friends for potluck dinner and ringing in the New Year at the Methow Valley Inn.  Safe travels to all who are similarly out and about tonight, and Happy New Year!

Kick & Glide

After the Big Snow last weekend, there was a terrific base for the cross-country ski trails, and the groomers have been out in force.  We went out 3 times this week, right from the house (more or less).  The Methow Community Trail that runs the length of the valley from Mazama to Winthrop goes by about 200 feet from the end of our driveway.  We got permission from the neighbor across the road to cut a trail along his fenceline over to the trail.  Here is a picture taken from the trail back towards our home:

We definitely had sore muscles after the first time out, but today we went out for an hour and a half and both felt a lot stronger.

The Methow Valley has one of the top cross-country ski trail systems in the country… check out MVSTA, the Methow Valley Sports Trail Association.

I finished another of the swirl-top hats, using Noro Silk Garden and Rowan Kid Classic in a raspberry pink color.  I picked up one ball of this color from my friend Jessica at a stash reduction sale a year or two ago.  For this hat, I tried out a different mosaic stitch pattern – it’s a slight variation of one I found in Barbara Walker’s Treasury of Knitting Patterns.

We’re off to the Coast tomorrow for 6 nights – for family events, including Christmas of course.  See you in a week!

Snow is Me

The “Pineapple Express” arrived in the Pacific Northwest this past weekend.  It made for a wet trip to Portland – the roads and passes weren’t bad, but it just rained down in buckets.  We arrived in good shape late Thursday, delivered and set up the headboard for a very happy customer, and then spent 2 nights with our friends who own The Real Mother Goose Gallery of fine American craft in Portland, OR.  Friday was a fun day spent wandering around Portland, finding Christmas gifts for the little great-grandkids, going to Powell’s Bookstore, etc.  Also it didn’t really rain on Friday, so we could actually walk around town without getting soaked.

We headed up to Seattle on Saturday in another complete downpour, all the way up I-5.  We are listening to “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” on audiobook in the car, and the reader is really good, so that helped a bit.

Yesterday I went to my knitting group with my friend Carol.  I hadn’t seen my Seattle knitting buddies since the first of November, so this was a good thing.  I have been working on a couple of hats using a pattern I bought years ago at Weaving Works in Seattle.  Here is the designer’s Ravelry page:  Triangle Topped Hat by Ellen Christensen.

My first one, done last week, used a long discontinued Filatura di Crosa yarn (wool and rayon) plus Rowan Kid Classic left over from my “Come Together” Sweater:

The second one was knit mainly in the car this weekend, and finished about an hour ago.  I used two Mirasol yarns bought at the Ashford Gallery in Winthrop:  the brown one is “Miski” (100% baby llama) and the red one is “Akapana” (65% baby llama, 25% merino wool and 10% Donegal, which are the color flecks).

This is a really fun pattern, knit all in one piece (very few ends to darn in!) but there were a few challenges in interpreting the pattern.  I am probably going to make a couple more.

But back to the Pineapple Express.  We left Seattle about 2:30 and went over Stevens Pass.  The rivers were muddy, raging and very high – it looked like Sultan was on the way to being underwater!  But Highway 2 was open and the drive wasn’t bad except for lots and lots of rain on the west side.  Our housesitter had told us we had gotten 2 feet of snow at the house the night before.  TWO FEET – yes, you read that right.

Our snow-plower had cleared out the driveway, but Rick is out there digging out the truck:

the camping trailer and the utility trailer:

and they are clearing off the carport roof, since the metal roofing is supposed to be delivered today:

Dec 13, 2010 - after the big snowfall

Shopcam

We’re off to Portland, OR today to deliver and install this:

Twisp River Headboard #2

It is a custom order through our friends’ store in Portland, The Real Mother Goose.  It is the same as the headboard on our bed which Rick made a couple of years ago – based on a picture from the headwaters of the Twisp River.  This version will be hung on the wall using a “French cleat”, at the head of their bed.

It has warmed up 25 to 30 degrees, just at or slightly above freezing, causing much of the snow on the roofs to slide and curl off:

And they got the trusses up yesterday – hopefully sheathing today so it will be covered.

Dec 9, 2010 - trusses in place

We’ve got to run!  It’s a long drive to Portland from here.  See you next week.

Truss – but Verify

Work proceeds on the carport.  Today the trusses for the center section were delivered, but it remains to be seen how far they will get on installing them (if that is the correct term).  It’s supposed to snow a lot tonight!

Dec 7, 2010 - side roofs framed, trusses delivered

Dad wondered where it lies in relation to the other 2 buildings, so here is a shot from farther out on the driveway:

carport lies to the right of the studios

Last Saturday some of the women from Shear Creative Guild in the Okanogan Valley came over to my house for the bi-monthly meeting.  We had a great time, and the potluck lunch is always a big part of it:

I finished up some knitting projects last week.  One is a poncho that I started in the car on the way to Seattle for Thanksgiving, and finished in 10 days.  It is a pattern from Ravelry:  GarteRing Poncho by Lisa Risager (a $5.00 PDF download).  I used 4 skeins of a discontinued Noro yarn bought on sale 3-4 years ago (Manmosu, wool-alpaca-silk) plus 4 skeins of Debbie Bliss bulky tweed (the dark brown).  In all, about 780 yards of bulky yarn on 7.0 mm (US 10-1/2) needles.  The pattern did not call for stripes, it uses a variegated yarn – but I had to use 2 different yarns so this is what I came up with.  I really like it, it’s very cozy!

Poncho in the snow

I also finished up a sweater I knit almost a year ago:  Come Together by Pam Allen, off of Twist Collective.  This was a $7.00 PDF download.  I used Rowan Kid Classic on US 9 needles.  The top portion is all rib so it stretches out quite a bit and is, ahem, form-fitting (but in a nice way).  I had to fiddle with the neckline, which she does not put any edging on.  It was way too wide and stretchy for my taste, so I did a row of single crochet around, pulling it in a bit, then a final edging of reverse single crochet.  Also the hem wanted to flip up so I had to deal with that.  Finally done and ready to wear to all those holiday parties!

 

Snow time

We have a new project underway here at home – a carport!  Our builder said it could be done this winter if we got the concrete work done as quickly as possible.  So Rick put together some plans, we got our building and land use permits, and it was off and running by mid-November.

Nov 16 - pouring the foundations

It snowed for the first time, and was really really cold that week – but the excavator managed to get the back-filling done just in time to protect the concrete foundations after they had set for a few days:

Nov 20 - piers in the snow

They started the framing just before Thanksgiving – brrr!

Nov 23 - begin framing

And yesterday, with more snow on the way, they had a boom truck come and place the beams, plus one of the upper walls that they framed up on the ground.  They would have liked to have the other wall up too, but the boom truck came a little early.

Nov 29 - a wall is up!

It has been snowing here all day and they are taking a break.

We spent 4 nights on the Coast for Thanksgiving with family and some nice visits with various friends.  It was cold and a little dreary in Seattle, so no pictures.  But on our way home from Anacortes on Sunday we were able to take the North Cascades Hwy for probably the last time this winter.  It was an easy drive and quite beautiful, especially in the Washington Pass area around 3:30 pm.  I leave you with some scenes of early winter….

Just west of Washington Pass

Looking east from Washington Pass

Looking back at Liberty Bell

A ridge southeast of the pass

METHOW VALLEY SPINNERS AND WEAVERS GUILD

Cordially Invites You to Our

Annual Show & Sale

Friday, November 19, 2:00 – 6:30

Saturday, November 20, 9:00 – 3:00

137 Old Twisp Highway

(a loop road off Hwy 20 between Twisp and Winthrop in the Methow Valley)

Towels, Blankets, Rugs, Scarves & More  ~~ All hand-woven by our guild members

I’ve been really busy this week getting ready for the above event.  I sold a lot of my work at the Seattle Weavers’ Guild Sale and then the following weekend out at Port Townsend – not that I am complaining, it basically paid for my new e-spinner and camera.  But I wanted to have more to show at our Methow Valley guild sale this weekend.  So I put on a purple warp for 4 more plaited twill scarves last Friday, wove them over the weekend, and finished the ends etc. last night.  They were all woven with rayon chenille this time:

Plaited twill scarves with purple perle cotton warp

The two blue ones are not exactly the same – they were done with different tie-ups and treadling (one is the same pattern as the black scarf, the other the same as the green scarf).

Today I will put together some more shawl pins, as I sold out of those too.  I was out of finished wood rings, but Rick still has quite a few that are cut out and turned, and he sanded them out and put finish on them for me the last couple of days.  Bless him.

And I finished spinning the fiber I started on 2 weekends ago, and will ply it up into yarn on my new spinner today.  Pictures later!  I like to have some handspun for sale at our event, as people really seem to appreciate it, and I often feel the spinning part of our guild name is somewhat neglected in favor of the weaving part.