Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Weaving my way into Autumn

We drove across the North Cross Highway (North Cascades, Hwy 20) to Anacortes this week, to bring our camping trailer over for winter storage at my folks’ house, and have a nice visit with them.  It was a rainy day, but the colors were good up in the high country:

North Cross Fall 2009

Such a pretty picture, I have taken a bit of it for my new header image – the autumn theme.

It was heartening to see the colors, because the early freeze of a few weeks ago seems to have stopped most of the trees in our valley dead in their tracks.  They are mostly turning… brown.  No other word for it.  We usually have a lot more color this time of year.

I have finished up seven shawls and have warp prepared for six more.  I am experimenting with making more of a “shoulder shawl” – a little narrower and shorter than the previous series, and meant to be worn more like a vest with perhaps a shawl pin to hold it closed.

There are three alike from a sky blue mohair boucle woven with hand-dyed multi-colored wool in the weft:

Sky blue boucle with black alpaca, 3 alike

Sky blue boucle with hand-dyed wool, 3 alike

For another two I used a multi-colored mohair boucle, hand-dyed with mainly blues and greens -both have a greyish blue wool weft, but I used different colors of kid mohair/silk for the accent stripes:

Bluegrass with turq stripesBluegrass with pear stripes

And for these last two I used another hand-dyed mohair boucle, in a new colorway called “Schist” that has lovely tones of grey, gold and black.  For one I used the greyish blue wool for weft, with deep gold accent stripes.  For the other I used black alpaca for weft, with a dark bronze accent stripe.

Schist with blue woolSchist with black alpaca

These have been somewhat of an exercise in frustration, since it turns out the hand-dyed mohair boucle yarns I am using for the warps do not have consistent amounts of yarn in the skeins.  But after some trial and error I have concluded that getting the length right is what matters the most, and if they aren’t all the same width, then so be it.

I leave you with a picture of Teasel and Pushkin, who love to follow the sun around wherever it falls into the house during the course of the day:

Teasel Pushkin 10-24-09

Snow in October?!

I haven’t kept up with the blog very well this past week or so.  There’s plenty going on, but not much of it has been picture-worthy. Or maybe I am getting lazy about taking pictures.

Five days ago we had an early visit from Old Man Winter:

October 14, 2009

October 14, 2009

And it was cold!  It seemed like we had gone from Summer to Winter with very little Autumn in between.

But yesterday it was lovely – warm, almost 70 in the afternoon.  We worked out in the back yard all day, having borrowed a rototiller from our neighbors up the road.  We tilled up and raked out the sod in the rest of the areas where we want to put a shrub and perennial border to the lawn, then Rick used the tractor to haul over soil from the dirt pile and we raked that out.  It is almost ready for a layer of mulch, and then planting next spring.  Very satisfying!

planting bedsSince the barrier fence across the back seems to be progressing nicely – they poured the concrete after the early snow melted and daytime temperatures came back up – we have decided to hire someone to put in a deer fence around most of the back yard before winter comes.  They started today.  We borrowed a tractor with a post-hole auger from the neighbors, and they are using that to put in the wooden posts.  The fence itself is a rigid 4″ grid, the same thing they use to reinforce concrete slabs.  So it should pretty much disappear visually.

Don’t get me wrong.  We love the deer!  We just don’t want them eating our trees, our future planting beds, our future vegetable garden, etc…

Speaking of deer, this is the week of “modern firarms” hunting.  Meaning hunters with rifles all over the place.  There are hunters camped up in the national forest at the top of Benson Creek, and they cruise up and down our road slowly, “spotting” deer out in the fields.  We keep the driveway gates closed, and don’t go out for a walk, even up the road, much less up in the hills.  It will be over next weekend.

Woodworking: Rick finished up a big installation last week, for the job he is working on up in Mazama.  He had to finish all the cabinets that will have stone tops, so they could come and template the granite.  This involved a 22-foot long kitchen cabinet wall – quite the sight when set up in the shop downstairs – plus another set of cabinets that go in the “snug.”  Sorry I didn’t get a picture!  We will take some up at the house, sometime soon.  He has a part-time helper now, and I am doing some of the finishing to help out.  But it looks like the job will continue on into November, as there is still quite a bit left to do.

Weaving:  I’m working on a series of shawls to get ready for our guild sale the weekend before Thanksgiving.  I am also going to make some shawl pins, but am waiting for some “findings” to show up in the mail, so I have nothing to photograph at present.  I am also getting ready to weave a first project on my new loom up at the guild room – Kay is helping me as I am going to be pushing my knowledge and abilities on this one.  It will be a lace curtain for the guild’s bathroom window!

Knitting:  I am substantially far along with the Tomten Jacket, but it just doesn’t seem that interesting visually at this stage, so I am waiting to photograph later.  I have 2 other projects in mind, but as none of the yarn I have is exactly the right gauge (and I am determined to use yarn I have) it is going to require some recalculating and planning before I can actually start anything.

By the way, the Seattle Weavers Guild annual show and sale is coming up at the end of this week.  I joined the guild recently, and hope to participate in the sale next year.  It’s a pretty big deal – they have a lot of inventory with very high quality, and a loyal following.  So if  you are in the big city, try to get by St Marks Cathedral sometime between Thursday and Saturday evenings and check it out!

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.

Completely batty

I have so many ideas in my head about things I want to try, and/or a queue of projects I am trying to get to, that it sometimes almost seems like a random choice as far as what to dive into next.

However, I had so much fun dyeing those shawls a week ago – and Sara at Ashford Gallery in Winthrop keeps asking me for spinning fiber (you can tell fall is on its way – knitting and spinning are coming back into people’s minds around here) – that I decided the fiberarts project for this week was to dye up some fleece and drumcard some spinning/felting batts.

I used about 3 lbs of a white Romney fleece I bought last year from The Pines Farm in Maple Valley, WA.  The Schwiders raise white and natural colored Romney sheep, and Angora goats.  They are well-respected breeders and also chief organizers of the Shepherds’ Extravaganza held each April at the Puyallup Fairgrounds.  Judith MacKenzie McCuin recommended them to me for a fiber source.

I dyed 4 colors using Judith’s dyes (Mother MacKenzie’s) in various combinations of Blue, Magenta and Violet.  I used the dye samples from the workshop in Preston this past summer as a guide, and am happy to report that the colors came out quite similar even though it was fleece and not yarn.

3 colors destined to be carded together into layered batts:

3 colors all using Blue-Magenta-Violet

3 colors all using Blue-Magenta-Violet

The 4th color was a similar to the color on the right above, only a little more purple, so I used it by itself and then added a “frosting” of dyed kid mohair locks on the second pass:

4th color carded on first pass

4th color carded on first pass

after adding dyed kid mohair locks

after adding dyed kid mohair locks

I got eight 2-oz. batts from this color plus the kid mohair.

Here’s the drumcarder in action.  Love this tool!  It was built by Judith’s husband, Nick McCuin.

drumcarder in action

I failed to take pictures at some point.  This blogging is very demanding.  The 3 colors shown above were put on the carder in layers:  blueberry, most of the fuchsia color, then the violet, then a light frosting of the fuchsia again.  I got 16  batts, each 2-oz. of fiber.

After taking 10 batts up to the gallery this morning, I still have this nice box full of lovely batts, ready to spin or sell at the holiday sales coming up in November.  I know, I won’t get rich doing it- but every time I do a project like this I get more confident about what I am doing, and it is really a blast!

Box full of spinning batts

Box full of spinning batts

Finished Projects

This was a good week for finishing projects.  My package finally came from Macomber with the things I needed to finish the restoration of Mother Mary’s loom.  We put the new cloth (canvas) aprons on the front beam and the plain warp beam in the back.  Then I re-strung the cords on the sectional warp beam using the materials they sent, and their instructions:

replacing sectional cords

Then we wrapped it up and put it in the cargo trailer and took it on up to its new home at the Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers guild room.  I also got 2 more reeds, a raddle and a bunch of the pedal hooks – there were only 8 pedal hooks when I got it, should be more like 64 for a loom with 16 pedals.

Now of course everyone in the guild wants to know what I am going to weave on it and if I will jump in with both feet and use all 12 harnesses on the first project… yikes!  no pressure, none at all.

I also finished 3 rugs and that was the end of the rug warp.  31 rugs since the beginning of May, and I have sold about half of them already..

blue jeans denim rug, 28" x 41"

blue jeans denim rug, 28" x 41"

9 shades of blue cotton corduroy, 28" x 27" and 28" x 38"

9 shades of blue cotton corduroy, 28" x 27" and 28" x 38"

Yesterday I took 7 more rugs up to the Ashford Gallery in Winthrop, as they were running a little low.

I did some maintenance on my 48″ Macomber – replaced the flat steel heddles with new inserted-eye heddles I ordered a while back.  Then I gave it a thorough cleaning and lubricated the jacks.  I am planning to start another series of shawls, as they have sold all of the ones I had up at Ashford Gallery, and we have holiday sales coming up soon!

Market and Fair

I participated in the Twisp Saturday Market again the last 2 weeks.  I got up there extra early the Labor Day weekend, as this is easily the biggest market of the year, in terms of numbers of participants and (hopefully) shoppers.  Our valley has a robust tourist economy and Labor Day weekend marks the end of summer season.

Well, rain was forecast, which was accurate, unfortunately!  It turned into a soggy affair.  Some vendors folded shop and simply left early.  Hardy souls squelched by with rain jackets and umbrellas.  I managed to get most of my display, plus myself, under the cover of my large patio umbrella:

Labor Day market 2009and felt lucky to sell 3 rugs over the course of the morning.

Last weekend was a different story, weather-wise.  We are having clear blue skies and temperatures in the 80’s.  I brought one of my spinning wheels up and sat spinning some wool that my sister sent me from California.  This was fun and productive for me, and seemed to be interesting to a lot of the passers-by.

market 9-11-09

I also submitted some items last week for judging at the Okanogan County Fair.  First time I have entered a county fair in my life.  We went over to Omak on Sunday afternoon to look around the fair exhibits and the animal barns, and pick up my entries at the end of the day.

Judging is done using a modified Danish System, in which entries are evaluated against a set of standards and not against the other entries in the same division and class.  At this fair they also place exhibitors into age groups, which I think is what makes it a “modified” Danish System.  The awards are Blue (excellent, exceeds standard), Red (good, meets expected standard), White (fair, falls below expected standard) or no award if the entry is disqualified for some reason.  They also may award Grand Champion and Reserve Champion (sort of like first and second place amongst all the blue ribbons in the class).  But they don’t necessarily award these and I haven’t yet figured out what the circumstances are for this to happen – it isn’t explained in the Fair entry book.

I entered two knitted pieces in the Knitting class under the Home Economics – Sewing & Needlework department.  My Einstein Coat, which I completed last fall (pre-blog) got a blue ribbon and Grand Champion award.  Holy cow!  This pattern is found in Sally Melville’s book The Knit Stitch.  I used a discontinued Noro yarn, wool/silk/alpaca, picked up on sale somewhere a couple of years back.

Einstein Coat

Einstein Coat

grand champion coat

My “Bohus Forest Darkness” sweater, the knitting of which was chronicled on this blog earlier in the year, received a blue ribbon.  I find it ironic that this one wasn’t the G.C., since I know it required much more skill, experience and patience to knit than the coat.  The comment form said “Good looking sweater – good work – but looks like dog or cat hair on it.  Roller (sticky) would clean it off.”  Excuse me?  I carefully de-pilled and cleaned this sweater before entering it and I sure don’t see any cat hair on it.  I did tell them it was an angora blend yarn on the entry form – Rick thinks someone thought the angora halo was cat hair.  Who knows.

blue ribbon Bohus

Over in the Arts & Crafts department, I entered a skein of handspun yarn in the Spinning class, and one of my overshot table mats and a rag rug in the Weaving class.  I got a blue ribbon and Reserve Champion award for my handspun (spun last fall from a dyed Corriedale pencil roving I bought from Crown Mountain Farms in Yelm, WA):

reserve champion handspun

I also got a blue ribbon for my table runner and a red ribbon on the rug – there was no comment form so I am not sure why but, oh well.

We also managed to catch the last 2 horse races of the day, the final one being the “Pony Express” race, which a friend here in the Methow had told me about last week.  There were 4 teams with one rider and 3 horses each.  And this is done bareback, too!  They have to change horses after each lap around the track, and if they don’t make the transition they are disqualified.  One guy was in this unfortunate position, he just didn’t manage to get on the second horse and it wound up making the lap without him.  They seemed like pretty high-strung horses, too.

Pony Express

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.

Recent Rugs #3

I have finished 12 more rag rugs in the past 2 months and thought it was time to put up a few pictures!  All of these are on the same 28″ wide warp.

Rust & tan fringed selvages, probably cotton, 42" long

Rust & tan fringed selvages, probably cotton, 42" long

Bronze, silver & chocolate fringed selvages, probably synthetics, 42" long

Bronze, silver & chocolate fringed selvages, probably synthetics, 42" long

Pendleton fringed wool selvage, 39" long (sold)

Pendleton fringed wool selvage, 39" long (sold)

The above rug was so thick and cushy (especially to bare feet!) that I decided to make another one.  I had quite a bit of that color left and just kept weaving until it was all gone.  It came out 76″ long after washing, and I think it will be great next to a bed, for example.  But I don’t have a picture of it.  I also failed to get a picture of the next rug I did after that one, which was the same thick, cushy Pendleton wool selvage material, but black with jewel tone flecks.  It came out 44″ long.

The rest of them evolved as I got into the boxes of denim and colored cotton corduroy strips.  For most of these, I pick out the colors I want to use (usually 6 or 7 colors), arrange them in a color progression I like and then sew the strips together in those repeating sequences before winding them onto the shuttles.  So the colors do repeat over and over, but not in stripes, since the length of the sequenced strips are not usually an exact match to the width of the rug.  If you get what I mean…

Green denims and corduroys, 36" long

Green denims and corduroys, 36" long

Green, teal and bright turquoise denim and corduroy, 51" long.  Reminds me of breakers coming on shore.

Green, teal and bright turquoise denim and corduroy, 51" long. Reminds me of breakers coming on shore.

Corduroy in shades of gray, arranged so there is some striping.  46" long.

Corduroy in shades of gray, also black denim, arranged so there is some striping. 46" long.

Mixed denims, dark blue through medium gray.  43" long.

Mixed denims, dark blue through medium gray. 43" long.

Now I started into the box with burgundy, brown, purple and a bright raspberry red, of which I had a lot:

Burgundy, brown, purple & raspberry denim & corduroy, 44" long.

Burgundy, brown, purple & raspberry denim & corduroy, 44" long.

Corduroy in 7 shades of purple, 36" long.

Corduroy in 7 shades of purple, 36" long.

"The leftovers" from the 2 above, lots more raspberry.  28" long.

"The leftovers" from the 2 above, lots more raspberry. 28" long.

I think I’m seeing the end of this rug warp – I have completed 28 rugs since the beginning of May and may have 5 or 6 to go, at a guess.  It’s been a blast but I am ready to do something else!

We went over to the coast last weekend for a variety of reasons, one of which was to pick up a garden tractor (riding lawnmower) from some friends who no longer need it.  It came with a large dump-cart to tow behind, that is going to be incredibly useful as well.  The little tractor needed some cleanup and a new battery, then fired right up.

It’s sort of like a cross between a go-cart and a lawnmower.  Yee-haw!!

Trusty 1

Cowboy Aberson Carr rides again

Cowboy Aberson Carr rides again

They also gave us some other great stuff, including some pavers that I will eventually use on a new entry walkway, and a ten-gallon hat.  Here it is on a very cute little kid who was visiting with his parents, from Bellingham:

Luka 1

More excitement this morning.  They are removing the concrete blocks and manure piles/compost heaps next door in further preparation for the fence!!

removing concrete blocks

When we came back into the valley last Sunday, there was a new forest fire to the east of us, that caused them to close Highway 20 over Loup Loup pass to Okanogan and Omak.  Evidently the power was out for 18 hours over the weekend, as they had to shut down the main line over the Loup because of the fire, which they have named the Oden Road Fire (the link is to InciWeb, which is a great resource for tracking wildfires).  It’s pretty much mopped up by now, though.

Yesterday I picked up the Methow Valley News at the PO Box and found out there was a big pot bust this week up near Sun Mountain Lodge.  We had noticed helicopters flying around last Tuesday but couldn’t figure out what was going on… read all about it here!  So wierd to think people are growing large quantities of pot in our national forests and this one so near to trails we use all the time.

So that’s the news from Twisp so far this week….

Loom tidbits and more

Holly asked about the sanding block for metal cleanup (I think, not the one for wood).  I just found it with Google under Bridge City Tools.  Specifically, it is called Sandflex Hand Block and comes in fine, medium and coarse or as a set of all 3.  There you go!

Over the weekend I was able to contact one of the previous owners of Mother Mary’s Loom.  The loom came with a copy of the Macomber catalog with their name and address on it.  A simple directory lookup gave me the phone number to try in North Bend, Washington. Very nice folks; the husband had obviously been quite fond of the loom and had made an effort to find out about it when they bought it.

The loom, built for Mother Mary in 1954,  had originally resided at Mt. Angel Seminary near Salem, Oregon.  There it had been used to weave priest’s vestments, etc.  At some point it was sold to a weaver in Puyallup, Washington.  This lady’s husband was the one who made the bench that came with the loom.  It’s a very pretty bench with some beautiful figured maple on the top.  She apparently developed some health issues that caused her to give up weaving, and she sold the loom to the folks in North Bend around the year 2000.  She has since moved to Florida and they lost track of her, so I can’t follow up that lead any further.  The folks in North Bend traded it to someone in Olympia (for a harp!) due to lack of space, and the fact that she had become fond of Leclerc looms and that is what she is using now.  The fellow in Port Orchard obtained the loom, 2-3 years ago, from the gal in Olympia also through a trade arranged through Craig’s List.

So there we have it.  I am owner number 5 since it left the Mt. Angel Seminary.

On another topic, we were very excited to see a tow truck show up next door and take away the dead car and the equally dead John Deere farm machinery (not a tractor; not sure what it was…).  They already hauled off the stock feeding stations.  They say the concrete blocks are next, and the fence will happen this year.  Keeping our fingers crossed!

bye bye John Deere thingy

bye bye John Deere thingy