Friday, March 14, 2008

Camp Burton!!!

I finally made it to Camp Burton this year. The NorthWest Regional Spinners Association has a spinning retreat right here on my island. It's very freeform, just unstructured time for spinning and visiting. But there were about 5 vendors all with great offerings.
I bought some Crosspatch Creations from Amelia of the Bellwether.

It's a blended batt from Joan Contraman in Montana. A mixture of 2 types of wool Corriedale Cross and Romney (names of each sheep provided!), silk and viscose. The color is called Tammany's Prize.
I started spinning it up almost immediately. Here's one skein from one 4 ounce bag. 200 yards of 10 wpi (wraps per inch).








I also bought a 1 ounce batt of English Garden from the Bellwether. It's another blended batt from Crosspatch Creations.
I spun it up and navajo plied it just to get an idea what it would be like as a 3 ply. I want 2 pounds of it!

I think it would make a beautiful sweater.
Meanwhile, as I save my pennies, I'm inspired to start blending different fibers and colors together on my drum carder to get more textured yarns.


There was also a woman there with a company called Great Balls of Fiber. I love the name. She had some alpaca/merino superwash that she had overdyed on pale brown, gray and green. The colors spun up beautifully. I bought about 8 ounces though the picture below doesn't really show the colors well. I've found that photographing outside is the only way to get true colors and it's been raining so much.

Everyone seemed to have some of her dyed fiber!



Most of the spinners stayed 4 days in cabins. They met and spun in a common area. Since I live on Vashon, I visited briefly on Thursday and then again more extensively on Saturday afternoon.
What can I say! Spinners are such great people. I didn't know anyone. The room was filled with spinners. Not a free chair in sight never mind a spot to put one. Someone immediately helped me find a chair and as I wandered around looking confused, another woman told me just to stick it in the middle of a circle. I felt so comfortable. Everyone was friendly and helpful. I sat chatting and spinning for about 5 hours and then went back again that evening. Six of us stayed up spinning, talking and laughing until past midnight.
All I can say is that it was so much fun. I'm amazed at all the talent and knowledge in that room. Every bag had beautiful things peeking out. Some people even showed me the gorgeous yarns and knitted items that were hidden at the bottom of theirs.




I'm having so much fun with entrelac.








I've designed a few hats in children's and adult sizes. I've used the wonderful Noro Silk Garden and have been hand dyeing fiber and spinning it up with entrelac in mind. It's so much fun but I feel like I want to do more than a few more hats to get it right and also to explore color a bit more. I really do like to just sit back and let it happen without influencing the way the colors come off the needles but I do see the fun of maybe using 2 different balls of yarn and switching every row. That would take away some of the building up of color in certain sections.
And after seeing all the wonderful fibers and yarns at Camp Burton, I feel I want to play a little more with texture and blended fibers in these hats. The Noro one is absolutely satisfactory. Please disregard the unwoven ends sticking out!












But the handspun ones need some tweaking.












I saw some hamster bedding at a friend's house. I rushed to Petco and bought this:




It's viscose and a little under $4 for 35 grams. I spun up a little and it produced a fine slightly bumpy yarn. I'd like to try blending it with another fiber. I'm not so good with my ounce/gram conversions but I think it's probably not such a cost effective way of getting spinnable viscose. I had to try it though. I'm not even sure that the color is fast though I am assured that it's perfectly safe for my rat/hamster/mouse to eat.

Joe's sweater has been a challenge in some ways, primarily the finishing details. I didn't want to rush through so I took my time and redid almost every part of the process, sometimes 3 times!

Right now, I'm hand sewing the zipper in place. The finish work on this sweater has been tough!





And just in case, you didn't know what I meant by using those children's foam floor mats for blocking.............


Monday, February 18, 2008

A Run of Bad Luck

I'm having a small spell of bad luck but it doesn't sem to be affecting getting projects done.
I finally have blocked my Gothic Leaf Stole designed by Sivia Harding. The photo does not really show it off well. It is about 7 or 8 feet long! I am very pleased with it!












And that scarf that has been in progress for months and months is finally finished. I love it! It is very soft. Handspun and millspun and mostly kid mohair.






And Joe's sweater nears completion too. I'm on the second sleeve. Then, there's just the collar, zipper and edging to do.




Madrona Fiber Arts Winter Retreat was this weekend and I did make it there one day for a class with Kathryn Alexander on entrelac knitting. Sadly, I missed my Saturday class with Judith MacKenzie because the ferry broke down.
I decided to take a ferry off the north end of the island and stay in Gig Harbor Saturday night in order to make it to the Sunday class. I was pretty tired all day and couldn't seem to follow instructions!










But somehow when I reached home last night, it all started coming together. These are not beautiful but they are fun to do and begin to let me see design possibilities for this technique.






Just learning and beginning to explore but when I was at the Marketplace, I saw this roving from Dragonfibers sold by Village Yarn and Tea. I had to have it. It's Blue Faced Leicester in colorway Big Top. I wanted to spin it up and knit entrelac. The yarn is still unfinished. The colors were beautiful as they changed and fed onto the bobbin. I love to dye and will continue to but I am really impressed with Dragonfibers. The colors were saturated completely through the roving and their combination was lovely. She has an etsy shop but no Big Top in stock at present.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Slowing Down

I'm purposely slowing down and taking care of the disorder around here. After 2 years of frantically spinning, trying to learn as much as I can, I now feel comfortable enough to not actually spin every day.
I'm still spinning though. Working my way slowly through the 3 and a half pounds of alpaca fiber I bought from Vashon Island Alpacas. I have no idea how much yardage I'll end up with in the end. I did some calculations based on the weight of a sample skein but I never trust things like that.
I'm spinning everything up before plying. I will probably buy some more bobbins but in the meantime, I'm winding the singles on to cardboard bobbins.







I'm making a 3 ply about the equivalent to a heavy worsted or aran weight. I'm carding the fiber on my Pat Green drum carder but spinning it worsted.




I finally finished the alpaca stole about a month ago though it still remains unblocked and looking like a lump of potatoes. I realize that I need something better for blocking. I've been keeping my eyes open for those children's interlocking foam floor coverings in my local thrift store. But I might break down and buy some from cocoknits.com I've been buying her patterns. She's very talented.



The stole came out perfect. It makes me embarrassed of my previous lace! I know I said I knew myself well enough to walk the fine line between being too demanding for my skill level and being really sloppy. I guess I had to make those mistakes to learn but those lace scaves and stole are staring me in the face saying "You didn't care enough to make me properly!"
I've been working on The Cambridge Jacket for my son. It's featured in the latest Best of Interweave Knits but it's also in the Summer 2006 issue. I played it safe and chose Cascade 220 (the same used in the pattern) because I really want this to come out good. I've never knitted Joe anything other than socks and more recently a hat.
I have the back and the left front done so far.







In between, I do little bits of this and that.
I pulled this scarf out of the bottom of the workbasket. I'm almost out of yarn so this will be done fairly soon. It's a mix of kid mohair handspun and a commercial kid/merino blend. It really is a slog!












I bought some more of that lovely Romney but I'm holding on to it for a bit because I have to wait to see if I'll need some more for this cabled vest I'm envisioning








.



I'm thinking of trying Connie Delaney's Spincraft pattern Knit Until The Yarn Runs Out Vest. Still, I don't want it to be too short. I'm thinking of a zipper as a closure.....












I finally bought Judith MacKenzie McCuin's book.


Sadly, I should have bought it earlier. She has a caution about making sure alpaca has sufficient twist because it doesn't hold it shape when it's not spun tightly enough. Joe's alpaca hat is melting slowly downward. I have to thread in some elastic or as he suggests shrink it.

It's all a learning process.


My friend Roxy gave me this beautiful bag! It's made from recycled materials. Her business is called RE GENR 8. Every bag is different. The inside has wonderfully detailed pockets and compartments with velcro closures. It's my new knitting bag. I love it!

Monday, December 24, 2007

Local Fiber

Although I've been working with commercial fiber from the big mills, I've recently discovered the ultimate pleasure.....spinning local fiber.
I've bought some Romney batts from Weaving Works in Seattle. These batts come from a local farm and are luscious! I had so much fun with my first batt that I bought another. I've just begun spinning that up and am thinking I might have enough for a vest.
The other batt was spun and knit up into the Fiber Trends clog (A-33). Although the clog pattern has been around forever, this was my first attempt.

These were for Sam who has a size 12 foot. They were unbelievably long before felting. I think perhaps 30 inches! The Romney wool was loosely spun into a very low twist single and felted beautifully although the initial result was very furry looking, very much like those fuzzy slippers fom the fifties that didn't seem very appropriate for Sammy. I took a pair of scissors and trimmed closely to the fabric and I liked the result.
The clogs still need soles. I'm not so sure I want to use the FiberTrends ones . I'm tempted to visit the leather store and make my own.

I was asked to demonstrate spinning at the Willingham Weavery on the Art Tour on Vashon Island. I was set up right next to the batts and yarns available from Vashon Island Alpacas. I chose a few batts from an alpaca named Black Bart and spun up enough fiber for an alpaca hat for my son, Joe.
I used a top down hat pattern available on the internet from Silke Hupka. It's called Karlchen. I had used the pattern earlier for Guy's superwash hat and was worried about the bind off edge being too tight. I did a little exploring and found the technique of using a yarn over every 3 or 4 stitches on the bind off edge. The yarn over was immediately cast off with the stitch next to it. The result was a neat flexible edge. Very simple but it works beautifully.

Joe seems pleased with the hat and wears it a lot.



I loved working with the alpaca from the local farm so much that I made an appointment to go look at fleeces. Bill and Lee Green have the most wonderful house on thirty acres with the female alpacas and crias always on view from their windows.
I came away with some washed raw fiber in this beautiful shade of cinnamon from Sienna:

There is close to 3.5 pounds and I'm keeping my fingers crossed that I'll have enough for a sweater.




I also couldn't pass up the fiber that resulted from a huacaya jumping the fence to mate with a Suri creating a crossbreed named Deliah (possibly Delilah but it says Deliah on the bag)! It has the characteristics of both and is a wonderful white shade. I have less of this fiber so I have no ideas yet.

I noticed Weaving Works also carried raw fleece, batts and yarn from Vashon Island Alpacas.



This month, Spin Off, the magazine for handspinners has an article on eco-friendly farms of fiber producing animals which seems right in sync with my inclinations now that I'm discovering local fiber sources. Though at present, I feel supporting local farms is important even though the farms may not be completely deserving of the term "sustainable". (The two above may very well be but I don't have the information to state if so or not.)What appeals to me are the humane situations in which the animals are raised and the small support I am able to give to local farmers.
There is also the delight of working with fibers not distributed by the major suppliers. There is so much more variety! Keep in mind that I have yet made it to a sheep and wool festival so my experience is very limited. This is my first taste of that joy!

Monday, November 26, 2007

A First!

My first handspun, handknit sweater!

It's not perfect or even lovely but for me it's still an accomplishment.
I had been speaking to a friend about how intimidated I was about making a sweater without a pattern. She said something like, "Well, you know how to remedy that, just do it." and I did without a lot of forethought.
My initial idea was to have a more "painterly" blending of colors like the yarn used for the circus tent hat.





There just wasn't enough blending of colors in the yarn to give the effect I wanted. I am learning that the more complex colors are, even if they appear solid gives a richness and dimension that I'll strive for in the future. Pictured is the yarn I used for the sweater although adequate doesn't really have qualities.




When the sweater was still unfinished, I had a lot of doubts about continuing. There was the disappointment with the lack of color complexity and my very unplanned approach to the pattern. The body was narrow. Maybe ideal for a fitted sweater with set in sleeves but not so desirable for drop shoulder sleeves. I had to use drop shouldered sleeves because my skill was not up to figuring out how to steek fitted sleeves. Is it possible? I think it is. I had to keep the color changes in the yarn halfway consistent. To try to remedy the narrowness of the body, I made the sleeves larger. It made me nervous. In the end, it worked out okay.
In progress, it looked very serape-like and I thought it might be better to rip it out and make a shawl or a blanket. I'm glad I didn't though.









I have more to show you but not the time right now to do it.
I'm doing a 3 day juice fast and having a hard time staying focused.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Still Playing!

The rain came a little early this year to the Seattle area and with it slightly cooler than normal temperatures (or at least so it seems) and although I'm completely startled by the lush beauty the rains brings, I'm already putting on long underwear even though the thermometer says it's in the low 50s. I feel like such a wuss!
I continue to experiment and play with color and different techniques without much forethought but surprisingly I do find myself completing projects with my handspun.
I've heard people talking about subpersonalities. I'm sure it's some well thought out template of human personality and interpersonal exchanges but I don't know anything about it. Though I am certain that one of my subs must be a clown. Why else would I keep turning out articles of clothing that are so brightly colored, so whimsical, so clownish.





Don't laugh! I actually like these. They do fit almost as I intended. They're almost knee high in length. They just don't feel complete at this point. I bought some of the FiberTrends soles from fiber2yarn.com .





The soles just don't give the effect I want. They make the felted socks look too much like traditional slipper socks so I'm saving the suede soles for something else........perhaps the Fiber Trends clogs which I've never tried before. I'll continue to keep my eyes open for something to "complete" my felted socks. I keep seeing leather trim and buckles canabalized from thrift store handbags or belts.




I handspun the yarn for the socks from the NZ carded wool that most spinning supply shops carry. I practiced my woolen technique and initially weighed all the fiber before blending so that I would get an approximate matching pair. After a bit, I just eyeballed which worked pretty well. I drumcarded the colors into vertical stripes and then rolled the batt with colors running still in vertical stripes. Then I drafted and spun from the side of the batt allowing the colors to unfold in sections as I spun.I think the resulting mismatching on the feet was partly a result of working fewer rows on the second heel and partly the inferiority of eyeballing. The mismatched feet don't bother me at all though I am glad that the legs seem to be similar.





I used the mukluk pattern in Folkknits from Interweave Press as a guide for knitting though I ignored some of the instructions. If you haven't seen the book yet, it's very fun with lots of lovely patterns that although unique in themselves are idea inspiring and can be used as a jumping off place for other garments or accessories.
The socks were knitted and then felted. In my early days of spinning, I never thought I'd felt my handspun but it makes perfect sense. Singles felt beautifully and woolen yarn spins quickly so I have no qualms about felting it. Here they are before felting:





I've beeen having so much fun with the drum carder. I spun up some Corriedale that I'd blended on the drum carder and knitted up a lace scarf with thick singles.






The lace pattern caused one edge to make chevron like points while the other end turned out pretty even on the cast off edge. If I ever use this particular lace pattern again for a scarf, I will definitely work up from each end and graft the 2 together.


Deviating a bit from the rainbow colored batts, I spun up some singles and worked out a pattern for a hat. It looks a lot like a circus tent to me.



It's all just playfulness and fun. It feels as if I'm just sticking my fingers in paints and smearing it around and seeing how things look.
For awhile I was just spinning up small bits of blended fiber and knitting small, narrow swatches.

























I hadn't been dyeing in weeks so I threw some fiber in pots to wet and after 2 days felt I had to go ahead before mold grew. The mixing and dyeing were hurried. The space dyed roving really should have been split so that if I decide to knit socks or gloves, they would be more consistently matched but I just began spinning. I love spinning worsted and it had been so long. I just sat down and went into a trance. I realized too late that I hadn't split the roving so I would have more choices for its use after it had been spun up. It's Blue Faced Leicester and I navajo plied it. I have 170 yards of the muticolored and about 150 yards of the light green. The color sections of the muticolored skein are at some points very long.......yet another argument for splitting the roving especially when there is little yardage and the knitted item will be small. I do have a few ideas though. How they will look when executed is a different matter.......







That night, I also dyed some Punta wool I bought from Carol Lee at thesheepshedstudio.com for blending with other colors on the drum carder.


I'm pleased with the color and can't wait to start blending batts.




I am slogging along on my Gothic Leaf Stole. It's not that I don't enjoy the pattern. It's rhythmic and relaxing. The yarn is Henry's Attic Prime Alpaca and it's wonderful to work with. I knit this piece only on the commute though which ends up being a total of 30 minutes a week. I started in May and I'm a little more than half done. If you're not familiar with lace, I'd like to point out that often it looks like one big crumpled mess until it's washed and blocked. Then the pattern appears very distinctly...or so we hope!












And I just began fixing the Peruvian hat I made for MaryAnn last year. The hat was so roomy it slipped down on her head! I'm going to remedy that by putting in a polar fleece band. It really does need ear flaps too so I just began those this evening. I already ripped out one but it is coming along. Pictured is an unformed idea of the ear flap. The actual earflap will be knitted on from picked up stitches. I actually tried sewing on flaps last year and it ended up looking pretty amateurish.






The pattern for the hat, I just made up as I went along................no wonder it slipped off MaryAnn's head.....but the motifs, I found in Andean Folk Knitting. Sadly, I think it's out of print. If you see a copy, grab it if the price is right.