Smatterings

  • project catch up

    As I wound my Midwest Moonlight silk scarf around my neck this morning, it occurred to me that I hadn’t posted a finished shot of it.  I love it.  It’s very wearable,  comfortable too.  100% silk, hand dyed.

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    I finished spinning the Icelandic and silk I bought at the Vermont Sheep & Wool this year.  I thought I was spinning it pretty fine, turns out, not quite so.  It is nearly 200 yds.  That makes it almost 100 yds./ oz.  What can I do with just shy of 200 yds. ?  Remember, it is Icelandic.  I think I may have to get a bit more.

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    Finally, here is the beginning of my first hooked something or other (probably a pillow top) out of my handspun  and hand dyed Lincoln.

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    Now, out to pull up and stake an apple tree that has blown over.  Wish it luck.

    14 responses to “project catch up”

    1. Midwest Moonlight is beautiful, altho it is reminiscent of being strung up by a posse.
      <200yds? Mittens. Hat with fleece lining. Decor.

    2. I’m sitting here eating and apple and hope you can save the tree! The scarf is beautiful. If you can’t get a full mitten or glove from the 200 yds…maybe the cuffs would be nice.

    3. If the Icelandic yarn is sport weight you could get ankle socks out of it. I have large feet (size 11 shoe) and I can get socks with about 4 inches of ribbing out of 250 yards of sport weight. It is beautiful. I love the heathery texture.
      I hope the apple tree bounces back. What kind is it?

    4. The scarf is stunning! Best wishes to the apple tree.

    5. I just learned how to hook (actually punch) a rug, too, and it is a great way to use up little bits of handspun. There’s a picture here: http://mymountainhome.typepad.com/my_mountain_home/2006/08/punch_needle_ru.html
      That Icelandic is beautiful–one of my favorite breeds!

    6. Luck to the apple tree.
      Love the scarf. It’s so pretty.
      You could make yourself a little felted clutch out of the Icelandic.

    7. Love the scarf! Interesting pattern and wonderful color. (I hope I didn’t influence you too much where the Gathering classes were concerned, by the way…I was more than a little negative about “you know who” when we discussed it a while back. Hated her the minute she opened her mouth…but that was just me! You might have had a better experience.)

    8. Beautiful scarf. Moonlight Madness is one of my favorite patterns from Scarf Style. I love it in silk. Such gorgeous colors!

    9. As always, Judy, everything is gorgeous.

    10. I like the hooking; the colors are strong!!! I see you’re being very productive…..

    11. That scarf is a beauty! What a great clear color!

    12. The scarf is gorgeous but I can’t wait to see what the hooking is going to be. I love the colors!

    13. Really pretty scarf! The icelandic /silk sounds like a wonderful blend for an earflap hat…(stretch your 200 yards by doing a design with another color?)..but I’m on a earflap bender these days…can’t make enough of them…

    14. Oh, oh, OH… that M.M. scarf is magnificent! And you photographed it so beautifully. I love the way it’s draped over the bare branch. Very artistic!

  • The Gathering

    This past weekend marked the end to 2006’s fiber affairs, at
    least for me. It’s been quite a ride
    this year and 2007 is shaping up. Not
    bad, not bad at all.

    The Gathering..  It
    was great and it was not as great. Some
    things are best unsaid. I had a wonderful
    time. How could I not? There were over
    200 spinners staying at the Loon Mountain Club for the weekend. That’s 48 hours of eating, talking, spinning
    and the sharing of stories and projects.

     

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    the view from my window

    The two weekend days were broken up into three class sections. I’m
    kicking myself now. Hindsight. I should have taken Rita Buchanan’s
    classes. I should have. Now, in the aftermath, I am reminding myself
    that I can always learn something new, even in a beginners class.
    Instead,
    I learned that there are two parts to Bosnian Crochet, only two. Most
    of what you need to know can be covered
    in about 15 minutes. The stitches can be
    learned in about five minutes…. the rest can be shown in the remaining
    10. I took the class all day Saturday, two
    sessions. The company was wonderful. Deborah is an incredibly
    knowledgeable
    textile historian and her stories are very interesting. But, two
    stitches. I can see myself using this technique for
    crocheted basket work, maybe bags, something like that. Thing was, when
    I saw the technique, I
    realized I’ve used it many times in the past. I have never been taught
    to crochet. I learned by picking up the needle and
    playing around.  I had naturally (read
    that as made up, reinvented, and) used those two stitches years ago for
    making
    crocheted sculpture. It produces a very
    sturdy fabric. I didn’t know it had a
    name. I think, that at the time, I
    assumed it was a single crochet. That
    was the Saturday class. Sunday’s Rug
    Hooking was rather more informative. Again, the technique is incredibly
    simple;
    the tools, likewise. It is a terrific
    way to use up odds and ends and get a beautiful and creative product.
    I’m psyched. I have loads of Lincoln roving that I’ve been spinning and
    dyeing for a rug or bench pad. It will be hooked instead of woven. My
    sample is underway.

     
    Friday and Saturday evenings were spent in a big room with
    vendors and spinners doing what we do best. There weren’t many vendors, but the ones that were there were good
    ones. Christopher Hall was there with
    Montedale roving. Umm… just what I
    needed. And, Foxfire. I bought another Forrester spindle, this time
    a light weight .74 oz., wild cherry beauty. It spins like a dream. We
    relaxed, we talked, and Saturday night we listened to a local NH story
    teller. By noon Sunday, we were exhausted. How can that
    be?  I ate my box lunch in front of the fire in the
    main lobby and waited for my ride north.

    It would be nice if the Gathering was a yearly event. It’s the kind of thing that benefits the mind
    and the soul; new skills, new friends, and time spent with visiting with old
    ones too. The NETA Spa is next up, in
    February. It’s a very different experience. While the Gathering is about learning, Spa is social, more vendors, late
    nights. Today, as I’m winding down from
    one, I can’t wait for the next.

    And a “HEY” goes to the RISG. We have 16 members, small state, small
    guild. We had a 75% attendance for the
    Gathering. 75% !

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    8 responses to “The Gathering”

    1. Sounds like a great time. I still have a small bit of Montadale from Chris I bought 3 years ago (can it be!?!?) at NHS&W. I totally lucked out because the fleece was unmarked, but I liked it and took it to the counter, whereupon the lady I paid commented that was one of his and wondered why no one had snapped it up already. Lucky me!

    2. Sounds like a wonderful time… and what a view. Rug hooking… always thought that would be a great way to use up those little balls of left-overs…

    3. The sunlight on the mountain is breathtaking!
      This sounds like the type of spinner’s gathering I’d enjoy. I’d have a hard time deciding what classes to take also. Bosnian crochet – I wonder if it’s the same technique as Tunisian crochet?
      Does Turkish spinning still tempt you? 🙂

    4. Despite the class experiences, it sounds like a great weekend.

    5. Sounds like it was a good time inspite of the classes “-).

    6. Love that photo at the end!

    7. Wow the view alone was breathtaking. Hope you at least got something in the way of knowledge you can keep forever.

    8. Another spindle?
      I was just thinking yesterday that it is time for me to start learning more constructively about spinning….
      The seat of my pants has been good to me so far, but I need a little kick in it now.
      See you in Feb.

  • saturday sky

    not today, and not where I am today…

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    if the forecast is right, it should be snowing.

    3 responses to “saturday sky”

    1. Beautiful! It is my new laptop background.

    2. Vermont, yes? Give it a few minutes – you know the drill. 🙂

    3. SNOW? I’m upset about a little rain.

Our lives are dyed the colors of our imagination.” ~ Marcus Aurelius

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