Random thoughts of a fiber enthusiast - mostly fiber related, sometimes coherent

Category: General Page 36 of 49

General Fiber Posts

London and Santa Monica

I woke up to news about the London bombings and had a sense of deja vu. News of these horrible events shouldn’t be so routine.

Yesterday, our family took an outing to Santa Monica for dimsum and a movie. Well, Iris and Mark went to the Aero theatre to see Oliver while I checked out the stores. I noticed something different about Montana avenue. I didn’t realize what was different until I got home. The westside (of LA) has a huge british expat population and I didn’t hear any english accents on the street.

I hung out at L’Atelier on 12th and Montana for a while and knitted. The owner, Leslie, was very nice to knitter’s both seasoned and new. In fact, Leslie let a new knitter take home a pair of needles and a ball of yarn (Stacy Charles, no less!) to get started and then didn’t make her pay for the stuff until she came back the next day for additional knitting lessons! Sadly, there were alot of people hanging out at L’Atelier but not enough people buying. So, if anyone actually reads this blog, go out there and change this!

I bought 5 balls of yarn, 4 of which will become a Mobius shoulder wrap. I will use the remaining ball to trim a plummy wool sweater, part of my haul from the Yarn Lady bag sale.

Ennui

It’s a good thing that Grace has knitted content for you, because I’ve been experiencing ennui. It’s not that I haven’t wanted to knit. I have. It’s because I haven’t wanted to face reality.

Huh? You say.

Top Down Sweater

The above sweater is the primary cause of my ennui. Why? Well, I have to say, I am pretty proud of what I had done. This was my first attempt at knitting a set-in sleeve sweater from the top (using Barbara Walker’s Knitting From the Top). I’m pretty tickled with how neatly all those short rows turned out at the shoulders and the sleeve cap. Technically, it’s a work of art. The yarn is beautiful (Dale Svale) and feels great. It splits a little too easily for my taste, but it drapes beautifully.

Problem? I’ve been working on it, on and off, for over 2 months now, and the above is all the progress I’ve made to date. In fact, I haven’t touched it since I took it to Knit Night at Uncommon Threads 2 months ago, when I finally made it to the point of knitting in the round. Something was niggling at the back of my brain then. I knew it wasn’t going to work. But I was stubborn. Then, a couple of weeks ago, I sat down and finished one of the sleeve caps, and tried it on.

Yup. It’s too big. That was what was bothering me. I had a feeling, but I didn’t want to admit it. Yes, the beauty of top down sweaters is that you can try it on as you go. But, with the curling seams, I was able to delude myself that IT WILL FIT. Once the sleeve was in, I could delude myself no longer. The shoulders are at least 3″ too wide.

How the heck did I mismeasure that badly? I checked my notes, and I am knitting to gauge, and calculated per my measurements. All I can say is that I measured incorrectly.

The next time you see this sweater, it will be a pile of yarn balls.

Turkish Spindle and Spun SinglesI will leave you with pretty eye candy. I am finally finished spinning the singles from some pretty roving from Willow Creek Farm using a Turkish spindle, made by Kurt Ocker. I think the cross arms are made of pink ivory. I have to admit, I can’t remember. I have so many of Kurt’s turkish spindles that I’ve lost track (last count is about 8 spindles by Kurt of assorted exotic woods). I bought the pink ivory for Martin, and something else for me, but I can’t remember. Does anyone know what other types of pink hardwood there is? This one is a bit brighter than pink ivory.

Here’s a pretty cool article about Kurt and Kat by Kurt’s son, Kenny. (Scroll 2/3 page down to “Kurt Ocker and Karen Dobroth: Wool and Spinning”.) Kurt, Kat (aka Karen), and Kenny are pretty great people. Kurt is a fabulous woodworker, and Kenny is learning fast. I found them at Shepherd’s Extravaganza years ago, and have been collecting their spindles ever since. I make a point of stopping by their booth whenever I’m at Black Sheep Gathering. The wood that Kurt chooses to work with are absolutely beautiful, and they spin forever.

Color Institute West II – Part 2

My head is buzzing, and it’s not just the meds that’s causing the buzz. I just returned from my second Color Institute workshop at Earthues, in Seattle. The first session was at the end of January. There were 16 or 18 of us in the first session. The class size was too large, too hectic. This time, Michele divided us up into 2 smaller groups. My group consisted mostly of people in the SF Bay Area: 3 of us from the Black Sheep Handweavers Guild.

This time, we focused on independent study: working in areas that we needed to develop our color memory. My study area? Cool vs. Warm. Sounds simple, doesn’t it? Except that I confuse the two. I never really thought about what colors make up the cool vs. warm colors. In fact, I had it backwards in my head. So I threw away all preconceived notions and worked through the progression from cool to warm, and back again. I used Color-Aid chips and created my own series of cool to warm in primaries, secondaries, more secondaries, and then just plain played with color progressions.

Last day was spent on setting up our independent work project for the next session. I picked 3 photos (1 sunrise and 2 sunsets) and will designing a yarn and a fabric that will convey the colors and sense of light that are depicted in these photos.

I also retook the Farnsworth-Munsell 100 Hue Test. I did marginally better than I did in January. My area of weakness is where blue-green transitions into green-blue. I have to find some exercises to develop my color memory in this area.

Page 36 of 49

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