One approach to deciding on a knit project…

5/15/12 Project 365 Strawberries

Somewhere in my very first pound of spinning fiber I spun a lovely little 4 oz. of lime green, sock weight yarn.  It was my first 3 ply yarn and I spun it with a “z” twist to see if I would notice a difference while knitting continental style.  But… it was lime green and only 4 oz. of fiber.  I knew I would either have to knit something small or pair the yarn up with something else.  Lime green meant it lingered.

5/15/12 Project 365 2ply lace wt yarn

Just in the last week, I finished up this lovely turquoise yarn.  It is in an “s” twist and spun as a two ply.  I was thinking as a two ply, it would make a nice lace yarn.  The color is beautiful and the photos do not do it justice.  I was pondering the Haruni shawl, but I was concerned I would not quite have enough yardage.  I decided to risk it and went in search of the pattern in my stash as well as some yarn that could pair up with it if the worst happened.

5/15/12 Project 365 2ply lace yarn closeup

While I was looking for the Haruni pattern in my binder, I ran across another pattern I had already knit up twice already.  What can I say, it’s a great pattern.  It was Romi’s Taygete shawl.  I knit it once in purples as a gift.  I followed that with one made of lovely tans + pale, sky blue.  The second was done up in a couple of sock yarns that had too much bounce to them.  I practically stood on the iron trying to flatten the thing out, to no avail.  (It is in a pile to be “frogged”.  Ribbit, ribbit, rip it).

Then I noticed the colors on the Taygete pattern picture were nearly the same as the two yarns I had sitting right next to it.  Huh!!  I very rarely choose the same colors as what is written in a pattern, but this seemed a little too odd.  It was like my subconscious taking the driver seat.  The decision was made… or it found me… I’m not entirely sure which.

5/15/12 Project 365 Daisy photo

My handspuns are not bouncy sock yarns, just worsted spun merino, so hopefully my curling issue will be a thing of the past.  I’m not sure how the “z” twist, “s” twist and ply variations will play out, but given the structure of the shawl (mostly garter), I think it will be balanced enough not to misbehave.  I may have to use a slightly larger needle for the lace section to compensate for the lighter weight yarn by itself in a larger area, but it should work.  And, I will get to showcase my handspun turquoise yarn in the lace.  Whoohoo!

5/15/12 Project 365 Taygete #3

The project begins.

Why should I spin yarn?

5/9/2012 Project 365 Why spin flower 1

I am a recent convert to spinning after at least a year of abject refusal.  There were a few simple reasons for this.

It’s another fiber hobby, with the accompanying need of yet another set of tools and supplies.

It looks a bit like wrestling an octopus… and not in a friendly way.

It’s slow.  For those of use who usually dive into a new craft like it’s a full body contact sport, it really doesn’t seem like a logical fun step to have to suspend gratification.

5/9/2012 Project 365 flower 2

Cue the martinis; two of them.  Two of them and some gentle persuasion by @cupcakefaerie and friendly encouragement from @cheekyattitude and I was happily taking home a borrowed drop spindle and some fiber just to “try out”.  Not too long after that I was buying my drop spindle from @meshuggeknitter and trying to get my hands on any prepared roving I could from @ilikecake’s destash.

Then @cupcakefaerie let me try out her lovely spinning wheel.  All resistance was gone after that.

5/9/2012 Project 365 flower 3

So yes, it’s another fiber hobby and has another expense.

And yes, it really is like wrestling an octopus at first, until you find this delicious rhythm that is like a balm to the soul after a long day.  More than one curious spectator has remarked on how soothing it looks and sounds.

And yes, it is slower and takes longer to dive into knitting and weaving… but then maybe it’s a bit like “slow food”.  Maybe the sum of some wholesome parts makes for a more satisfying end result.  Part of that sum would be the lovely support from those around me.

Thank you, ladies!

5/9/2012 Project 365 flower 4

(But, I’m not going to prep my own fleece.  Really.  I mean it this time.)

Why weave?

5/8/2012 Project 365 Why weave + spring garden

Interestingly enough, weaving has a different story for me than knitting.  I wonder if the same is true for other artists and fiber artists who cross-pollinate…

I’ve always been quietly interested in weaving.  There were the requisite mini projects as a kid followed by some tapestry weaving envy as a teen in art class watching her neighbor.  Any gift shop pulls me towards the fiber goodies.  Shopping for clothes is always about touching the fabric.  With the knitting going full blast, I didn’t need another hobby, so I paid little attention to the quiet urge.

5/8/2012 Project 365 Why weave sticky monkey flower

At some point weaving ended up on my “bucket” list.  A neighbor had passed away and after hearing all the wonderful things she did with folks in the therapeutic art realm, I realized I needed to challenge myself more and DO more.  I made the list… and promptly forgot about it in favor of the daily grind.

Then my MIL was diagnosed with a Stage IV gallbladder cancer.  Here was a youthful woman I greatly admired.  She had done so many things with her life and yet was always curious to do more.  In short, she was my heroine.  My bucket list came to mind again around the new year as we visited her as a family for the last time.

I traded my New Year’s resolutions in favor of the bucket list and haven’t looked back since.  I took that class and fell into it like a duck to water.  I’ve taken and signed up for other classes since.  I now have 4 looms. (Maybe someday I’ll have as many looms as hubbie has computers.)

5/8/2012 Project 365 Why weave? Columbine

While I’m saddened that I was not in time to be able to weave anything for my MIL, I’d like to think she would be thrilled with me taking on new things in the fiber realm.  At the very least, I’m sure she would be so tickled that I’m having fun with it.

So what is your story?  If you’re a blogger, please consider blogging about it and post a link in the comments section.  I adore stories; they reflect the beauty of our humanity.

5/8/2012 Project 365 Why weave? Nasturtium

Why knit?

5/7/2012 Project 365 Flower Pen Bouquet

Ask anyone who knits what got them started with knitting and you will find a story.

You’ll hear things like:

It looked easy and fun.

I wanted to make a scarf.

My grandmother/aunt/mother taught me as a kid and I wanted to try it again.

More often than not, they had to see the knitting being done to spark their interest.  Why they stayed with it (or not) is just as varied and personal as the knitters and usually has a lot to do with their own journey and personal payoffs to knitting.

My own knitting story began when I was a teenage exchange student living in Germany.  I sat in a classroom and watched other teen girls and boys knit their own sweaters!  I knew about knitting, but had never seen it done.  The idea of making your own sweater… with lace patterns… well, that just floored me.  The spark was there.

Fellow classmates started letting me mangle their works in progress.  My host mother took me to a yarn store for needles and yarn.  She even let me buy a fingering weight (thin) dark blue (hard to see) Angora (fuzzy and even harder to see) yarn against her recommendations because she recognized the mule headedness of a brand new teen knitter.  My mom was going to have the most beautiful scarf.  It was to be my masterpiece.

My fellow classmates returned to my side to help with casting on… repeatedly.  My host mother was there for me when I dropped stitches and perversely also increased stitches.  Even Mozart’s music came to the rescue by grounding me during the knitting (and keeping me from throwing the needles across the room).  My support was in place.

The scarf was exquisitely soft, boring and hourglass shaped a couple of times over.  My mom, being the ever so kind person she is, dutifully admired it, wore it once or twice and kept it forever.

After Germany, my knitting quickly faltered after 2 or 3 failed projects and the lack of foresight to just step into a knitting store to find support and camaraderie.  No one I knew knit, or if they did, knew nothing about Continental style knitting.

I didn’t knit again for another 20 years.

5/7/2012 Project 365 Outdoor Bouquet

Two things happened that got me back into knitting.  My son was diagnosed with Autism, so I had tons of extra time sitting in waiting rooms doing nothing but re-reading the same trashy magazines.  We also moved into a town that had a knitting store right on a main street.  I saw it several times a week and it tempted me again and again until I finally had the courage to go in and sign up for a knitting class.

Even though my son has very thankfully outgrown nearly all of his therapies, I still knit.  I knit now because:

It’s fun.

There’s a fast learning curve.

It soothes me.

I love touching the fibers.

The colors are fun and sometimes surprising.

I like being productive and making things.

As to my mom’s scarf… Well, a few years ago I had my mom shop my stash for some sparkly novelty yarn, ripped out the old scarf and re-knit it with both yarns.  It was exciting, soft and even.  The flight attendants on several flights eyed it covetously as I journeyed home to see my mom.  Sometimes it’s good to be a knitter.

5/7/12 Project 365 My grownup knitter scarf in progress

(A sneak peek at a future scarf in progress… with lace.)

Ready for plying…

I’ve been trying to spin fiber every day for the past week or so.  I’m taking two spinning classes in a couple of weeks at the CNCH Conference in Oakland, CA that involve nicer fibers (cashmere, baby!) and want to be in good form.  So I’m practicing (and getting things off the spinning wheel and bobbins) in preparation for these classes.

For my non-spinning friends, you can see I’ve spun up a single strand (ply) on each of the two bobbins.  The bobbins are sitting on my lazy kate ready to be twisted (re-spun) together into a two-ply yarn.  Whohoo!  I’m hoping there is enough yarn created for a small lace scarf or shawlette.

5/3/12 Project 365 Ready to ply

Facing the music…

My Modge Podge coasters from a prior post didn’t pass the usage test… and that was with me painstakingly waiting the full month for curing!  Room temperature drinks were fine, but anything hot or cold would stick to the coaster, setting the stage for some dicey situations and leaving marks behind on the coaster surfaces.  My fiber friends (who took the brunt of the testing period) were exceedingly polite about it, but the coasters simply just didn’t function well for their intended purpose.

I bought some other tiles for dirt cheap at the same time that had some residual glue on them from stickers past.  A little acetone quickly took care of the glue.  They are pretty as they are, rustic, and best of all, absorbent.  I think they are possibly concrete tiles if such a thing exists.  The bottoms are molded but the tops have a stone appearance.  Very pretty.

I slapped some cork sheeting on the bottom (middle left) and just need to wait another 24 hours before I use them.

4/30/12 Project 365 concrete coasters

They are spare and uncomplicated, but I think my fiber friends will very much appreciate how much better they function.

Sweet little butterfly bag…

Miss E sometimes surprises me.  In this case, I gave her free rein on decorating a zippered canvas bag I just finished.  Her usual drawings are busy and full.  In this case they are simple and sweet.  There are just two little butterflies, one on either side of the bag… both circling a happy little sunflower button.

4/29/12 Butterfly bag

4/29/12 Project 365 butterfly bag closeup

1 old t-shirt = 3 new bags

I originally saw the idea for drawstring bags made from the sleeves of old T-shirts in Green Craft magazine, then proceeded to google some instructions today.

These were so easy and so thrifty it felt like I’d discovered the new world.  I’m totally patting myself on the back here.  They were fast, too.  It took just 1/2 hour to do these for my very first time.  My 12-year-old saw them and immediately claimed the large bag for himself to hold his PE clothes.  (Mstr. N being interested in Mom’s crafts?  Priceless!)

I have one large bag from the body of the t-shirt and two small bags from the sleeves.  The draw strings on the smaller bags are made of 1 inch strips from the top of the t-shirt.  The beauty of these is that the hems are used as the drawstring casings… that means just a tad bit of cutting plus some straight sewing on only 1 or 2 sides.

4/27/12 Project 365 sleeve bags

This is what was left.  I figure I might google other t-shirt crafts to see if there is any way to re-use the rest.

4/27/12 Project 365 tshirt bag scraps

Too fun!

Back and forth…

I’ve been joyfully going back and forth between two projects this weekend.

Sleeve shaping on my Quercus sweater…

4/22/12 Project 365 Quercus sleeve shaping

Per the pattern, I did some short row shaping where the shoulder area is (much like the heel of a sock).  Very intelligent construction idea!  I really do enjoy smart knitting.

And some spinning when I want to visit hubbie in the back office area…

4/22/12 Project 365 spinning

This is Blue Faced Leicester top in Teal by Lisa from Poppy Flower Fibers (rebranded to Wabi Sabi Yarns).  It’s worsted spun and hopes to be a 2 ply lace wt or light fingering when it grows up.

Hope you and yours had a lovely weekend, too!