Monday, July 4, 2016

Drab green for miles...

I've finally finished up a project that I purchased in the spring of 2015.  I saw a beautifully knit sample when I was in Syracuse NY, and decided that it would make a great addition to my winter wardrobe.  The yarn – WoolFolk Tynd – is wonderfully soft.  And the finished object is interesting and something I think I can easily dress up or down.
Finished knits and skinned knees

Miles and miles of drab green stockinette later I was ready to crochet 372 miles of vertical lines down this shawl.  Okay.  Maybe not 372 miles, but it felt like it.  I'm not good with the crochet hook... I can't look away, and it feels a little unnatural to me.  But I mustered through and I do love the finished piece.
BYGGE
So soft and lovely

Now that this is done I plan to focus on some spinning... I've got some beautiful Targhee from Nest fiber that I'm half through.
Nest Fibers – May 2016
"Garden Party" Targhee wool
Singles waiting for plying
And betwixt and between, I'll be working with Crave Yarn One and a new lightweight cardigan for the small fry.

Have a lovely start to your July.




Monday, June 20, 2016

This is your "fault" Donna...

Tonight I finished spinning a polwarth silk blend, and I got some decent yardage out of it.  My new friend Donna suggested I knit something from Martina Behm, and I think she's right... so now you all must vote.  I know there are at least three of you who read this blog...

2-ply
I've narrowed it down to these three patterns... Lintilla, Magrathea or  Trillian.

A little "barber pole"
I didn't pick anything too lacy because the yarn has a pretty wide color spectrum, and all that detail tends to get lost in an intricate lace pattern.  Here is what I will be working with.

Nest Fiber - April 2016 "Constellation" Polwarth/Silk

And thanks Donna for the idea.  XO

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Swept right into summer

The heart at Squam
Here we are in mid-June.  So much has been going on behind the scenes.  We've attended carnivals and an air show.  I've worked on my spinning skills.  We took our first ever family camping trip to a beautiful CCC camp in southern Illinois.  We've gone hiking.  And been gardening and cooking new things.  It's good, this time of year.

First ever airshow
New recipe - so good, try for yourself
My mom's - big as a saucer - clematis
Our garden at home... coming along
Hand knit, handspun birthday hat (ravelry link)
Chickadee cardigan in progress
Newest fiber project - Polwarth Silk blend
Singles in work
First handspun, hand knit sweater.

Giant City State Park trail
Giant City State Park trip
Textures in green
And I went back to Squam Art Workshops for the third time.  It was so incredibly wonderful.  I returned there with one of the amazing women that I met four years ago at the first one I attended.  And we stayed in a cabin with eight other women who were just delightful.  I can't write about it without sounding like I'm gushing, and I've already used my best adjectives in the beginning parts of this paragraph... so I'll just say it was just what I needed.

A gift from my roomie, Jen.
Favorite Squam purchase... Crave yarn.  It's incredible and
so is the proprietor.  Seriously, go see her!
I think it might be the contrast that those five days offer me.  It is a luxury at this point in my life to have five days to be responsible only for myself – without the pressures of being a parent, spouse, employee or manager.  My favorite indulgences were all indulged in... I knit, drank wine, ate food that others prepared, talked and laughed, swam in the wee hours in a brisk and amazing lake, learned a bit about a few new things (book binding and tapestry weaving) and there was yoga and ice cream and luna moths and loons.
Warp and Rya knots at Squam
Re-entry to home life was super smooth.  I was so happy to get back to my nest and my family.  Re-entry to work was a bit difficult... I spent the first day trying to recall what I was doing five days earlier and simultaneously trying to convince myself that it was worth remembering.  That lake and those people... they are a powerful force.

Evidence of our last 6am swim.
Thanks, Donna!

Only 50 more weeks before I can return

Sunday, May 1, 2016

UFO Socks

2T thigh highs or normal socks, whatever.
Crazy bright neon paired with tonal grey and black knit up a fun pair of "UFO" socks. My dear friend Jen sent me this yarn around Christmas and I was really anxious to see what kind of "fabric" it created... the colors in the skein were so bold and concentrated in skein form.

UFO color way close up
As it turns out, it was from Sunrise Fiber company with whom I've had no other experience.  But this was really nice tightly wound sock yarn, and the color was fast... almost no bleeding when I soaked them.

They knit up quickly.  I started with the toes first so that I didn't create any waste... so they are longish and also have a really tall ribbed cuff.  I think I'll be thankful for that when the weather gets chilly again.

Any my knitwear model was completely unconcerned about the fact that the fit was less than perfect. Love her.



Thursday, April 28, 2016

Gorgeous weather and photographic ramblings...

Missouri Botanical Gardens
There is so much that I want to document here.  Sometimes I'm stymied by the problem of wrapping the photos and projects into some kind of coherent and thoughtful commentary...  maybe I need to take the pressure off and just share more photos.  (You might think so too after you read this brief but rambling post...)














This spring has been just beautiful.  We've been spending so much time outside, in our yard, at the Botanical Gardens, at my rural home.  And in the evenings, I've been knitting, spinning and sewing.  It's been a great balance.
Urban Garden

I listened to a podcast the other day about the declaration of "being busy".  And I know I just did that in this space.  And it felt cliched.  And the podcaster and her interviewee talked about how busy-ness is really just making time for all the things that you want to do.  And I liked that idea... it's not that someone doles out a list for me each morning as I stumble out of bed of things to do.  These are the activities of the path that I've chosen and our family has chosen... we are lucky that they are all engaging and positive things.

So, I guess if I'm being more honest and straightforward about all this busy-ness, it's all self created.  I get great joy out of our family time, watching the girls in their extracurricular activities and school, carving out time with my better half and also finding professional success at work. And I would be remiss if I didn't mention the hobbies and the activity of trying to chronicle them on this blog.

That's our busy... and it's self inflicted and good.

Monday, April 18, 2016

April Already

It's hard to believe that the first quarter of 2016 has already passed.  It's been fun, so far.  And the weather in these parts is wonderful.  I was looking back at my posting history on this blog, and April and May seem to be the time when my ramblings taper off.  That fresh air and sunshine beckons and I am less apt to write down what is in the works...

Sisters

The taper feels like it might be officially starting, so I'll share a few things that I made for Easter and try to beat my own trend.  The last post was the peanut's Easter dress, and this post will be about her sister's.

I bought a vintage Simplicity sewing pattern (3327) on etsy last year in a size that I knew would be a bit big, but it has this pretty pin tucked bodice with waist shaping, so I was willing to wait.  And this year it fit really, really well.

3327 - waist shaping hidden in pin tucks - be still
my beating heart...

I failed to take any progress shots of the actual making of the dress.  But I can tell you that it went really, really smoothly.  The pattern was very straightforward, and simple in the sense that it had no interfacing piecing.  The arm and neck holes were finished with binding.  The one modification that I did make was to sew the contrasting sash into the dress when I attached the bodice to the skirt.

Bodice detail

The fabric is the really fun part of the story though.  Growing up, my dad's god parents were a part of our extended family.  You could count on them and their family to come to every Easter and Thanksgiving dinner.  And they were always very fun and engaging with my sister and I.  His god mother was named Sabina.  She was perennially kind, polite and cheerful.  And she was so very excited when my husband and I had our first baby, which makes the making of this dress even more fitting.

Their household was broken up several years ago on their passing, and my mom was thoughtful enough to buy two pieces of material from among the things for sale at the estate auction.  The material was probably intended to be a housecoat, and it is a very lightweight, 100% cotton lawn, almost. (I'm terrible at identifying fabrics, but it's definitely a garment weight.)


Anyway, my mom gave them to me and this is the first that I've used either of them.  The small fry loved the pink roses.  And we updated it a little by adding some darker contrasting trim at the neck and sleeves.  And those sparkly pink buttons up the back, those were all her doing.

"Girling-it-up" even more

Egg hunting action shot

It's nice to see this come together and used by a new generation of little midwestern ladies.  And I think Sabina would agree.