Archive for March, 2008

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the best laid plans…

March 18, 2008

it seems only right that, hat knitter that i am, my first elizabeth zimmermann pattern be a hat. so a while ago, i cast on for the maltese hat from one of the spun out newsletters that flo gave me.

maltese hat - on me

the plan was to make a hat that ben and i could share. originally, i did the hat as described, but it came out fitting me and not ben, plus i looked like i had a volcano coming out of my head. cute? yes. what i intended? no. so i ripped back, added an inch to the body before decreasing, then smoothed the decreases out a bit. now we were in business.

maltese hat - on ben

but not quite. the yarn i had chosen from the wall of yarn, jumbo tweed, was actually itchy. you hear that? i was itchy. a very very rare occurance. the even further, ben was itchy, which defeats the purpose of having a hat for ben and i to share even if i could stand the itch.

truthfully, the dear maltese hat could be lined, but our climate doesn’t really require it, especially not on a bulky hat. maybe if ben still lived in alaska. the question is when would this hat be worn? so after much deliberation, i’ve decided to bid farewell to the maltese hat and exile the jumbo tweed to the wool pile i’m going to use for a rug sometime in the near future. it’s all very sad. i do kind of like the hat. i guess i’ll just have to make another one :)

into the bag full of stuff to frog it goes.

p.s. my friend jessica wrote this really fun entry on textiles in the movies if you’re interested. to tie into that, yesterday i got to see the workshop and have a very pleasant conversation with the man who is in charge of aging the textiles for the movie i knit for… and as a bonus they happened to be working on a costume of one of the major actors that included one of my hats!

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done! thank the good lord.

March 17, 2008

these movie hats have lost their glamor after completing 6!! of them. ugh. i’m taking today off.

done.

now, if you really know me, you’ll know that i’m a ranter, but not much of a complainer… so it’s serious when i say i don’t really need to do large amounts of ribbing again any time soon. furthermore large amounts of ribbing with intentional mistakes thrown in in the exact same place on each piece = no brainless ribbing for me. luckily, i was wise enough (although i don’t remember being wise) to not make a mistake every row or two, i spaced them.

seriously, 6 hats could have been an entire ribbed sweater!

just for fun here’s the hat color (light green beige) with the color i actually got in the mail. a bit different, no? i’m going to keep the bright green because i like it. i do need to do a shout out to the knitting experience, the owner of which went beyond the call of duty to get the yarn here quickly. thank you so much! (and good job on your photography…)

the color i thought i ordered

this week ahead is going to be mostly a design week, maybe with some spinning and color kits thrown in. here’s a peek at what i was dreaming of while i was ribbing.

in progress

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race track (super hero) helmet hat

March 14, 2008

how’s that for a mouth full title? it reminds me of a bumper sticker i once had called bud-the-silver-naked-trucker. which i originally bought through this website back in the day. my favorite t-shirt is the one called fascist, but i can’t find bud :(

race track helmet hat

anyhow back to the hat. i made ben model the size large super hero helmet hat that i knit while working up the pattern.

ingredients:
recycled sweater wool

adult large

race track helmet hat

no movie knitting yet – we got the wrong yarn! i can’t believe how wildly inaccurate the pictures of the first four shops who came up with the yarn were… so i re-ordered. luckily, i found one of the tags around for this second go-round. you always hear about this happening, but i never imagined. i guess if i had an on-line store i’d keep taking photos until i got one close enough. these were no where near. live and learn. has this ever happened to any of you? in my own defense, i really don’t ever order yarn on-line, but i still feel i should have known better ;)

have a great day!

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color kits

March 12, 2008

my color sense.
your creativity.

(i think it is sooo funny when i come up with tag lines. it makes me feel like i’m working on a middle school project :)

so here’s what i’ve been working on while waiting for some yarn to show up on my doorstep. the movie people need a few more hats, so it will be movie knitting once that comes, but in the meantime… the yarn room has been organized enough for me to make some color kits.

all piled together – for some reasons the colors in the pile are pretty accurate.

and individually

as always – the greens are brighter and less blue

this one should be challenging – the bright blue is brighter and more green than it appears

i will be (sooner or later) designing a couple of patterns for these yarn kits as well as offering them in different quantities (1 big skein, 2 smalls and 3 equal skeins). if you want to know more about the yarns in each photo, click on over to flickr. i’m planning to put one in the shop a day for the next 5 days.

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bee in the bonnet

March 9, 2008

that’s what i had yesterday and it ties in nicely with todays entry ;)

spring flower picking bonnet

spring flower picking bonnet

ingredients:
misti alpaca chunky (soooo soft)
thrifted buttons and tapestry wool
ties made from gwen’s handspun scraps and my hand dyed tweed

adult small/medium

spring flower picking bonnet

my goal with this one was to show off the pretty old buttons. it’s *very* girly.
each time i come up with a new hat pattern, i’ve noticed that i have to re-figure out how to embellish it. for instance, with flat hats, i have the tendency to treat them as a landscape. with round hats, they can be partial landscapes. with these bonnets? i’m not so sure yet.

ben and i thought this one was perfect without any embroidery.

purple pixie hood

purple pixie hood

ingredients:
recycled vest wool (very ugly and late 1980′s, but i LOVE this wool)
ties are hand dyed recycled sweater wool

adult small/medium

purple pixie hood

and lastly, i think this one would be great for someone with lots of hair to come out the back. it has different shaping than the others.

a hood for a winter walk

a hood for a winter walk

ingredients:
debbie bliss donegal tweed chunky
embroidered with inherited wool (blend?  it’s shiny.  i used it because i loved the contrast.  all natural for sure though…)

adult small (although modeled on my medium sized head)

a hood for a winter walk

the first two are from my pattern here.

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AARgh! color and dyeing

March 8, 2008

the following is a rant. if you don’t like reading rants, please look at the pretty green yarn below and move on.

greens

today i was listening to one of the more recent knit picks podcasts and was appalled. first of all, asking someone how they dye and what they do while they’re dyeing is not a bad thing. however, i never, throughout the whole conversation, felt that either of the people on the podcast had any idea what they are talking about and not just that, i felt that they could be putting people’s lives at risk (i’m being dramatic, but…). if i were running a podcast and wanted to give accurate information to people i may have found someone who was a professional dyer with some training or someone who was well-read on the topic.

first of all, their comments on color theory. they recommended you learn this from mixing paints. although this may be a good place to begin… i think that there are serious differences in between dyeing than painting. you know, the whole adding white thing as opposed to making your solution a different strength. very different in my mind and in my experience.

next… um… don’t use your dyestuffs for food or your foodstuffs for dyeing. ever. in truth, as they mentioned, the powder form is the most dangerous, but most of our dyes have not been tested all that well. i’m not overly paranoid, but wear gloves, have separate dye stuff, wear a simple dusk mask when dealing with the powder form, and have separate clothing for dyeing that you wash right after. easy peasy. go to a thrift store and buy pots/pans/measures etc so that you won’t be tempted to use your foodstuff for dyeing. do as much as you can within reason to be safe. i am a kitchen dyer like most of you, but i also have a brain like most of you.

they also mention having dried up dye in pyrex dishes!! folks, that is back to powder form which is the most toxic form of dye. wash everything. clean up after yourself.

when you get dye on your hands it’s ‘nothing worse than pen ink’ – i don’t think that this comment was in any way researched. cave painters thought they were good to go dipping their hands in paint and putting it on the walls, then all the artists died early deaths.

mix your dyes. one color of dye won’t give you variegated… it’s true. the definition of variegated “Having streaks, marks, or patches of a different color or colors; varicolored.”

“certain dye bonds to the fiber in certain areas in different concentrations.” they seemed to think this was caused by the dye… could be, but really? i’m not so sure about this. my humble opinion is that when the water starts heating and the color starts moving around, the heat/movement of water are what causes the dye to bond to the fiber in different concentrations in different areas. granted, it could be a mixture of the nature of the dye and the water/heat.

the podcast also recommended muting with black/brown and claimed that it doesn’t matter which black/brown you use. actually, to mute a color you add a bit of the color across from it on the color wheel. to darken a color you use a black/brown and i must say that which black/brown you use does make a difference. they also recommended a color for this because they liked it best!!! i’m not sure that’s a good reason for it to be the best color for mixing dyes and the darkening of colors.

are immersion dyeing and kettle dyeing the same? they think so, but i’m also unsure about this. i think in kettle dyeing you put the fiber in, then add the dye on the top, heat. immersion is making a dye bath, then putting your yarn in and heating. i may be wrong about this because there are so many different variations in the dye world… but what i do as kettle dyeing is nothing like what they were doing. anyone clarify?

thanks for letting me rant :)

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live and in person

March 8, 2008

smoke ring

one of our regulars at the shop (hi jane!) stopped by the other day to show me this smoke ring made from my pattern. colorwise, it is actually crisp bright red. what was really cool about this whole thing is seeing one of my patterns, knit by someone else who doesn’t know me, in person for the first time.  although jane knows me and my stuff, she didn’t knit this. her cousin (who did not know that jane knows me) made it for her and gave it to her as a gift! how cool is that?!?

p.s. the free pattern links on the side work again – i had no idea they weren’t working! sorry about that.

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orange soda

March 7, 2008

getting a package together for a good friend this sabbath. she really likes orange.

orange soda

here’s my original. i always get asked if mine is for sale at craft fairs.

other things i’m doing today:
staying out of the rain
listening to back issues of craft sanity because i finished at the back of the north wind
working on my first sweater (for me)
reading walker percy’s love in the ruins
napping
spinning
eating pancakes for lent
and playing pandemic with my roommates

what are you all doing on your day/days of rest this weekend? or whenever you have them since mine is obviously not on the weekend…

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do over

March 6, 2008

it seems to be the year of such things – or maybe my business is big enough now that i come across such things. earlier, i made this hat to replace one that got eaten by a dog… and now i’ve made this one.

snowdrop hat - take 2

it replaces one very similar. i know how sad it is to lose/have eaten your favorite hat.

ingredients:
recycled sweater wool
hand dyed recycled sweater wool
a small ball of wool from vivian

18 mo.-4 yr.

green tree hat

speaking of loss, this hat is also a replacement… its predecessor being left in an airport on accident (a much better fate than being eaten if you ask me ;) i was lucky to have some of the original hand dyed recycled sweater green left – and even luckier to have found it in the mess that is the yarn room! (the yarn room is getting better, by the way…).

ingredients:
hand dyed recycled sweater
lamb’s pride (wool/mohair blend)
recycled sweater embroidery

adult medium/large

green tree hat - embroidery

have a great day!

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silken

March 5, 2008

thank you all for your congrats on the priceless picks thing :) sometimes i feel like the biz has taken on a life of its own. i can only hope it will keep on going…

silk!

here are my first attempts at dyeing silk for the shop. we named them cosyColors which goes well with Cosy Knits (literally) and cosySpins. Flo came up with that. they’re 1666 yards – HUGE skeins of lace weight. one semi solid and the others variegated, but not the same all the way through, so your yarn will keep the same colorway, but change as you go. they wouldn’t pool if you paid them :) plus i spent forever jumbling them all up so that they looked decent. anyone know how to jumble more efficiently? so much to figure out. yesterday i tagged them and they’re out for sale! we’ll see what happens.

silk!

so that’s the expensive, lush, luxury fiber – and what am i a sucker for instead? the leftovers ;) i exhausted the brown and the green dye baths with some of the recycled shetland from this post.

shetland

shetland

i *love* them. they went into the dye bath unsoaked and then i added a bit more color and let the whole thing heat until exhausted. my fingers are itching to knit with these, but i’ve other things to get done today. hopefully soon.

less yarn, more knitting coming soon!

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