scarf
This is not my knitting, my sister in law just made it for my Christmas Present. Thought it worth putting on here as am very happy with it.
The wool comes from my cousin Janet's needlecraft shop which she runs with her friend Joan, and they have marvelous wools in..
Hope everyone has had a great Christmas Holiday xxxx
Can I go back to bed?
Stitching for Sanity
I've borrowed the title from a favourite knitting / spinning blog but it's very apt.
Creature of habit
Christmas treat
Blanket
Not quite up to your standard Shiela, but about time I posted on here again.. love to all. x
Advent Calendar for the Hand Spinner 2010
I can hardly believe that it's the countdown to Christmas once again. Last year's advent calendar went down so well, I'm going to do it once again. I'll make a special offer to my Twitter followers, facebook friends and newsletter subscribers every day between now and Christmas. (There's nothing stopping anyone from joining in at any time by subscribing to the newsletter at handspinner.co.uk or starting to follow on Twitter.)
You'll get details of each day's offer in the morning. You'll be able to add the item to your cart if you want. Postage will be as per the regular arrangements, ie based on the value of your cart up to £45 and then free after that.
Quantities will be limited. Sometimes there will be plenty, and will depend on my stock, and sometimes it'll be a one-off. Maybe something that's not on the site. Sometimes it'll be something small, but I have one or two bigger items in mind too. If the offer has sold out, then Paypal will tell you when you check out.
I'll send out information about that day's offer in the morning before 9am. Each offer will be removed 24 hours later.
It would be good to hear what you think. What you'd like to see on this advent calendar, or what's on your Christmas list!
Don't miss out
Free pattern - 'Mimi' simple mitts
Finished baby hat
pattern emerging
The photo of the finished hat on the pattern is quite small and indistinct, and it's impossible to tell from the chart how the pattern looks, so it's thrilling to get through the rows and see the pattern gradually appear.
I bought yarn
'Aqua' fibre
Wool Week
This item also appears in the handspinner newsletter (November 2010)
11-17 October 2010
Wool Week was led by His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales and the campaign for wool. It aimed to reverse the trend that now sees fleeces being burned because farmers are shearing their sheep at a loss and encourages us to think of wool as part of our heritage and a renewable, sustainable and versatile resource.
I have to admit that in putting together this 'round-up', I've enjoyed some of the puns; 'having a field day', 'fans flock to Savile Row', 'best baa none', 'suits ewe sir', 'give fleece a chance' and so on.
Savile Row Field Day
You won't have missed the news that the week was kicked off by Savile Row being turfed over to help flocks of Exmoor Horn and Bowmont sheep to feel at home.
There is a wealth of photos and video of the sheep alongside bemused and besuited urbanites:
http://blog.visitlondon.com/2010/10/british-wool-week-sheep-on-savile-row/
http://modusdowalwalker.com/latest/permalink/saville_row_goes_rural_for_wool_week/
http://www.sustainable-fashion.com/tag/wool-week/
Mayfair.org carries a wonderful video showing the sheep, farmers, visitors and the agriculture minister.
http://www.mayfair.org.uk/blog/2010/10/sheep-graze-in-savile-row-00608.html
More video from the BBC:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-11521313
Wool Week blogpicks
I like the illustration and writing on this post:
http://www.ameliasmagazine.com/fashion/its-national-wool-week/2010/10/15/
josiekitten marked the week by making a wooly post each day:
http://theknittingexploitsofjosiekitten.blogspot.com/2010/10/wool-week-2010-day-1.html
http://theknittingexploitsofjosiekitten.blogspot.com/2010/10/wool-week-2010-day-2.html
http://theknittingexploitsofjosiekitten.blogspot.com/2010/10/wool-week-2010-day-3.html
http://theknittingexploitsofjosiekitten.blogspot.com/2010/10/wool-week-2010-day-4.html
http://theknittingexploitsofjosiekitten.blogspot.com/2010/10/wool-week-2010-day-5.html
Devonfinefibres wrote this fabulous post about getting the Bowmonts to the event:
http://devonfinefibres.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/the-journey-to-savile-row/
... and their post-event thoughts with a gallery of photographs:
http://devonfinefibres.wordpress.com/2010/10/12/savile-row-field-day-wow/
York
The NFU asked Diane of the murmering wheel to make a union jack from hand dyed and spun wool.
It was commissioned to help support the campaign to have wool included in the 2012 Olympics, but as part of York's Wool Week celebrations was displayed on the back of Norfolk Horn ram Nobby.
http://www.nfuonline.com/Regions/North-East/News/Nobby-brings--em-flooding-in/
lots more links and photos on Murmering Wheel's blog:
http://murmuringwheel.blogspot.com/
More photos of York's Wool Week event:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/45211192@N07/5080800377/
In other areas
Artist Steve Messam covered a remote barn with the fleece of 200 Swaledales
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-11521066
Chelsea Harbour Design Centre's Wool Week installation involved sheep, textiles and cat's cradles of red wool. Watch a video of their installation being constructed:
http://www.dcch.co.uk/index.php?page=wool+week+installation
Liberty and Rowan Yarns jointly held a Wool Week competition for students, the prize winners being displayed in one of their windows. Claire-Anne O'Brien used British sheep breed yarn in supersized basic knit loops to create a chair. Joint winner Helen Turner's woolly wonder oversized knitted retro coat was made using five varieties of Rowan Purelife British wool.
http://blog.liberty.co.uk/5635/and-the-winner-is/?resetFilters=true&utm_source=social&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=GeneralItems_141010
Liberty made willow Herdwicks for their Wool Week installation.
http://blog.liberty.co.uk/5627/wool-week-comes-to-liberty/
I've said before that I think the terms graffiti knitting or yarnbombing shouldn't be applied to corporately-organised events, but credit to Selfridges for 'yarnbombing' their store for Wool Week:
http://www.selfridges.com/en/Whats-On/Events/London/Wool-Week_Wool%20Week/
Selfridges also sent a flock of remarkably-unperturbed dyed-yellow sheep down the street:
http://www.ecouterre.com/flock-of-yellow-sheep-kick-off-londons-inaugural-wool-week/
For more beautifully-coloured sheep, check out this post at Textile Arts Centre:
http://textileartscenter.wordpress.com/2010/10/29/by-you-the-campaign-for-wool/
Video
Mayfair.org carries a wonderful video showing the sheep, farmers, visitors and the agriculture minister.
http://www.mayfair.org.uk/blog/2010/10/sheep-graze-in-savile-row-00608.html
For more video, here's the BBC's:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-11521313
Can you make a handspun hat in an hour?
Batts to hats was a fun event for the final night. the challenge was to spin and make a hat within an hour. Seven out of eight teams finished their hats in the allotted time.
The write-up is a good read
Learning a new cast on and knitting in the round
My top-down raglan jumper is progressing slowly but surely. Along the way I've had to learn the 'backward loop' cast on. As you'll know if you've used this cast-on there's nothing to it:
Knitted big cat pelts
Beautiful and animal-friendly! I love these big-cat pelts by Aussie artist Ruth Marshall.
check out her reptiles too - she's knitted all 68 known species of coral snake.
The Bowmonts' Journey to Savile Row
Spinning as relaxation
Why casting on is so exciting
more damselflies
That worked well, so here goes:
This time I was especially asked to sign it, which I have started to do now.
.. and add another small minibeast somewhere else on the wheel.
Got flair?
Savile Row Field Day
I'm a country mouse, and so the idea of turfing over a London street and moving in some Exmoor horn and Bowmont sheep really does appeal to me! The event takes place for a week starting 11 October and is organised by the Campaign for Wool.
The aim is to promote wool and tell Londoners about how wool is produced and made into the luxury cloth used by the tailors working in the adjacent shops. For my money it's as much a reminder of the soil beneath the urban concrete and tarmac.
Free wig pattern round-up
Hallowig: http://knitty.com/ISSUEfall04/PATThallowig.html
Housefrau: http://knitty.com/ISSUEfall06/PATThousefrau.html
Princess Leia: http://www.etsy.com/shop/ansleybleu
Barrister: http://www.knittingastor.com/published-barrister-cap.htm
Halloween - purple and green monster: http://www.lionbrand.com/patterns/60443.html?noImages=
Cowgirl: http://www.lionbrand.com/patterns/60446.html?noImages=
Cleopatra: http://www.lionbrand.com/patterns/60445.html?noImages=
Rag-doll: http://www.lionbrand.com/patterns/60444.html?noImages=
Wild, Wild Red Wig: http://www.lionbrand.com/patterns/60386.html?noImages=
Food and natural dyeing
Have you been curious about natural dyeing? In this lovely series of blog posts that will inspire you and make you hungry at the same time, Helen of My Heart Exposed Yarns links the methods and inspiration for her natural dyeing to her cooking, with tasty photos, tips and secrets.
Carded and spun Emmanuel
called Emmanuel.
I loved the feel of it because it was so soft. I was told too late the there is no need to wash it first. But hey. Being very fortunate I have a drum carder that made the job of carding so much easier, especially considering there were many smaller pieces of the fleece.
Spinning it felt great. I was quite pleased with my first effort but feel that it should be spun a bit thinner because of its warmth, But there you are it's all individual and about creating your own style, that can be very rewarding.
The recent threat to drop knitting from the curriculum on the Sheltand Islands has had a side-effect of attracting the media's attention onto the traditional crafts of spinning and knitting and brought into the open the question of whether the island should move to more indstrial techniques and increase production.
I've enjoyed this article on The Business of Fashion. While similar jumpers are mass-produced in China, those labeled "Made in Fair Isle" take over 100 hours to spin and knit and sell for over £600. Despite the high price tag for the genuine article, demand is outstripping supply.
Using teak oil to finish a spinning wheel
Fuzz
Pat's hat - cast off! Will it fit?
The sun did not shine.
It was too wet to play.
So I sat in the house
And knitted on that cold, cold, wet day.
Never to be repeated
Pat's hat - step 4, knitting
Pat's hat - step 3, dyeing
It looks delicious - as if it might taste of blackberries or blackcurrant. I can't wait for it to dry out so that I can get busy with the needles.