Rewrite and New Project

I’ve begun the Great Pattern Revamp of 2007 in an attempt to make some of my old patterns not look like they were written by a new knitter, which of course they were. #1 on the list was the Felted Knitting Tote, prompted by some questions that were emailed to me this morning, embarrassing me thoroughly.


*all better*

Aw, the memories. I only wish I still had the bag so I could take a decent photo!

And oh, how I wish it wasn’t too late to change the name of that pattern. I used the word “felted” incorrectly on purpose, because it was, by then, the term that was popular in certain circles to describe fulling. I wanted the pattern to show up on internet searches, and boy, does it ever. I still regret it.

*felted vs. fulled info*

Fantom Bohus:

Knitting has had to stop on the Fantom Bohus because I need to spin more yarn. It’s making me anxious, despite the pleasure of spinning that gorgeous wool/alpaca blend, so planning of the next project has begun.

New Project:

Mark (Mr. HelloYarn) went with me to the Circles moving sale last weekend and helped me empty the store. It turns out he’s as helpless in the face of sale Rowan as I am. He silently pointed at the shelf of Rowan Scottish Tweed Aran in Thatch (color 018) and 10 skeins were purchased. He was also very fond of these buffalo nickel buttons.

So, a new project is in the works- the Saddle Shoulder Aran Cardigan by Elizabeth Zimmermann/Meg Swansen from Wool Gathering #63. Yoohoo over there made one a little while ago and when shown about 975 sweater photos yesterday, Mark chose this one. He has good taste.

Goodbye:

All washed and dried and smelling delicious, off to baby.

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Colorful Spinning

Despite chatting on a regular basis, Amy (Spunky Eclectic) and I don’t share our fiber club plans with each other, mainly because we trade subscriptions and don’t want to ruin the surprise. We were strangely in tune with our July club offerings, and now we both have lots of rainbow-y yarn at our disposal. We both chose sturdy wools with lots of crimp and body and happy, bright colors, in combed top form. Even the names are similar.

To spin these, I folded the top in half and pulled it apart there, then split each half into strips as wide as my pinky, and spun those from the end. Half went on one bobbin and half on another, and I plied them together. Easy peasy and my favorite way to spin these spotty tops. I’ve become a very consistent spinner and rarely have more than a couple of inches left on either bobbin after the plying is done. It’s always cause for a little jump and clap in my seat. It’s the little things!

Hello Yarn Lantern Festival:


Hello Yarn Fiber Club July 2007 offering
hand-dyed and handspun Corriedale wool from combed top
*see the fiber*

2 ply worsted weight
4 oz., about 240 yards
Super fluffy! Very rainbow-y.

There’s a lot more where that came from. I’ve got another skein of 160 yards done and as much wool again to spin, bringing me up to about to about 800 yards of worsted. Hmmm!

Spunky Eclectic Celebration:

Spunky Eclectic Fiber Club Selection for July 2007
hand-dyed Shetland wool

2 ply worsted weight
4 oz., about 230 yards
soft, light, fluffy

I’m amassing quite a collection of handspun worsted weight yarns. Whatever will I do? :)

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Shop Update Today!

Today at 2 pm EST, I’ll be adding a whole mess o’ stuff to the shop.

I think this is my favorite:

Plunge Fat Sock

I’ve dyed up tons of Fat Sock for all the BSJs and toasty socks you know you want to knit, plus Sock in gentle colors, BFL Sock in Single Color skeins, Single Color Lace Weight Wool in saturated colors, plus lots of Corriedale, Merino, and BFL spinning fibers and kits.

Sarah from Maisy Day Handspun send hand-dyed Merino sock yarn and some handspun, including a glorious fat skein of South African Fine Wool handspun in fruity colors that I want to steal for myself.

As usual, shop here and see it all over at Flickr.

Thanks so much!

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