Friday, December 4, 2009
The LACE Has It!
It's been a year of study for one weavers small group. A year to learn about the structure; a year to see how different yarns and colors interact and then there are the meetings when members show off their weaving talents. It's a time when critiques are given and the learning continues. Discussion centered on whether lace shows better with solid colors in warp and weft or whether a weft color change would hinder the lace design.
This weaver took the project study further by weaving matching napkins for the tablemats.
So many different weave structures can be lace.
And colors can add to the textural technique of this varied weave.
Needless to say my hands didn't touch the loom with this study--what's the old saying? "Been there, done that"! And there sits the sample book to prove it! Yes, Lace does have it for being an interesting weave study.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
BEVY of HATS!
My Colorado knitting friend, Judy, doesn't know what a hat knitting monster she has created! This past summer she told me about a hat using odd bits of left over sock yarn. That note rested in my brain for several months before finally getting a recipe from her and taking those little bits of sock yarns and knitting hats! It has been so much fun to see the results of combining two different sock yarns to knit these basic hats! My hands will not stop until the pile is depleted. A look at four of the hats that were knitted within the past few weeks. The pattern is so easy and quick that a hat could be turned out within a matter of hours--good TV watching. The pattern recipe is simple--cast on 80, 88 or 96 stitches and knit using two sock yarns. That's all there is to it! When you think it's depth has been reached, decrease with knit row between decreases. K6, K2tog one row, K5, K2tog and so on until you have reached the end of stitches, which will be pulled together at the top.
This one is smaller version, using basic blues.This was the first hat to be knitted where different colored yarns were combined. This hat is called "Starburst Hat" by Elizabeth A Cote and you can find the free pattern on Ravelry. This child's hat used some handspun wool.
Using some leftover yarn from a beret made for granddaughter, this child's hat is from a free pattern called 'Mr. Tom's Beanie, which can be found on Woolly Wormhead site. The pattern features several different sizes and there are several different versions. The latest hat just off the needles is being modeled by green head.
All these hats will be donated to Knits for Needs . And the hands continue to knit to deplete the pile of leftover sock yarns! Thanks Judy this is a great journey!
Sunday, November 29, 2009
It is Beginning to Look Like Christmas!
Thanksgiving has come and gone--Whew! that was a great day spent with family. Now, the stores are filled with shoppers and the spirit of Christmas is moving within us. Although, the weather is humid and the sky is filled with clouds and threatening rain, we go tree shopping. We like a real tree! There is nothing like the smell of fresh greenery in the house!
This one looks perfect for our space! Of course, before we can place the tree it is necessary to move furniture--chairs from master bedroom to upstairs studio, chairs from living room to master bedroom--okay, now we are set.
Shopping trip to Brookwood Community is the perfect opportunity to purchase lovely holiday flowers. Whether it is traditional red poinsettias or the unusual colors; maybe, you prefer Christmas cactus, the greenhouse is filled with these blooming flowers.
If you are a quilter, don't forget to check out Quiltville for the first step in the Carolina Mystery quilt.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Quilting Tuesday!
Yes, it was another day spent with quilting buddies before we all go our separate ways for the Thanksgiving holiday. We talk, talk, eat, and quilt throughout the morning and early afternoon and then it is too soon for us to depart.
As a tribute for her son-in-law, who completed the Ironman competition, Linda created this huge Texas flag. Under the quilting talents of Sandy, the flag quilt will be given as Christmas gift. So, shhhh, keep the secret! (sorry for the fuzzy photo)
And Linda is smiling because she is finishing up an UFO! Hurrah!
This was a sampler that she began in Venzuela and we won't count how long ago that was--we are just happy she has one less UFO in her stash!
Judy, the hostess for this quilting day, is showing off her newest addition to her lovely quilt collection. This one is called "Whispering Pines" from Thimberries patterns.
Close-up of one block.
Can't you just hear the wind whistling through the pines!
As a tribute for her son-in-law, who completed the Ironman competition, Linda created this huge Texas flag. Under the quilting talents of Sandy, the flag quilt will be given as Christmas gift. So, shhhh, keep the secret! (sorry for the fuzzy photo)
And Linda is smiling because she is finishing up an UFO! Hurrah!
This was a sampler that she began in Venzuela and we won't count how long ago that was--we are just happy she has one less UFO in her stash!
Judy, the hostess for this quilting day, is showing off her newest addition to her lovely quilt collection. This one is called "Whispering Pines" from Thimberries patterns.
Close-up of one block.
Can't you just hear the wind whistling through the pines!
Monday, November 23, 2009
Happy Turkey Day!
"Did you know?
Turkeys can have heart attacks. Groups of turkeys, sometimes known as a rafter of turkeys would drop dead when the Air Force was conducting test runs and breaking the sound barrier nearby.
Apparently turkeys can drown if they look up when it is raining.
Excessive turkey breeding has caused turkey breasts to grow so enormous that the turkeys sometimes fall over.
The Pilgrim Fathers would not eat lobster because they thought it was a giant insect.
How Were Turkeys So Named?
The word may have come from the noise a wild turkey makes when it become frightened: it sounds like 'turk - turc - turk.'
The original inhabitants of America called this bird a 'firkee.' It's not hard to see how firkee could become turkey.
Christopher Columbus, the explorer, took some of the wild turkeys of North America back to Europe. People enjoyed eating the meat. It is possible that traders along the Mediterranean casts, known as Turkes, may have brought some of these birds hence they came to be called 'turkey birds.'
In Spain, the turkey was often referred to as Indian fowl, an allusion which is repeated in the French 'dindon' formed with d'Inde which means 'from India'.
Some say Columbus thought the turkey was part of the peacock family. So he decided to call them 'tuka' which is the word for peacock in Tamil, a language spoken in southern India and Sri Lanka.
Pulling the wishbone is a tradition of Thanksgiving. It's bes to allow the wishbone to dry. Then, two people each grasp one end of the wishbone. After making a silent wish, they pull it away. Whoever gets the bigger portion with the joint, will get their wish come true. This is the same at Christmas in the UK"
http://www.guy-sports.com/humor/pictures/picture_thanksgiving.htm
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Teasing!
Riding as a passenger in the backseat gives one the opportunity to see things that the driver wouldn't even think about seeing! "Stop! Stop! Turn around! Back in the ditch are some interesting plants--teasels!" Yes, it's time to turn around to take a photo and pick some of these wild weeds as souvenirs and maybe make a fuller's brush remembrance of earlier times.
Photos of earlier teasel brush.
During historic times, in the cloth dresser’s workshop, a piece of cloth was hung over a perch (bar). The surface of the cloth was brushed using handles of teasels thus raising the nap of the cloth. A handle was a wooden, cross shaped hand tool which held several fullers’ teasels (Dipsacus fullonum). Cleaning and repairing the handles was done by the preemer, usually a boy. One cloth would be raised and brushed several times.
A mechanised teasel gig was developed and introduced by 1770. There is a splendid model of a teasel gig designed by Hadens, on display in Trowbridge Museum (England) alongside a genuine machine.
Lovely, sticky things they are and when laid out on the cloth, a million little seeds fell out!
Thursday, November 19, 2009
SOLVED!!!
Okay, another mystery has been solved! In fact, two mysteries have been solved! Of course, we all knew these patterns, if knitted correctly, would produce hats, but only the designer knew what they looked like.
Here is the view of the tops of the hats, both are berets.
My friend, green head, models the look. She is a good companion--never speaks or objects to anything that is placed on her head.
These hats will sent to Knits for Needs to add to the total for the year. The goal is 500 knitted items and so far, the total is sitting around 400.
Sure feels good to solve these two mysteries, but guess what? There is another mystery brewing in the wind and it is entitled "Miss Marple"! Now, how can anyone resist the urge to knit with Miss Marple!
Here is the view of the tops of the hats, both are berets.
My friend, green head, models the look. She is a good companion--never speaks or objects to anything that is placed on her head.
These hats will sent to Knits for Needs to add to the total for the year. The goal is 500 knitted items and so far, the total is sitting around 400.
Sure feels good to solve these two mysteries, but guess what? There is another mystery brewing in the wind and it is entitled "Miss Marple"! Now, how can anyone resist the urge to knit with Miss Marple!
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