Thursday, September 22, 2016

Socktaober!



What better way to begin October?
Carolina Fiber Girls podcast is hosting this knit along for interesting socks! check it out!
This sock features a little bit of colorwork, a lot of texture and the wonderful double gusset heel by turtlegirl76 on Ravelry .  Lilliput Yarn is offering kits in her etsy shop that are available now. There are five color options!
The sock is written for one size, but if you have very small feet, you can switch to US 1 (2.25mm) after the colorwork section to snug it up.
Scrappie by  Adrienne Fong
Mystery pattern for SOCKtober for the Carefree KAL group on Ravelry. Uses left-over sock yarn. Pattern will be released in its entirety on October 1, 2016. Pattern includes both written instructions and charts.



Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Do YOu Double Knit?

Do you double knit?  I don't!  In fact, I think I have a Craftsy class on double knitting
that I haven't watched.  Well, here is another video on double knitting.  And just might
learn how to do this technique!


Here is the pattern you can practice with--a beginner's pattern, it is called! 
TPHPE - The Prettiest Hot Pad Ever! by Heather Zoppetti-
You'll find this pattern on Ravelry!
This hot pad uses the double knitting technique. Just like magic, it makes a positive image of the pattern on one side and a negative image on the other – there is no ‘wrong’ side. The fabric it makes is double thickness, so it’s perfect for a hot pad.


Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Texas Hill Country Yarn Crawl!

Howdy, y'all!  It's time to put this event on your calendar--
saddle up and get your passport and join in this roundup of exciting
yarn shops--It's the Hill Country Yarn Crawl!




Join us for ten fun-filled days crawling your way through 19 yarn shops around and about central Texas! Bring family, meet up with friends, make new ones, and see all the great things each shop has to offer. To add to the fun, you will have lots of chances to win PRIZES! Along the way, we hope you discover new ways to fuel your fiber passion and meet local fiber artists up close and delight in their wares. Best of all, rekindle your love for all the yarn and fibers the Hill Country has to offer.
Pay an entry fee of $15, which entitles you to: 1) Yarn Crawl Passport and Passport Stamp Page,and a commemorative stitch marker. 2) two exclusive, specially-designed patterns at each shop you visit, 3) a 25% discount on 2 yarns highlighted for the patterns at each of those shops, and 4) a super cool commemorative yarn crawl bag to the first 1000 participants.
How to Win?
Each yarn shop will be giving prizes away daily! The more shops you visit, the better your chances of winning cool prizes. Turn in your passport card at the last shop you visit because this year we are having three grand prizes!  This provides more opportunities to win.  In addition to the daily prizes, will be having grand prizes for those who make it to at least 8, 13 and all 19 shops.
Rules of Engagement: We’re easy! Each participant must:
  • have their own passport card
  • fill out the contact information on the passport card (having pre-printed labels with this information will help speed you through this process)
  • be present at each yarn shop to get your passport card stamped (i.e., no proxy crawling)
  • be at least 10 years of age
All passport cards must be turned in by end of business on Sunday, October 16th. Remember to print clearly on your passport card – we need this information to contact you!
Winners will be posted here and will be contacted by the shop they have chosen to hold their prize*.
Grand Prize winners will be drawn on Oct. 28th, 2016.

Monday, September 19, 2016

September--To & Fro

I love Fall!  There are so many wonderful things about Fall weather--and so many wonderful quilt patterns to sew up!

Here we have fall presented in a different way--This pattern comes from

Here is how it looks in a quilt

Love! Love! These Maple Leaves, "Maple Sky" by A Quilting Life
There are so many Fall-Autumn Quilt patterns just fit for the working!
Happy Fall!

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Let's Build A House! Or Several!

Here is a great quilting adventure--especially if you enjoy building houses as much as I do--
this is an easy way to build houses!
Bear Creek Quilting Company is hosting a "Be My Neighbor" Block of The Week event.
Every Friday a new free block will be released.  Sign up for their newsletter
so you can keep up with the neighborhood!

This is the block for week of September 9th
Here is my block from that week
Oh, dear--some remodeling needs to be done!  
The chimneys are following off the roof--
that's a job for Mr. Ripper!




Saturday, September 17, 2016

Myth of Sugar Wrappers

Have you heard that early American settlers used the blue paper from sugar cones to dye their fabric?
I have!  And why not?  It was there from the sugar cone wrappers.  Why just throw it away?

I found such a blue wrapped paper sugar cone on my visit to the Farm House at Washington on the Brazos Historical Site.  The following article debunks the logic that Early American Settlers used this for dye--Read on!
sugars2
A sweet story, but experts in historic crafts say that no actual instances of this practice are known in America’s colonial era. Apart from lack of evidence, it is illogical. Refined sugar was an expensive, imported luxury—think caviar—that only the wealthiest could afford. Not the sort who are scrimping and recycling their wrapping paper or dying their own fabric. (If the family budget couldn’t stretch to include sugar, what did folks back then use for sweeteners? Maple sugar, honey, molasses, or muscovado sugar. Or nothing.)
But lo and behold, several household management books published in the mid-nineteenth century do mention this practice. In one of them, The American Frugal Housewife (1835), author Lydia Childs tells how to make various cheap dyes, including “a fine purple slate color” by boiling sugar wrapping paper in vinegar with alum and boiling it in an iron kettle. In another, Eliza Leslie’sLady’s Frugal House-Book; a Manual of Domestic Economy(1850), the chapter on domestic dyes tells how to make a slate color by boiling vinegar and alum in an iron kettle with some pieces of “the thick purple paper that comes round sugar-loaves.”
Why then and not earlier? Probably because that’s when sugar became cheap. The expansion of Caribbean sugar plantations flooded the market with sugar and prices dropped, bringing sugar loaves, wrapped in traditional purplish-blue paper, within reach of most housewives. And the average housewife is just the sort who might be interested in learning to dye her own fabric on the cheap. So this myth is false when heard at early American sites and true for later, nineteenth-century sites.
Where did the purplish-blue paper custom, as opposed to white or brown or another color, originate? Probably in the Middle East or North Africa, where sugarcane cultivation originatedIn certain North African countries, sugar is still sold that way in grocery stores, as large cones wrapped in blue paper. I saw them in a Moroccan grocery store a few years ago, and also in a market in Jordan.
 /

Friday, September 16, 2016

An Afternoon Spent at Washington on The Brazos

Recently, the blond headed daughter (bhd) said, "let's take a picnic and go on a road trip!"
Well, not a long road trip--please--no, let's just drive about 1.5 hours from the house to one of the 
most historic places in Texas History--Washington On The Brazos.  It is said to be the
birth place of Texas Independence.  Oh, okay, let's go, but let's not take a picnic--it's just too darn hot!
We'll find that airport diner in Brenham for lunch--all agreed and we're off!

I'm glad we took the ranch walking tour--where I found some textile treasures.
like this overshot woven upholstered chair.

sad though, as it has faced the sun way too long and has faded--
this would definitely happen without window dressings in 1800's

The bed covering was a fancy applique

and in the other bedroom, this lovely pieced plaid quilt adorned the bed

In the dining area, we found a floor cloth-- used in the place of carpets or rugs

We ventured to the museum, which was across the road from the farm house and
upstairs I found more wonderful textiles--like this Grandmother's flower garden quilt

A super great applique quilt--with star borders

Look--a lazy kate!  I never could find the reasonings behind calling it lazy kate!  

The Lone Star Quilt!  One of my favorite patterns and very difficult to piece in the 1800's

and a remarkable piece of overshot pattern with weaving shuttle and quills (bobbins)

a variation on the Lone Star Quilt

Hand quilting in circles

At the foot of the bed--wouldn't you like to cover yourself with this delight?

hand quilting!

another example of overshot coverlet

Here you can see how the strips were seamed to make a full size coverlet.
Okay, even though it was a hot day, it was an enjoyable day visiting Texas History again.

X Y Z

 X Y Z   The slang phrase XYZ, meaning “examine your zipper,”  has been used since at least the 1960's  These letters are used for const...