Monthly Archives: March 2012

Hitch!

Last week I posted my first call for submissions, for Hitch: Patterns Inspired by the Movies of Alfred Hitchcock,  on Ravelry (here, if you’re curious!) — for a collection to be published by Cooperative Press, curated by me.

It’s an idea that’s been percolating a while, from about the same time as CRK.  I got entranced with the idea for the 2nd collection that I’m working on right now, though, and realized that if Hitch was going to be published any time soon (i.e. within the next year)  it would only be as a collaboration.  I consulted with some designer friends who’ve done, or are working on, similar books, and realized it is something I could do concurrently with the 2nd collection that’s, um, all me.

For Hitch, I’ve chosen to work with a more limited palette — blood red, cream, greys, and black.  I like the idea of building cohesiveness through color, but usually, as with CRK and the next book, I include a bit more of a range.  However, this just feels right to me — I want something classic, with both stark contrasts and literally shades of grey.  This will let your designs really take center stage.

What kind of designs am I looking for?  Classic, timeless pieces, garments and accessories, inspired by the fashions of the 1940s through early 1960s. That’s a pretty broad range, I’ll admit.   Take a look at the sketches by Edith Head for various Hitchcock films;  you can see some on my Pinterest board here.  Anything from ultrafeminine to masculine:  maybe even Grace Kelly as Lisa borrowing a sweater out of  Jeff’s closet in Rear Window.

Techniques?  Anything from cables, lace, beading, stranding….Remember Bohus sweaters were from this time period, so don’t shy away from intermediate and advanced techniques.  Think fine details.  Couture, even, if you fancy yourself an artiste.

You can see some of Hitchcock’s movies on Netflix On Demand;  others are generally not too hard to find at a good library.  I’ll admit I’m lucky in that I have several good options for libraries very close to me:  Los Angeles Public Library, with a branch in Westchester, on Dave’s way to & from school; and the Palos Verdes Public Library, which, I think, must have a very healthy budget.  The grounds of the closest PVLD branch, Malaga Cove, also served as the setting for some of the photos in CRK.  I’ve also gotten books (and movies) from the Redondo Beach Public  Library.

I was surprised when I started rewatching some of the movies.  I’d always like To Catch a Thief, for example;  but this time through I found myself more engaged with films like Notorious and Rear Window.  Darker & more suspenseful movies.

If you’d like to submit a design (or more!) check out the details here on Ravelry and here.

Finding Your Tribe

It may sound strange, but I came to girlfriends very late in life. When I was in high school and college, I didn’t speak the same language as most girls. I wasn’t interested in clothes or make-up; I much preferred to read or be outside exploring.

And frankly, girls were a little scary. They could be mean in a way that boys never were. They demanded absolute fealty and the exclusion of newcomers. It was sort of creepy.

I was really in my early 30s before I discovered the joys of girlfriends. Today, I have the most incredible group of girlfriends, women who I know would do anything for me and for whom I would do anything. And the beauty of these women is that they are always excited and welcoming of new members of our circle of friends.

I was reminded of this over the past week when Lizzy House came to the farm for a couple of workshops. The women that spent part of Lizzy’s time here were ever so much fun! We laughed and talked and learned to create something lovely and amazing.

But mostly, we supported each other. Whenever someone said they didn’t think they could do X, they were convinced by another that they could do, in fact they were doing it.

 

We made quilts. We made skirts. We made wood blocks and we made fabric with them. Zac made food and food and food. But most importantly, we made friends.

You’ve heard me blog here about how important it is to find your tribe, the group of people that you can be your very best self with. This weekend has reaffirmed to me how important it is to have a tribe.

Where do you find them? If you are a maker, I would highly encourage you to sign up for a class. Whether it’s something you’ve done before or something brand new to you, taking a class is an excellent place to find your tribe.

Check with your local yarn and fabric shops. Call the community college and see what they have to offer in their continuing education program. If you are ever within 100 miles of Gather Here in Boston, sign up for one of their dozens of sewing classes. The owner, my great friend Virginia, could teach a penguin to sew!

Or come to Juniper Moon Farm for a weekend workshop. I’ll be posting our Camp JMF schedule next week but I can tell you know that the amazing Lizzy House will be making a return, as will Culinary Camp. And we will at last be offering the workshop that is most often requested, Cheese Making.

Finally, I would like to thank my friends, old and new, who shared some of their precious vacation time with Caroline, Zac and I. Amanda, Virginia, Mary, Therese, Peggy, Lisa, Amy, Erin, Andrea, Tanya, Maggi, Lisa, and Anna. You brought such joy to the farm. We can’t wait for you to come back.

Wednesdays are for Dyeing

This morning I am firing up the dye pots. I was nearly out of yarn to dye last week, and yesterday 5 kilos of yarn in all weights arrived, begging to be made all pretty. Worst of all, I was completely out of sock yarn to dye. I feel positively naked without any sock yarn to mess about with. And now I have 2 kilos of it!

To start with, I am tackling some a couple special orders that were placed over the weekend. One of them, I am excited to say, is to dye yarn so a local knitter can start her very own big d-mn pineapple! (I cannot wait to see this finished product, though not sure I am willing to tackle it myself.) The other is some more lace weight in my new favorite colorway.


I called it gunmetal originally, but in the right light there’s just a hint of green. With this color, I have enabled two of my local knitter friend to start their own lace shawls. Alas, mine have fallen by the wayside due to farmer’s market prep, but are not forgotten.

Speaking of which, there is a new fingerless mitt pattern in the works! However, my knitting mojo seems to have finally given way to desire to spin a little bit. I have a whole crate of fawn alpaca fluff which I carded yesterday, which I am hoping to spin today. Then perhaps I will get sucked into a spinning time-warp and have time to card the brown alpaca as well. It is a challenge to which I will gladly rise.

What are you looking forward to today?

Desk surfing

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The last couple of days, Riley kitten has decided she wants to be right next to me on the desk. She comes charging across the room and leaps up onto the desk and proceeds to nap on top of my calendar. I’m not sure what instigated this change but as long as she’s not knocking everything on the floor it’s fine with me.

in which I enter the age of e-ink

Despite my reputation as a gadgeteer, I'm generally not on the cutting edge when it comes to electronics -- I'm a devotee but I never buy an Apple product until the second or third generation (and even then, I usually get the newly-outdated model, not the latest and greatest) and I'm never the first kid on the block to have whatever the new Gadget of the Moment is.  Somehow, though, everyone at work seems to think I have every gadget known to man, and so it came as a surprise to everyone when Jim bought me a Kindle, at my request, for my birthday this year.  The most common response: "Really? You didn't have one already?"  The second most common: "You only went for e-ink?  Why not the Fire?"

Yes, it's true.  I got an e-reader, finally.  The price finally came down enough where I felt like I could justify it -- even if I didn't like it, it wasn't a HUGE waste of money.  I chose the very lowest-end Kindle (though I did pay up to get the version with no ads).  And that was done very deliberately: I didn't want the touchscreen version for a variety of reasons, and I wanted something to read on, not another device that gives me internet access and apps and myriad other ways to waste my time.  I've got a laptop and an iPhone and a tablet for that already.  Plus, while I spend pretty much my entire workday, and a large chunk of my non-workday, on a computer, I really don't like reading on a backlit screen...anything longer than a newspaper feature article, and I prefer to read it in print.  Always have, and I suspect I always will.

I hoped that the Kindle would cause me to read more, if only because it's so easy to bring everywhere -- and it's definitely lived up to that!  Of the twelve books I've read so far this year, ten have been on the Kindle.  I'm particularly enjoying the library e-books.  We have Overdrive at our library and, as is the case in most libraries, the demand for the e-books is very high, and at any given time there aren't many available.  Consequently, I've wound up reading books that I never would have gotten around to reading in print, just because they're available, and really enjoyed them -- so, it's a win.  (If you're the sort of person who tends to always read in the same genre, I suppose the limitations of the Overdrive system wouldn't work well for you, but since I read widely, it's been great for me.)  I've also loaded it up with classics that I've been meaning to catch up on.

Another thing the Kindle has allowed me to do is use Netgalley more.  Netgalley is a website that allows publishers to share electronic galleys/advance copies with booksellers, reviewers, librarians, etc.  But because I don't like reading on the computer screen, it was of little use to me before.  Now, though, I can send them to the Kindle, and I've been able to read and review several recent books this way.

This has led to an embarrasment of riches, though -- so much to read!  I'm finding it a bit difficult to prioritize things I want to read purely for pleasure with things I want to read for review -- and it doesn't help that I've dived into George R. R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire books, either (Those I am reading in print, in case you're wondering!).  That's like five thousand pages of reading right there.  And with Book Expo America coming up in a couple of months...I'm not going to be short of reading material anytime soon!

I fell behind on my reviewing a bit when my grandmother was ill -- there were a couple of January titles I intended to read and review before publication, but that fell by the wayside.  I'll catch up someday...

 

Window Light …

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New York Public Library


A Tuesday Sort of Post

Caroline, Zac and I are still glowing for our amazing week with Lizzy House last week. We’re also catching up on all the things we put off while quilting, learning to sew clothes, block printing, staying up far too late, and feasting. It was a glorious week, but the real world- and our real jobs-beckon.

We spent all day yesterday giving the barn a top-to-bottom cleaning in preparation for lambing. Stalls were muck, everything was dusted and trips to the dump were taken. We’re in great shape for lambing and kidding, expected to commence on or around March 22nd.

And we have some rather exciting news about lambing for those of you who will be watching at home. After three years of waiting for the phone company to finally provide us with high speed internet access, I have caved and arranged for the installation on a T-1 line! It is obscenely expensive, but not that much more obscene than the infuriating satellite internet were are paying for now.

The good news is that it will solve a world of Lambcam problems, at least the ones that come from our end. We will finally be able to offer you an uninterrupted , 24/7 look into lambing at JMF!

Installation is expected some time late this week or early next. I’ll let you know when we’ve made the switch.

In other news, you may have noticed that we have decided not to offer Half Shares in our Yarn and Fiber CSAs this year. There are a number of reasons for this and -after receiving an email from a customer urging us to bring them back- I have decided to stick with my decision not to offer them this year.

In place of the Half Shares, we are offering a two-payment Full Share to members of our Raverly group. If you’d like to take advantage of this payment method, we do ask that you join our Ravelry group, as it was initially offered to the group exclusively.

The two-payment Full Share is available in yarn or spinning fibers; just indicate which you prefer on your paypal check out in the “note to seller” box.

In other news, we hope to have all of the garments submitted in our Design Contest photographed by tomorrow for a Thursday post. I’m so sorry to make you wait- I know it can be nearly unbearable. The problem is really that we received so gosh darn many awesome entries! But the wait is nearly over and I thank you for your patience.

More news tomorrow (with pictures even!) once I catch up a bit.

Processing Alpaca

I bought a few ounces of alpaca fleece from a local alpaca producer a few months ago. Marcia, of Alpacas at Orchard Hill Farm has really lovely fiber. It’s soft and strong, and very fine. I don’t know if Alpaca is classified like Mohair, where “kid mohair” is a grade of fine quality no matter how old the goat is, but if it is, I would say Marcia’s sells “baby Alpaca” (Even what she calls course our local spinning group agrees is not really so course as far as wool goes.)

It has taken me some time to pick (opens the locks and help dispense with veg matter) and wash the fleece, (easier than with sheep’s wool because of lack of lanolin) but yesterday, I finally finished washing it out.

I have just about 6 oz of a dark reddish brown.

and 3-4 oz of a nice fawn.

Since space is a huge issue in my house, I have been laying the locks out on towels as I clean them, that way, I can roll the towel up and throw it in the closet when I need my kitchen back. (Because the only place to put down the towels is on the kitchen floor–and if you’ve seen my kitchen, you know that one bath towel just about takes over.)

Since I needed my kitchen to cook dinner last night, I rolled the towels up together and tucked the alpaca roll in the bedroom (in front of a window). This morning, the alpaca was still just a little bit damp, so I set it out in front of the plant window to finish drying. If there weren’t nesting birds fluttering around my balcony, I would set it outside directly in the sun, but the finches and swallows are back for the spring, and if I set this fiber outside there would end up being a lot of really cozy nests and no fiber for me.

The plan for this afternoon is card as much of both colors as I can and then spin like mad. I have even been playing around blending the two colors together on my hackle, but haven’t decided yet. For now, I will just appreciate my alpaca pile.

Seed starting

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Windmills on Allen’s Ave

Windmills on Allen’s Ave:
They seemed to just appear. Giant spinning blades of green energy– they dominate the waterfront.

How Did That Happen?