Monthly Archives: March 2012

multy


I like rice krispy treats
Originally uploaded by lornababy

we miss him so much.

Stars upon thars

flying geese, aka star points stash party stars stash party stars

Feeling a bit guilty for having lost pattern 2, I sewed up blocks 2 and 3 right away. It’s very quick and easy now that all my star points are ready and waiting.

 

JSTOR’s Register and Read

JSTOR has just announed an experimental program for individual researchers and scholars called Register & Read.

While access to the majority of JSTOR content is restricted to participating institutions, under the Register & Read program JSTOR will offer free, read-online access to individuals that are not affiliated with a participating institution. PDFs for some content will be available for purchase and download. At this time, Register and Read includes 75 publications from 40 different publishers.

To keep abreast of the development of the Register & Read program, follow JSTOR on Twitter or Facebook.

Block of the Month: March

Nom.

Today is the 100th birthday of the Oreo.

Snack

I'm celebrating appropriately and I hope you are, too!

 

Lizzy Bliss

We are all still walking on air around here after Lizzy House’s Quilting Weekend. It was just magical in every way- old friends and new friends, gorgeous fabric, lots of laughter, amazing food courtesy of Zac and – oh yes!- there was even quilt-making.

Zac built an enormous farm table for the craft room and there was plenty of room for 8 campers and their sewing machines.

My friend Amanda came from Boston and spending time with her was a tonic for my soul.

One of the best parts was seeing the fabric everyone chose. All completely different and each combination exactly perfect.

Caroline and Amy worked together on a lovely quilt.

My friend Virginia’s charming pincushion ring by Made in Lowell.

Jack absolutely reveled in having so much adoring attention in the house.

Look at all these lovely quilt squares!

I have to thank Lisa, Caroline, Virginia, Lizzie,Mary, Therese, Amanda, Peggy, and Amy for a whole slew of memories the that I will treasure.

You can read Amy’s version of the weekend events here. Also check out our new friend Lisa’s farm blog. She has some heart-meltingly cute pics of their new piglets posted now.

Flight of Fancy

I am on a work trip to California this week, so yesterday I had some nice long stretches of time in which to knit.

I FINALLY finished the Sagrantino Shawl, I finished it before I went on any flights and weaved in all the ends from my Boston->New York City flight (45 minutes). It is currently being blocked in my hotel room – I had to jury rig a setup, because at home I just use regular straight pins on a foam blocking board. The setup is blocking the top half now, I’ll have to block the bottom half separately after this is dry:

I also finished the Monkey sock, with a Sweet Tomato Heel. This was also finished before my flights.

I managed to write and print up my instructions for the Sweet Tomato Heel sock that I’m going to teach at FiberCamp this weekend, so I am all ready, and I’ll post those instructions here later in the week, as a blog post and an accompanying PDF.

In my first checkin post I neglected to mention a scarf I’m making for my husband, Tony. It is being made from a handspun I made, a 2-ply of Louet Black Diamond (carbonized bamboo) and what was labeled 100% wool (seems like merino) from the Lancaster Yarn Shop. Tony went on a trip and brought me back 3 bumps of 1.2 oz each – 2 bumps were blue and one was purple, and it combined really well with the Black Diamond:

Tony asked me to make him a scarf, and I thought the black/purple combination would work well, so given the yarn stats I looked for a pattern on Ravelry, and told Tony to choose a pattern. Well, he chose Crooked Little Scarf, and lately he’s been asking me when it’s going to be finished. Before yesterday’s flight it had only a few inches. I am happy to say it is over 12 inches long now, after a good 6-hour flight yesterday:

Last week I did do some spinning, because I knew I wasn’t going to be doing much spinning this week while I’m away – I have brought my spindles and my wheel in the past, but there are evening fun activities for the team so I decided I wasn’t going to bring all that stuff, I could just bring my knitting so I’d always have something to do. That being said, I put up 2 new skeins.

The first skein is the Enchanted Knoll Farm Happy Hooves Batt for February 2012, the colorway is called “Conversation Hearts”. It’s a Shetland/silk blend, and Shetland is one of my favorite fibers to spin. This spin did not disappoint me:

The second skein is also an Enchanted Knoll Farm Happy Hooves Batt, from November 2011, called “Crunchy Leaves”. It was sent as a boucle kit, and I put it aside for when I was ready to actually spin a boucle yarn. Well, a different rav group put out a boucle challenge, so I decided to give it a go. I’m not a fan of boucle yarns, and I also am very methodical and don’t generally like chaotic yarns, so I made a somewhat tame boucle – I think I did a good job for my first time out, but I know how I would spin things differently now to make it more boucle-y.

Bogs Boots Giveaway Winner!

YIKES! In all the excitement around here we completely forgot to pick a winner in our Bogs Boots Giveaway. Which isn’t very nice of us, considering the nice folks at Bogs were so crazy generous and so many of you enter. Please accept my apology- totally my fault.

The winner- chosen at random- is;

Yay Julie! Email me at susie at fiberfarm dot com to claim your boots.

Thanks to all who entered. We will do it again soon. And BIG thanks to Bogs for your generosity.

Some sewing fun!

So I have this exciting project going on right now.

thread

It all started with this block print I did a few years back.

printing

When a friend of mine had her first baby at the end of 2010, I used this same block to print on a piece of t-shirt material and then sewed it like a patch onto a tiny onesie.

Long story short, my friend really loved the design, and as time went by, she talked about turning this into a small line of onesies for a children's line she and her husband are launching within their gallery/retail space.

I did some other designs and we tweaked some things, and ordered some other things, and before I knew it, we were all set to start on the first run and I was getting my first custom order from Spoonflower in the mail.

sunny day!

sunshine

starry skies

twinkle

a field of peas

sweet pea

To say I was speechless upon seeing my meager artwork PRINTED on actual fabric would be a grotesque understatement. I actually cried a little when I opened the package and saw it all in front of me for the first time. I cannot say enough about the extremely high quality printing, the delightful feel of the fabric (and we chose the cheapest option!) and the super fast turnaround. I am now officially a Spoonflower addict and cannot wait to do some actual fabric designing. (Always been a pet dream of mine actually...)

Those three are just the ones she picked for the first go round -- there are two, possibly three more designs we'll be using in the future.

Wanna know what they ended up like?

ready for the serger

all threaded and ready to go

up one side and down the other

Ta-da!

ready to sew onto some wee little shirts

The shirts will be arriving soon and these little lovelies will be sewed on and ready to go. I am so, so excited about this project, and absolutely can't wait to start on some of the other things we have planned.

A fun side thing that happened while I was doing these was this miniature garland.

serged garland!

In order to finish the top and bottom edges of the patches quickly, I fed them through one after the other without breaking thread and then just cut in between them all when I had done the whole line of them. Of course, with just one side attached, they looked like a little flag garland, so I used the bottom scraps of the sunshine yard to make an intentional garland.

sunshines!

I have big ideas now for tiny things... And I can't wait until I have some finished shirts to show you!

Lizzy House Quilting Weekend! (extra-long post)

Let me start by saying that if you work with fabrics you should know Lizzy House.  Because if you don’t, you are missing out BIG TIME.  Lizzy has beautiful prints in beautiful colors – so much so that Susan collects hoardes bundles of it to display in her house.  It’s that beautiful. 

Lizzy came to the farm this weekend to give a quilting workshop (farm plus BFF’s plus quilting?  I was SO in) and I was thrilled to be a part of it.  I’ve not done a lot of quilting myself, and what I have done has been mostly frustrating because I never really bothered to figure out how to quilt, so when things went wrong I wasn’t really sure how to fix them.  This class was perfect because I am not necessarily a beginner, but I needed to see people properly working a quilt to fill in the knowledge gap.  And now that I know what I was doing wrong I realize how kind of simple the fixes were.  Quilting is so very much easier than I was assuming it is, and so very much more fun!

Don’t you just love this Hello Kitty machine Virginia is sewing on?? Virginia owns “Gather Here” a beautiful yarn & fabric shop in Cambridge, MA.  If you’re in the neighborhood, drop in and check it out.  And tell her I said hi!!

The bonus?  Aside from spending the weekend sewing at the farm, my dear friend Amanda came down from Boston.

I do not get to see Amanda nearly enough.  That has to change.

I collaborated with Caroline and I am pretty sure a new quilting fiend has been born in her – she took right to it and loved it.  Don’t be surprised if she’s designing quilts by this time next year!

Lizzy herself is just as beautiful and friendly and fun as her designs.

We were all working on making our own version of the quilt you see behind her – but not just “making” it.   She shared a story of personal loss that spurred her to begin quilting, and how it saved her.  How all of the emotion and love and sorrow and all of it went into the quilt until it became more than just “a quilt”.  This is very familiar to me as a knitter, and to other knitters as well.  Our craft is a kind of therapy and I have spent many hours knitting while mulling over whatever is happening in my life at that moment.  From then on, that project always reminds me of that moment, like a snapshot.  There are knitters I know who will call something their “angry scarf” or their “lucky socks” because that is what they remember most about knitting them.  I oddly have a project that makes me think of Niagara Falls because I was listening to a “This American Life” segment about the Falls while I was knitting it.

Lizzy’s fabrics being bundled into a gorgeous stack.

This quilt project was about that, but in a more “intentional” way.  Lizzy tasked us with deciding what we wanted our quilts to be about and to focus on that while working on it.  I can tell you my intentions for it were all about my friendships at the farm (both old and new) and my hopes and feelings about finally getting my own farm underway.  This will be an intentionally happy and lucky and grateful quilt.  And Caroline and I worked on it together!  I will remember that every time I see it and it will make me happy.

This is Lisa.  Lisa lives locally (YAY!!!) and for all of you who are local, she and her husband own Revolutionary Soup.  Right??!!!  You can also check out their blog at Red Row Farm.

Caroline and I used a collection by Moda called “Papillon”.

I can’t wait to show off the project when it is all finished.  We knocked out 12 of the 18 squares for the top.  I’ll be machine quilting it once I’ve gotten the backing fabric and sandwiching material.  Nothing fancy – I think the fabric does a knockout job on its own.

If you’re thinking about learning to quilt but are unsure – find a class.  I can’t promise it will be as fun as this was, but it will take away much of the fear factor and get you going on the right track (if you live in the greater Boston area, Virginia’s shop is a great place to take classes, and you can use her machines there by the hour).

If Lizzy is going to be in your area giving a class or workshop – DO IT. I can’t speak highly enough of her.  And for heaven’s sake if you find some of her fabric GET IT!!!