Monthly Archives: March 2012

In the garden

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The weather was so nice this past weekend we just had to get out and do a bit of work in the garden. I found a peanut feeder the perfect container for the wool and cat fur I’ve been saving for the birds to use as nesting material. Riley has already pulled up a few new seedlings on my light rack so I’ve installed the cat deterrent screen. Hopefully that will keep her out of my collards and onions! I’ve also started tomatoes, peppers and some assorted herbs. Out in the garden, I’ve planted sugar snap peas. The garlic is going gangbusters out back but I won’t take the mulch off it for awhile yet and the strawberries will remain covered as well lest they bloom too soon. We’ve also planted some more heather so that the bees have some early flowers to visit.

Spring Has Sprung …

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Bloom where you are planted :)


Outside My Window

This is the magnolia tree that lives outside my window. It is in full bloom right now, with barely any petals on the ground.

Besides the gorgeous color and pleasant smell, I love how these trees rain down their petals for one or two days a year.


I think this color is destined for some sock yarn. (Wouldn’t it make a lovely shawllette?)

Pretty colors on a rainy morning are lovely
After I finish my coffee I am going to run really fast for a little while outside with all of the blossoming trees and shrubs. I am finding that the more I go do things outside, the more I enjoy it and the more I enjoy how my body feels.

Happy Spring Break!

Monday Morning in Pictures

Jack

Callum

Peregrine and Jekyll

Elwyn and her nest

Curtains

new curtains new curtains new curtains

We’ve been in this house for quite awhile now but it’s taken us all this time to finally get around to installing nice curtains. We started out with just rollup shades and graduated to nicer cloth shades with sheers and now we have actual factual curtains with pretty sheers and lovely leafy rods and tiebacks. It was well worth the wait.

Brown Quilt Update

A Walk In The Woods …

A few years ago along with my daughter Deb, her dog Chappy and two dog friends, we went walking in the Tisbury/W Tisbury woods of the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank Commission.

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While the 4-legged walkers sniffed their way through the woods I let my eyes feast on the beauty. Looking down I saw this beautiful green mossy growth…

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…and this old stump that somewhat resembles an airplane part (to my eyes anyway).

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Raising my eyes a bit there was …

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And finally, looking skyward and spotting something nestled among the trees !!  Do you see it – is it a bird, is it a plane !!

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I’m looking forward to my next walks on the Vineyard… there’s no better place to stretch your legs and your paws.


Fairy Tale Weekend

Once upon a time, a beautiful princess and her handsome prince planned for like two years for their wedding...  Seriously, they worked really hard and saved every penny.


They thought and thought, and decided on many things that were important to them.  And their starlit wedding reflected all those things that made them very special.


And so Friday night, an honored group of us got to attend this beautiful wedding in a chapel among the trees.  Rita and Lawrence finally became man and wife.


And they were very happy.  

I had to show you her hand-knit veil made of some lovely silky yummy yarn.  Isn't it exquisite?  She made it herself.  We have been delighted to watch this fairy tale unfold over many years, as their relationship grew and matured.  Most good fairy tales take a long, long time to get to the happily ever after part.  Happy sigh...

But the weekend was young, and GrandmaTutu and I had to jump into the Extended Cab Chariot of Fun and head to Tyler, for the Wildflower Fiber retreat that very night.  We got to Tyler very late and checked into the Palace of Holiday Inn Express.  This is a huge departure from every other time I've been to this retreat, as I usually rough it in a cabin on a bunk bed.  But I decided to embrace my elder status and cushion the accommodations a bit.

For me, the most magical thing about this year's retreat was that I had very little responsibility, and I tried very hard to do some relaxing with my fiber peeps.  So in my sans souci state of mind, I did a crummy job of documenting all the wonder and awe of the whole thing.  I rested, and only got a few photos of our fun...


Tri-loom weaving was a big hit this time - here Lisa shows us how it's done.  Love those little looms.  We have a tri-loom class coming up here at the farm in a few weeks--would you like to learn how?


Dori needle-felted little sheep on the table decorations this year, highlighting the special breeds we would be learning more about: Shetlands and Jacobs.


Joyce Terrell spoke about her love of Shetland sheep, and told about how to best use their wool.  I got the opportunity to share about Jacobs, and we all got to play with some freshly washed fiber from the two breeds.  Midge talked about silk and we got some very nice samples of that fiber to play with, as well.



The atmosphere was very casual and laid back this year.  We enjoyed the usual great food, show and tell time, and a riotous evening of door prize giveaways, but the schedule was loose and flexible and allowed for lots of restful time in the vendor hall, or wandering outside among the pine trees in the fresh air.


The theme revolved around fairy tales and Renaissance-style spinning, so some folks worked on spinning linen yarn with custom-made distaffs, dressed with flax stricks.  (Don't you love the crazy spinning lingo?)  The finished yarns looked so beautiful...


Go Christine!  You can tell she's done this before.

We drove out of the pine forest, waving goodbye for another year, but the farewells are only temporary.  Heck, these are some of my favorite folks and I'm blessed to hang out with them lots!  The DFW Fiber Fest is just two weeks away, so there's lots more fiber fun in the offing, very soon.

Before you know it, we'll add our alpaca fiber to the harvest haul...  What amazing adventure will we have next?








In My Fiber World, Sun Mar 18th Version

I grabbed all the pictures I’ve taken in the past few weeks, so here’s a version of what’s going on with me, based on the pictures I have. I know I just updated y’all yesterday, but today’s post has lots of pictures!

In the “knitting while traveling” series, first off is how to knit on a plane when you have a pattern:

Then there’s my answer to “how do I block a scarf in a hotel room”?

Unfortunately it’s a bit too pointy for my tastes, and I do want to re-block it:

Exactly a month ago, on Saturday, February 18th, I finished a Flower Scarf. What’s special about this scarf is that this started out as one ounce of white cashmere roving. I spun it, dyed it (with food coloring) and knit the scarf.

Here is a close-up that shows the color a little better (although it’s a bit washed out):

I acquired a loom while I was in California 2 weeks ago, and I have finished my first piece – the warp is a simple black cotton for weaving, and the weft is Noro Silk Garden sock yarn. This has not yet been blocked:

And I jumped right in and started another project – the warp is mercerized cotton and the weft is Jil Eaton CottonTail:

Here’s a more detailed shot:

I have continued to work on my niece’s Color Me Pretty sweater. I have just gotten to the point where I slip the sleeve stitches off and start working on only the body. This is the magical part of a raglan for me, as it’s when the piece actually starts looking like a sweater:

The yarn is a dark purple solid color, I’m not sure why the photo shows a gradient-type color.

Yesterday was a day full of shopping, and I picked up a seam ripper to finish getting all the cashmere I could out of the thrift store sweater I started on last week. I got the rest of the sweater pulled out and Navajo-plied it. It’s resting on the bobbin now, but I did have a full bobbin from Wednesday, which I took off, measured, bathed, and put up to dry. It dried this morning, and it’s close to 600 yards of what looks like a sock-weight yarn (I haven’t measured WPI yet, but it’s 3.75 ounces, or 109 grams):

I have been spinning more of the Hello Yarn BFL/silk that I talked about yesterday. I also took pictures of the fiber – here’s the fiber as a bump:

I think the colors show better as a braid, though:

I’ve spun up almost half (2 ounces). I’m thinking I might do a 2×2 cable with this yarn, but I’m not 100% sure. I will have to sample. I worry that the colors will muddy, but I think as a cable it will be more heathered. I’ve just split the yarn lengthwise into 4 parts, so there’s no fancy fractal spinning going on or anything, but I’m sure I didn’t divide it exactly equally.

Ron Philbeck and Michael Kline and Trista Chapman, OH MY!

Last Wednesday was a date I had saved on my calendar for several weeks. DRIVE TO FREDERICKSBURG. (I am still going back and forth until the house changes hands officially.) Wednesday was the workshop with the boys from North Carolina, Michael Kline and Ron Philbeck. In addition, Trista Chapman of Fredericksburg was signed up to join them in the giving of deco secrets!

Liberty Town was VERY lucky to have a bit of time with Michael and Ron as they were heading to Cape Cod to teach a weekend long workshop. While we only had them for a quick evening of pizza, beer, comedy and decoration tips it was a night that I am so happy to have been in attendance!!

It was a fantastic sampling of their work.  And I just have to say that Ron you are so funny!  Just what I imagined while reading your blog.



Dan doing the official introductions (with Michael Kline waiting in the wings)


Ron Philbeck works with earthenware clay fired at low temperature in an electric kiln.  He applies white slip and utilizes sgraffito to decorate his pots.

Ron warming up the crowd.




Explaining his sgraffito techniques.  (That's a laundry line bowl in his hand...one of his older but very popular designs)

Trista Chapman is another potter who works with low fire clay, this time white clay, and fires her brightly colored pots in an electric kiln.


Trista showing a finished plate with her color technique.




Plate in process.




Finished plate.  I found it interesting that she does all her decorating at the bisqued stage, not as greenware.  Definitely gives her a big window for decorating.




I had to document Trista's, er, messy, glaze jars.  If you are using them every day why waste all that underglaze by washing out your brushes???



Michael Kline wood fires.  A very different and time intensive technique.  He uses wax to resist a slip.  Then fires in a high fire salt atmosphere in his wood kiln to produce his beautiful pieces.


Michael introduces us to his style of decorating with wax resist either on its own (that allows warm browns after woodfiring) or colored with oxides and colorants to darken the design.



The purple jar holds straight wax colored with food coloring to help him see his design as he applies the wax to the pot.
The brown jar is the colored wax that you see him painting on the pot.  He strives to make literally every stroke just right!



Examples.  That little one on the right went home with me!


Can't attend a workshop without taking home a souvenir....I have a couple of Ron's pots from his etsy shop, so I bought only this wonderful goat mug.....

The pitcher on the left is the wee one from the previous picture and is deco'd using the plain wax.  The cup to the right uses the colored wax and the vines show much blacker.

I own a pot or two of Trista's as well.  Since she is local I know I will make my way to her shop again soon!!!