Monthly Archives: March 2013

Trunk Show!

I’m posting this for Susie since she’s currently SNOWED in without power or internet or heat. Fortunately it was also 58 degrees in Virginia today, so the snow will melt quickly, but the heavy, wet snow took it’s toll on the power lines and a transformer blew. She has no idea when she’ll have power back. (Also fortunately she has a nice stack of wood to toss in the wood stove to keep warm.)

The Abonimal Snow Ernie

This is an old picture of beloved Ernie from 2011.

But, on Saturday she’ll be at Laughing Sheep Yarns in Charlottesville, VA for a trunk show featuring all the garments from the new yarn lines (including one more which still needs to be introduced!).

Sabine 2013 Pink

So come on down from 1p-5p to fondle all the new yarns and perhaps even try on a garment or two to see how you like it in person!

Carme SLEEVE DETAIL-Optimized

I think I might even be able to convince Susie to go to Amy and Paul’s to shower before Saturday.

Laughing Sheep Yarns
188 Zan Road
Charlottesville, Virginia

Introducing: Yearling 2013

When we saw Janine Le Cras’s designs for the 2013 collection of Yearling (60% merino wool and 40% cotton bulky yarn), we were thrilled that they were designed with positive ease so you can determine the size you’d like to knit based on the fit you’d like. Some of these designs are unisex so you could knit a sweater for your husband and then steal it out of his wardrobe when you want a loose-fitting sweater!

For this photo shoot we focused on sporty themes, as the Packer Pullover is designed around a traditional Cricket sweater. (When they played Cricket on Downton I spent much of the scene checking out the sweater to see Janine’s design inspiration!) I can easily imagine a fun Sunday spent with a bunch of your friends while you giggle about how you hold a badminton racquet and if there are rules about where croquet wickets can be placed… because that’s how we spent the last full-day of our photo shoot!

Yearling Cover Actual

Yearling 2013 collection on Ravelry

Designed by Janine Le Cras

Janine Le Cras lives, works and windsurfs on the beautiful island of Guernsey in the middle of the English Channel.Many of her designs are influenced by the landscape and traditions of her island and she has designed for many online and paper magazines. She and her designs can be found on Ravelry as Guernseygal and at her website www.guernseygaldesigns.com.

Packer HERO-Optimized

Packer Pullover
Knitter:  Sarah McCusker
Model: Emily Karasz

 Sewanee HERO

Sewanee Tunic
Knitter:  Jessica Anderson
Model: Tanya Brook

 Yearling Sites Cowl HERO

Sites Cowl
Knitter:  Ainslie Hodges
Model: Shirra Stone

 Bronwyn07-Optimized

Bronwyn Blanket
Knitter:  Lindsay Berdan
Model: Lisa and Marie Richey

 Caston and Dorrit

Caston Guernsey (on the left)
Knitter:  Beatrix Haggard
Model: Cris Ferguson

Dorrit HERO-Optimized

Dorrit Cardigan
Knitter:  Sarah McCusker
Model: Anna Pohl

To find a store near you that carries Yearling and collection of patterns created for it by the lovely Janine Le Cras, go to KFI’s website, click the “find a store” button,  enter your zip code, and select “Juniper Moon Farm” from the drop down list.

Giveaway – we’re giving away a Yearling pattern booklet to three lucky people! Tell us which of these patterns is your favorite and we’ll randomly select a winner. If you post on facebook, pinterest, or ravelry you can get an additional entry – leave an additional comment telling us that you did it and where. Giveaway closes at the end of the day Saturday, March 9.

Moonshine Winners!

Using the random number generator, I selected 5 numbers. Using the very complicated image-editing software (paint), we created a collage of the winners:

Moonshine Winners

Please send your full name and mailing address to lauria AT fiberfarm DOT com and we’ll get your 3 skeins of yarn and pattern booklet in the mail.IMG_9959-Optimized

Shown here in #10 cotton candy. Prize skein colors will vary based on availability.

For those of you who didn’t win, you can find Moonshine yarn and the pattern booklet by clicking “find at store” at knittingfever.com.

Rainbow { knitting }

boneyard

I just had to share this incredible rainbow yarn my very gifted spinning friend made for me on commission (and the project that stemmed from it). I was inspired by some yarn she had spun before for someone else. Their (multicolored) fiber wouldn't have given them much yardage, so she spun it thinner and plied it with white and I fell in love with it.

another one of the boneyard

After a few brainstorming sessions, she directed me to her favorite dyers and I ended up with this 50/50 Organic Merino/Tussah Silk from Zebisis Designs,

50/50 Organic Merino/Tussah Silk from Zebisis Designs

and this undyed Norwegian wool from Woolgatherings. (And yes, that ball is as big as it looks. That is TEN OUNCES of wool!)

Norwegian wool from Woolgatherings

50/50 Organic Merino/Tussah Silk from Zebisis Designs

Norwegian wool from Woolgatherings

Ready for it?

Because thanks to my friend's capable hands, those became this:

custom yarn by StarGrrl Spinworks

custom yarn by StarGrrl Spinworks - I just can't stop, sorry!

After having some trouble choosing a pattern that would really showcase the long color changes and not scatter them or be too busy, my friend and I both gravitated toward Boneyard (by the extremely fabulous Stephen West) so Boneyard it is!

boneyard shawl

boneyard progress

boneyard

get used to seeing this every day until it's done

As of this morning, I am back into the yellows and already seeing hints of olive coming out of the ball.

back to yellow again

I'll be knitting until I run out of rainbow, then finishing the whole thing with a natural white garter stitch border. Can't wait to get this off the needles!

Mellow Yellow …

copyright 2013

- by Joan -


Call Him Ishmael

minerva
Minerva says hey.

At the start of the New Year, I made a decision about my 2013 knitting. I wanted to knit as many sweaters as possible. I wanted to broaden my sweater construction technique. It only takes a quick look at my pattern page to notice that I am a top-down raglan sort of girl. Now, I love a top-down raglan. The math is relatively easy for this English major, the shoulders fit without too much trouble, and I don’t spend too days cursing at my darning needle trying to seam the damn thing. (I have nothing against seaming. I think it is amazing when done well–I just don’t do it enough to do it well, so I take it very seriously when I do it.) In my quest to learn different knitting techniques for sweaters, I decided that knitting a sweater per month sounded reasonable. I queued up a bunch of sweaters I thought I would like to knit this year, evaluated them all, and decided I could certainly knit one each in 30 days or so. (I may or may not have been crazy. You’ll notice, it’s well into March and this is the first time you, dear reader, are hearing anything of it.)

In January, I knit Abigal, which I still don’t have good pictures of. It’s a great, quick knit, for a fingering weight sweater. The weight is perfect, but it has this nasty habit of slipping off my slopy, round shoulders. I am wondering if blocking the collar out more would perhaps make it a bit more sturdy? (My other solution has to pin it in place at work with a brooch on one side and my name tag on the other.) You’ll notice the Abigail is a top-down raglan. But it was a quick knit and I got a deal on the yarn. Happy birthday me. I finished it early, so I decided to start on a new sweater for Brock since he’s wearing holes through the elbows of his Cobblestone every other week. Speaking of, if anyone has some brown, not to reddish suede I could use for elbow patches, I am in the market, as it were.

Having finished the Abigail cardigan early, I cast on for Ishmael Sweater in January and worked on it during the entire month of February. It took me until last night to finish it. Five days late isn’t anything, especially for such a large sweater.

brocks_ishmael_sweater

I don’t know how many of you have met Brock, but he’s not exactly small. 6’3″ and lanky as all get out.

my_ishmael_front
I added four inches to length all around.

my_ishmael_sleeve_detail
I also knit it a slightly tighter gauge than the pattern called for since he is firmly between sizes.

my_ishmael_back_detail
The back detail floors me. It’s such a lovely touch (even with my mis-crossed cable that yes, I noticed, but decided to hell with it, and moved on.)

I’ll tell you a secret about the yarn. I dyed it myself, of course, in a color to Brock’s specifications, but the yarn isn’t something I have ever worked with before. It’s plain old Lionbrand Fisherman’s Wool. Talk about a bargain. To be honest, I wasn’t sure how much I trusted this yarn, but I have to say I really enjoyed knitting with it–and doesn’t it dye superbly? Brock wears his sweaters hard, so I will keep you updated with how well it wears.

I just cast on for Tule which I fell in love with the second I laid my hands on the new Knitpicks catalog. (You’ll notice that while Tule is top-down, it is a round yoke pullover, and not a raglan like the last two, so I really am doing something new, I promise.) Something snapped and I ordered the Aloft yarn immediately. I am secretly hoping I have enough yarn left to knit a cute little cowl.

I have been harboring the desire to design a sock weight summer tee with puffed sleeves, which may or may not have anything to do with me having just reread Anne of Green Gables, but am too chicken to start it just yet.

Polenta with mushroom tomato sauce

IMG_0424

Polenta with tomato mushroom sauce is always a hit with guys. Sometimes I make soft polenta, sometimes I fry the polenta and sometimes I add meat to the sauce but it always disappears lickety split.

Spring Forward

btt button

Clocks change this weekend here in the US, which means one less hour to read … does anybody else begrudge that hour like I do? Wish the Powers That Be would just pick a time-frame and stick to it instead of inflicting clock-driven jet lag on an innocent public twice a year?

(Yeah, so not a question so much about reading … except, of course, you do need to use your electric light to be able to read, so the hour it gets dark IS relevant!)

Don’t forget to leave a link to your actual response (so people don’t have to go searching for it) in the comments—or if you prefer, leave your answers in the comments themselves!

And also–don’t forget, folks–sometimes WordPress’s spam filter seems to decide that a lot of perfectly valid answers are spam. I periodically check throughout the day for lost comments. But, PLEASE–if your comment doesn’t show, don’t post it four more times in the hopes that one of them will go through. I get very, very tired trying to sort out the duplicates (grin).


Winter’s Last Stand

Just as we were starting to prepare for the advent of spring, winter finally decided to give it a go.

I don’t know what our final tally is, but we’ve got A LOT of heavy, wet snow.  Perfect for snowmen.  Also perfect for collapsing roofs.

03.06.13a

Our temporary nursery shelter was compromised by the time we got out there this morning.  Everyone was fine, but we ended up moving them into the original goat shelter we built a few years ago.  It’s not in the pasture but it’s much sturdier.

03.06.13b

It was hard to work out in the weather because it wasn’t at all the fluffy, light snow I like.  We were all soaked through in no time, and with the power being out most of the day, we were pretty cold.    I was glad I had a fresh bale of hay delivered yesterday to keep the sheep  happy and full of food.

03.06.13c

03.06.13d

03.06.13e

Fortunately we made it through the worst of it without anyone lambing.  Amelia’s looking suspiciously close to it, though.

Orzo was very, very unhappy when we took the goats and the babies out of the pasture.  He stood at the gate and whined and barked for awhile.  Then he stole Neve’s hat off her head and ran off with it.  Snow seems to bring out his playfulness even more.

He looks just like his father, Cini, in this picture.

03.06.13f

03.06.13g

Gully was less enthused.  He had a hard time negotiating the snow, since it was deeper in places than he is tall.

But he knew how to recover from it.

gullyfire

I think I’ll go join him.

 


Tagged: Farm, Pets, Seasons

Yarned by You

Susie is stuck under a mountain of snow and it’s raining cold, hard, windy rain here with the threat of snow tomorrow. I’m alternately wanting to snuggle up under the most comfortable of warm clothes, or throw out anything having to do with winter and embrace spring.

Let’s see what I can find that you’ve made on Ravelry to match my mood.

Winter Warmth. Blendab1 knit this Cowboy Cowl out of her Spring 2011 share for her gorgeous daughter.

Blendab1's Cowboy Cowl

Spring for Spring. rebeca4a knit All the Stops (designed by Caroline Fryar for the Spring 2012 collection) in Findley Dappled’s Woodland to wear on her cruise. She modified it for a more conservative neckline and skipped the belt.

rebeca4a's All the Stops

Cozy Comfort. chelseabug knit a Hattie dress (also designed by Caroline Fryar for the Fall 2012 collection) in Herriot. I would love to be wrapped in a dress like this with some wool tights.

chelseabug's Hattie

Warm-Weather Wear. SupaSteph knit a supa-awesome Leaves of Spring shawl out of Findley in Dove. Just right as a spring layering piece, though if I started right now I don’t know that I’d be done before fall!

SupaSteph Pi

Head Heater. jbritton79 knit this Thorpe out of Marlowe in Madrigal. A lovely pop of purple color to know that spring will someday be here.

jbritton's thorpe

Cool Cap. This is the first Moonshine project in the wild! Knipper knit this Ola hat (which received a lot of attention on Rav for its racy pattern page photo!) out of the brand new yarn, Moonshine in Charcoal and Swimming Pool.

Kipper's Ola

Here’s something a little bit in between. Tamrisk knit up Driftwood, which has been in my favorites for awhile since it features a relatively unknown shoulder/sleeve construction called Contiguous. It’s gaining in popularity and just became an attribute tag on Ravelry. (In fact, the All the Stops dress pictures above uses it!) It’s a top down method in which you knit the sleeve cap and body at the same time. Anyway, Tamrisk did her Driftwood in one color of Sabine – Sirius. (Did I mention that it’s free?) The pink buttons are a fun addition!

Tamarisk's driftwood

What do you like to knit on these stormy days?