Tag Archives: yarn

Can I be braggy for a moment?

Herriot made Raverly’s Popular New Yarns list!

Which is amazing! And exciting! Have you sen Herriot in your local yarn shop yet? Be sure to look for it- this is one of those yarns you have to feel to believe. And- OH MY- the patterns! 

If you’ve knit with Herriot and would like to leave a review, you can post it here. We would really appreciate it.

Designed: Cora

Because I was (and still am) pretty excited about ombré effects in knitting, I was particularly drawn to the unique way that Bohus knitting uses texture to help blend and incorporate color (in short: sometimes there are purls). But I didn’t want the colorplay to dominate the entire garment, so, for Cora I left it as a yoke detail.

This croqi reminds you of Selma Blair’s character in Legally Blonde, right? Severe black bob, an even severer expression– somewhere between petulant and pugnacious.

Anyway I opened up my copy of Poems of Color, which was a Christmas gift from my parents, and swatched around.

This is what I came up with.

photo © Caro Sheridan

Anyway, this is me. I’m wearing my most beautiful wool pants and a nice wool fedora (despite my fears) from Rag & Bone’s Fall 2011 collection (this is the one thing I bought when we went to San Francisco back in January– it was even more expensive than my emergency-room visit! (turns out, I had an ulcer!))

photo © Caro Sheridan

I’ll be the first to say that this design doesn’t even come close to approaching the level of intricacy and precise blur for which the original Bohus Stickning garments are so rightly famous. This is an approximation– a taste, I guess, of what’s possible.


Working On: Socks for Jay

I’m having so much fun with these.

Back in early July, my friend Maggie came to visit and casually let it slip that she’d just visited our friend Jay, and that the socks I’d knit him had seen better days (actually, verbatim: “So, I’m supposed to mention to you in a sort of an offhand way that they’re super worn-out, and that maybe you could just make another pair, if you have the time.”).

With that in the back of my mind, I went down to my old-but-new-again LYS last week, in search of something suitable. Lorna’s makes a spot-on Carolina Blue, it turns out (and exclusively for Yarns Etc!), but businesslike, it’s not.

I went with a yarn I’d never used before– Online Supersocke Silk in a granite-like gunmetal grey color. Online, a German yarn company (Ganze Banderole auf Deutsch? Absolutely.), is distributed by JMF’s distributor, so that extra familiarity made it all the nicer. The silk content– 20%– really made the slipped stitches shine, and gives (I think) an attractive look of precision & exactitude to the whole thing. You can tell that these don’t have any mistakes in them.

The pattern, aside from the skyp stitch, is a pretty uncomplicated one, but it’s very popular (also, it’s free! Thank you, Adrienne!). The herringbone running down the center of the ribs is really unusual, but looks especially great, I think, with this yarn.

I’m flying through these, so, soon!


Working On: Funchal Moebius

I’ve been working on this since last year– November 20, 2011– but things have ground to a stop.

This pattern, Kate Davies’ Funchal Moebius, is graphic, striking, and a simple knit. Since it was released last year during Wovember, I decided that I’d use my own fingering-weight handspun to make it– the gold is some Corriedale that came with my spinning wheel, and the white is Tunis from Infinity Farm in Cedar Grove, NC (I wrote about going fishing there, a few years ago).

However, therein lies the problem: I’ve done 4 pattern repeats out of 14, and I’ve run out of the Corriedale yarn. I sure can’t buy anything like it.

I’ve got plenty of roving, luckily, but it’ll be a challenge to replicate yarn I spun 2 years ago. We’ll see how it goes.


Designed: Egbertine Cowl & Hat

I’ve talked a bit about how very proud I am of the work that I did with Pamela Wynne on the Juniper Moon Farm Herriot collection, but also I wanted to take the time to talk here about the genesis of my designs. It’s fun to tell a story.

After swapping our inspiration photos and outlining how we wanted to organize the collection, we decided to go ahead and make our sketches. It’s incredibly nerve-wracking, let me tell you, to casually send over a sketch (or seven) to someone whose work I admire as much as I do Pam’s. Especially since my fashion illustration (ahem) leaves a little to be desired (Truly. Susan was giving a trunk show out West, and the shop owner said something like, “Wow, if we’d seen from her sketches that these garments would look this good, we’d have been even more excited about the Herriot collection!” So, well, maybe I’m not anything as blunt as a bad drawer, but I’m certainly an inexact visual communicator.).


So, there’s that.

(I learned wisp-hands, by the way, from the illustrations for the terribly-embarrassing-moments section of Seventeen– illustrated girls without fingers were always, you know, walking into the boys’ locker room or dropping tampons in public or something.)

So, that turned into the Egbertine Hat. You can see that I scrapped the tassels, as well as the two-color garter st border. Why complicate matters?

I didn’t know whether to be proud about the fact that I wasn’t the only one with ombré beanies on the brain this summer. I can’t really be sad about being outshone by BT Fall. I mean, goodness gracious.

juniper moon farm herriot

photo © Caro Sheridan

The Egbertine Cowl is one of my favorite pieces in the collection. It’s simple, attractive, as easy to knit as it gets, pleasantly weighty, and the softest thing in the world. But the best part is that it’s a honest-to-goodness pantoum.

BAM.

The pattern runs from black to white and back around, continually recontextualizing each of the ten colors in relation to the others. The interactions of color are subtler (but therefore, to me, more exciting) because we’re working with a specifically limited color palette– only natural shades. These ten colors and their gorgeous interplay will show up again, in Margaret.

juniper moon farm herriot

photo © Caro Sheridan

Until then, enjoy, y’all, and deeply ponder how wonderful it is that a longish cowl is also a visual representation of a poetic form.


Working On: Cormo Rusticus

It is a fact commonly acknowledged that, when under duress, knitters turn to their knitting. It’s how we cope. Life may be tumultuous, but it helps us to maintain complete control over something, and work at it one stitch at a time. It’s also apotropaic– a way to keep hard times at bay, and, well, it’s a verb for keeping warm. I am no different from any other knitter– except maybe that I’m so dependent on my knitting that the real warning sign is when I’m not knitting. That means trouble.

Anyway, since I’ve just moved and changed jobs, I’ve been redirecting my nervous energy into a sweater that I started at the beginning of the year:

caroline fryar cormo rusticus aran knitting

I’m very, very proud of how it’s turning out. There are lots of little clevernesses in the construction that I can’t wait to show off, the fit’s pretty perfect, and the yarn, of course, is one of a kind.


WIP: Shawl in 2 colors

Introducing: Herriot

As I warned you yesterday: please sit down before reading any further. I know from experience that there’s simply too much wonderful contained in Herriot for an ordinary knitter to resist. It’s named, of course, for James, whom we invoke so frequently in our farming lives that he might well be our patron saint.

Back in February, when the UPS man dropped off the box from the mill, I had to use a wheelbarrow to get it into the house, it was so overwhelming. When we showed it off to the attendees of our Lizzy House Quilting Workshop– “Wanna see what awesome things we’re working on for fall?”– they were knocked flat, then begged us for some. Our test-knitters went nuts over it. It stopped traffic on the floor at TNNA.

You heard it here first: Herriot is going to be a kind of a big deal. What is it, exactly?

Herriot is a DK-weight yarn made of 100% baby alpaca that comes in 10 natural shades (ie, undyed, never-gonna-bleed, straight-off-the-alpaca gorgeous). The colors are:

Talc, Bullrush, and Heartwood,

Walnut, Ghost Fern, and River Birch,

and Eucalyptus, Sycamore, Travertine, and Granite.

Have I gushed enough about this yarn?

Well. Let me tell you about the knitwear collection.

It’s a collection of 14 patterns designed by Pam Wynne and myself. The only guideline Susan imposed was that she wanted a colorwork book– we were otherwise left to our own devices, completely free to design what we wanted. I’d never designed a collection in collaboration before, but Pam was great to work with, and I had lots of fun planning the whole thing out with her. After grouping our ideas into chapters, we realized that our designs were arranged in increasing complexity.

That is to say: if you begin with the first pattern in the book, and knit straight through, cover to cover, the designs in this book will help you build your skills as you work until you are just about the most skillful, competent, amazing colorwork knitter this side of the Andes (the Peruvians, in my opinion, take the proverbial knitted cake).

I could go into crazy detail about the genesis of each design, or tell a cute story about what happened in each photo on the shoot, or maybe talk about how much I like the pants that a certain sweater is styled with, but that would be a bit too much birth story, and I have a feeling you’re pretty eager to see what we came up with. For now, I’m going to let our designs speak for themselves.

Egbertine hat and cowl, designed by Caroline Fryar, test-knit by Jennifer Britton and Jessica Dunsmore (respectively), modeled by Emily Karasz.

 Bessie, designed and modeled by Caroline Fryar, test-knit by Melanie Clark.

Herbie Hat and Mittens, designed by Pam Wynne, test-knit by Helen Elston and Erin Lucido (respectively), modeled by Emily Karasz.

Edie, designed, test-knit, and modeled by Pam Wynne.

Cora, designed by Caroline Fryar, test-knit by Marci Lavine Bloch, modeled by Caroline Fryar.

Here are all three of us sitting on a fence, swathed in alpaca and tweeds, as one does in the first week of June.

 

Amy & Emily, proving just how strongly beauty runs in the Karasz family.

Hattie, designed by Caroline Fryar, test-knit by Krysta Harty, modeled by Emily Karasz.

Ida Mae, designed by Pam Wynne, test-knit by Gail Defendorf, modeled by Amy Karasz.

Vera Marguerite tam and mittens, designed by Pam Wynne, test-knit by Nancy Harrington and Elizabeth Vores (respectively), and modeled by Emily Karasz and Pam Wynne (respectively).

 I’m allowing myself to gush (and use multiple photographs), because these last two are our capstone pieces. This is Maeby, designed and modeled by Pam Wynne, and test-knit by Eve Ramos & Daisy Blinn.

You look at it and think,Oh, wow, what great colorwork! And elbow patches!

and then you turn around and the sweater’s like,Bam! Drawstring funnel neck! Kangaroo pocket!and it’s everything you ever wanted in a sweater, ever.

I’ve already cast on for this sweater, because I want it something fierce.

Okay, and, lastly, this is Esther, designed, test-knit, and modeled by Caroline Fryar.

It’s a double-knit coat done in a traditional Swedish brocade pattern. There’s loads of i-cord trim, and an attached fair-isle scarf that grows out of the left lapel and wraps around the front to become the collar.

 Did I mention? The whole coat is double-knit!

And, just in case some of you live in some crazy dreamworld where there isn’t ample time to knit not one, but two coats (when it comes to double knitting, there’s the rub), the scarf is also offered as a stand-alone pattern. It is named Margaret.

I barely know where to begin with the thank-yous.

Susan came up with the yarn in the first place. Pam was a joy and an inspiration to work alongside, from inspiration photos to styling the garments on the shoot. Alison was a phenomenal technical editor. Caro kept us laughing throughout the several days she shot the garments. Our amazing team of test-knitters created each and everyone one of these garments, and our beautiful models sweated it out in their alpaca without a word of complaint. Zac anticipated our every need. Lauria helped us hold the whole thing together. Michelle gracefully put up with a thousand nick-of-time revisions, and made the book look super nice. And everyone who put up with me while coat-knitting reduced me to a shriveled and embittered husk of my usually-nice self– you know who you are.

Here you go, world. Here’s Herriot.

Introducing: Marlowe

It probably won’t surprise you to learn that we’re big readers of poetry here at the farm. Nor should it surprise you, then, to learn that we’re fans of pastoral poetry in particular, and that we award special bonus points to any poem that uses the word “Shepherd” in its title.

I’d like to share one of our newest yarns with you: Marlowe.

It’s pure poetry in yarn form. A worsted-weight merino/silk single– pause for a second and consider how soft that is– its beautiful and gentle variegations float from one color to the next like notes of a song. Thanks to the silk content, the yarn absolutely glows, and has a very satisfying weight and drape. Named for the poet, we chose similarly musical and pastoral names for the ten gorgeous colorways.

Madrigal, Melodious, and Riparian,

Carpe Diem, Stanza, and Arcadia,

and Georgiana, Allegro, Garland, and Sylvan.

We were so over-the-moon thrilled with the Sabine collection that Marie Grace designed for us this past Spring, we asked her to design another collection for us, this time using Marlowe.

The Marlowe collection she designed for us is just as pretty, feminine, cohesive, and wearable as we knew it would be– thank you, Marie Grace! Each of the projects requires 3 balls of Marlowe or less, so they’ll knit up quickly. The lace patterns were all kept deliberately simple in order to best complement the variegated yarn. I’d say that this collection is utterly perfect for knitters who’d like a fun taste of lace (and other fancy stitchwork), but who might not want to tangle (yet) will full-on lace knitting in a laceweight yarn.

The Cypress Accessories Set– a cowl, hat, and fingerless mitts in two lengths– in a mock-cable rib, test-knit by Debbie Palmer (the cowl, hat, and shorter mitts) and Beverly Katz (the longer mitts, pictured), modeled by Lisa Richey.

(Puppy not included).

Blaine, a lace-edged shaped wrap, test-knit in two different colors by Jen Kelley and Marie Grace Smith, modeled by Emily Karasz.

The Daphne Accessories Set– a hat, cowl (not pictured), and a long infinity scarf– in a traveling diagonal rib, test-knit by Susan Swanson, modeled by Emily Karasz.

Kenna, a simple lace-edged shawl, test-knit in two different colors by Chaitanya Muralidhara and Jennifer Bohlig, modeled by Amy Karasz.

Seneca, which can be worn buttoned-up as a cowl or left loose as a scarf, test-knit by Rachel McKinney, modeled by Amy Karasz.

Terra, a beautiful cowl in a honeycomb cable pattern, test-knit by Ainslie Hodges, modeled by Emily Karasz.

And, lastly, we have Sorrel, a scarf edged in lace, test-knit in two different colors by Marcy Jones and Marie Grace Smith, modeled by Amy Karasz.

Also, I would be absolutely remiss if I didn’t share the extra-special something extra that’s included in this pattern book. See, since the creation of the yarn line, we’ve wanted to make sure that the yarns and books reflect us– the way we work, live, and knit at the farm. And you know us– we love to cook only slightly less than we love to eat, which is why we’ve paired this collection with 5 of our most-requested farm recipes.

It’s highly likely that you, like us, are happiest sitting down to knit when there’s a pot simmering on the stove or something delicious baking in the oven. This wonderful trio of yarn, patterns, and recipes should keep you warm and cozy straight through the winter. You can find all seven designs on Ravelry, here.

Marlowe and the Juniper Moon Farm Marlowe pattern book should be available at any of these stockists starting in September. If you don’t see your LYS listed, ask the owner to bring it in by getting in touch with his or her KFI sales rep.

Again, an enormous thank-you, and congratulations on a job well done to our knitters (named above, with their garments), test-knitting coordinator, photographer, editors, models, stylists, and to everyone else who helped us bring you this collection. Putting together this post really has re-warmed my heart towards this collection and everyone involved in bringing it to life– I feel like shouting, look what we did, everyone!

Tomorrow’s collection– well, just make sure you’re sitting down when you read the post. It’s that good.

Findley Fall/Winter 2012

We’re very pleased to announce that Findley, our super-popular laceweight yarn, will be released in 10 gorgeous new colors this fall!

May I present:

Oyster, Dove, and Cocoa,

Garnet, Tyrian, and Mermaid,

and Rappahannock, Tiger Lily, Malachite, and Menemsha!

This makes a total of twenty-two solid colors (plus the eight variegated shades of Findley Dappled) from which you can knit your next lace project. I hope you love the new colors just as much as we do!

I’d also like to share with you the four free patterns that I’ve written to go along with the yarn. I wanted to design approachable, wearable pieces, but I also wanted to challenge my own ideas about what could be done with a laceweight yarn. I think you’ll find this collection fun to knit and lovely to wear– please enjoy!

Springer, a zip-up jacket in men’s and women’s sizes, worked in a slip-stitch pattern using Findley held doubled, test-knit by Gina Assetta.

Download the pattern here.

 Gambrel, a visually striking colorblocked cardigan that’s got a surprise to share– a ladder of dropped stitches down the spine!– test-knit by Sue Isenhart.

Download the pattern here.

Gable, a large rectangular wrap in Indian Cross-Stitch, test-knit by Deb Terrio. It’s a stunningly simple stitch pattern that, when used in a mass like this, really makes the Findley shine.

Download the pattern here.

and Coulter, a two-color reversible slouchy beanie in a dead-easy basketweave stitch, test-knit in two different sizes by Sarah Lebel van Vugt and Jessica Nelson.

Download the pattern here.

The biggest of thank-yous to our swift-stitching test knitters, lovely test-knitting coordinator, talented photographer, endlessly patient technical and general editors, beautiful model (my sister, Charlotte), sharp-eyed stylists, and to everyone else who helped us bring you this collection.

Now, what are you waiting for? Queue them up on Ravelry, download them here, and then get knitting!

Tomorrow, we’ll be showing off a brand-new yarn and a fun collection of accessories to go with it. Make sure not to miss it!