Tag Archives: Knitting

Yarned by You: Marlowe Gallery

With the gorgeous glow and drape from the merino silk blend, it’s no wonder that Marlowe, like Herriot, made Ravelry’s Popular New Yarn list! Unfortunately it must not be new enough to have stayed up, as it’s gone, but I saw it! This worsted-weight variegated yarn is sold in 153 yard balls – the perfect amount for a one-skein hat or cowl!

Below liped knit up Cypress, especially designed for the JMF Marlowe yarn and pattern line by Marie Grace. It was knit in recommended colorway, 10 Sylvan. I love her slightly mischievous grin!

lizabee  owns Purl’s Yarn Emporium in Asheville, NC and knit this Drop Stitch Scarf as a shop sample. I love the fact sheet that talks about Susie so people can get to know how kick-butt she is! Wouldn’t it be great if you knew more about each company before you bought the product?

The scrumptious Anabella’s Cowl was made by tnhausfraus. I’m not typically a cowl person, but this looks so soft and silky, I could see myself becoming one!

jdunsmore whipped up this cute little hat, called Sarah’s Slouch. I asked her to take another photo so that you could see the hat (as the original was just a small portion), and she gladly obliged! Thanks, Jessica!

This Swirl Cable Hat, knit in Sylvan, was made by tricotsceletes. Whom it is for seems to be a mystery. Perhaps it will get pulled out of the gift bin to be given to a lucky recipient this holiday season!

alohalizzy knit this Daphne Cowl (again designed by Marie Grace Smith for JMF’s yarn and pattern line) in just a day! I bet that the texture helps to trap in air and keep your neck nice and warm! You can find it on display at her LYS – Northfield Yarn, Northfield, MN

If you’re making a project in Marlowe, be sure to link it on Ravelry so we can find it and admire it!

You can find Marlowe and the rest of the Juniper Moon Farm Yarns in a LYS near you by clicking here then clicking “find a store,” inputting your zip code and selecting Juniper Moon Farm as the yarn brand.

Black Friday Crafternoon

"Holiday creep" seems to be a popular thing to complain about these days, and with good reason. I do have to admit that I'm not particularly bothered by stores rushing the seasons -- while I may not act on anything...

Knitted: Red Beret, Also, Knitting in Action!

So, cripes, about a month ago I went on a wonderful camping trip with some friends of mine to a place that’s very dear to me– I mean, it’s where I go for nearly every fall break.

Anyway, because one of the ladies I went with is 1) a terrific photographer who 2) planned on shooting a few rolls over the weekend, I made sure to oh so casually wear pretty much exclusively knitwear. I ruined the all-the-wool-all-the-time effect by layering a windbreaker over the whole ensemble, but, hey, it was cold: we walked up along the ridges all weekend, got hella windburn, and woke up with our tent encrusted in ice.

Nic took lots of photos, but I selfishly picked out the ones featuring my knitting, since that’s what this blog is all about. Also, to pre-explain: the Highlands are home to a bunch of sweet lil’ pon’s.

So, um, there’s my hat, doing a great job as a hat.

Guest starring Cormo Rusticus,

and an extra pair of gloves that came in handy,

and my pretty-much-all-time-favorite-knitted-thing, the Peerie Flooers vest.

All photos © Nic Anthony

A Clue about My Current Project

“By the end of her school days, a girl from a fishing family was expected to be able to knit a sweater for her brother or father, particularly if, for some reason, her mother was unable to do so. At the very latest, once she caught the eye of a particular young man (“when we starting courting”), a girl would begin to knitting her first sweater. She already would have acquired the basic skills of circular knitting at school and at home by making socks and mittens on a set of four or five double pointed needles. Now all she must do was transfer this skill from short needles to long ones.”

“In most cases, a girl’s mother was her only tutor, because each woman, even one’s own neighbor or aunt, protected her knowledge and experience as her personal wealth and property.”

“Simple cables stand for the ropes used on their boats, diamonds for net meshes, horizontal lines for ladders or the many steps that people have to walk from the village above the North Sea down to the boats on the beach.”

–From Cables, Diamonds, & Herringbone: Secrets of Knitting Traditional Fishermen’s Sweaters by Sabine Domnick.

I Heart WOVEMBER!

For the past week, I’ve looked out the window of the coffee shop where I work and watched a beech tree strip itself, top-down, of its leaves. Winter is coming and no mistake.

It’s a month to revel in the particularly human pleasure of being proof against, which is why it’s so apt, in November, to celebrate WOOL in all its forms and uses. Even if it weren’t for WOVEMBER, I’d still be wearing wool in approximately five ways (socks, pullover, jacket, hat, scarf) every day of the month.

I’ve had two pieces of mine featured on the WOVEMBER site this past week–blog posts, both from this and the JMF blog–and I’d be criminally remiss if I didn’t call attention to them. One is about the Maryland Wool Pool, and the other is about Shearing School. It’s fantastic company to be in–I’m humbled and grateful (and proud and excited!) to be included. Thank you so much, Felix, and all my best for a warm & woolly Wovember!


Yarned By You: Designed by You!

So far we’ve seen lovely posts featuring hand-knit/spun things by you. But where did all these patterns come from? Some of them came from designers that JMF has hired to design specifically to pair with the characteristics of the yarn. Sometimes an adventurous knitter saw a pattern that they liked and paired it with a JMF yarn instead of the recommended one. Sometimes, a knitter had a need to fill and some JMF yarn on hand and improvised a pattern.

Today, we’re going to look at patterns that have been designed for JMF yarns that you might not have seen before. These are all patterns that you can buy (or download for free) that were created by independent designers. Some of them might do this as a part of their knitting hobby, some of them might be doing it as a way to make a living, some of them might have just made something up and thought that there might be others out there that might like to make it, too. Whatever the reason for making these patterns, I’m happy that they chose to use JMF yarn and I’m happy that I can share them with you!

Winter Branches was designed by Jenna Swanson. Knit in Chadwick, colorway Mercury, it is a hat that either a man or a woman could wear. I particularly like the attractive way the decreases for the top of the hat work with the cable pattern.

The Hope Grows Cowl is a cute and quick knit designed to be worked up in Willa (Colorway Norwell). Stacey Pope is donating all proceeds to finding a cure for Neuromyelitis optica (NMO). She also designed a matching scarf.

Ellen Stratton’ Hearts on a String Shawl in Findley’s poppy colorway seems like the perfect way to show someone that you’re thinking of them and to keep them wrapped up in lots of love even when you can’t be there.

Picket Fence on a Country Road is another hat designed to use warm and snuggly Chadwick. Designed by Jennifer Cox, the stranded knitting is sure to keep you warm on even the coldest of January days.

Frozen Spires Cowl was designed by Beverly S, of yarn intercept designs for Chadwick’s swimming pool. It is a quick knit and includes both written and charted instructions.

This delicate lace shawl was designed by Adrienne Ku and is based off of Elizabeth Zimmerman’s Pi Shawl. Learning Curve was designed to as a skill-building project.

Up to this point I’ve featured designs from JMF’s fall yarn lines. (The spring yarn line designs will have to wait for another post!) But even though this next pattern is designed with Yearling, right now seems like the perfect time of year to wear it, so I’m including it.

The Cardiff Bay Ponytail hat is a good example of a designer (Beth Ann Beck) seeing a good use for a yarn that isn’t “in season.” The cotton/merino blend of Yearling is perfect for wicking moisture away from your face/hair while trapping in heat and being nice and soft.

If you’re interested in finding any of these designs (all of which can be purchased / downloaded right now online!), you should click the pictures to be taken to the ravelry pattern page.

Working On: Ben’s Mittens, A Red Hat

Well, it’s been a while since I showed you what I’ve been knitting on.

I made this nice little red beret over four days in October, using some really beautiful Rowan Fine Tweed I bought at this summer at Knitting Sisters.

And for my friend Ben, I worked on a pair of mittens from a pattern book from the 1940′s, provided scanned by the V&A (WWII era; Essentials for the Forces). I guess this comes as no surprise, but I took them for a test drive (well, bike-ride) in the cold the other night, and was very impressed with how warm they were. Hands are still pretty much the same, 60 years later.


In the Wild

I am not sure how many of you know this about me–but despite my inclination toward loud colors, I tend to be a bit shy. It doesn’t help that I am a little claustrophobic in large groups, but even sometimes in manageable situations, I hold back even when I know I shouldn’t.

For instance, last night I went to a high school musical in a small Kansas town with a friend of mine. She had some business there that day, and I was just along for the ride. This friend of mine currently has pink hair. (I am so jealous). We got a some stares. Pink hair in a small Kansas town is somewhat of an anomaly. So, apparently, are Daybreaks. While admittedly my friend’s hair garnered more attention, my Daybreak garnered at least two, prolonged examining stares.


Daybreak in the Wild

I hope it was the Daybreak. I can’t think of any other reason for random women to stare at my neck. On the whole it was a set of triumphant moments for me. I have a lot of fiber arts friends, and I love them, but I only have a couple of fellow Stephanie Pearl-McPhee definition-of-the-word Knitter friends in real life–people who would recognize the Daybreak and say, “Oh my god, I love your Daybreak!” But I had at least two–TWO–stares that said, “Oh my god, I want to talk to you about your knitting, but holy heck I know everyone in this town and you, miss knitter, are a complete stranger!” They were complicated stares, I assure you.

I love spotting hand-knitting in the wild. Yesterday, it was fun to be spotted. I wish these ladies would have stopped and talked. Not only could I have bragged a little bit about how I dyed the yarn myself, but I really love meeting Knitters. Finding kindred spirits out in the wild really is one of the things I like best about knitting–because more often than not, if you see someone wearing a Daybreak (or other pattern-gone-viral) the wearer knit it themselves–and no matter what else, you know you have something in common with that person. So next time, I hope I have the courage to say, “Have you made a Daybreak, too?” when I catch someone’s eyes glued to my neck.

Make it Better: Keeping Warm After Sandy

I admit, for the past two weeks, I’ve been spending most of my free time reading Hurricane Sandy coverage. Absolutely everything the Times and the Atlantic have to say, and lots of pieces about the pervasive inequality laid bare by the hurricane, what people are doing to help one another, plus a good bit of let’s-process-how-we’re-feeling (which, well, maybe a little indulgent of me).

There’ve been plenty of opportunities to donate money (hey, thanks, Wells Fargo, for making it so easy! You asked me right at the ATM, point-blank, and how could I say no?), but I was so glad to read, this past weekend, that there’s a way to contribute knitted goods, too.

Brett Bara and Natalie Soud have come together to create:

I’m going to just lift some text real quick:

HOW TO HELP

MAKE IT. Simply knit, crochet or sew a warm garment or blanket–items most needed are hats, socks, gloves/mittens, scarves, sweaters, and blankets. Use one of the quick and easy free patterns we found below, or any pattern you like. If you’d like to include other small items to help the relief effort, feel free to donate another warm garment (new or gently used, please). We are hearing reports that general clothing is no longer needed, so please restrict your donations to warm winter items only.
SEND IT. Send your finished item to Natalie Soud, 310 West Broadway, New York, NY 10013 as soon as possible. We want to start distributing warm goods within a week or less, so stitch something quick and send it off! Our volunteers will deliver the items to various points in and around New York City. (Although we’ll start delivering immediately, we’ll be accepting donations for the near future, so free free to send projects whenever they’re complete.)
CRAFTALONG. Share what you’ve made and help spread the word! Please, please, please blog, Tweet, Facebook, Instagram, and Pin that you’re participating in the Sandy Craftalong as soon as you can (like today!) so that we can get as many hands stitching as possible. Then, when you finish your project, share what you’ve made by posting it on your own blog and on our Facebook page at facebook.com/sandycraftalong. Also remember to use the tags  #makeitbetter and #sandycraftalong

Here is the thing: I have not and do not ever enter the tricky world of knitting-for-charity, because, well, Pamela Wynne really has said it best in this encapsulation: Charity is always political, and it’s always about power. And, as a rule, I’m going to steer way way clear of that particular ball of wax. However, she goes on to say that charitable knitting & crafting do get some things right:

For one thing, charitable knitting has the potential to make the personal political, to create spaces not only for sharing, compassion, and cross-class solidarity, but also for critical consciousness and social support in a world where women’s lives are too often marked by violence, victimization, and isolation…We knit when we encounter the violence, poverty, and loss that are endemic to modern, white supremacist, heteropatriarchal, capitalist societies.

And, as Laurie Penny points out in the New Statesman and Sarah Jaffe notes in Jacobin, it’s entirely appropriate to link the “violence, poverty, and loss” out in the Rockaways to that which we’re accustomed to seeing only in the third world (and, since the “juddering crisis of capitalism” in 2008, we’re increasingly used to seeing at home):

Crisis is what people in the United States have been living with for at least four years. Active emergency, turning people out of their homes and into the cold, destroying lives. It’s not crass to compare a climate disaster to a juddering crisis of capitalism, because the two are connected, not least because those most responsible are also those most likely to be cosily tucked away in gated compounds shrugging their shoulders when the storm hits. Like the crash, Hurricane Sandy hit the poorest hardest, smashing through Staten Island and the Rockaways while the lights stayed on on the Upper East Side.

I’m really, really worried about how poor people in New York are doing in the cold (shoot, for that matter, I’m also worried about how Syrian refugees will do this winter), so, for Sandy, I’m going to cross that line–risk the intimate tangle of charitable knitting, gendered morality, and class privilege–in order to work some utterly practical and apotropaic magic. As Brett says in her post announcing the Craftalong:

If there’s anything knitters, crocheters and sewers are good at, it’s making warm things.

Amen to that!

I have an enormous pine chest full of knitwear, a good lot of it intended as Christmas gifts, and therefore never worn. I’m sending it all: gloves, scarves, hats, a sweater (or two), and socks. It’s a considerable-sized box, and I am so grateful for the chance to be able to send it–to know that they’ll be able to make the life of a faraway stranger a little bit warmer, a little bit more comfortable. You should consider doing the same.


UPDATED Yarned by You: Share Yarns

It’s that time of year again! When Susie is shipping Spring 2012 shares to shareholders excited or surprised (if they forgot that they purchased one!) to get them. There’s been lots of talk on the Ravelry group about what to make with these share yarns, so I thought today I’d show what other people have done with their previous shares to give you some ideas!

Featured below are all spring yarn shares. The spring shares are all 100% pure cormo goodness direct from the farm animals and by Susie’s hard-working hands. The yarn produced is a labor of love, filled with heart-ache, joy, hard-work and patience. How many of the sheep that produced this yarn did Susie sit beside while they gave birth to tiny (or huge! Alabama, I’m looking at you!) baby lambs destined to also create this lovely yarn.

With each share, I like to think about what yearlings added their first clip into the lot. For the Spring 2012 shares just mailed out, it was the sheep named after birds (born Spring 2011) that were shorn for the first time! Robin, Wren, Peregrine! (Large baby) Emu! Indigo Bunting and his twin, Scarlet Tanager! I think about the conversations I had with many of the knitters whose work is featured in this post. It’s lovely that so many of them are active on the Ravelry group and we can all talk about the impending babies!

Speaking of babies, ElysaWolfe knit this in threes: baby cardigan for HowdyPandowdy’s much-anticipated baby girl. This Spring 2011 colorway is pistachio. Fortunately while we’re waiting for new babies to be born, HowdyPandowdy keeps us up-to-date with her own picture posts of her darling girl!

And because this sweater now fits the sweetheart it was made for, here’s a photo! (Do you see the blanket in the background? That was one of the specially woven blankets from the Babydoll Southdowns on the farm. HowdyPandowdy snatched one up and I’m completely jealous!)

CraftyHistorian used her undyed Spring 2009 share to knit this lovely, just-enough-lace-to-keep-you-entertained Peabody:

Flarkin put up a poll to let the people decide what she should knit next. The people elected the Wood Hollow Vest in her Spring 2011 share, colorway Nantucket. (I happened to be one of the people that voted in the majority!) I think democracy worked well here!

SusanM has been without power since Hurricane Sandy hit last Monday. It just came back on a few hours ago. She has had a lovely sense of humor about it all though, and I’d like to think that her son’s been keeping warm in the Staghorn Aran Second Edition sweater she whipped up for him in time for last St. Patrick’s Day. (I know you’ve been dreaming about this sweater since you saw a sneak peek last week!)

In addition to SarahVV being an incredibly kind person, she also has terrific taste in sweaters. This Dark and Stormy is anything but dark and stormy, but is a perfect match for her Spring 2011 Nantucket share yarn!

Trinknitty’s Spring 2009 yarn share became this lovely Textured Shawl Recipe. I’ve been eying this pattern for awhile and with the Nor’easter blowing outside my window, it seems like it would be perfect to wrap around myself and keep out the drafty winds seeping in from the windows.

SarahVV does not seem to suffer as much as other people from Pattern-Paralysis when it comes to her shares. I know plenty of people (myself included!) who just can’t find the perfect pattern for the share yarn. Here’s her Tea Leaves knit from her Spring 2010 share in this cheerful blue!

Finally, I’d like to end with a pattern that was made specifically for the farm. Back when Juniper Moon Farm was Martha’s Vineyard Fiber Farm, Emily Johnson created this lovely sweater, Ethel Mildred Ferguson, for her Family Trunk Project. Check out her blog for the story behind the sweater and the project.

I hope that if you’re just receiving your Spring 2012 share that this post gives you a few ideas of what lovely thing your yarn can become. If you’re having cormo-sweater envy and need to satisfy yourself with a definitely-not-instant-gratification-purchase (remember, the share names are for when the wool is clipped and it takes time for the mill to process the fiber), you can become a shareholder here. Up for sale right now are 2013 Spring Cormo Shares and 2013 Spring Colored Flock Shares.

And Susie brought back half shares, so if a full share is more than you can commit to, you can try it out with a half share!