Yeah! My sweater is finished just in time for fall weather!
This is the sweater I started spinning for last year (details in my March post titled "A scarf for Spring and some colorful spinning"). The spinning uses a "fractal stripe" technique I learned from Janel Laidman in class at Madrona Fiber Arts Winter Retreat back in 2008 (see Spin-Off magazine, Summer 2007 for her article). It is fun and easy and gave me some fun (and sometimes unpredictable) striping on this sweater (thanks in part to the fabulous dye work by Lisa of Dicentra Designs).
colorway Cinnamon (my favorite)
colorway Madrona (my favorite)
(OK, it's true, I love them both)
And this is how it all began
I used an "unpattern" - the "Top-Down Pullover with Raglan Sleeves" by Karen Alfke to size, design, and construct the sweater. An "Unpattern" is essentially a generic recipe/knitting sequence, that you plug in your own sweater measurements, gauge, and design details. Then you do a little simple math, follow the clearly structured steps of construction, and away you go.
And now it's done. Cinnamon colorway at the top, and Madrona at the bottom.
I love love love this sweater!
Thanks Janel, Lisa, and Karen!
On a small island in Puget Sound, Farm Nana wrangles the dear wee beasties (Pygmy Goats, Pygora Goats, Alpacas, cats, and a swan), throws herself headlong into the fiber arts, and dyes/knits/felts/weaves/quilts/spins her way through life, the universe, and everything.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Friday, September 17, 2010
The End of the Summer Blues
Well, this is the summer wrap-up, so it's going to be a long one!
This is so weird - blue is not one of my colors, I'm a fan of fall colors - oranges, golds, olive greens, warm browns - but here I find myself with a summer's worth of blue projects! (OK, some of them tend towards green, and there's a bit of gold and purple here and there, but still . . .)
Part 1 - spinning blue
A Crosspatch Creations Signature Blend layered batt with lovely textures of Romney wool, Bombyx silk, and Tussah silk (colorway "Gwen and Her Daughters").
A Crosspatch Creations Rainbow Roving blended in sweet tweedyness with lovely soft CVM wool (California Varigated Mutant sheep - it's fine, really, they're not radioactive or anything), Tussah silk, and silk noil (colorway "Victoria into the Woods" - OK, it's green - but it's got some blue bits in it!).
Tussah silk in the "Kelp" colorway by Tactile (love this stuff)
Bombyx silk in the "Evergreen" colorway by Chasing Rainbows Dyeworks (sorry about the glare, that's the shine of Bombyx silk for you)
And a 50/50 blend of Merino and Bombyx in "Scarab" colorway from Chasing Rainbows Dyeworks
Now I just have two decisions to make
1. Am I going to ply these or use them as singles?
2. What am I going to make? (I'm seeing some kind of a warm textured cardigan, maybe)
Part 2 - Weaving Blue
Rigid Heddle Weaving (Schacht Cricket loom) - Log Cabin Weave
This pattern is so much fun! I learned it from the Schacht Spindle Newsletter (scroll down the linked page to Spring 2005 - the instructions are for a table runner, but it's easy enough to narrow it down for a scarf).
I used some yummy O-Wool Balance (50/50 Merino and Cotton) in Gold and Teal
Here's the warp threading pattern (bottom shed is just the opposite)
and when you weave it with the same sequence of colors in the weft, you get this
Because of the threading pattern, you end up with a double color at each block transition, which creates this cool outline/shadow thing.
Weaving tech - 8 dent reed, 7 inches in the reed, 56 ends (7 groups of 8 ends in pattern), 6 foot warp on loom,
Off loom - shrunk to 6 1/2 inches wide and 5 feet long (including finished fringe - twisted and tied)
Part 3 - Cardweaving Blue
This is a sampler (lesson 1 on Candace Crockett's DVD - it's out of print, but was able to borrow it from the Seattle Weaver's Guild) that turned into my banjo strap. Used 5/2 cotton.
All of these patterns come from the same threading (warp) of the cards!
even the back looks cool
So here's some basic cardweaving - You thread your warp through the cards in a pattern, and tie one end up to some immovable object (the knob to the TV cabinet works well) and the other end attached to your own belt like so (OMG, I'm even wearing blue clothes!)
Spread the cards a bit and turn them one quarter turn - either towards yourself or away from yourself, depending on the pattern (doesn't it look like my hands are turning really fast?)
Then, after running the cards forward and back to clear the shed, push the shuttle on through
Use the shuttle to press the weft firmly into place, and turn the cards again. Then, with the weft locked in place, snug it up to even out the selvedge edge.
To turn it into a banjo strap, I had to narrow it down to fit under the keys around the "pot", so I dropped out a card (4 threads) on each side every 4 turns (or so, I may have lost count here and there)
And here's how that works on the banjo
then I did a fun little 4 ply braid on all the loose ends
And then you go to American Banjo Camp where you meet a fellow weaver who wants to make a strap, too!
This is so weird - blue is not one of my colors, I'm a fan of fall colors - oranges, golds, olive greens, warm browns - but here I find myself with a summer's worth of blue projects! (OK, some of them tend towards green, and there's a bit of gold and purple here and there, but still . . .)
Part 1 - spinning blue
A Crosspatch Creations Signature Blend layered batt with lovely textures of Romney wool, Bombyx silk, and Tussah silk (colorway "Gwen and Her Daughters").
A Crosspatch Creations Rainbow Roving blended in sweet tweedyness with lovely soft CVM wool (California Varigated Mutant sheep - it's fine, really, they're not radioactive or anything), Tussah silk, and silk noil (colorway "Victoria into the Woods" - OK, it's green - but it's got some blue bits in it!).
Tussah silk in the "Kelp" colorway by Tactile (love this stuff)
Bombyx silk in the "Evergreen" colorway by Chasing Rainbows Dyeworks (sorry about the glare, that's the shine of Bombyx silk for you)
And a 50/50 blend of Merino and Bombyx in "Scarab" colorway from Chasing Rainbows Dyeworks
Now I just have two decisions to make
1. Am I going to ply these or use them as singles?
2. What am I going to make? (I'm seeing some kind of a warm textured cardigan, maybe)
Part 2 - Weaving Blue
Rigid Heddle Weaving (Schacht Cricket loom) - Log Cabin Weave
This pattern is so much fun! I learned it from the Schacht Spindle Newsletter (scroll down the linked page to Spring 2005 - the instructions are for a table runner, but it's easy enough to narrow it down for a scarf).
I used some yummy O-Wool Balance (50/50 Merino and Cotton) in Gold and Teal
Here's the warp threading pattern (bottom shed is just the opposite)
and when you weave it with the same sequence of colors in the weft, you get this
Because of the threading pattern, you end up with a double color at each block transition, which creates this cool outline/shadow thing.
Weaving tech - 8 dent reed, 7 inches in the reed, 56 ends (7 groups of 8 ends in pattern), 6 foot warp on loom,
Off loom - shrunk to 6 1/2 inches wide and 5 feet long (including finished fringe - twisted and tied)
Part 3 - Cardweaving Blue
This is a sampler (lesson 1 on Candace Crockett's DVD - it's out of print, but was able to borrow it from the Seattle Weaver's Guild) that turned into my banjo strap. Used 5/2 cotton.
All of these patterns come from the same threading (warp) of the cards!
even the back looks cool
So here's some basic cardweaving - You thread your warp through the cards in a pattern, and tie one end up to some immovable object (the knob to the TV cabinet works well) and the other end attached to your own belt like so (OMG, I'm even wearing blue clothes!)
Spread the cards a bit and turn them one quarter turn - either towards yourself or away from yourself, depending on the pattern (doesn't it look like my hands are turning really fast?)
Then, after running the cards forward and back to clear the shed, push the shuttle on through
Use the shuttle to press the weft firmly into place, and turn the cards again. Then, with the weft locked in place, snug it up to even out the selvedge edge.
To turn it into a banjo strap, I had to narrow it down to fit under the keys around the "pot", so I dropped out a card (4 threads) on each side every 4 turns (or so, I may have lost count here and there)
And here's how that works on the banjo
then I did a fun little 4 ply braid on all the loose ends
And then you go to American Banjo Camp where you meet a fellow weaver who wants to make a strap, too!
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Summer snippets
Wow! Summer is slipping away already, so here are just a few quick snippits of the last month-
shearing alpacas and sheep
finding tadpoles in the frogpond
Granddaughter visits for a camping trip to the ocean,
and I do a little weaving here and there, but you'll have to wait for my next post to see what I've been up to.
happy summer!
Thursday, June 17, 2010
finished cardwoven strap and some random nature photos
Here's my first cardweaving finally finished. Not long enough to be a banjo strap, but pretty and easy (mostly) and fun (cardweaving details in April post).
The front and the back are really different from each other, and I like them both!
Random nature photos (birds, baby spiders, flowers, trees, and more).
First up - birds:
So I've been going through bird feeder suet at an alarming rate (putting out a new one every day!) and thought I would just do a bird count of suet eaters - this is just in one hour of watching (morning).
One large Flicker
Two sweet little Downy Woodpeckers
Four bold Black Headed Grosbeaks (males and females or maybe youngsters)
Five beeping Red Breasted Nuthatches (this might be a youngster - he let me get really close - I think all the parents are teaching their kids how to use the feeders)
Seven greedy Stellars Jays
Many (sorry, too many, too fast to count) fast moving Chickadees (seen here with Downy)
Well, I guess that explains the suet consumption (yes, I do have 3 of the suet feeders out now!)
Next - Baby Spiders: They are everywhere! Every gate has a little hatching (apparently the gate latch provides nice protection for the eggs)
And this is what happens if you accidentally leave your garden gloves out by the compost bins overnight
And now a few landscape items:
Vine Maple setting seeds
Dogwoods flowering
sweet sweet scented monster peonies
And finally, what nature photo shoot would be complete without a wee little spotted Bambi
His mom just parks him on the back lawn while she forages (notice there are no photos of my rose flowers)
(what rose flowers?)
Well, tomorrow is shearing day for the Alpaca boys. More later.
The front and the back are really different from each other, and I like them both!
Random nature photos (birds, baby spiders, flowers, trees, and more).
First up - birds:
So I've been going through bird feeder suet at an alarming rate (putting out a new one every day!) and thought I would just do a bird count of suet eaters - this is just in one hour of watching (morning).
One large Flicker
Two sweet little Downy Woodpeckers
Four bold Black Headed Grosbeaks (males and females or maybe youngsters)
Five beeping Red Breasted Nuthatches (this might be a youngster - he let me get really close - I think all the parents are teaching their kids how to use the feeders)
Seven greedy Stellars Jays
Many (sorry, too many, too fast to count) fast moving Chickadees (seen here with Downy)
Well, I guess that explains the suet consumption (yes, I do have 3 of the suet feeders out now!)
Next - Baby Spiders: They are everywhere! Every gate has a little hatching (apparently the gate latch provides nice protection for the eggs)
And this is what happens if you accidentally leave your garden gloves out by the compost bins overnight
And now a few landscape items:
Vine Maple setting seeds
Dogwoods flowering
sweet sweet scented monster peonies
And finally, what nature photo shoot would be complete without a wee little spotted Bambi
His mom just parks him on the back lawn while she forages (notice there are no photos of my rose flowers)
(what rose flowers?)
Well, tomorrow is shearing day for the Alpaca boys. More later.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Rigid Heddle Double Heddle Double Weave!
So here's my crazy double heddle doubleweave sampler!
Did this on my Schacht Flip Rigid Heddle loom using double heddles
(Cascade 220 yarn and 10 dent reeds)
What is this crazy thing? How did I get here?
Started out by warping the loom with two heddles.
First, all the threads are pulled through the slots in heddle one (4 threads to a slot - two light and two dark) - warping from the front of the loom here!
then every other light thread is pulled through the hole in the reed/heddle (OK, on a rigid heddle loom the heddle is the reed too, so when warping, heddle=reed).
Then heddle/reed number two gets sleyed (threaded) with all threads coming through the slots, and every other dark colored thread into the holes.
This dark/light thing is just so I can see what the heck I'm doing (having never done either double heddle or double weave before).
And here it is all warped up and ready to go, looking really too dense and packed with threads, but one set (light) will be woven as a bottom layer and one set (dark) will be the top layer!
So here's how it works:
I've used a pick-up stick to separate out every other light color thread, which then drops down into an extra lower shed when the pick-up stick is flipped up on end (this is looking from the back of the loom)
Then a simple front heddle down gives the second shed for the light color/lower level of the weave
I pushed the stick shuttle in there so you could see the shed - below all the other threads!
Then for the top layer, the first dark thread shed is created by the rear heddle rising up
and finally, another pick-up stick (every other dark thread) and an extra shed pops up when the pick-up stick is flipped up on end (this is looking from the back of the loom again)
So they don't get done in that order necessarily, it depends on what your final product will be. Anyhow, you end up with 4 different sheds!
So this is what happens:
This is a section of double width doubleweave, and I've just pulled the bottom layer over to the side so you can see what's happening. With this technique, I can weave a 30 inch wide shawl on my 15 inch loom!
And here's the two layers woven with separate wefts and kept separate, followed by a bit where the separate wefts wrap around each other at the edge so the two different pieces are joined.
(I switched the weft colors to show the join more clearly)
And then, using a single weft, joining on both sides to make a tube
Then joining at both sides and in the middle to make two connected tubes (stuck my hand in the big tube and stuffed fingers into the small tubes so you could see that they are open inside)
And then, by switching the top and bottom layers, making widthwise tubes
Then a completely closed tube with a little slot opening in the middle of one side
the patterned area on either side is both layers woven together into a single thick dense layer.
and finally, back to the single weft double wide with a little hemstitching to finish.
And that's my sampler.
Some parts were a little confusing at first, but overall it just wasn't that hard - thanks to my source materials:
1. HandWoven magazine, March/April 2010, "Rigid-heddle doubleweave" by Jane Patrick
2. Textures and Patterns for the Rigid Heddle Loom by Betty Davenport, pgs. 58 - 60
And now I have something to share at my new rigid heddle study group on Sunday!
Did this on my Schacht Flip Rigid Heddle loom using double heddles
(Cascade 220 yarn and 10 dent reeds)
What is this crazy thing? How did I get here?
Started out by warping the loom with two heddles.
First, all the threads are pulled through the slots in heddle one (4 threads to a slot - two light and two dark) - warping from the front of the loom here!
then every other light thread is pulled through the hole in the reed/heddle (OK, on a rigid heddle loom the heddle is the reed too, so when warping, heddle=reed).
Then heddle/reed number two gets sleyed (threaded) with all threads coming through the slots, and every other dark colored thread into the holes.
This dark/light thing is just so I can see what the heck I'm doing (having never done either double heddle or double weave before).
And here it is all warped up and ready to go, looking really too dense and packed with threads, but one set (light) will be woven as a bottom layer and one set (dark) will be the top layer!
So here's how it works:
I've used a pick-up stick to separate out every other light color thread, which then drops down into an extra lower shed when the pick-up stick is flipped up on end (this is looking from the back of the loom)
Then a simple front heddle down gives the second shed for the light color/lower level of the weave
I pushed the stick shuttle in there so you could see the shed - below all the other threads!
Then for the top layer, the first dark thread shed is created by the rear heddle rising up
and finally, another pick-up stick (every other dark thread) and an extra shed pops up when the pick-up stick is flipped up on end (this is looking from the back of the loom again)
So they don't get done in that order necessarily, it depends on what your final product will be. Anyhow, you end up with 4 different sheds!
So this is what happens:
This is a section of double width doubleweave, and I've just pulled the bottom layer over to the side so you can see what's happening. With this technique, I can weave a 30 inch wide shawl on my 15 inch loom!
And here's the two layers woven with separate wefts and kept separate, followed by a bit where the separate wefts wrap around each other at the edge so the two different pieces are joined.
(I switched the weft colors to show the join more clearly)
And then, using a single weft, joining on both sides to make a tube
Then joining at both sides and in the middle to make two connected tubes (stuck my hand in the big tube and stuffed fingers into the small tubes so you could see that they are open inside)
And then, by switching the top and bottom layers, making widthwise tubes
Then a completely closed tube with a little slot opening in the middle of one side
the patterned area on either side is both layers woven together into a single thick dense layer.
and finally, back to the single weft double wide with a little hemstitching to finish.
And that's my sampler.
Some parts were a little confusing at first, but overall it just wasn't that hard - thanks to my source materials:
1. HandWoven magazine, March/April 2010, "Rigid-heddle doubleweave" by Jane Patrick
2. Textures and Patterns for the Rigid Heddle Loom by Betty Davenport, pgs. 58 - 60
And now I have something to share at my new rigid heddle study group on Sunday!