Thursday, September 18, 2008

Breaking the one sock syndrome


Okay I admit, for years the whole sock thing has totally defeated me. I've tried and tried to knit socks. There's the green socks for Daughter No. 2 and the blue socks for the ex....... Got one of each plus one lovely blue and tweed slipper somewhere in my WIP's. But not two.

It's hard knitting socks. There's all these peculiar instructions and they keep talking about turning the heel and heel flaps. Weird stuff, not very intelligble to this crocheter. But then ..........

My spinning buddy, Ruth, turned up with this fantastic book! Crochet patterns for socks. It's great and it has heaps of ideas around two basic patterns one for 5ply or sport weight and one for worsted weight. It also has a very nice lace pattern. The book is called Learn to Crochet Socks by Kathy Wesley. It is American and uses their terminology but it doesn't assume any knowledge and includes instructions.

I made the basic sport sock pattern and it was sooooooo easy. This is the yarn is used.


The apricot yarn is left over from a baby jumper and is Patons Big Baby.
The multi coloured yarn came from my raid, I mean, shopping excursion, at First Editions in Euroa.



The first half of the first sock seemed to take forever because the yarn is a little finer than sport weight so I had to do extra rows. The band is crocheted sideways, going into the back loop of the stitch which creates a lovely ribbed effect.



The multi coloured yarn is actually a sock yarn and it has a lovely spongy feel - probably from the nylon in it. It bought an extra 100 grams of this undyed and next guild meeting I'll having a go at doing self striping yarn - like the lovely Opal sock yarn in my stash on Ravelry.

Once I got on the heel shaping on the socks, it was easy peasy. Okay, I did have to frog it once. The extra rows didn't match the pattern, but it was easy to fix. I just needed to see it first to work it out. Here are my finished socks. I really like the way the multicoloured wool pools the colours. It creates random patterns, nice serendipity!



They fit really well, and I have long queue of people wanting a pair. Sister Jay gave me money for birthday fibre at First Editions, so she's first cab off the rank! I finished spinning the yarn for her socks today and will post pics and a new post when it's dry.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Suzie moves in.



WoooHoooo. I've finally bought my new wheel and she is beautiful! Her name is Suzieb and she is a Majacraft Suzie Professional. I also bought a wild flyer kit and head and ordered a lace kit. I've been very flat out and haven't had as much time to spin as I would have liked but I've spun some very fine possum and merino, some fine merino, a medium yarn and I finished the spinning the yarn for a new pair of socks last night. It still has to be plyed - I think I want to Navaho Ply it. Will do a trial tonight to see if it will be fine enough.
The top picture is Suzie set up and ready to go. This picture is Suzieb folded up ready for a car trip.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Spiral Beanie




This started out as a bit of playing around. I was trying out some of the shapes from "Freeformations" using the leftover yarn from the scarf and some baby yarn. I really liked the look of it and it was already a flat circle shape so I just kept going into the classic beanie. The spiral effect isn't really obvious to a casual glance but it shows up beautifully from the top or from the rolled up sides. I love spirals and I'll definitely play with this shape some more.




Ruth wanted it to be long and a bit wider than normal so I added a few more increases than I normally would. She has lots of hair and likes to stuff it under her beanies!!! I think this would felt well if I made this again because it's big. Hmm...maybe a spiral bag would be good.









I think the scarf and the hat look great together as my lovely model shows. Ruth wore them when we went to Bendigo for the Sheep and Wool Show and we got lots of compliments so that was nice.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Ruth's Scarf


This is a current favorite. I love the way it came together. I wove the scarf on my Ashford Knitters Loom using Ashford Tekapo and Naturally Hand Knit's Aspire DK. I used a mixture of both in the warp and the weft.


This created a lovely random tartan pattern as the Aspire picked up the crossovers. Aspire is a wool/alpaca mix - very soft - that is spun to resemble a hand spun singles yarn. Both these yarns behaved beautifully and the colours are fantastic. Only problem was that the Site Supervisor i.e. Ruth, decided a beanie might be nice as well..............



The finished scarf modeled by our friend Nicky

Sunday, August 17, 2008

I'm back


Well it's been awhile. I just didn't really get into this properly, but hopefully now I will. I have lots of things to post about. Ruth's hat and scarf, Kim's poncho, Lina's Hat, Mary's Scarf and the SOCKS, will do to start with. I've also got the Bendigo show stash, the visit to Bendigo Mills and the Ravelry Stash story. It's been a while. Here is a peek of some of the projects. This is Ruth's Hat and Scarf.




And this is some of my new hand spun yarn.
I'm away from home a fair bit at the moment so I'll be doing lots of crochet and weaving in the evenings so I'll try and catch up on some of my missed bits before it all becomes too much
Back soon

Friday, March 21, 2008

The Beanie


This post is about the hat that I made for my nephew for his birthday. He wanted a beanie and he wanted one that looked hand made. This is the result. It was an interesting process, because I decided to try not to spin too finely and to let any naturally occurring lumps and bumps stay that way. It was harder than I thought, I kept wanting to smooth bits!

The wool is from a coated fleece I bought at the Victorian Sheep and Wool Show, 4 years ago. It is a brown Corriedale fleece which is naturally light and lofty and I wanted the spinning process to enhance those characteristics. I choose a random selection of pieces from the fleece going for softness rather than a similiar size. Here is a comparision of two of one of the longest and shortest pieces of fleece. The longer piece is approximately 15 cms (six ins) long, with the shorter piece only 9 cms (3 ins).



I don't know that I'd recommend it as a regular practice. I think I should have stuck to just one area of the fleece. But the drum carder sorted it out. I fluffed up each lock of fleece on the carder before I fed it through. The final batts were a light fluffy mass I couldn't wait to play with. I split each batt into two pieces and rolled them into giant rolags to spin from.

I decided to spin the wool using a woolen spin with a medium draw to preserve the lofty feel of the wool. I also decided to card the wool in the grease and hopefully keep a small amount of lanolin in the final product to make it waterproof for my uni student nephew. He catches public transport a lot and I thought it might be it might be a bit more useful that way.

I spun the singles "z" twist and slightly over-plyed two singles "s" twist as I had decided to crochet the beanie. The over-plying helps compensate for the untwisting the crochet causes and to stop the stitches from slanting too much. This is a close up of the stitching, as you can see there is not a lot of slant and there is a natural variation in the colour which I think worked well for the handmade look I was going for.


I used the toque pattern from "Not your mama's crochet" and fiddled with it to do what I wanted. My nephew was very pleased with the final result and so was I but I wasn't that thrilled with the colour so I decided to so some dyeing! More in my next post.



This is the only bit of wool left. Not a bad estimation, huh?

Friday, February 29, 2008

Sea Moods Scarf


This is a scarf that I have just made for a friend's birthday. She lives on the Great Ocean Road at Warrnambool - which is the most beautiful coastline in Victoria - and I wanted to create something that would reflect some of the moods of the ocean that you see along the road.

I used my Ashford knitting loom and a range of commercial fibres. The reed is 7.5dpi and I used the full width of the loom which allows a finished width of about 25cm or 10ins. Overall dimensions for this scarf are 1280cm or 4ft 2ins length with an additional 150cms/6ins of fringe each end and 25cms/10ins in width. The warp is a white cotton and acrylic mix with lots of slubby bits which I thought might enhance the range of blue and grays I wanted to use. It worked well to tone down some of the dark colours and added the appearance of white caps on top of waves to the overall effect. The weft was composed of blocks of colours and textures and fibres to better reflect the constantly changing moods of the ocean. The colours range from a bright cerulean blue to a deep almost black blue gray. The textures include feather and eyelash yarn, soft cotton ribbon yarn and thick chunky chenille.

This was a very quick scarf to make, the planning process and deciding on the yarns took nearly as long!!!! I'm very happy with finished product and the next project for the loom is a earth and sea vest so we'll see how that turns out.

Ist Posting

I feel a little pretentious calling my garage a workshop BUT that's what it is for me so I'm going to run with it! And with a little bit of help from the site supervisor, that's what it will be one day. OK, a lot of help from the site supervisor. My talents do not run to hammer and nails, my building skills are hard earned.

Truthfully I'm craft person, I like lots of different crafts, but at the moment I'm concentrating on hand spinning & weaving and crochet which is what this blog will focus on. There might be a bit of knitting thrown in now again as well.

The garage is where I do most of my weaving and where I have all my bits and pieces. The fleeces, top, dyes, commercial wool, the looms and the spinning wheels. I have fought long and hard for a place to work in and so I'm putting it to full use now I've got it. I have two Ashford spinning wheels, the traditional and the traveller. I also have the Ashford 20 inch knitting loom, which is a rigid heddle loom designed to use with all of the fancy new knitting yarns. I have two other looms, a Sheridan 4 shaft table loom and a big old countersink floor loom with four shafts and six peddles which I am slowly, veeerry sllllooowly restoring.

I'm still a beginning spinner, even though I first started spinning 10 years ago. I haven't had an accessible space to work in for a long time, but now I do so I've gone on a fibre binge! I'll be posting about all my adventures in the next few posts as I get more comfortable with the blogging process. I intend to use this blog as a fibre diary and a place to reflect on the processes involved in what I produce so we'll see how it goes.