Archive for September 1, 2009

autumn inspiration

from Interweave Crochet, fall 2009

from Interweave Crochet, fall 2009

I saw a tiny, tiny thumbnail of this beauty on my Knitting Daily email and I had to do some further investigation.  It’s called the Moorish Mosaic Afghan, designed by Lisa Naskrent and it just so happens that the pattern is available in this season’s copy of Interweave Crochet.   A more complete picture:

soooooo pretty

soooooo pretty

When I first saw the wee bitty picture, I thought it was a shawl.  A really, really pretty freeform crocheted shawl made in the colors that have been flying by my eyelids for the last few nights.

Kismet rocks.

do you like buttons?

I like buttons.  Look at these buttons.

www.fairysteps.co.uk

www.fairysteps.co.uk

when you join technorati they make you do this

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easy, girl

We like the environment.

I would wager to say that almost every action we take is coupled with the thoughts, “How will this contribute to our ecological footprint?  What are the lasting repercussions?”  Our family re-uses whatever we can, we make the choice to get “new-to-us” items rather than buying something brand new, and we prefer to walk or ride bikes just about everywhere (still trying to figure out how we’re going to load up the bike trailers with all the gear we need to go camping with two babies…)

Sometimes we trap ourselves in a little box of eco-perfection, when we feel like we can’t do anything without disrupting the flow of the entire natural world.

Sigh.

When I process wool, it comes to me in raw form.  That means that someone gave a sheep a haircut, put all the wool in a bag, and then delivered what some would consider a greasy, stinky, filthy parcel to my open, outstretched arms.  Personally, I think raw fleece is lovely–rich with lanolin and touches of mother nature (aka:  hay)–but I understand that most folks prefer a tamer version of this beautiful fiber.  That’s cool with me.

So I wash the wool in a special way, pick through it to remove all of the bits of mother nature (hay), comb it to remove the weakened sun-damaged fibers (it is hair after all), and then card it into little blobs called rolags in order to make it easy to spin.  Someday I will show you pictures of this process, but I think I was talking about the environment today.  I get a little sidetracked when I start thinking about wool.  Sorry.

After the combing, there are a few mounds of hay-ey, crappy little bits left over.  I could spin these up to weave into rugs, but I like to leave them outside for birdies to snatch up as nesting material.  Because I’m nice and I figure birds like to be warm too.

Enter the eco-terrorist that lives inside my mind:

“What kind of effect will this have on the populations of birds?”

“What if a particular species gathers the wool, stays warmer than it should, refuses to fly south for the winter, and then dies because of this wool?”

I’m serious.  This is the kind of crap that I think about.

So the other day I was taking the kiddos around for a stroll and happened upon a fallen branch, a casualty of the windstorm from the previous evening.  And I found this:

birdies' house

You might notice that big hunk of plastic in the front of the nest there.  And the bits of wool that I threw out into the yard earlier this summer.  I think I’ll take my chances with providing the sweet birdies with wool.

the alchemy of spin

hi.

I’ve been pretty busy these last few months, what with the new baby and the summer market, and my general state of constant craftiness.  but I miss my blog.  I have a feeling that I’ll take a big break from it next summer too, but for now I am happy to return to this place.

even if it looks a little crappy right now.  perfection = laziness, so if you’re going to love me you have to put up with a few warts.  for awhile anyway.

so here’s what I’ve been learning to do since the last time we hung out:

made with upcycled eyelash yarn wrapped in wool, plied with upcycled cotton

"grey hackle peacock" ~ upcycled handspun yarn

and not only is it handspun yarn, I use reclaimed-recycled-upcycled-whatever-you-want-to-call-them fibers.  I just say I use ugly yarn and make it look real pretty.

spinning wool has presented yet another opportunity for me to examine the small things in life–those elements that are beyond my control, the joy of learning, the frustration of…oh, so many things.  a microcosm of the universe so to speak (was it Joseph Conrad that said that?  can’t remember now.)  anyway, these are thoughts that I’ve been collecting, delicately placing in a basket to share.  my harvest of wool and acrylic and hideous polyester novelty yarns.

and you should see the looks I get from the die-hard spinners in our spinners group when I pull out a skein of this flashy, plastic-y, horrible yarn and begin adding perfectly good wool to the mix.  heheh.

there will be much more to come, but for now I have to go retrieve all of the shoes that my toddler just threw out the front window.