Twists of Fate

Tuesday, 29 July, 2008

Yanno

Filed under: brain_dump, spinning-fleece — moiraeknittoo @ 1:33 PM

Some days, the best you can hope for is to actually be wearing pants when the hot UPS man arrives.

Fiber content: knitting on Kauni Hat the Second continues. Spinning? I have this urge to spin and absolutely no get up and go to make it happen. Today is a cold, depressing, sad kind of day. I blame the intermittent crying on PMS.

I’ve been in contact with a new-to-me local person who does fiber washing, but their email persona is really quite brusque. I’m not sure I want to take my business to them. Maybe I’ll go with one of the more established folks, even if it’s a longer drive. I went on another fleece buying binge (could be worse, right?) and, well. Yeah. I can do some of them myself, but I think the merino/crosses need to go to someone else. I just can’t get the water here hot enough, even with addition of water from an electric kettle.

Today is blah. At least stray kitty was happy to see me (aka didn’t hiss when I went to put out her food).

Friday, 25 July, 2008

The internet is for (fiber) porn

Filed under: brain_dump, knitting, spinning-fleece — moiraeknittoo @ 4:58 PM

Anyone else out there an Avenue Q fan? If so you’ll recognize the title. And maybe, if I am evil enough, you’ll be singing it all day too. :D

I’ve lost all my words about the workshop with Carol Rhodes, but suffice it to say that she is FULL of awesome and fabulous and a wonderful teacher. I learned quite a lot about fleece selection for spinning the Arans (not likely, because I hate me some bobbles yo), Guernseys (somewhat more likely if I really decide I love my brother, the merchant marine) and Fair Isle (possible, but not anytime soon) yarns and patterns.

For Aran yarns, we spun two different fleeces. I tripped and fell and bought some Cheviot, which I learned is pronounced Chee-vee-ott, and it’s sitting and waiting for me to wash it. The Galway (I think? I can’t find my little booklet from the class…I think it’s in the studio with the wheel) fleece is hard to find outside of Ireland. I can see where I may want to do an Aran hat or maybe some mittens with a wristband that has some cables, but dude. The bobbles. I hate the bobbles. I have a bobble loathing that is probably fairly unreasonable, but seriously, why wear something that looks like you’re wearing cat testicles proudly on your clothing?

With the Guernseys, I learned that I really love pure Blue Faced Leicester in combed top format, but am no so much with the enjoying of the personally combing or carding it. Those spiral, crimpy locks are lovely to look at and a bitch to work with. I want to roll around with it in soft focus and maybe a suggestive soundtrack (the FLEECE people, this ain’t a Dolores production), as long as it’s clean, but if you want me to spin it? Pure BFL in combed top please. I did find that the Scotch Mule crossbred fleece was MUCH easier to work with, as the teeny tiny curls were magnified so it was easier to work with, and I think my best yarn of the entire weekend was spun with the two locks of that Carol was able to share. I am tracking some of that down for next year (they already sold the whole ‘08 clip foo…and yes, I googled it) and getting me some.

Last but not least were the Shetlands, who are small, cute, and too smart for their own good. Sadly, by this point in the weekend I was spinning wounded and totally on overload. I did get that there is a remarkable amount of variety in the breed, that I could spend just about forever working with just the natural colored palette that the beasties come in, and that a true moorit is a beautiful thing to see. Also, when I’m tired I can’t spin nearly fine enough to make a Fair Isle weight yarn.

I would be QUITE remiss if I didn’t mention that Suzanne, part of the brains behind Madrona Fiber Arts, is a damn fine cook. Plus, the house was gorgeous, and Rakish Joe and the super sweet Diva were quite welcome distractions for someone who has no animals of her own. Besides the dustbunnies that roam the land that is my apartment, I mean. Suzanne was a gracious host for the hordes, and mmmmmm good eats. I didn’t even mind driving from where I love out to the house, which seemed like a really long drive in the 7am hour for three days in a row.

Anyway. Good Eats (sans Alton). Fab teacher with a Table of Happy (many knitted samples). Great classmates who put up with my severe crankiness when trying to ply from three wound balls (never again). All in all, well worth the money and I am very much looking forward to the Bohus class next month!

And now, to the porn. While buying up some of the types of fleeces we worked with in class (though I did go with roving for some of it), some of my other purchases arrived. For some reason, I keep getting Coopworth and Corriedale mixed up in my head. I really didn’t enjoy working with the Coopworth roving I purchased when I first began spinning. Maybe it was a strange batch, but it reeked of a weird glue-like smell and was really really rough. I’ve shunned Corriedale because I thought it was similar, but then pulled my head out and got to reading, and from what I understand it’s really quite a lot softer, finer, and if these fleeces from Twin Peaks Sheep and Wool Company in Colorado are some of the best of the breed? I’m a happy happy camper indeed.

Holly, right out of the bag she shipped in.

And some of the fiber washed up today. I always let my fleeces soak overnight in water with half a squirt of Dawn. Then I drain, wash twice (these only needed once) with three squirts of Dawn and then two rinses. I got a new toy that spins out so much more water than the salad spinners did and it’s worth every single penny I paid for it.

I’m rather pleased with how well the “locks” stayed together here, even if they all fluffed up into a mass that makes it difficult to really distinguish individual locks. The crimp is super obvious in the fleece, but the individual locks really kind of blend together into these big blocks that stayed together well in the wash.

Not the best pictures of the washed fleeces, but I used the Crackberry camera, and lightened them a bit when I uploaded them. I need to work on a lighting plan for the studio. The carpet is a dark teal and it faces mostly north.

OH! Before I forget, I must thank my favorite NOR-ma for the lovely pink sock kit I won from her blog contest! We share a birthday, and she was giving this away on the day. And then Sandy pulled my comment number out of the morass and lo, I won! On my birthday! For a giveaway she did for her birthday! The cosmic coming-togetherness boggles my little peabrain. But it’s happymaking, and it came with a card that I believe is a January One special (I could be wrong and please do correct me Norma if you read this and I am wrong) and it was very warm fuzzy inducing when I opened the package today.

Whew. A long post, but there was lots to talk about for once!

Sunday, 20 July, 2008

Tired but pleased

Filed under: spinning — moiraeknittoo @ 5:37 PM

Man, a three day workshop really takes it out of you. I finally lost all momentum about 3:30pm today, but thankfully there wasn’t much more to go. A wrap up post later, but for now? Carol Rhodes is full of awesome. *nods firmly*

Also, I need to work up to this spinning regularly thing. My wrists/hands/shoulders are killing me.

Wednesday, 13 February, 2008

Madrona

Filed under: spinning — moiraeknittoo @ 8:33 AM

After all my bitching about not being able to sign up for classes at Madrona Fiber Arts this year, I re-checked their website and found that they added some spinning classes. So, despite my terror, I signed up for two six hour sessions in addition to my Kauni hat knitting class on Sunday afternoon. I originally completely got the wrong weekend when trying to reserve a hotel room, and the hotel was sold out for the Wintergrass Festival. So I booked at a B&B that’s two miles away (because I worry about my car driving back and forth to Tacoma three times in a weekend), only to realize tonight that there are, in fact, rooms at the hotel and for the same rate as at the B&B. Ah well. I got a really nice room at the B&B, with another giant tub for soaks (which I will probably need after six hours of spinning), and I will hopefully get some rest. If I stayed at the hotel I’d be too likely to stay up way too late with other people and party, and I have a HUGE two weeks at work following this event.

I’m not sure I’m up for the spinning classes. Yes I can spin a continuous single, which is all that is required in the class description, but it’s been over a year since I spent any real time at the wheel. Well, worst case is I take the Alpaca with me and end up embarrassing the hell out of myself in front of people who probably know exactly what they’re doing. Of course, if they knew that they’d probably not be taking the class, so I don’t know what I’m worried about.

I swore I’d get around to spinning more this year, so here’s to hoping that this kick starts me towards that goal. The first class is pointing out the different methods for worsted vs woolen spinning, and the second is all about camelid fibers. All of which I think will be totally interesting, so it should be a good weekend.

Now if I could get my hands to stop shaking at the idea of spending this much time spinning in front of other people when I am truly not sure I can even actually DO it anymore? That would be quite nice, thank you drive thru.

Sunday, 3 February, 2008

Possibilities

Filed under: personal, spinning, stash, yarns — moiraeknittoo @ 11:47 AM

No, not Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup. I’m thinking about why I buy fiber.

And, frankly, why I buy it in such excess.

What prompted all of this Deep Thinking today? My mother is in town for a week or so to help my sister out when Papa heads back to work. She is, however, coming over to MY place Thursday-Friday and spending the night. We’ll be cleaning and maybe putting some shelves together, but that’s not actually a given.

I’m…sort of dreading it, actually. Y’all know how there are just some folks in the world who don’t understand The Stash. Nevermind that she just bought herself a ring with diamonds and blue topaz in it on a whim. In her words, “…the jewelry store was closing! !nd it was 75% off!”

Maybe if I replace “jewelry store” with “yarn store” or “fleece sale” it might work. Eh, on second thought, probably not. To her, the jewelry is functional. She wears it every day and sees it on her hand whenever she looks down.

Me? I look at these cardboard boxes that have most of my yarn and fiber still stored in them, and I imagine. I think about how awesome it would be to work with that Romney roving I sent to the processor last year. Or ponder whether leaving that Merino fleece from Australia in the warm summer sun might help with getting the grease melted enough to make it worth working on. Or thinking about how neat it would be to dye roving this year before spinning it, and wondering where the box of dyes went off to. Or thinking about how awesome it’ll be to get all my knitting books and binders with patterns in them actually unpacked and on a shelf, so I can “kit up” projects with the yarns I have. Or…well, you get my drift.

Isn’t it interesting how differently we all think? My connections to the physical world are usually my last priority. Maybe it’s because I’m in pain all the time with a variety of conditions that I noted and promptly ignored. I can’t really change them, and pain management is about the best I can do, so yes, noted, will to my best to incorporate things to help, and moving on now. Maybe it’s because I find the world a pretty harsh place, though less so than it was when I was growing up in a pretty awful household. Maybe….

Whatever the reason, I always retreat to my head and my thoughts, daydreams and the amazing, exciting wonder of possibilities. Give me some raw fiber and I can spin you a tale of about a dozen things I’d make it into, if given the chance. And if I do a lot more of that in my head than I do in the real world? What’s so wrong with that? My time, especially lately, is pretty limited when it comes to pursuing my chosen hobbies. If I end up buying (way) more than I can use, and if I can afford to do so, what the hell is the problem?

*sigh* I needed to get that out, I think, before Thursday, so I can be rational and adult about it rather than reverting to my childhood years and feeling guilty for asking for a little extra something when we really didn’t have the money for the basics, let alone the extras. Food for thought, I suppose. A sour meal, to be sure, but food for thought.

In the meantime, I’m going to go fondle some yarn or fiber and daydream. Because it’s my day, and my choice about how I use my time. Dammit.

Monday, 28 January, 2008

I need love, love

Filed under: spinning, wheels — moiraeknittoo @ 12:34 PM

…to ease my mind. Which is what I get from the Alpaca wheel. It’s all love.

I finally got around to spinning a bit yesterday, and it was wonderful. Granted, I’m used to double drive so learning how to deal with the scotch tension has been interesting, but overall it’s good. I used a just barely sticky California Red/Coopworth cross roving I just got in the mail as my guinea pig fiber, and it’s working well so far. It’s very forgiving, and I’m glad I bought it from a local supplier over in Port Orchard. Found on Craigslist, it’s quite nice, if a wee bit dusty. I’m saving the actual California Red roving amount for when I’m a little more comfortable with the wheel.

I am a bit concerned that the handle might be rubbing up against the drive wheel – does anyone who has a Suzie/Alpaca have any suggestions? The sound of the plastic bobbins rubbing against the shaft is a bit strange too…hissssssssst! There’s also a bit of a strange clunking sound that I”ll have to investigate when I’m not so tired, but for now? I LOVE the delta interface vs. the round orifice. I wasn’t sure I’d do well with it, but it’s all good. The sliding guides on the flyer arms may also take some getting used to, as I am much more familiar with a hook system, but again, it’s something I can easily adapt to. I hate the rasping sound it makes when you slide the bit of metal over those arms though – total nails-on-a-chalkboard effect.

My energy levels only lasted for about 15 min of spinning, but it was enough to get back into the swing of things. I really hope to be able to carve out half an hour or so of spinning time daily…maybe right before bedtime, a nice transition from work & computery things to something more grounding and relaxing. I think it’s a plan, don’t you?

Working from home today as there was about four inches of white stuff on the ground outside this morning. It’s supposed to snow again tonight as well, so I will probably work from home again tomorrow too. It’s a nice change, given that I’ve spend most of the month on campus and barely able to complete anything due to lack of work space and back to back to back meetings.

Anyway, yay the Alpaca wheel! Love!

Sunday, 27 January, 2008

Hey baby

Filed under: personal, wheels — moiraeknittoo @ 1:04 PM

Sorry for being radio silent for so long. It’s certainly not as long an absence as previous months, but I was really trying hard to do better this year.

I do have a good reason though! Last Sunday, my darling new niece was born! Asa Jane weighed in at 6lbs, 14oz and 20.5″ long. I ended up being an impromptu birth coach for my sister, who did it strictly au naturale, at a birth center with a fully trained midwife in attendance along with two trainees. I was planning on begin there strictly for moral support, but turned out to have a much bigger role. Which was groovy, and, I have to say, the very best birth control ever. From the time her water broke to the time she actually came out and greeted the world with some very hefty cries, it was nearly 45 hours point to point.

Nevertheless, mom, dad and the new little bit are doing fabulously. They’re working through the awkwardness of learning to breast feed like champs, and she’s totally got her parents wrapped around her teeny tiny adorable little fingers. She’s also wearing the baby camel hat I knit for her, since she’s so wee it’s about the only thing that fits her right now. She wore it home from the birth center, and mom finds it very soothing to pet as she cradles her newborn baby’s head. It’s all very sweet, and it was really quite something to be there for her birth.

Shortly after that, I came down with a hideous cold/flu/exhaustion type-thing, and have barely been able to scrape myself together to go in to work. I’m also hideously behind in reading my blog roll, but I did catch just today that Cathy of Catena Expressions gave me an award! That’s so sweet and thank you! I feel like I’ve cheated her a bit, given that I’ve barely done any new spinning and due to the baby and exhaustion, I have yet to spin on the new Majacraft Alpaca. However, today may be the day to fix that! I went a little overboard on ordering more roving and fiber recently, so I should probably start working on that today.

Why the Alpaca? I have to say, and this is utterly self indulgent and the lamest reason ever for choosing a wheel but…I liked the woodburned alpaca motif. There, I wrote it out loud for everyone. I like the specs of the Susie, and though I probably would’ve done better to get a Little Gem with the head that rotates to wherever you want it to be, but I like what I have. I’ve been sitting on the couch now and again and treadling, just to get used to the feel, and I have to say it’s pretty darn effortless. LOVE that!

Thank you Cathy, for the award. I’ll have to put some thought into who I’ll add to my 10 blogs that make my day roll, but it’s a fair bet yours is one of them. :D

Happy day everyone!

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