DFW Fiber Fest, April 2006
You can learn to make these polymer clay buttons in my workshop at the first-time-ever DFW Fiber Fest in Addison, Texas, April 28-30, 2006. Three days of classes and a market will make this an event you won’t want to miss. Classes will appeal to crocheters, knitters, spinners, and others with an interest in fibery, yarny, sweatery things. You can sign up for up to six classes.
I’ll be teaching three workshops: Crochet Flowers and Leaves (Friday morning), Polymer Clay Button Boutique (Saturday afternoon), and Intarsia from Beginning to End (Sunday morning). Read about current button workshops here.
There are lots of other good workshops and teachers, including Beth Brown-Reinsel and Darla Fanton. Click here for the class schedule. I’m looking forward to it!
Updated in 2016 to remove links that don’t work, and in 2022 to add button workshop link.
Back to Workshop Samples
It’s time again to make workshop samples. I enjoy working on samples and swatches to illustrate the concepts I introduce in my workshops. They’re mostly small and quicker to finish than most other projects.
Some readers may remember the underwater scene I made for a design class at Camp Iwannaknit 2005. It was knitted on my Bond knitting frame. Someday I hope to show you the underwater scenes that the workshop participants made. They were all different, because each person used a different photo for inspiration.
Anyway, I’m developing a new underwater scene class for hand knitters and crocheters, which uses freeform techniques. For homework, I’m asking participants to choose a photo of a reef or other marine scene for inspiration.
The next step is to raid the yarn collection for colors and textures to match the background of the photograph. Here’s my photo, with the matching yarn.
Did you notice that I said ‘yarn collection’ rather than ‘yarn stash?’ Imagine my nose very high in the air, as I explain that I prefer to think of myself as a proud collector of yarn. Forget stashes. Think collections, instead. The word ‘collection’ appropriately invokes the care, thought, and money invested by a yarn collector in her hoard.
Next time, a finished freeform background.
The Case of the Traveling Chenille
Look what has happened to my KnitRedKAL cardigan from last year. The rows of chenille are developing these little wormy outgrowths (inside yellow circles). It’s only the chenille, and they are not snags. Even the darned-in ends are coming out.
It’s like any slack in the stitches is just working itself out. I have pushed the outgrowths through to the inside of the sweater, but they just squiggle back out again. I’ve knitted a lot of chenille, but never had this problem. Could this be a result of knitting it with other fibers nearby? Anyone else had this problem with chenille?
The only thing I can think of is to push them to the inside and tack them with sewing thread. There are at least two dozen of them. What a pain!
You can probably guess that I’m still reading Perry Mason novels.
2005 KAL-culations
Knit ALongs were my favorite internet discovery of 2005. I love how they motivate me to finish projects. And here is a true confession: I love the colorful buttons. There you have it.
Here are the KALs I did in 2005. They are gathered here, so my sidebar will be ready for the KALs of 2006. You’ll see I’ve already got a 2006 button for KnitRedKnitAlong. If you love to knit red or have an interest in women’s heart health, please join! The people in the group are just great.
Meanwhile, a yellow vest update: it’s almost up to the armhole shaping.
Knitting in the Wind
The last two afternoons, I’ve been outside with three-year-old Ella. She plays in the tree or with the cats, and talks and talks to herself. I love to hear that sweet talk. I worked on the yellow vest. It is about six inches long. That doesn’t sound like much, except that it includes the back and the fronts, worked back and forth on a circular needle.
In one of my December posts, I wrote about three young raccoons, who were trying to eat the frozen broth in the cats’ bowls, in the middle of the night. They were making such a racket. I caught one on film. Here he is.
Christmas Yarn Indulgence
My daughters and I visited the fabulous Bluebonnet Yarn Shoppe (Cedar Park, Texas) before Christmas, and I gave in to temptation. “Silk Garden” by Noro caught my eye, in shades of purple, silvery gray, olive, and touches of ochre here and there. To enhance and stretch it, I got Cascade 220 in a heathery eggplant shade. Reynolds “Odyssey” had a colorway amazingly like the Noro, so I added it to the mix. There’s enough for a big shawl or a cardigan.
I’ve been considering wavy lace patterns, Fair Isle possibilities, intarsia, and color stitch patterns. Can’t decide!
Ever eager to encourage knitting and crochet for my girls, I got Eva some eyelash yarn for a scarf. Ella, newly turned three, couldn’t bear to be left out. We bought some yarn for her frequent companion and fashion advisor, the Pinky Bug.
Naturally, the Pinky Bug loves pink. She talks in a high voice, and lavishly compliments Ella on her pink clothes, pink cheeks, pink fingernails, or pink shoes. The Pinky Bug can convince Ella to do whatever needs to be done, much better than I can. She is a great conversationalist, and, almost instantly can stop Ella from crying.
Other friends of Ella and the Pinky Bug are the Ring Bug (loves sparkle and shine), the Tall Bug (loves spots and dots), the Index Bug (loves red), and the Shy Thumb Bug (loves yellow).
The Case of the Yellow Yarn
The posts about the knitted Advent calendar, originally published in December 2005, will be featured in December 2021.
Thank you all for the comments on my Advent calendar. It was fun to make, and I feel happy about it every year. I have done a number of felt ornament kits, a felt snowman wall hanging, and of course my snowman rug. It’s great to have and make Christmas ornaments, but can a family have too many? My excuse is that I will off-load some of them to my daughters when they grow up.
After a holiday marathon of reading Perry Mason novels (I bought some and my daughter gave me more), I was ready to knit again. The yellow vest is started. It’s an abridged version of the Seveness technique, using only five different yarns instead of fifteen or more. Here’s the progress so far. The yarns are from Lion Brand.
I have several projects that need immediate attention, including administrative work. Even Perry Mason reluctantly dealt with his correspondence from time to time, though he had Della Street to help him. My personal goal is to send off my tax return by the first of April. Better get going.
Pretty Pictures of Stone and Scarf
Now that we have Ian Boyle’s stone pillar in our front yard, my mission is to take photos of the pillar in all kinds of light, at different times of day and different times of year. Here is the pillar on one evening earlier this month.
Ian was particularly interested in photographing through the pipe that is embedded in the pillar. The summer solstice sunset shines right through the pipe, as you can see in my original post about Ian’s stonework in Comanche County. The sun has moved to the south since then. I still take pictures through the pipe, but I also like to photograph the ruggedly constant pillar against the sky’s changing colors, clouds, and light.
Moving to a softer subject, my 10-year-old daughter has always loved bees of all kinds, so I wasn’t surprised when she laid claim to this little scarf. It is stripes of Lion Brand Fun Fetti alternating with Wool Ease. “It reminds me of a buff-tail bumblebee,” she said.
I started the scarf last night, while listening to the last tape of The Fugitive Pigeon, by Donald E. Westlake. The reader was Nick Sullivan. It was a comic murder mystery, with a little romance thrown in. It was good.
Intarsia Revisited
This is part two of Intarsia How-To, in response to several questions and comments. Thanks for those!
Two common ways to prepare yarn for intarsia work are bobbins and yarn butterflies. Here’s an empty bobbin, a bobbin with yarn wound around it, and a yarn butterfly. The slit in the bobbin is so narrow, the yarn cannot unwind by itself. You unwind as much as you need, knit, and wind the extra back up. The bobbin hangs neatly at the back of your work.
The yarn butterfly is a sort of center-pull skein that you wind between your thumb and little finger. Take the last few windings around the middle, and tuck the yarn under itself to tie in place. To knit, pull the other end from the butterfly.
Kary asked: How do you know how much to wind on the bobbin? If you want to count stitches, you can estimate how much yarn to wind Figure out about how many stitches you can make with one inch of yarn, and calculate how many inches you need for the stitches, plus about 8 inches for yarn tails and peace of mind.
I am not a fan of bobbins. I don’t like the weight of them hanging near my knitting needles and dangling around, bumping into each other. It throws off my balance.
Furthermore, being a lazy knitter, I don’t want to wind a bobbin, only to have to unwind it again so I can knit. And of course, the bobbin will probably run out of yarn, six stitches short, which means I have to add another length of yarn for the last six stitches, making two more ends to sew in.
I like to knit straight from the skein when possible. For smaller areas, I make yarn butterflies. If the design has two of the same color area, I often knit from both ends of the skein.
This can be a terrible, tangly mess, but with some planning, it is possible to knit neat and successful intarsia straight from the skein. Here’s how. Put the yarns in a basket or box, roughly in the order that you will use them. Work a couple of rows to get the colors established.
At the beginning of a knit row, make sure all the yarns come straight from the skeins, without crossing, as in the first photo.
Knit across, changing colors correctly as shown in Intarsia How-To. They will cross each other as in the second photo.
So here you are at the end of the knit row. Grab the right hand needle point in your left hand. Rotate the other end of the needle toward you (clockwise) and around so that this becomes the left hand needle.
Purl across, changing colors properly. As each new color taken up, the old color will untangle and hang free of the previous yarn. At the end of the purl row, all yarns will be uncrossed, but they will be twisted by half a turn.
Now you’re at the end of the purl row and the yarns are spiraled halfway around each other just once. So, grab the right hand needle with your left hand. Rotate the other end of the needle away from you (counterclockwise, anticlockwise, widdershins, whatever you call it), and around so that it becomes the left hand needle. Voila! The yarns are all straight again!
If you live in a house where you can knit whole rows without having to put your knitting down, you can go on like this for hours: crossing them all on the knit row, uncrossing them on the purl row. You have to switch the needle around correctly for this to work.
Sarah asked, “How do you add in a new color?”
When the intarsia chart indicates a change, start knitting with the new color, leaving a three inch or so tail of yarn. Finish the row.
On your return row, at some point, you will be using the new color again. When you’re finished with the new color, drop the yarn.
When you change to the next color, reach under the new yarn you dropped, as well as its tail, and pick up the next color. he next color will then cross both the tail of the newly added color and the newly-added color coming from the bobbin. Look at the photo, where the hot pink is crossing the blue yarn and its tail (circled in red).
Darn the new tail back into its own color area.
If the yarns get messed up as you knit, just wait until you’re ready to start a knit row. Then, with the knit row facing you, untangle the yarns so you can start fresh.
Color Weirdness
I posted earlier this month about how some workshop leaders have steered students away from using yellow because it is supposedly “difficult.” Woolwinder and Furrworld commented, saying that they had never heard that about yellow. I’m glad this folly hasn’t gotten all the way around, and hope I can stem its further spread by addressing it in my next INKnitters article.
Using and enjoying color is a problem for so many people, because they have 1) had creativity squashed out of them from an early age by peers, parents, and teachers; and 2) had foolish sayings and pronouncements drilled into them before they knew better.
For example, have you ever heard this bit of idiocy? “Blue and green should never be seen.” Please, don’t tell the bluebonnets and forget-me-nots!
This saying is really a political warning. I think it started in Scotland, one of the places where Catholics and Protestants were at odds. Blue was associated with one group, and green with the other (I don’t know which was which). Parents and peers told children that blue and green should never be seen, because they didn’t want Catholic kids and Protestant kids to be friends.
Unfortunately, the slogan made it into the mainstream, where the political associations of blue and green weren’t as well-known. So hundreds of kids thought it was incorrect to wear the colors blue and green together, or to use them together in decorating. All because of a mistake! It’s enough to drive a person distracted.
Here’s another pronouncement that I heard about ten years ago, from a well-known knitting and art-wear designer and workshop leader: “You can’t make art with blue.” Her justification is that blue is too common in our decorating and clothing to be valid as an art color (huh???). I say, maybe she can’t make art with blue, but the rest of us can, and should.