Just for Me

Diakeito Diamusee Yarn

I couldn’t take my eyes off a beautiful Japanese yarn called Diakeito, Diamusee Fine, at Lea-Ann McGregor’s Knitting Today shop in northern Indiana. The color I liked is two-ply. Each ply is shaded browns with a tiny bit of burnt orange and a smidgen of olive. Then they’re plied together to make a subtly variegated yarn. Oh, it would look so nice with my hair, but at $11.95 a ball, and with limited time for fine knitting, I decided against buying it.

The second time I went to Knitting Today, I saw a pretty scarf that is like a shallow shawl with elongated ends for tying (Fiber Trends Landscape Shawl and Scarf, designed by Evelyn A. Clark). Guess what!? It uses one ball of Diamusee Fine. Sold!

Normally, I make things that are for more than one purpose, like, I may make a sweater for myself, that’s also a good workshop sample. The scarf is for me, and me alone, so it is my project for the Just For Me KAL. And since someone else has already done the designing, it will be a pleasure to knit it!

Updates

We have friends visiting from England. It’s fun, but there’s not much time for knitting. Nevertheless, I’m making progress on my ReKAL vest. On the subject of recycling, my brother gave me a cotton blend cardigan with color patterns in it. It will make a good TextileFusion project.

The red cardigan has fallen by the wayside for the moment, because since my return from Camp, I can’t keep up with my regulation three rows per day. I’m not too worried, though. The project is back on my mind, and I will start working on it again very soon.

Can Hardly Wait for Camp 2006

Knitting Today has hosted knitting camp for hobby machine knitters, since about 1998. I went for the first time as a teacher in 1999 and promised myself I would go back. Why? Nice people, relaxed atmosphere, friendly people, people who love knitting and fiber, good conversations, silly people, many hugs, and of course, Lea-Ann’s yarn shop! And all this in serene, green, northern Indiana.

The people who took my classes reminded me why it is so much fun to teach textile arts. They have promised to send me photos of their finished class projects. I will post them as they come in. Some were surprised at what they could do! That’s my favorite part.

I spent a lot of time listening to the talk, as I worked on my red cardigan. The first sleeve is finished! I bought many mini-Hershey’s Special Dark bars to support Lea-Ann’s web forum for machine knitters. I got a lot done on a vest that is due to be mailed this week.

Liz and Fern, who are among the legendary campers, cleaned out their studios and brought lots of magazines and books to sell. It was great fun to look through them. What memories! I bought a few…

Had Friday afternoon off, so went to Lea-Ann’s shop, and spent two and a half hours looking at books and yarn. I bought some…

Enjoyed meals in the camp cafeteria. The food was okay, but the talk, the companionship, and the show-and-tell were great.

Sunday at noon, it was over. We stopped at the shop one more time before leaving for the airport. I saw a small lace shawl/scarf that I hadn’t seen before. It uses one ball of a yarn that I had admired. So I got the pattern and one ball of Diamusee Fine, a Japanese yarn. Now I can join the Just For Me KAL!

Looking forward to next year’s camp!

Pink Seveness

Diana at KnitRedKAL asked me to post this. I was extremely glad to oblige!

It was my first Seveness project and I have worn it a lot. It’s perfect for most Texas winter days. I used all kinds of pink yarn, including some I spun myself. I love pink. And red.

And black. Alright, alright. I love all the colors. But pink and red are my favorites.

Taos: Great Design Skills for Knitting or Crochet

This is the first of several posts for people who are interested in my workshops at the Taos Wool Festival. I tried to publish them privately, but they are so private, even I can’t look at them.

In Great Design Skills for Knitting or Crochet, we’ll design an underwater scene on the fly, and knit or crochet it in class. We’ll do it all with no gauge swatches and minimal notes. It is a great exercise to blast through designer’s block, or to give yourself a jump-start toward designing for the first time.

Here’s a sample similar to what we will make in class:

I taught this class for machine knitters at Camp Iwannaknit, which you can read about (among other workshops) in the Workshops category on my blog. Since that sample is machine-knitted, it is bigger than ours will be, but the principles are the same.

Check back with me later in the summer for a crocheted sample.

If you would like to see where this can lead, check out some of the knitted, embellished quilts I have made at Works.

Taos: Quilts and Totes from Old Sweaters

GREAT NEWS!!! Husqvarna Viking will be providing sewing machines for this workshop. That means we’ll have the best equipment to work on in class, plus a person to assist us with the machines. So you don’t have to know much about machine sewing to sign up and be successful in this class.

These are two small quilts from store-bought sweaters. You can also use hand-knits in this workshop.

These tote bags are made from freshly-knitted fabric, but we will make our workshop totes from old sweaters. Check back with me in late July for a pic of a tote bag made from an old sweater.

Alt Tassels and Trims Workshop

The name of one of the classes I will be teaching at the Taos Wool Festival is Alternative Tassels and Trims.

Here are pics of two tassels I made with the alternative method I will teach in the workshop at Taos. Both of these have polymer clay tops, but our workshop tassels will have knitted or crocheted tops. However, the tassel skirt is made by the same method, using two or more strands of yarn–can be commercial or handspun. You can even string beads on a thread and spin those into the tassel.

This shows the commercial yarns I spun together to make the tassel above.

Please check back here late in July for more alternative tassel workshop samples.

Different Kind of Button Making

Tonight Charles and I made the last buttons of the year for our daughter Eva’s school. I think it’s more accurate to call them badges, but a lot of people refer to them as buttons. Either way, as diligent PTO members, we made hundreds of them this year for the teachers to give out as awards for perfect attendance, meeting math and reading goals, honor roll, and so on.

Though they take a while to make, and can sometimes be a real pain, I have mostly enjoyed this year’s project. I love to design the pictures. We use Badge-a-Minit button-design software, which comes with some okay clip art. I import copyright-free designs and digital photos. It is fun to make the designs, but it is even better to see them made into badges.

So this isn’t the usual knitting-related post, but the badge-making project has been a big part of our lives this year, and it is a craft project. I love making stuff!

KAL Motivation Working

The KnitRedKAL/Personal Red Cardigan Challenge is working! Last weekend, what with driving to Houston for 5-1/2 hours, driving around Houston, and visiting with my wonderful father-in-law, I racked up over 60 rows on the sleeve. And I have diligently done my three rows per day, all two days since we returned from our trip.

Now my big dilemma is whether to knit ahead for the five days I’m gone to Indiana for Camp Iwannaknit or bring it along with hopes of an even larger gain. Reliable sources have told me it’s okay to knit on planes again. If I don’t bring the red cardigan, I’ll bring yarn to knit samples for an exciting project, which I will reveal later.

I have had two occasions lately where I could have used those pre-made smiley, winking, etc. faces that come with Word Press. May have to upload them.

USM-ing in Nature

I set up my Ultimate Sweater Machine under the carport again today. Two-year-old Ella cooperated, and now I have three new swatches for my latest (and I do mean latest! ) INKnitters article.

Coats Moda Dea ‘Sassy Stripes’ yarn was a happy surprise. It is a long-repeat, variegated yarn, therefore the sassy stripes. I loved this color-way, with the pink and red and mottled gray stripes. It knitted like a dream with keyplate 2-dot. I’m contemplating a cardigan for nine-year-old Eva, or maybe even for myself with this color, called ‘Crush.’

By the time you see the sample in the magazine, it will be much changed. I’m writing about how to let variegated yarn inspire you to play, play, play.