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I think I have mentioned this before... Vermont has FIVE seasons, not four: Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter, and Mud Season, which as you may surmise, is beginning right now.  Unless you live here, you can't imagine what that means.  What's a little mud?  Those Vermonters--are they just whiney?  As the snow melts and the temperatures rise, the dirt roads turn to the thickest, deepest mud you ever saw.  

Well, the first place I lived when I moved here was on a mountain, accessible only by dirt roads.  Some of the people who lived on those roads would actually move into hotels for a few weeks until the worst was over.  The first couple weeks, we would rev the car engine and bolt over the mud, hoping to make it across.  But after awhile, there would be no getting around it and the car would get stuck.  And of course, this means that anyone further up the road was also stuck because there is no getting around a car sunk into the mud at least a foot, if not more.  I treasured my AAA membership for all the towing I got.  But it was so stressful not knowing if I could get home, especially at night.  And my last year there was so bad that the tow truck driver finally wouldn't answer the calls anymore, he was so fed up. 

So now I live in town and have no room to complain, but I will anyway!  This is my path from the parking lot to the porch–my own little mini-mud nightmare.  I wear boots just to go to the car and I skirt the mud, trying to stay in the snow.  After that I don't need the boots and switch to my shoes.

My "sidewalk"

My "sidewalk"

It's messy going out and I prefer to stay in.  So I have been getting a few fun projects done in the process between the numerous snow storms and the mud.  I've been making a few baskets and having a blast...

An Egg Basket

An Egg Basket

Tiny Market Basket1

A Tiny Market Basket

Large Williamsburg1

A Large Williamsburg Style Basket

Medium Williamsburg1

A Medium-sized Williamsburg Basket

Med. round basket

A Medium Round Basket

 

Well, I got all that out of my system I think and I am back to my knitting again!

 

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I am in Eureka Springs, Arkansas now.  This is the first time I've ever been to Arkansas and wasn't sure what to expect.  It is lovely country and the town of Eureka Springs is too darling for words!  Very artsy, hip, and awesome!  I'll save the town for another post. Meanwhile, I am in my apartment here at the Writers Colony at Dairy Hollow.  I thought I would have a small bedroom with a  desk, but I actually have a large bedroom-kitchen area with a bathroom (jets in the tub--YES!) and a room for my writing space with lots of windows and good light.   I couldn't be happier.

My bedroom

The cheery bathroom

Note the Maurice Sendak print above the tub (the author of Where the Wild Things Are).  Author Crescent Dragonwagon, along with her husband Ned, founded this place (Dairy Hollow) originally as a B&B.  Crescent and her mother, Charlotte Zolotow who is also a children's books author, were friends with Maurice, who recently died.  Actually Crescent lives near me in Vermont and we have gotten together on occasion.  She has written over 50 books, many of which are fabulous cookbooks.

The kitchen

 

Lots of good light in the writing room...

 

...and a place to knit when I need a break from writing.

Well, I had better get back to work!

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Sunday was another busy day of meeting with vendors, looking at yarns and other cool stuff and eating at the North Market. Oh, that Jeni's ice cream! Jeni\'s Splendid Ice Cream! Monday was a quiet day on the show floor as many people had already gone home.  But it was a good time to be there because one could spend more time talking with others. Etiquette dictates that you don't schmooze with the business owner when a potential sale is happening in the booth. Everyone was really tired that last day and the vendors still had to pack up.  I remember from my exhibiting days at Stitches how exhausting that is!  After all the glitz and pagentry is over, it is a lot of hard work packing up to go home.  And the hall is quiet and empty once more.

The empty hall...

Now I had a day to rest before Knitters Connection started!  
Friday morning I was up early to give my presentation on my Long Distance Gansey Knit Along series.  I was pleased with the turn out of yarn shop owners and of their response.  If you read this blog, but don't subscribe to my newsletter, you probably don't know what the heck I am talking about. In a nutshell, I have devised a learning program that integrates my DVD chapters as lessons with some of my gansey patterns so that shop owners can teach the necessary skills within the context of a 10 to 12 week Knit Along.  I supply a syllabus and other supporting materials and I Skype in a couple times during the class. Anyway, after I checked in with the Up North Fiber Art Supply booth, I went wandering and came across a vendor who was selling a new DVD featuring none other than Barbara G. Walker, author of all those incredible books full of knitting stitches (scroll partway down to the bottom of that web page to see her books)!  I asked a couple questions, and the vendor said, "Would you like to talk with Barbara?"  And there she was!  I felt a stupid expression creep onto my face and I was a goofy awe-struck knitter in Her Presence.  I got her autograph, but didn't think to ask anyone to take a photograph of us together.  Fortunately, my friend JoLene Treace, designer extraordinaire wearing one of her lovely lace designs, was thinking more clearly and got a photo of herself and BGW.

JoLene Treace and Barbara G. Walker

The DVD is available from Stitch Heaven and is called (I think) StitchHeaven salutes Barbara G. Walker.  It is 3.5 hours long! Here are some other things I saw on my wanderings around the show floor... Knit Outta the Box offers some really interesting yarns.  One in particular is called Cotton Sifa and is 95% Turkish cotton, 5% silver.  Yes, silver.  It feels so cushy and I can't wait to swatch it!  The yarn is almost braided.
KB Sifa* Silver Cotton

Cotton Sifa yarn

I also stopped by the O-wool booth.  I love to use their yarn especially when I am knitting a baby gift, because all their yarns are organic.  They have six different yarns.  Here is one of them...

Legacy DK 100% certified organic merino wool

Next, I met the woman who invented Fix-a-Stitch.  This tool is really clever and she told me she thought it up when she was 12 years old.  Now in her 60's, she is finally getting a patent on it.  If you visit her website, you will see videos on how to use the tool.  It comes in a package of 3 sizes.  You can see one of the videos below. Fix-a-Stitch Fix-A-Stitch Instructional Video   Moving on, I came to the booth of the Fiber &Fabric Mania Travel Guide.  This book is compiled anew each year to list all the shops that carry yarn, quilting, needlepoint, weaving, spinning, and/or cross stitch/embroidery.  Mr. Merin, who helps his wife to put the book together generously gave me the new 2011-2012 edition.  You can get this book at your LYS or order it here.     I was excited to find a wool mill that makes WORSTED spun yarn! Stonehedge Fiber Mill in East Jordan, MI has lovely yarns! It is a full service mill that cards, spins, and skeins wool, alpaca, and other fibers.  I was impressed with the Shepherds Wool yarn they are now creating. The website shows their worsted weight, but I was told they are expanding the line to other weights.  I love worsted spun yarns because they tend to resist pilling and last longer than woolen spun yarns.
Many of the colors of the Shepherd's Wool line
  I passed the TKGA booth (The Knitting Guild Association) and saw Arenda Holiday there.  Arenda is very active in the guild, particularly the Master Knitters program,  and responsible for raising the bar for knitters everywhere.  If you see her knitting, you know what I mean.  Here is her design she calls Winter.  I think she said it was knitted at 12 stitches to the inch out of the same lovely silk wool yarn from RedFish Dyeworks that I used for my Sunnhordaland Set I blogged about several months ago.
Arenda in her cardigan Winter

Arenda in her cardigan Winter

After the show on Friday, I gathered my things to set up an exhibit of my litttle sweaters for the Teacher Meet and Greet.  That was fun, talking with all sorts of people–former students as well as yarn shop owners who had never heard of my work. It was a full day and I slept very well that night!      

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Thursday, I flew into Columbus, Ohio for my annual pilgrimage to TNNA–The National Needlearts Association.  This is a show for the needle arts industry where manufacturers come together to show their wares to retailers (yarn shop owners).  In addition, there are the designer and teacher contingencies, of which I am apart.  We wander around on the immense show floor, showing our wares or teaching classes to yarn shop owners, and reaffirming friendships and acquaintences.  It is a giant schmooze party in the best sense, because at the heart of it all, human connection is what makes it all work. I met up with friends for dinner on Thursday night, and talked about my slide presentation for the next day.  As much as I have taught rooms full of students, I was pretty nervous about presenting my KAL program in front of yarn shop owners.  For those of you who read my blog but not my newsletter, I have developed a series of workshops for yarn shop owners to teach, based on several of my gansey patterns, aided by my DVD.  These classes span 10 to 12 weeks and I will Skype in to the class twice during the period.  In its inaugural debut at Cornall Yarn Shop in Cornwall, NY, it met with great success and some of the knitters who completed their first gansey had never knitted sweaters before!  Anyway, I digress!

 

The Greater Columbus Convention Center

The Columbus Convention Center is enormous and is thankfully surrounded by all sorts of wonderful restaurants.  So while I walked my tail off during the day, losing weight and gaining muscle, I gained it all back at night tasting all sorts of wonderful things.  If you ever come to Columbus, don't miss Jenny's ice cream in the North Market! Friday morning at the ungodly hour of 8am (you know I am a tried and true night owl) I gave my slide presentation to my class of LYS owners.  They were very interested and receptive and I felt really good about it!  (I was so glad I had, as an afterthought a few days before, created a slide show by downloading KeyNote, learning the software, and making up a slide show, rather than just relying on my speaking.)  My friend Gail who owns Cornwall Yarn Shop was there as well to give her perspective and give credence to the effectiveness of my program. After that, I helped set up the Up North Fiber Art Supply booth with Barb Catani who owns that business and distributes my DVD, book, and patterns.  It is a lot of hard work, unpacking, arranging, hanging, re-arranging all the things that go into a booth.  Before I started vending at Stitches in the '90s, I had no idea that people had to plan for and bring and set up FIXTURES, the stuff that displays everything.  They can be very costly themselves, besides the cost of the booth, which can be exceed $1,000, the airfare, the hotel and meals (another $1,000). It is a huge risk to commit to a show, and success depends on garnering enough sales to cover all the costs and your time and the wholesale money you put out for your products, plus making MORE!  If you don't make a profit you are not in business for long.  It takes courage in an economy like this one to put out that money and effort. I registered and got my badge that would let me into the show, along with a map of the show floor.  I spent the rest of the evening pouring over the map, planning who I would see and talk to and which booths I would investigate the following days.    


 

As many of you know, travel is a big part of my life.  I enjoy being in new and different places, meeting knitters I have not met before and seeing those with whom I have been acquainted.  I am a happy camper once I am where I am headed, but the time between leaving my house and getting to where I am going is not so fun anymore.  This is not startling news to anyone who flies these days.  I try to take the bumps along the road in stride, but my trip to Stitches South was particularly trying. I made my reservation last fall.  I try to buy my tickets as soon as possible to get the cheap tickets, but also for peace of mind–one less detail to worry about.  I was so pleased that I got a ticket with my frequent flier miles to Stitches South in Atlanta that was in a reasonable time frame.  (I was to teach only in the morning on Sunday and reserved a departure flight around 2 pm.  I'd be home before dark!)  In February, the Sunday flight was cancelled and I was reassigned to a 7:30 PM flight.  It takes me about 1.5 hours to get to or from the airport, not counting waiting for baggage and the shuttle to the parking lot, so that all means I would now be getting home after midnight.  Oh well. Last Thursday I was to leave for the airport at 7:30AM when I got a robot call that my flight TO Atlanta was cancelled and my new flight would leave on Friday morning at 6 AM.  Panic!  My classes at Stitches were to begin at 8:30 on Friday morning.  I called the airline, explained my situation, and was rebooked on an afternoon flight  with a different carrier that day.  Whew!  I thought all was well. I drove to the airport and was told that because I had booked the flight with my United miles and not money, Delta would not honor the ticket.  United had NO open seats and I was out of luck. With Spring Break, all flights were at capacity and I was "very lucky" to have the seat at 6AM the next day.  I didn't feel lucky driving home or calling the folks at Stitches that I would miss the morning session of my class the next day.  I didn't feel lucky that I had to now get up at 3AM to drive back to the airport to catch a flight the next day. It is aggravating.  But I got there safely, and I got home safely.  For that I do feel lucky every time.  And I felt very happy and relieved that my students were so gracious and understanding that their 6 hour class was reduced to 4 .5 hours.  Travel is so wearing–and more so the older I am getting.  The 49.5 pound suitcase feels heavier. (I am pretty good at keeping it just under the limit.)  I am gratified that once I get to where I am going, it is a fun time.  But I wish there were more flights from which to choose, like the old days.  I wish the airplanes weren't so crowded. I wish for the amenities of the last decade.  Sigh. This month has been so busy.  I have been in East Stroudsburg, PA teaching for Mountain Knits and Pearls, in Hillsborough, Virginia teaching at a retreat at a winery for Aylin's Woolgatherer, in Atlanta for Stitches South, and soon, Minneapolis, MN for Yarnover. Months like this see me unpacking and repacking the day I get home.  With two to three days of turn-around time, I can't dilly dally.  I have to get laundry done, new handouts printed, the proper samples selected to go in my suitcase, bills paid, new book and DVD orders shipped out.  When I think of how it used to be when my kids were growing up, I also added grocery shopping, meal planning (and some preparation), and catching up on their lives to the list.  How did I ever manage?  Isn't it amazing how we get done what needs to be done? Yet, my email box is full because I can't seem to deal with it all.  And I struggle to get designs done, chapters or articles written.  Those are the things at the top of my Want-To-Do List, but at the bottom of my Actual-To-Do List.  I see how productive others in my profession are and I feel envious. In May, I will be home the entire month.  I am so excited.  It is a scary month of no income.  But it is a month I can devote all my waking hours to editing my second DVD (on color stranding techniques).  I am looking forward to a predictable schedule.  I might even get some exercise in!    
I am very glad I decided to open up an Etsy shop.  I am now privy to a lot of great articles on all types of subjects.  Here is a wonderful one, with photos to drool over, about different artists' work spaces. I was so impressed with myself when I cleaned up my office at the beginning of the year.  The issue is that if you don't have the  right storage for all your stuff, the organization doesn't last long.  In addition, there needs to be space in which to work.  I am so frustrated with the lack of space that I am contemplating renting some studio space.  However, I love staying at home to do my work, so it is a problem.  I keep eyeing that second bedroom that my daughter Chelsea is in, and imagining how I would organize it with my Stuff if she moved out.  (She has the only real closet in the whole apartment.) Once I brought my basket making supplies into the house, chaos reared its ugly head once again.  Every bit of wall space already has either a book case or a cupboard on it housing my yarns, knitted samples, fibers, books, and tools.  Time for a road trip to Ikea, I think. I wonder if any of you have found a great solution to housing your Stuff.  Wanna share?

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I volunteered to give a demonstration for my spinning guild on my Charkha this month and I thought I would share this information with you.  The Charkha is a very old tool, one of the oldest forms of a spinning wheel, popularized by Gandhi in the last century. The concept of the spinning wheel came to India by way of Iran in the thirteenth century.  The charkha is powered by hand-cranking a wheel which in turn spins the spindle which sends twist into the fibers being spun, thus creating yarn or thread. "Charkha" means wheel in Hindi and was a tool as well as a symbol for the Indian Independence Movement.  Gandhi understood that the people of India could be self-sufficient if they spun their own cotton thread and made their own cloth for their clothing, rather than being dependent upon imported fabrics.  The resulting cloth is known as Khadi cloth, and I wrote about that a few blogs ago. I have both a book-size Charkha and a briefcase-sized Charkha.

Book Charkha in foreground, Briefcase Charkha in background

You can see some non-skid cloth peeking out from underneath the Book Charkha.  That helps to keep it from sliding around as I spin.  Also, the weaving on the coffee table was made from a commercial cotton warp and handspun cotton weft in Crackle weave, in case any of you are interested. I like to spin on both Charkhas, but prefer the book sized one for some unknown reason.  Mainly I have spun cotton on it.  Here is a skein I spun on the Charkha.

Charkha-spun Cotton

Here's a detail shot.  I plied it on my spinning wheel in a corkscrew fashion for more texture.  I find it difficult to ply on the Charkha because the spindles don't hold as much as a bobbin does on my regular wheel. I hope to weave cloth for a top someday from this.

Notice the corkscrew ply of this 2-ply yarn

The Process of Cotton to Yarn When I lived in Maryland, I tried growing cotton with very little success.  Maryland has high humidity which promotes rot.  Cotton needs a long dry growing season, which is why the South is perfect for this crop.  I must admit though that a friend of mine, who was an avid gardener in Maryland, was very successful in her attempts to grow cotton, and the blooms are so fragile, delicate, and beautiful.  I wish I still had a photo of them.  If you Google "cotton bloom" you can see some photos, but they don't do it justice. Here is the product of the cotton plant, cotton bolls.  The fibers of the boll, or lint, are attached to the seeds.  It is quite tedious to remove the seeds by picking them out of the cotton.  No wonder the cotton gin was so important in revolutionizing the cotton industry. I learned an African technique of using a stick to roll the bolls, which makes the seeds pop out. Some people use pasta machines!

Brown and white cotton bolls

When cotton is almost mature, the plants are defoliated, to drop the leaves and force the boll to mature.  Most cotton crops are heavily doused with toxic herbicides.  These poisons will reside in the cotton oils, an unfortunately prevalent food additive in use these days.  I try to avoid any food that has cottonseed oil listed in the ingredients for this reason.  When spinning or knitting with cotton, it's a good idea to buy organic whenever possible to reduce your exposure to those toxins.  One way organic cotton is defoliated is by withholding water.  What a simple, basic solution! There are many natural colors of cotton.  Here are just a few of the possible shades of browns, beiges, and greens.  I know I have more hiding around the house...  If you are interested in spinning on a charkha, I recommend Eileen Hallman's website New World Textiles for videos, organic cottons, and Indian Charkhas. On Jonathon and Sheila Bosworth's website you can see their beautiful handmade Charkhas, in luscious woods and high quality spindles and workings.

A few of the natural shades of cotton

When working with raw cotton (not prepared as a sliver for spinning) the cotton can be carded to make punis or poonis (an Indian term) that are little rolags that make spinning on a Charkha easy.

Multi-colored cotton sliver and a bundle of punis from India. Look at the newspaper used to wrap them!

When preparing wool, the desired result of the fiber preparation is to make a rolag that is light and airy.  For easy spinning of cotton on a Charkha, the punis must be dense and rolled tightly.  Here is how I make mine. I start by charging my cotton cards with cotton lint.

Carder charged with lint

Then I card the cotton and then strip the carders.  Here is what came off my carder:

Carded cotton lint

Now, I roll it tightly on a dowel I sanded smooth for this purpose.

Puni on a stick!

Then I push it off the stick.

Puni partway off the stick

Completed puni

Here's a one-minute low-quality movie of me spinning on my Charkha.  I couldn't find my Flip camera, so I used my regular camera and the quality isn't the same, but you get the idea. [wpvideo gpTVjAfx]

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There are few things that entice Vermonters more than the idea of going somewhere warm and sunny in February.  And, although I admit I love the snow, I have been feeling weary of it of late.  I came down with a cough and congestion the weekend before I was to leave, so I worked hard at resting, forcing fluids and drinking every herbal concoction known hoping to be well by the time Stitches rolled around.  So I got on the plane a little croaky, and just knew I'd recover immediately as the California sun beat down on me.  Well, I didn't see Mr. Sun until the day I left.  It rained.  I never left the building.  Sigh. My throat went into full-fledged laryngitis, but I had enough energy to not only teach my classes but to enjoy them as well.  If I wasn't doing something I was supposed to be doing, like being at the banquet or signing my books and DVDs, I was in bed and I am sure that's how I managed to get through the weekend. On Thursday, the teachers got together at 11am for an early lunch.  Here is my table:

Deanna Van Assche, Laura Farson, Lily Chin, Merike Saarnit, and Laura Bryant were at my table. Edie Eckman is in the background at another table.

It was a delicious lunch!  Then we went in to a big ballroom where the students were having lunch.  We each sat at a table for five minutes and gave a schpiel about ourselves, our classes, and what we love to knit.  I was so pleased how well this was received.  Some of the students had never considered traditional knitting and they were amazed at the little sweaters I brought along to show (you can see them in the foreground).  Here is a photo of my first table I sat at:

Students at the a la carte luncheon--sorry Amy, you got cut off!

Then I taught my Norwegian Purl class, signed books and DVDs, and went to bed. Friday, I taught Color Twined Mitts.  Everyone worked so hard and did a fabulous job!

Look at all those lovely mitts!

I went to bed instead of going to the Fashion Show where I had entered two of my designs (Susan's Eriskay Gansey form my DVD and the Classic Gansey Cardigan).  My friend Karen went though and told me they were well received, so that made me happy. Saturday was my Tam class.  Again, my students worked so hard and several finished their tams, including sewing in the ends!  Aren't the colorways they chose just wonderful?

Beautiful tams!

Sunday my class on Latvian Fingerless Mitts ran.  We worked on scalloped cuffs,  half-braids and the Herringbone Braid as well as working with two, three, and four yarns in a round, as the fearless Latvians do!

All those lovely mitts! The color combinations were inspiring!

Sunday evening, I had a lovely dinner (my appetite came back with a vengeance) with Janel Laidman and Gail Roehm.  What a terrific time we had.  Then it was time for The Dreaded Red Eye.  Foolishly I succumbed to buying a mystery book at the airport and stayed up most of the night reading on my flights.  By the time I got home, I was delirious with exhaustion and I slept for two days, dreaming of the good time I had had.

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Time travel back with me about 17 years ago.  I am teaching at a TKGA conference and I grab a few minutes to go down into the market.  I head for Yo's Needlework Shop (sadly no longer in business) because she has those fabulous Japanese knitting books.  I can't read Japanese but the pictures are so great who needs to?  Yo is very persuasive and talks me into a book that uses a new kind of needle, a crochet hook with a shoestring through it.  The book and needle are shipped to me.  I look at it for a moment, put it on the bookshelf, and forget about it.  I am too busy knitting. Fast forward to VK Live in NYC this past January.  I have just come out of the market and am waiting for an up elevator.  A long time.  Fortunately.  Because there is a lovely young Japanese woman waiting for a down elevator. She is wearing a soft grey mohair dress of indescribable beauty.  It looks knitted, or crocheted, but not really.  In fact I can't quite figure it out.  She tells me that it is a Japanese technique where you knit up and you knit down.  In other words, in opposite directions.  I am fascinated and my stupid elevator decides to arrive at that moment.  Can you believe I got on it? Now I am haunted.  I write to a Japanese knitting friend of mine and ask her about it.  She asks about the young woman and asks if the dress she was wearing is grey mohair.... It turns out my friend Mari knows Izumi, the young woman I saw at the elevator, and gave me her web address.  I tried to email her from her blog, not sure if I was clicking on the right button (in Japanese) and she graciously emailed me back and even suggested some Japanese books on the subject: Japan Amazon- basic books Japan Amazon- more advanced book Izumi said, "The stitches you saw on my mohair dress, is not on any of those books because that was created by my Ipponbari teacher pretty recently.  With this needle you can combine stitches of knitting, crochetting (Tunisian as well) and other unique stitches, so we are exploring more and more possiblity of new stitches right now. I'd love that someday Ipponbari books will be published in English though." Here is a photo of the fabric of the mohair dress. Here is Izumi's blog of her past projects. What a variety of knitting techniques: mitered squares, gloves, lace, you name it!  Here is a blog about it from Rhonda, an American, where this technique is called "Knooking".  She has a 15 page PDF download on her Etsy shop that will get you started. There is even a Ravelry group devoted to Knooking.  Who knew? I have started a little project, a cotton bag, from a pattern in some of the papers included with my book I received so long ago.  I will post more photos as I progress so you can check back!

Bag made by Ipponbari

You can see two shoe strings in the "knooked" fabric.  I am about to take out the light pink one, having just finished a round with the dark pink one.  I have worked garter stitch, columns of purls and knits, and cables.  It's time for the beads.  Don't look TOO closely, there are mistakes.  Now I am off to Stitches.  More later!
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