Archive for November, 2003

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Yummy! There is nothing quite like hot roasted che…

Yummy! There is nothing quite like hot roasted chestnuts on a chilly fall day!

And to make things even better, we are one step closer to having the barn built! They are out back right now working on it. The first floor is just about framed in! I just took the guys some hot coffee, hot chestnuts and a few choc. chip cookies to warm them up a bit and they may get in another 4 hours of work if the weather holds. Perhaps, with a bit of luck we can move the stuff into the storage part of it by Christmas and finally be able to have my fiber room! Very exciting!

I’ve finished 1 mitten for my niece and I’m about to start the other. In between I’m doing a bit of spinning on the merino and angora that I want to make a hat out of . . .

And of course, there is a pile of laundry and some dishes to be done . . . better get back to it!

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Wow, its saturday already! Time sure does fly when…

Wow, its saturday already! Time sure does fly when you are having fun!

Yesterday was a great day. A came over around 11 am and we made choc. chip cookies. Yum!

Our other project for the day was to teach her how to scour raw fleece ; ) I had lots of raw materials we can “practice” on. So in the spirit of a true, old-fashioned apprenticeship we got to work on about 2 1/2 lbs of very greasy corriedale. First we teased the locks open a bit, then stuffed them into mesh laundry bags. Once we had 4 bags full we started running the hot water. We then did 2 washes and a rinse on each bag full, putting the rinsed fiber into a pillowcase so we could restuff the mesh bag for the next batch. Once we had 3-4 bags worth in the pillow case we gave it a spin in the washing machine. It took us almost 12 hours to do it all! Of course we did bake cookies while the sink was filling and watch a couple of movies while we were teasing the next batches of wool . . . . but it was a long day worth of work and she hung in there quite well.

We also got permission for her to stay over and had planned to start the next fleece this morning. However, the day and my husband had other plans for us and so far we’ve been to the Grocery store, the bank, the post office and Home Depot. I’m about to take another run back to HomeDepot and then we are going to make bananna bread and apple pies. My Dad is coming for dinner tonight and Monday is his birthday so he is getting a birthday apple pie (he likes them way better than cake) and A has some homework to do, but we might, just maybe, find the time to scour just a little more fleece before we call it quits.

thats all for now!

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Happy Thanksgiving! I am totally enjoying today…

Happy Thanksgiving!

I am totally enjoying today! Selfish as it may sound, I’m home alone, knitting a little, still in my pjs at noon and drinking gallons of coffee and reading blogs!

We are breaking with tradition this year. Normally we either cook her and have both families over or juggle going to my mother’s and either his mother’s or brother’s houses all in the same day. Either way there is lots of work and cooking involved and invariably some family arguement that just can’t be avoided and all the other “fun” stuff that goes along with the holidays.

This year, we changed the plan. We have told both mothers that we want to spend a thanksgiving on our own (a first in 7 years) and have made plans to go to J & L’s house for dinner. This is the couple that we spent the entire trip to Italy with last month and after traveling with someone for 3 weeks they really do become family. So you could say we will be having dinner with the family we chose rather than the families we were born into. DH is working during the day and should be finished sometime after 6 (or as early as 4 if the manager is kind) and we are due at their house by 6.

This means that other than making my famous homemade cranberry sauce and 2 apple pies and getting myself ready and over there . . . the rest of the day is mine to use as I please. No extra cleaning for company, no birds to cook or sides to make , just knitting and coffee and Superman on Scifi!

What a beautiful Thanksgiving!

Apparently my rant the other day did strike a few cords with bloggers out there. Glad to know I’m not alone; perhaps we should start a Fiber Snobs Support Group?

Bess has an interesting approach to gift giving and receiving, I have to say I’d like to adopt it for my own in the future!

Well, again, Happy Thanksgiving! I’m going back to my mitten project!

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I know it’s Tuesday, but it feels like a Monday! …

I know it’s Tuesday, but it feels like a Monday!

Starting with the fact I had written a nice long post and hit the wrong button and its gone!!!!

So lets try this again, shall we?

I managed to get the holiday gift project I mentioned yesterday to the 1/2 way mark last night and I’ve started the other half and hope to finish it by the weekend, wish me luck!

I also started my Gram’s Holiday Shawl project. The yarn I couldn’t think of the name of yesterday is Lion Brand Wool Ease Bulky. I have to say, I’m less than fond of this yarn. While it is the right yarn for the project, it does have a tendancy to split stitches easily and to snag on the needles. I’m using it because Gram has to have something machine washable and I know it is the type of thing she will like, but it isn’t a yarn I would choose to use often or for myself.

**Warning: Rant ahead!**

While we are on the subject of acrylic yarns, there has been a lot of chatter on the Yahoo! Groups and other places lately about fiber choices and how knitters treat one and other based on those choices. I haven’t posted there about it, but I will here since this is my space to state my opinions.

I am a Fiber Snob.

I’m stating this up front so there will be no confusion on that point. I like natural fibers. I have gotten more into them since I became a spinner and learned more about them. I will use other fibers or blends for specific projects and find myself occassionlly drawn to an intersting novelty yarn with a high acryllic content. However, given the choice I’d probably try to knit with barbed wire before I’d buy Red Heart.

That said, I realize that not everyone feels that way (which is what keeps LB and RH in business, afterall!) There has been much discussion going around about the fact that not everyone can afford natural fibers and that there are many reasons that some people prefer to use acrylics. To each his own, right?

I certainly wouldn’t hassle a beginner for using RH for their first project, though in my experience with helping new knitters I’ve found that a basic wool is often easier to work with. I keep a supply of random bits of Cascade 220 on hand for just such occassions. I also think bamboo needles with wool are easier for a beginner to handle . . . but that is another whole discussion.

A number of years ago, after I had been knitting for about a year, I took a good hard look at my stash. It was filled with all sorts of acrylic yarns that I had accumulated from the local craft store sales. There were a few skeins of wool, wool/alpaca blends and even a skein or two of mohair. After thinking about what projects I really did want to work on and which yarns I was most likely to reach for in those tubs (yes, I had several tubs after a year of collecting) I realized that most of what I had were yarns I really didn’t want to use. They might have been a “great buy” at the time, but the odds of my working with them were slim.

Part of my rational for this, which was certainly true back then, and is still true now, is that I am a relatively slow knitter. It can take me weeks to months to finish any one object, and that is if I don’t get distracted to another project! Therefore, given the amount of time it takes me, the hours and hours that I put into a project, it only makes sense (to me) to use the the best materials I can afford. I get hours of enjoyment from handling the yarn (or fiber) and if I were to value the finished object in terms of both materials and labor, the labor cost (even at a modest hourly rate) would far exceed the materials cost for any project I’ve done.

As for ease of care, if I can spend hours and hours of my time (which really is the only thing we truely have) working on a handknit whatever for someone, the least they can do is take a few minutes to hand wash it every once in a while. If they aren’t up for the challenge, then perhaps I should stick to purchasing their gifts?

I do make some exceptions for this generalization. My Grams is one. She is way past the point where she can be expected to wash things by hand (she’s 82 and not very “with it”), I do know that she appreciates when someone makes her something and therefore it is time well invested even if it must be spend handling acrylic yarns.

The other exception I’m willing to make is for new mothers. Generally, I make gifts for new babies in 2 categories. I either knit simple patterns that go up quickly and are intended for “every-day” type use, in which case I will use a machine washable yarn. Sometimes that is superwash wool, other times its a wool/acrylic blend and very seldomly it will be all acrylic. The other cateogory of baby item I make are those gifts intended for special people, who I believe will appreciate the time and effort put into the gift, and who will take the time to launder according to instructions. These are ususally things with a more complicated pattern that will look best in wool or a wool/silk blend or what ever and are intended to be used for special occasions and treated as potential family heirlooms. I make far more things in category 1 than in category 2.

On the other hand, my MIL recently commented that she may stop knitting all together since she only really knits for others and she feels the people she has been knitting for do not appreciate the things she makes. I managed to restrain myself, but it wasn’t easy. See, she is what the ladies at my knitting group refer to as a “Red Heart Girl”. She is of an era when acrylics were the hip new thing. Far cheaper than wool, not scratchy like old wool used to be and machine washable, what’s not to love, right? Especially if you are knitting things for a family as a way to save money. Way understandable, for say the 1940s and 1950s. What she doesn’t get is that the people she is knitting for see these gifts as “crafty”*. They don’t take into account the hours of love and work she puts into them. They simply see inexpensive materials and think “CHEAP” which is often spelled “CRAP” in many people’s dictionaries.

While I understand her preferences, I just can’t agree with them. I have been the receipient of several of the things she has made over the past few years and while I do wear them, it is out of obligation, not enjoyment. I therefore, have a hard time blaming anyone else for not using the things she makes.

I guess the moral of this story would be “know your audience”. If you are making a gift for someone, take into account what their preferences might be. If you know they really prefer wool but can’t afford to knit them a wool sweater, why not make them a wool hat or mittens instead? They are probably more likely to use it than something made from a fiber they don’t ejoy. I have a friend who abhors mohair and angora, anything fuzzy, so I simply don’t use those fibers when making things for her. I have another friend who is allergic to everything, and I do mean everything. So she gets things made from high-end acrylics, like Collinette yarns. My husband doesn’t like acrylic at all, but is also very hard on his clothing, so he gets wool blends with a high wool content but enough nylon or other man-made fiber to add some strength to the fabric. I have come to believe that choosing the right yarn for a project is as much a matter of choosing the right fiber for the recipient as choosing the proper yarn for the pattern intended.

*By “crafty” I mean that handknit things tend to fall into two categories, Hand made or home made. Homemade being that stuff that Mom used to make which was embarrassing to wear in front of the other kids at school, the type of stuff that shows up commonly at chuch craft sales and generally almost anything that involves a glue-gun to make. Hand made being the stuff that you could sell in a high-end boutique for what it is actually worth, in both materials and labor.

Note: The preceeding are my opinions. I’m entitled to mine and your entitled to yours and since this is my blog I get to post mine here! If you agree, great! If you don’t agree that’s fine too!

End Rant

Interesting, I haven’t posted something that long in a while!

Guess I should get back to work now. I’ll have more updates on the projects soon and I’ll try to borrow a camera to take some pictures soon and I’ll post the photos of the gifts after they have been presented so as not to spoil anyones surprise!

One more work day this week, will we make it?

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Happy Monday Everyone! Okay, here is the latest…

Happy Monday Everyone!

Okay, here is the latest quiz making the rounds:

Which Fantasy/SciFi Character Are You?

I had a rather productive knitting weekend, though since I worked on holiday projects I can’t tell you what I was working on! Lets just say I got a lot of stitches done!

The one project I can mention is that I bought some yarn, Lion Brand - some sort of bulky stuff- to make a shawl for my grandmother. She isn’t online and probably has no idea what a blog is so I can talk about her gift without fearing she’ll read this! I don’t often use LB, I tend to prefer natural fibers (with the exception of some novelty yarns) and I’ve only gotten “worse” about this since becoming a spinster! (Yikes, I’m a spinster!) However, my Grams is getting up there (she’ll be 82 this spring) and easy care is a major factor in what we give her these days. Hand washing of things just isn’t going to happen and since the cat doesn’t need a new felted bed that badly, she is getting a washable 80% acrylic/20% wool shawl. I plan to knit it up something similar to the purple shawl from hell that I did for myself, though I may do a simpler stitch pattern (Grams is also blind in one eye so complicated stitches are lost on her anyway. Basically, I want to make her something warm she can toss over her shoulders while watching her tv. . . . So I got a pine green bulky yarn and I’ll be breaking out the size 11 needles to whip this out!

Alright, back to work. Lots to do today. I’ll post again tomorrow if at all possible.

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