Showing posts with label Spinning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spinning. Show all posts

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Finished Object, Finished Books, Finished 2nd Graders

A Big Finished Object

The Lacy Prairie Shawl from Cheryl Oberle's Folk Shawls. I'd been working on it for over a year, maybe two. I'd work on it a bit, then put it away for other projects.
















Unblocked.

















Close-up.
















Modeled.















Leftover yarn. Nothing like cutting it a bit close. It's done in Cascade 220 in the "Tahiti" colorway.

Books I've finished in March
  • The Johnstown Flood by David McCullough -- a history, rather gruesome at times, but fascinating
  • The Riddle of the Sands by Erskine Childers -- a turn of the (last) century thriller that is considered the first spy novel in English. Set in the Frisian Islands in the time leading up to WWI. A few old fashioned passages, but really a rip roaring read. Interesting factoid: the author was later killed in the Irish Civil War.
  • The Bloody Tower by Carola Dunn -- Former aristocrat and policeman's wife Daisy Dalrymple Fletcher solves a murder at the Tower of London in the 1920s. Not rip-roaring, more comfortable, but I love the setting.
  • Shark Island by Joan Druett -- More in the Wiki Coffin nautical mystery series
  • The Bounty by Caroline Alexander -- a detailed history of the mutiny and its aftermath
  • Dark Tort by Diane Mott Davidson -- another Goldy Bear catering mystery
  • The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick -- this one is hard to categorize. It is the most recent Caldecott medal book, but it is 500+ pages. However, it's a quick read as some of the action takes place in the illustrations and in movie stills. It's not a comic book, but might appeal to young comic book readers.
  • The Unfinished Clue by Georgette Heyer -- another 1930s classic British mystery. I like Heyer because she sometimes sneaks in a bit of dry humor.
  • Murder on the Flying Scotsman by Carola Dunn -- another Daisy Dalrymple mystery
Finished Second Graders

While I was out on medical leave, the second grade heard several versions of Rumpelstiltskin. I brought in my spinning wheel and demonstrated for them. One of our state standards is that they learn concept of a production process for finished goods and I thought this would qualify.


















I've never had as rapt an audience in this age level right before spring break! They were fascinated.

















They were even interested in the knitting that follows spinning.

Finally, as an aside, does this look like a comfortable way to sleep?









Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Brrrr

When I got up Sunday it was 0 degrees F (-17.7 C) with a wind chill of -18 F (-27.7 C). Now I know my Canadian readers won't be too impressed, but that's cold!

So, the perfect day to come home from church and watch the Bruins come within 45 seconds of a shutout. And knit, of course.

Final score: Boston 3, NY 1.

Other fiber fun from the past couple of weeks:

Setting the twist on some spun and plied BFL.


Felt-o-rama!

Sock in progress.

Winter is the time for books. Curl up on the couch with a good one. (Of course, I think summer's great for reading too, and spring and fall . . .)

Current reading: picked it up in Nova Scotia.

Recent reads:

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Blah Day

It's one of those gloomy, blah, winter days. And I'm fighting off another round of sniffles and congestion.
No sunshine.
Lady Jane sure knows how to deal with days like this.

On the up side I've some FOs.
Baby hats for upcoming shower (for a girl).

And yesterday I finished spinning one of the Blue Face Leicester singles. One more huge bobbin of single to go, then I can ply.
Brown Blue-Faced goodness.

I'm going to go be a couch potato and knit some more.

"I'm still not sure about this thing!"

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Too Long

Okay, I can tell it's been too long since I blogged when I go to download pictures from the camera and see that there are still things on there from three weeks ago.

I have been busy!

I went to a Natalie McMaster concert -- fifth row! Brilliant!















I finished spinning my gray mohair. I have stealth plans for this yarn.












I survived Open House at school.

I went to the Feast of the Hunter's Moon in Lafayette.

















































I am recovering from the sudden attack of a two-day cold (no pictures).

I'm trying not to envy everyone at Rhinebeck.

Today I ventured into the kitchen for more dyeing.


"Before" picture of the gray mohair. I don't really like the gray color.












"Before" picture of the too-bright yellow. I bought it for a project with primary colors that got frogged to turn into something else.







Enter the Kool-Aid.







"After" pictures -- cooling. The red and green look so Christmas-y.







We'll see how they do rinsed, dried and skeined. Stay posted.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

What I Learned on Summer Vacation

Okay, here are the musings on my experience that I promised. Since I'm limited on time, it is in the form of my interim report to the Lilly Endowment. The report is due Sept. 30; nothing like procrastination. The report requires introspection, so if you're not that into discovering aspects of my personal growth feel free to skip it! :-)

The stated purpose of my proposal was to purchase a spinning wheel and fibers necessary to create handspun yarn, as well as participate in spinning workshops in Nova Scotia. I planned to create handspun yarn for a one-of a kind knitted sweater. Upon return to Indiana, I hoped to use my spinning skills to demonstrate for students the process of turning natural resources into finished goods.

Using funds from the grant I purchased a Majacraft Rose spinning wheel. This is a high-quality wheel made in New Zealand and one that is versatile enough to meet a spinner’s needs for a lifetime. I planned and carried out my visit to Nova Scotia. This trip included two weeks of workshops at the Spinner’s Loft. While in Nova Scotia I also explored the province’s fiber community with visits to historical sites, sheep farms, and an alpaca farm and fiber mill.

I have yet to set up a demonstration for students. The beginning of the school year is so hectic for all concerned and teachers have not yet reached the point in the social studies curriculum which my demonstration would address. I plan to work with the teachers over the course of the school year to showcase this production process when appropriate. In addition, although I have begun spinning for my planned sweater, producing enough yarn for the project is quite time-consuming. I expect this to be an on-going task which will take most of the school year.

Although I have done most of what I planned with the project, so much of it has been unexpected. Above all, this experience offered me more than I expected. I learned so much more than just how to spin, I was offered more opportunities than I anticipated, and I was changed more than I foresaw.

Learning to spin was a challenge, in no small part because I had to step outside of my usual learning styles. I am very much a visual learner. I process things best by reading (no surprise in a librarian). I even learned to knit by teaching myself from a book. I prepared extensively for my trip by researching the area I was to visit. It became a joke among Leslie (the teacher) and Paula (my fellow student) during the workshops that any place they mentioned I had read about.

During the spinning workshops, however, I was immersed in tactile experiences. Both Leslie and Paula assimilated knowledge by doing, rather than reading or seeing. I was forced to do the same. Although Leslie demonstrated and explained all the steps involved, I could not simply follow directions in order to spin. There was too much information I could not understand until I experienced the work. It required lots of practice, literally feeling my way through the fiber. It was only as I practiced later the next week that I began to see clearly the various parts of the process that had been explained earlier. I began to have a better understanding of students who learn by this method.

The grant also opened doors and created opportunities otherwise unavailable to me. Although the financial support made this experience possible, the credibility factor was important as well. Instead of showing up off the street and asking to see behind the scenes at a historic site or to visit valuable farm animals, explaining that I was on a grant to study the fiber community gave my requests a certain legitimacy. If the Lilly Endowment gave me their money, surely I was trustworthy. In addition, people went out of their way to suggest other contacts I should pursue while in the area. I will add, however, that there was a certain amount of incredulity outside of the fiber community when I explained what I was doing. Generally people found it hard to believe that teachers would be given money “just” to explore areas of interest to themselves. It was yet another example of why this fellowship program is so rare and valued.

Finally, I was surprised at the amount of personal growth I experienced as part of this program. I fully expected to learn the skill of spinning. I did not foresee the amazing jump in self confidence that traveling on my own coupled with learning a new skill would produce. The logistics of being away from home for five weeks required a lot of planning. In addition to fitting all expenses into my budget, travel produced unexpected situations to be met. Whether dealing with the discovery that I had planned a drive of too many hours for one day or that there was no air conditioning in the dormitory during a week of 90 degree temperatures, I was left to my own devices to find solutions. Doing so more or less successfully showed me I can face everyday challenges at work with aplomb as well.

Simply leaving behind the day to day experience of my life, which had fallen into a rut, gave me new perspective on things as well. Every day did not have to fall into a routine. Change was exciting. On the other hand, the return home was comforting too. Although I settled back into my work routine within days, the memory of my experience reminds me that the four walls of my library truly are not the limits of my world.

Based on my new skills, my new confidence, and my new perspective, I hope to share my skills with students, complete the spinning of yarn for a sweater, and perhaps even begin a small Internet-based yarn business in the future. I would also highly recommend the Lilly Endowment Teacher Creativity program to fellow educators.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Two Weeks?!?!

It's hard to believe it's been two weeks since I posted.

How to spend two weeks and hardly realize it:

1. Grocery/laundry/post office/clean/vacuum/bank/oil change/bills/work [life].

2. Put together two bookshelves.













3. Grade papers.










4. Spin some more alpaca single.










5. Knit (while reading if possible). Most of my knitting recently has been stealth projects for the upcoming holidays.










6. Begin spinning some merino.











7. Remember to blog!

Monday, September 3, 2007

I'm Still Here

Yes, I'm still here, in spite of a long silence due to my mom being in the hospital with complications from surgery and a couple of crazy weeks at work.

But the spinning and knitting go on (keeping me sane).


The first thing I've knitted from yarn I spun -- a small scarf from kid mohair. I love the colors blended with the brown.







More of the alpaca, although the bag of fiber left to spin still looks full. I've got about 330 yards of yarn now, so I'm hoping by the time I'm finished to have enough for a sweater. We'll see . . .






A sort of head scarf / wrap thingie a friend of mine found in a Spin-Off magazine and wasn't sure she could knit herself.




I think I look vaguely like a Russian grandmother in it, but Meghan is so elegantly stylish in a Victorian sort of way that I'm sure she can pull it off.






I've also snuck in some reading and audio books. I finished listening to The Island at the Center of the World by Russell Shorto, a rather lengthy but fascinating account of New York City's days as the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam. Recently read in print were Murder in Chinatown by Victoria Thompson (turn of the century NYC mystery), The Squire's Tale by Margaret Frazer (medieval mystery), and Three Bags Full by Leoni Swann, which defies categorization but is sort of mystery solved by sheep.

Labor Day weekend and labor is calling -- house to clean, errands to run, spinning to do! :-)

Monday, August 20, 2007

Quick Stuff

Not much time today, but a few things I wanted to post.

Shortly after returning from my trip, I completed my socks. Technically this is not my first pair of socks, as I had previously completed a set of toddler's socks in worsted weight. However, this is my first pair made to fit a specific set of feet (mine) and made with sock yarn. They're finished, fit, and look like socks, so wahoo!













I have been somewhat buried in piles of stuff to put away, laundry to do, house to clean, and starting school, but I have managed to get in some spinning and knitting. I have worked on the alpaca and have finished two skeins plus one bobbin of a single. The bag seems never ending, but since it was free and I hope to make a sweater, I am not complaining.












Spent time at the hospital today as my mother was having surgery, and made some progress on the shawl I have been working on for over a year. I'm down to about 30 rows left (it's one of those triangles where each repeat has two more stitches than the last), so I hope to post a FO picture soon.

Must return to the laundry. I should finish seating charts as well, but doing ten today was enough.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Yesterday

Saturday morning after a breakfast of yummy whole grain pancakes with fresh wild strawberries, it was time for some final pictures.



My production for the week, starting with top left and finishing with bottom right. The white and light green on the bottom are the mohair I had trouble with. The pink and gray combo is the dog hair.My production for the week, starting with top left and finishing with bottom right. The white and light green on the bottom are the mohair I had trouble with. The pink and gray combo is the dog hair.




Paula and I with our week’s worth of spun yarn.







I took Paula to the train station in Halifax, since it is only about 3 blocks from my hotel. We stopped at LK Yarns in the Hydrostone Market first; there were some souvenir yarn purchases, but it was all Fleece Artist and on sale.

Dropped Paula at the train in a downpour, then wandered around Halifax doing some shopping before checking into my hotel. This afternoon (Sunday)I plan to drive to Wolfville to a sheep farm and get some more fiber to practice with this week before returning to Leslie’s for the advanced workship next week. I also hope to post more frequently now that I’m in Halifax for the week.

Thursday and Friday

Thursday and Friday were cloudy and rainy, so we did a lot of spinning.



Paula at the wheel.









Tuesday morning I had moved to my own wheel from Leslie’s. Here I am plying yarn.






We spun mostly New Zealand wool mixed with some merino or synthetic fibers.


The results of Thursday. Far from perfect, but a definite improvement over Monday. The far right is wool mixed with tiny portions of synthetic, then plied with yellow cotton).



Thursday was Paula’s birthday. A neighbor of Leslie’s brought us fresh scallops for supper right out of Jeddore Harbor that afternoon.


Leslie made Paula a birthday pie – strawberry!








Leslie’s wood burning stove. During the summer she mostly uses the electric one to the right.






Friday it was more spinning practice. And it was mostly harder to spin stuff! Leslie is good about pushing you just as much as you need. For instance, I don’t think I will ever be friends with hand carders, but I’ve been taught to use them in spite of myself, which is a good thing. Although I’ll probably spin mostly from roving (fiber purchased ready to spin), it is always good to know more about how the fiber gets that way and to be able to prepare it if need be.

We spun mohair (some major regression in quality of spinning there), merino wool, and dog hair! Finally, I spun a single of Dorset roving I had purchased at Lismore Farm. I only had time to spin half of it before my back and supper told me it was time to quit for the day. I plan to spin the other half as practice this coming week.




I love the color of the Dorset. It’s brown/black, depending on the light, with bits of gray. I also love the crimp (springy-ness) of it.

More Spinning (Wednesday, July 18)

Well, some spinning, anyway. This was kind of a play day.

Depending on the type of sheep, wool can have what is called a short staple or long staple. Staple is the length of the individual fibers in the wool (or other types of fibers). Basically, really long or really short staple fiber is harder to spin -- at least for a beginner.

Today I picked (teased out) the wool and Paula turned it into batting on the drum carder. Batting looks like quilt batting and is used instead of rolwags (see Monday) to spin from. We used a longer staple brown wool and a shorter staple white wool.



The drum carder processes more wool more quickly than the hand carders.






The brown wool came out quite nicely I thought, hardly any slubs. The white was a little slubbier, since it had a shorter staple.

After spinning, we took a picnic to the Clam Harbour Beach.


A 30 to 40 minute hike brought us to “the Devil’s Oven,” this rock formation. The waves coming in make a sound like a door slamming (the oven door?).










Feet in the water again. This time no need for a jacket after that rather warm hike.






















Relaxing after lunch.





Just about the time we left, the sun went into the clouds and haze began to form over the ocean.

Inukshuk Cove. Okay, that’s probably not its real name, but it’s a cove with an inukshuk.






Back to the house for a nap, dinner, and some plying of the wool spun earlier that day.




Looking a little better each time.














Mist and fog have arrived.