Tag Archives: gifts

For the love of chickens. And wool. And eucalypts.

In the latest issue of Knitty, there is a stranded colourwork hat featuring a Rhode Island Red chicken design by Pam Sluter. I don’t know Pam, but clearly we share a love of chickens, wool and knitting.  In short, I had one of those moments, and decided to cast on RIGHT AWAY!  Because, I have these handspun yarns.  Mmmm.  Polwarth, my friends.  Soft as anything. Perfect for a little hat.

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I had an early period of doubt, because provisional cast on, and then three circular needles in play for a while.  I held my nerve.  I consulted a  book on cast ons and bind offs.  I love a good book.

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I tried to talk myself out of taking it on the bus.  Because charted patterns are not really ideal for bus knitting and I have a perfectly charming sock on the go.  No hope of resistance.  I kept wondering if the woman on the other side of the aisle could really be staring at me as intently as she seemed to be from the corner of my eye.  How can my eye possibly be following the chart, keeping track of two yarns on the needles, and still noticing a total stranger?  Eventually as we neared our destination I looked over.  Yes!  She was utterly intent.  It appeared we didn’t share much common language so I showed her the picture. She grinned.

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Here is the finished hat, being blocked over a big jar.  But you know, not a jar as big as my head.

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I did not do a gauge swatch.  Risk taking knitting, I tell you!  I went up a needle size as even when not using two colours, I tend to be on the tight side with knitting, and stranded colourwork has a tendency to mysteriously come out smaller than planned.  Especially in the hands of a novice.  Especially with long floats.  Well.  Not truly a mystery, then!  This is the medium size and I have to say, nowhere near fitting on my head.  I didn’t swatch because I was quite prepared to give this hat to whomever might like it and fit into it… and I am thinking of starting out with one of my very small friends.  Who would look cuter than any button in this…

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A patch of potato sacks

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I scored more potato sacks from the organic food co-op we belong to.  It has been running for many years, mostly because of the hard work of a few trusty and amazing people–and one of my friends in particular.

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I turned these into fully lined bags.  The printing isn’t designed to last but I like to honour the humble hessian sack, while there are still some of them left to honour.

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I am planning for these to go back to the co-op where other members might like them.

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Needless to say lining them brought on a little bag breakout.  I managed to finish one more sheet offcut collection! And provide yet further evidence that there are some things about my camera I don’t understand after all this time.

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Socks!

These socks were on the needles a long while: begun in March and finished in May. But–they are finished and turn out to be a great fit.

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The pattern is trusty old Jaywalker by Grumperina.  It isn’t a very stretchy stitch pattern, but once you get these on, they have fabulous staying up power, and they are great for a variegated yarn such as I love to knit.

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The yarn has been in my stash for years!  It’s Lorna’s Laces Shepherd Sock in Lakeview.  Finally, the perfect project.  I adapted the pattern for my dear friend’s especially slender feet, and they have been my trusty companions not only at WomAdelaide but also on buses and trains and in meetings and coffee shops.  I already have a new friend keeping me company on all such occasions…

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The tale of a little jumper

Once upon a time, there was a woman with a feverish imagination and far too much yarn.  Her imagination had only been further stoked by the Knitsonik Stranded Colourwork Sourcebook–ordered after various enthusiastic reviews on blogs and podcasts of her acquaintance.  This one, for instance. This book had been taken on a couple of holidays where it had led to hikes to find the closest stationery shop and purchase graph paper… followed by much sketching and colouring in and even more fevered imagining of stranded colourwork knobby club rush

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and stranded colourwork bike racks

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and stranded colourwork public artworks

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and stranded colourwork ruined jetties standing in the incoming tide.

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Each time, though, the woman who already had far too much yarn would be driven to a screeching halt by the complete absence of dozens of colours of Jamieson’s shetland wool in her already overwhelming collection, and a return to her far too time consuming paid day job.

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Why, she would think, would it make sense for me to buy more wool when I am spinning more on a regular basis and have entire fleeces waiting in the garage?  Why would it make sense to import wool from the UK when I am trying to reduce my carbon footprint, however inadequately?  On the other hand, what to do about having so much yarn in different weights, gauges, colours, breeds… this is nothing like having hundreds of yarns in the same nice neat breed and grist to knit, is it?

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Then, one day, she was preparing to go to a retreat at Tin Can Bay where surely there would be more knitting time than usual…she remembered how the last such experience (a workshop with India Flint in Melbourne) had triggered a breakthrough into her first really exciting stranded colourwork ever–and two handed colourwork knitting (and no, India wasn’t trying to teach these things–but that’s the way learning and inspiration go hand in hand when they go really well…)

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and there was a bigger than usual surge of blood to her head… and then there was a furious last-minute gathering of the Sourcebook and of skeins despite the lack of time to convert them into centre pull balls… and the addition of a nostepinne (to allow the hand winding of skeins into said balls)… and some creative suitcase stuffing…(although some choices had to be made) and all the pinks, purples and oranges got left at home.

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There were last minute consultations about measurement followed up by long distance text messages with schematics… in short, there was some co-operation coupled with serious planetary alignment.  Though it must be admitted that one of the graph exercise books–the one with the favoured designs in it–defied discovery.

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And then, there was some fabulous creative retreat time and delight and more downtime in the evening than usual, even if in dubiously dim light. And so a jumper began to take shape.  And was relentlessly encouraged by her new-found friends.

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Until one fine day, this jumper that had been knit in two states, on planes, by the beach, in class, by the TV, at the Guild… that had turned out to be smaller than anticipated but still to fit for the moment… came to a conclusion. It had a nice bath and pat into shape.

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By this time it had started many conversations with strangers about potential sale which had to be rebuffed by explaining what gifts from the heart are.  There had also been many unsolicited comments on the terrible ungratefulness and wool washing habits of young things these days.  They gave rise to explanations of the extremely loving, warm reception of all such gifts in the particular family for which it was destined, and their dedication to treating wool as it should be treated and washing and darning when the occasion requires.  And a lot of gratefulness in the heart of the knitter for the presence of such near and dear people in her life.

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Needless to say, this garment reached a final shape full of all kinds of wonky peculiarities and uniquenesses, which will not be further detailed.  Once it was pulled over the head of the recipient, they didn’t seem important anymore.

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Knitsonik’s design of a road leading into the distance made it onto the front, looking more like waves in this set of colours.

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All kinds of asymmetry made their way onto the sleeves.

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The yarns are mostly from Malcolm the corriedale (may he rest in peace), a sheep who had a long and well loved life in the Adelaide Hills, and a pet Polwarth, also from the Hills.  The creamy pale yellow is from an exhaust bath of coreopsis saved by my mother, a fabulous and generous gardener.  The greens are from that same coreopsis and from osage orange shavings donated to the Guild overdyed with indigo.  The blues are from indigo.  The jumper was designed with much guesswork with help from the intended recipient, my fairy goddess-son (and lots of help from his mother, my friend)–and with so much encouragement from friends, retreat companions and strangers.

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Of shawls and string and celebration

Manja wearing Shawl 2015

The colour affection shawl  I knit a while back finally found the perfect home as a birthday present for a dear friend–here she is in her gloriousness, modelling it.  With the Gleaners in the background for added wonderfulness. I am delighted that she likes the shawl. I can’t think of a better place for it to be than with her while she is working in her very demanding job (and perhaps even playing).  Long may it warm and comfort her.  Happy birthday!!

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In more prosaic news, it’s the season for making string from our daylily leaves. When I strip off the leaves that have died, I make string from them.  I’ve been doing this for a few years now.  I’m not terribly good at it but I love it.

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Comparing this string to that of earlier years, I can see I am improving!  This is much finer, more even, and my technique is better.  The twining (if that is the right word) is better executed.

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I even made myself a little bracelet.  I loved it… but it didn’t last forever, what with being washed and dried and rubbed over guitar strings.  In one way, this is perfect.  I have come to think that there are far too many things that last forever.  The more of them I pull out the council’s mulch the more I respect all that withers and dies and becomes soil again.  So perhaps I will make another of these and then another.

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Drawstring project bags

These are the bags that really started the party.  Fully lined drawstring project bags.

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Recycled suit linen with E Scoparia print; linen with an Australian designed print; cotton printed with prunus leaves and maple leaves.

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Indigo prints from the indigo dyeing day last year… paler prints went into the linings.

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While I was on indigo prints I used up the last of my own indigo dyed fabrics making this.  And finally, a gratuitous photo of a bee enjoying a street tree in flower taken on my way to a lunch meeting.  Glorious!

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Filed under Leaf prints, Natural dyeing, Neighbourhood pleasures, Sewing

Eucalyptus bark dyepots—the outcome

Well, the outcomes are in– E Scoparia bark on the left and E Poyanthemos bark on the right.

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As I was rinsing my pots a sudden movement caught my eye.

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All those cuttings and seedlings and little trees are doing well, because, we have finally had some lovely rain!

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It’s lovely to see water pooling after the long dry of summer.

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And, a lovely pair of warm socks for the coming winter chilly toes have made their way off the needles!

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They have gone to their happy home already…

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Knitting WOMADelaide

Last weekend was a long weekend here.  We do have some very strange public holidays here in Oz and this one is about a horse race.  I feel about as excited by the Adelaide Cup as I do by the Queen of England’s birthday (we celebrate that as a nation too).  But I love a public holiday.  I spent mine (and Friday night and a good portion of the rest of the weekend…) at WOMAD.  It takes place in the wonderful Botanic Park, which adjoins the Zoo and the Botanical Gardens at the edge of the city.

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On the way in, the grey-headed fruit fox colony were all a-chatter.  Who could blame them?  No peace for their daytime sleep for a few days.  I felt sorry for them… they may never have experienced Korean punk or Canadian bluegrass before… and who knows whether these things were to their taste?  They seemed very disconcerted during a performance by the wonderful FourPlay (who are not your average string quartet)–especially when they covered a well known song by Rage Against the Machine. If that sounds less than gentle–you’re right.  Some fruit foxes felt the need to choose new sleeping spots during that piece–but I am sure they were every bit as noisy.

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I had finally identified the perfect concept for this sock yarn.  I have had it for years–since I went to London for the first time.  Too precious to knit with, evidently.  I was overwhelmed by being in England and decided in my jetlagged state almost as soon as I arrived that I had to get out into the city.  I identified a couple of yarn shops and adventured around London by public transport in an attempt to find them.  I succeeded and was made very welcome by knitters at both.  In fact, at IKnitLondon I met a man who was knitting knee high socks for a friend of his from sock yarn he had dyed with Kool Aid (well, of course!) and two women who had come in for chocolate crackles and a film helped me with the crochet I had tried on the plane since knitting was banned. Pretty soon I realised I was surrounded by people who could inform me about Pride London (a couple of days later), which they cheerfully did.  And in the end I sat knitting with the assembled, watched most of a film and managed to find my way back to my hotel and a very profound sleep.

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This yarn came from a shop that has since closed down.  I had a hilarious conversation with the woman working there as she was about to shut the shop.  She was from rural Victoria–so we were two Australians in a wool shop in London for a happy half hour.

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It’s too much to expect I would stick to one thing.  I already had this sock happening.  I tried it on the intended recipient early in the weekend and a decision was made about the toe.  Done! Sock two cast on.

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I do love the banners at WOMAD.  They ripple in the slightest breeze. The red sock grew a cuff.  Here it is in an arbutus while I am queueing for dinner. Ask not what passersby were thinking.  There was a man in a top hat, skirt and impressive dreadlocks nearby.  They may have been looking at him and not me.

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The trees in Botanic Park are truly massive in some cases…

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Here I am with my friend, waiting for The Gloaming to begin in some deep shade, among all kinds of conifers, knitting.

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The sock is a Jaywalker.  Inelastic, but once on, it stays put and… awesomely good for a yarn like this one full of colour.

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Here I am listening to The Gloaming and thinking about how much I love trees and how amazing the atmosphere of the Earth is.  And how endangered. There were many opportunities to think about climate change and Indigenous solidarity at WOMAD.  It heartened me to be in the presence of artists and musicians who are also trying to figure out what they can do and what they can communicate on these questions.

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Next day, I think…

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My trusty bag got a little coloured powder on it during the Colour of Time–a rather amazing dance spectacular.  There is a good image with an odd caption (no spray paint, trust me) here if you scroll down.

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Pine needles after dark… in the presence of Neneh Cherry.

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A fellow beloved tree hugger.

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Eventually, we gathered ourselves up and wandered off into the night to find our bicycles and pedal home to our beds.  Wonderful.

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Happy birthday hand-knit socks and seed collecting

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I am not much of a one to give people presents on their birthdays.  I enjoy doing that when I can, but essentially, I prefer to make something and hand it over gleefully soon afterward. More than once a year maybe.  Once every several years, perhaps.  Or find something perfect for a friend and give it to them right away, because–why not?  I am not dedicated to one day a year of gift giving.  I’m awful at remembering dates and apparently I am too impatient to wait! Sometimes, though, there is planetary alignment.  I finished these socks close to my beloved friend’s birthday, I managed to take a picture, and we walked them over on the very day and shared some happiness about the fact of his existence.

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They were delivered tied with a piece of hand twisted silk cord, no less!  For those wondering, I succumbed to Noro Silk Garden Sock again. It was so much fun the last time!  The two socks are completely different.  There was a green segment that was not repeated at all, and a knot in the thread that had been tied with no consideration for the colour sequence.  Online knitters have led me to expect that this is what Noro will do for you.  I know the recipient of these socks will not miss symmetry in this case, and I was intrigued but not troubled.

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Meanwhile, I have examined my wattle seeds, collected for later use, shucked them and stored them for later planting.

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Saltbush all over the city have finally started to show ripe fruit.  I attracted a lot of puzzled attention from passing cyclists when I pulled over on the West terrace bike path to harvest these.   For non locals, this is a major road travelling along one side of the city, with parklands and a cemetery on one side and the CBD on the other.  These berries have already gone to the propagating area.  If it stays warm long enough perhaps they will come up–but they sure won’t come up through the colder months.  So from here on, I’ll be saving saltbush seed rather than planting it.

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My mother gave me the tube, which previously held vanilla bean pods.  She gives me all kinds of little treasures she can’t find a use for, with apparent confidence I will find one.  I love her confidence in me!  And, to finish, some spectacularly huge eucalypts I found myself enjoying recently…

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Hat-o-rama

In the last few weeks there has been a small outbreak of hat knitting.  It began with the Eleven Cloche and a skein of eucalyptus dyed grey corriedale.

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Check out that leaf shape all the way from stem to brim!  Such a clever design!  I don’t believe I understood the full glory until I’d finished knitting it.  When I chose the pattern I was attracted by its asymmetry and missed out on being charmed by the leaf connection until later.  There was quite a bit of my skein left so I cast on again…

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Things being what they are, I knit way too far during a movie and had to rip back, and pretty soon I had a Turn A Square for a person with a lot of hair, a big head, or both. Note to self–when adjusting needle size, also adjust stitch count.  As if I should need that lesson yet again!  Another clever but simple design.

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My heart wants to knit more hats (for some reason the cochineal over grey wool has my fancy) but my hands have been at the sewing machine, knitting slippers when I have counting-type-knitting time and I have also begun a plying frenzy…

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