Around the World

Sometimes when I’m bummed, I watch the Daft Punk music video for Around the World and it makes me feel better. This has worked since I was 10, except back then I had to sit around watching MTV waiting for it to come on, which it almost never did, and that just made me sadder, unless Daria came on, which was awesome.

I’m not especially bummed today, but I woke up with a terrible headache that won’t relent to drugs and I don’t really feel like doing anything except lying down (preferably with my head packed in ice). Still, I’m in my studio trying to work. I’ll probably get here tomorrow and look at all the things I messed up in my headache fog and wish I’d stayed home today, but you know. I’m trying to limit myself to things like stockinette.

Yarn Porn

As promised, here’s the yarn I bought at Maryland. Meet my new friends:

Verdant Gryphon – Traveller colorway San Zhi


Verdant Gryphon – Traveller colorway Romania


Verdant Gryphon – Traveller colorway Experimental Love Child


Verdant Gryphon – Traveller colorway The Window


Dragonfly Fibers – Traveller colorway Flannel Pajamas


Miss Babs – Yowza colorway Spectrum


Miss Babs – Yowza colorway Biker Chick


Dragonfly Fibers – Super Traveller colorway Winter Woods


Cephalopod Yarns – Traveller colorway House of Strangers


Tess Yarns – Superwash Merino Petite


Miss Babs – Yowza colorway Mystery (already swatched and cast on!)


Blue Moon Fiber Arts – Mopsy colorway Vancouver Violet


Blue Moon Fiber Arts – Gaea colorway The Green That Sings


Cephalopod Yarns – Traveller colorway Ferry Bar Park

Whew! Now, for people who don’t knit who’ve read this far, I have to tell you that it is NORMAL for knitters to get emotional about yarn. I promise. Back me up, here.

Plural Knitters

Here’s a question. We have schools of fish, flocks of birds, gaggles of geese, prides of lions, packs of wolves, etc. So what would we call a group of knitters? Here are a few things my knitting group and I have come up with:

a skein of knitters
a fleece of knitters
a tangle of knitters
a sweater quantity of knitters. This one needs a bit of explanation. You can almost never make a sweater out of one skein of anything. So you could say, “Are we talking about a Miss Babs sweater quantity?” (Those skeins have 560 yards, so two can easily make a sweater.) “Or are we talking about a Louisa Harding sweater quantity?” (I’ve seen patterns that call for upwards of 25 balls.) (No offense to Louisa Harding–I adore her patterns.)

Maryland Sheep and Wool

Just got back on Sunday from the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival! This was my first time going–I’ve been to Rhinebeck three times but I’d never been to Maryland before.

My mom and I drove up on Friday afternoon and stayed in a hotel in Ellicott City. The weather was not too bad on Saturday–kind of humid, but not terribly hot. Sunday was cool and overcast, which was lovely.

I set myself a budget, and TOTALLY blew it. (Restraint? That’s a kitchen utensil, right?) The first booth I got to that I bought anything at was Verdant Gryphon, one of the two offshoots of the now defunct Sanguine Gryphon. They kept a lot of the same bases, my favorite of which is Traveller (most people are obsessed with Bugga! which is a sock yarn and I set myself a rule against bringing home any more sock yarn that I actually stuck to). I’ll post pictures once I take some. It will be glorious.

Then, across the way was Miss Babs, a favorite of mine. I love Yowza, the 560-yard skeins of light-worsted weight. Two skeins makes sweater! $70! I went a little nuts in that booth and brought home what I think is my absolute favorite find of the trip. (Again, pictures later.)

Discovered Dragonfly Fibers, which I had only ever seen advertised online before. Bought some worsted weight (also called Traveller! weird! am I missing something about a collaboration or something?) and some chunky, which is so rare to find at a festival.

Also spent some time at The Fold, where they have all Blue Moon Fiber Arts. Everyone loves Socks That Rock, but I go for the thicker yarns like Gaea (got a few skeins of “The Green that Sings”) and Mopsy (a beautiful worsted weight angora blend–“Vancouver Violet”).

Also met some sheep:

I also saw some excellent t-shirts. Here are the top three:
Third place – “If you don’t talk to your cat about catnip, WHO WILL?” Maybe this isn’t funny unless you have a cat. I’m not sure why I was so tickled by this one, but let me tell you, I was.
Second Place – “I swatched Ravelry” I asked the girl who was wearing this about it and she said it was available in the early days of ravelry for the people who, like beta tested it. Which is kind of like swatching. I liked it.
First Place – “That sh*t will block right out.” I laughed. I laughed hard.

Anyway, more pictures later, once I photograph the new yarn in the family. For now, here’s this, from Saturday afternoon:

What’s Hot

Ummmm…so…has anyone been on Ravelry today?

Because on the patterns page, where they have a list of the top 20 “hot right now” patterns for the day?

Westminster is number 7.

! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !

Knightsbridge

Sooner than anticipated, the first shawl in the series is here!! In case you didn’t get it from the mug, these shawls are all named after stations on the London Underground. Meet Knightsbridge:

It’s up on Ravelry and the printed copies I ordered are on a brown truck to my house as I type, so they’ll be showing up at a yarn shop near you!

Other People’s Patterns (part 2)

Oh, my dear god it is HOT in here.

I’m in my studio right now (where there is no air conditioner…yet) and it is actually too hot to knit. Unfortunately, that means I should be working on things like sizing and schematics, but obviously, I’m procrastinating.

Had a really good photo shoot this morning, which means that the first shawl of the mystery series is due out sometime this week! And the second one hopefully next week!

This weekend is the Garden State Yarn Crawl, which, for those of you who don’t know, is like a pub crawl except with yarn stores. I’ll be working Friday Saturday and Sunday at The Blue Purl (and after that I’m going to need an industrial strength foot massage. Any offers?).

Last Wednesday I realized I wasn’t all that excited about anything I was knitting, mostly just because I’m not at very exciting parts of any of my projects. I thought maybe what I needed was to cast on for something that is NOT a design of my own. Sometimes it’s nice to just…follow a pattern. Not worry about whether it’s going to fit a human of any shape, whether I’m going to have to re-jigger the stitch count to make the lace pattern work, or what the HELL is going to happen once the armholes measure 7.5″.

So I spent the entire evening after work looking through all my Ravelry favorites, magazines, books and pattern binders. (If you’re anything like me, you laughed when you read that I was going to try to cast on for a project THE SAME NIGHT I thought of it because it takes DAYS, if not WEEKS of planning for this kind of thing. Except for the things you cast on on a whim just because you feel like it and the yarn happened to be right there and the needles were free. I don’t know about you, but those rarely end well for me…if they end at all.)

Needless to say, I didn’t come up with a project, but it did get me thinking about the whole concept of knitting from patterns again. I think people often don’t think of knitting as an art form simply because many knitters use other peoples’ patterns to create a finished garment. Now let’s think about this. I’ve never heard of a pianist being criticized for only playing the works of other composers rather than creating their own. You don’t scoff at people on the subway for reading books rather then writing their own.

Maybe I’m getting carried away. I guess in my own life, there’s a constant struggle going on: Art vs. Craft. Having grown up with an artist parent and always having been surrounded by that type (particularly in college), I’ve always considered art to be The Goal. At the same time, I was always drawn to things that were deemed “crafty” by my “arty” friends. I remember when I was in college and having a fling with counted cross stitch, one of my friends said to me, “Isn’t that sort of like paint-by-numbers?”

I still think of that as one of the most wounding things anyone has ever said to me. I’m always striving to make Art with a capital A, and now that I’m designing, I think I can legitimately say that I am (maybe not with the capital A, but art nonetheless). When the knitting bug first bit me and I was knitting from patterns, I was out of college and not quite so immersed in the art world, but I still felt that I needed to justify what I was doing because that bitchy little voice in my head was saying that this seemed an AWFUL lot like the dreaded paint-by-numbers.

My argument for knitting from patterns is this: I have learned so much from every pattern I’ve ever knit. I’ve learned how lace works, ways to incorporate shaping into various design elements, I’ve learned all kinds of finishing techniques and positively COUNTLESS other things. So even though I’m really busy with my own designs, I can’t imagine not ever knitting from a pattern ever again because I still have so much to learn from them. We all do.

Shawl Series

Remember a few weeks ago I posted about how I really wanted to design more shawls but it just wasn’t happening? Well, the day after I wrote that, I was struck with inspiration and now I have not one but THREE shawls soon to be released. Isn’t that always how it is? As soon as you make your peace with something, it changes. Not that I’m complaining.

Anyway, I’ve decided to release these shawls individually, but as a series. The theme of the series is a surprise, but here’s a clue:

I don’t think it’s too hard to figure out from that, but I’ll leave you in semi-suspense until the first pattern comes out, hopefully sometime next week.