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Knittastic!

You Spin Me Right Round Baby…

I finally – after a year of trying – made it to a Tall Pines Spinners & Weavers Guild meeting tonight! Now I am pumped! I want to spin again! Right now! Spin, spin, spin! Marni, who wrote one of the book reviews that I used on the Pointy Sticks podcast, and her husband were there. Matter of fact, her husband was tonight’s speaker, and he gave a very informative lecture on spindle spinning. It was amazing! They both know so much about spinning, it is fantastic. I learned things tonight that I have wanted to know for a year now. The biggest thing was how to tell if you are getting enough twist in your spinning. I can tell when I over twist it, but I wasn’t ever really sure if I did enough. Now I know.

So I have my first spindle full single ply yarn from the fiber I spun last summer. Now I need to get it off the spindle and ply it. Until I do that, I can’t spin any more yarn! And I really want to spin, right now. I have some roving I bought at Kid & Ewe that is calling my name.

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Knittastic!

We Are One…

Christine & The Sheep Shawl – Team Members for the Amazing Lace

“We are very athletic and well-traveled, but we can waste time arguing about stupid stuff.”

Christine, 36, has recently returned to college in spite of her initial fears of the younger students. She wishes that the university offered a degree in Knitology, but for now is looking at a Chemistry degree. She started knitting in February, 2005, with the support of her husband, Mike and her son, Jason. Her fourth or fifth project ever was a lace project. No one had bothered to tell her that lace was supposed to be hard, so she offered to knit a feather and fan lace shawl for a friend’s wedding. Since then, she has taken on other lace projects, including the Charlotte’s Web Shawl made of Koigu (Kooooiiiiiguuuuuu) and requiring the use of charts. She met the Sheep Shawl at the Kid and Ewe fiber festival in Boerne, Texas last November, and knew that the pattern simply had to be hers immediately. Christine admits to being neurotic, obsessive, and sometimes too much of a perfectionist. You can regularly hear about her knitting adventures on the Pointy Sticks podcast. She enjoys traveling, taking photographs, and knitting socks using the Magic Loop method. She fears knitting sweaters, not getting gauge, not having the needles she needs, and knots in her yarn.

Originally from Fibertrends, the Sheep Shawl, does not want to reveal its age to the public. An Evelyn Clark design, it features sunshine that ripples down on a village surrounded by orchards, sunflowers, and sheep. It is a simply lovely lace challenge and includes clear and well written instructions and easy to use, large print charts. Being made in Cherry Tree Hill’s laceweight merino wool and a US 3 Crystal Palace bamboo circular needle, it is an “all-around good athlete.” The shawl considers itself to be “spontaneous, competitive and funny.” It claims to have no fears and often blows off steam by simply relaxing in the knitting bag. It has spent time at Twisted Yarns and Yarntopia in Houston, Texas and looks forward to traveling with Christine this summer. The Sheep Shawl describes Christine as “very kind, gentle and patient,” but admits that one of its pet peeves about itself is that it is extremely delicate and sometimes prone to its stitches jumping off the needles.

If the team meets the challenge in time, the Sheep Shawl will be competing in the judging at the Houston Knit at Night Guild 10th anniversary conference in August. Both team members are nervous and excited about this opportunity, and are convinced that they are up to the challenge.

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Knittastic!

Twisted Yarns Sock Club Keychain…

I went up to Twisted Yarns today to pick up my first “Sock Club” bag, and they made little keychains that they put on each of the bags as a sweet little kick-off goodie! Too adorable! The Twisted Yarn Sock Club is a club that my LYS has started up. You could commit to signing up for either 6 consecutive months or ever other month, and each month you would get yarn for one pair of socks (I believe new yarns that the shop will be carrying), one sock pattern, and the second Saturday of each month is a knitting day at the shop so everyone can get together and work on the socks.

Normally, the new sock yarn is going to be a surprise, but I actually knew in advance what the yarn was going to be for this first round, because they are now carrying the Schaeffer Yarn Anne Sock Yarn!!! I have only been asking them about carrying it for the past year! I bought the Anne sock yarn when I visited Mac in Philly last May, and I loved working with it! I made a shawl out of it, using a pattern that I got that day at Rosie’s Yarn Cellar. They will be stocking the yarn within a month or so for regular sale. The pattern that we got for this month is a Schaeffer Yarn pattern for a sock with a lace panel on the side. I might knit that one, or I might pick out a different pattern. In an ironic twist, I ended up picking basically the same yarn that I used for the shawl, but slightly different because it isn’t dyed as dark as my shawl yarn was. I can’t wait to see all of the other Anne options that they will be carrying!

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Knittastic!

We’re KNOT Going to Take It!

Eep! I almost forgot to post about this here on this blog, even though I’ve talked about it a few times on the Pointy Sticks podcast. Today is We’re KNOT Going to Take It! day! Write the yarn companies and tell them what you think of their knotty yarn. Why do they think it is ok to sell us yarn at $10-15 a skein when it is full of knots? Especially when it is yarn that makes stripes and it messes with the pattern? Tell them how you feel!

Also, take a moment to thank the good yarn companies. They deserve to know that their quality pays off, and we all appreciate good yarn!

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Knittastic!

MagKnits June is Online!

I really like the new sock pattern in the current MagKnits, called Tropicana. I’m a bit confused by part of the instructions though:

srpo = sl st to right hand needle with yarn in front, then pull yarn over the needle – st looks now as if there are two sts, you are not making a yarn over, you just pull it to the back! = srpo double stitch. This double stitch is always knit/purled together as one st. Do not make increases!

Can anyone explain that to me, slowly and clearly? Please?