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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Sock Summit and Polk County Fair

No two things could be more different than Sock Summit 2011 and the Polk County Fair. But both are part of my life now.

The last weekend in July was Sock Summit 2011. The second one ever held, the first being in 2009. There will be a next on and it will be in 2013. What is sock summit you may ask? It is the celebration of sock yarn and handmade socks. Not all sock yarn is turned into socks, it is a good yarn for all kinds of projects. Personally I have used it for socks, shawlettes and baby items. It comes in all kinds of fiber blends and colors. I had a lot of fun at Sock Summit. I spent 4 hours helping at a booth there. It was fun talking to the people, I did not personally sell anything but the booth owner did make sales. The booth I was in was number 1025 there were only 2 other booths beyond us and I think the booth numbers started at 1. Some booths were big enough to take up two or more spaces. They all had something in them that either was yarn or something that you would use with yarn. My favorite was the display models of projects. I saw some wonderful shawls on display in booths and on people. Alicia, Serra and the babies went with me and they got to look around more than I did. By the time we left Sock Summit Alicia had decided she wanted to learn to spin. So Sunday we spent looking for items to make her a spindle. Looking for spindle parts is kind of like going on a scavenger hunt. We went to a craft store to  find a stone doughnut for the whorl and found one and we went to hardware stores to see if they had a wood molding or faucet handle that would work for a whorl, didn't find anything suitable. We went to World Market to find chopsticks to use as the shaft and found them. Went back to her house, put them together and I had Alicia and Serra spinning by the time I left for home.

On the other spectrum of crafting, yesterday I went down to the Polk County Fairgrounds and entered a skein of yarn and a shawlette I made. The Polk County Fair is smaller than the Marion County fair it looked like to me. I have not attended Polk Co Fair since I was a senior in high school. I hear they will have a carnival and a rodeo. Of course there will be 4H and FFA projects of all kinds. I am looking forward to seeing all the people and animals. There is a category in textiles that I want to learn and enter next year. It is called Chicken Scratch. It is a type of embroidery, like cross stitch only with more stitches. Instead of making crosses you make asterisks. Instead of cross stitch fabric you do it on gingham. It looks interesting, I saw a pillow at the fair turn in, I only saw a little of it from a distance, so will look for it when I go to the fair. I heard there will be a Chicken Scratch demo on Thursday so want to go and see that.

I am still working on my Summer flies shawl and will have to frog part of it and redo the last few rows as I ran out of yarn. I really need to get this shawl off the needles so I can use the same needles for the next shawl.

 I started a sock project, 2 socks on one circular needle. They are footie type socks and cuff down, I feel like I make good progress everyday once I got them cast on properly. The cast on was really hard for me as I had a video to teach me not a person. I think these socks will be really pretty as they have lace on them.

I have done little spinning, just working on some Yarnia yarn. Plying the yarn to make it easier to knit and then will pick a couple of shawls one to keep and one to donate to Blessed Arts. More about Blessed Arts in the next blog.


Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Dyeing to experiment

OK all you indy dyers out there do not be alarmed, I don't see me ever becoming a pro at this. But; I do occasionally get the urge to play with color and wool. So yesterday I got out 3 old canning jars, you know the kind, the ones with the glass domed lids and wires on the jars? I have some old wool batts and I tore one apart. In one jar I mixed 2 packets of grape Kool aide and 1 packet of fruit punch. The vinegar water turned a deep burgundy like color and then I stuffed in soaked wool and put the lid on. That one I set outside on a black plastic base to a kick punching bag.
The next jar I used Wilton icing colors of Peach and skyblue, the mixing guide said it would make Mulberry. I used vinegar water again and stuffed the jar with wool, then set it outside on the porch rail in the sun.
The last jar I was trying to make teal. The color guide said use yellow and royal blue, well I only have sky blue but i mixed it anyway. The color of the vinegar water was a nice dark teal like blue, so I stuffed in the soaked wool and set it on the porch rail in the sun with the other jar.
The water was almost boiling when I added the color and set it out and I ended up leaving them outside all afternoon and overnight until about 2:00 today. I opened the Teal jar first and poured out the water, hmmm blue water. The wool is a nice shade of green, the blue did not soak in very well.
The next jar was the Mulberry wool, again I took off the lid and poured out....blue water. Hmmm! The wool is a very pretty blend of peach and yellow, like pale flames? It is a pastel almost not very dark like I was expecting.
The last jar; the Kool Aide jar. It too shed blue water and the wool is a dark red violet sort of color.

I took a picture of them drying in the bathtub, I would put them outside to dry but know I will forget them and later tonight I am going to a lavender weaving class, so chances are they would end up outside over night and I am afraid an animal would run off with them or the wind would send them to Timbuktu.

Before I went to Sock Summit last weekend I dyed a small amount of wool with sky blue and yellow and got a really nice variegated green. When they are all dry I will spin them and knit something small with either stripes or try stranded knitting designs. I will have to see how much yarn I get. I used a whole batt so it is an ounce or two of wool. I will weight it before I spin it.

Mulberry on the left Teal on the right

Green wool dyed last week


 2 grapes and a fruit punch Kool Aide
I was liking the blue at the bottom and white at the top on this one but by the time I took it in it was all blue.

You can see that the yellow is at the top and peach is in the wool.

This is the wool out of the dye and drying.