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Cool Things

Finished2

I have some knitting to show y’all today!  First, my Clapotis. Finished.  The word Clapotis takes on almost mystical significance when it rolls off my eight year old’s lips.  She loves to wear it — perfect for staying warm after ballet classes.  I love how she says it…"Clapotis."  Almost like it’s a prayer, or maybe, the answer to a prayer. 

I like my Clapotis a lot too.  Today is the first day I haven’t worn it and that is only because I wanted to wear my Anthropologie Shrug, which I haven’t shown a proper picture of before, so here it is.  The yarn is Colinette Point Five in the Toscana colorway. 

Finished1

And here, strangely enough, is the same colorway in Jitterbug sock yarn.  I started this sock, just the ribbing, Tuesday night.  What you see here is the result of an unusually productive Wednesday.  Admittedly, I knit during a traffic jam on I-20 between Birmingham and Atlanta, which lasted for about an hour, and gave me a significant jump start.

Sock_1_in_progress

This weekend I have got to do some research and pick out a skein winder, so any advice would be very welcome.  I have several kilos of different yarns on the way here, and would really like to find something more efficient than my niddy-noddy for skeining them.  If anyone reading has a recommendation, please let me know!

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No, I haven’t disappeared

I know I have been abnormally silent this week, so I t hought I would let you all know that I’m still here, knitting and making art, but we’ve had a very full few days.  While the storms were moving through Alabama last week, our youngest son was having some bad problems with his asthma and ended up in the hospital over the weekend.  He is home and doing great, although I think he left some very bemused nurses behind.  He is the only four year old I know who takes great delight in responding to questions like, "do you take your asthma medication regularly" with "I decline to answer on the basis of my fifth amendment privilege" — his new favorite phrase.  He’s fun, this child.

So, we sat in the emergency room the morning after the storms, for what I thought was just a quick trip in for a breathing treatment.  Only we were there for HOURS.  Time stops in that emergency room, I just know it.  And it was freezing cold.  Ollie and I, however, were nice and toasty thank you very much, because I had stuck the almost finished Clapotis into my bag so I could weave in the ends and run the stitches in the rest of the rows.  I have renewed appreciation for the Clapotis — it is big enough to wrap a baby up in, while continuing to work on it.  Ollie refers to it as his "blue cape" and wore it the entire time we were there.

We are getting back to normal here and my thoughts are turning to socks.  First off, I’m getting ready to score some sock yarn to dye up for some of my girlfriends from the Parents Place board I frequented when I was pregnant with my daughter.  I’m going to paint up some luxurious, lofty blue-face Leicester yarn for the group of us (some very talented knitters in this group) and we’re going to sock-a-long.  Last night, I sat down and casted on for a pair of socks out of my lovely new Colinette Jitterbug sock yarn. 

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This picture does not begin to do justice to this wonderful yarn!  Just wait and see!

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Heading Into The Storm

We’re heading into thunderstorms.  Schools are closing at 11:00 (I’m not sure why we bothered opening) and there is lots of hubub and consternation.

The alarm has not made it to my house, however.  Apparently, as long as the four year old has his morning coffee, all is right in the world.

Clapotis_1

Yes, that is his Peace Fleece vest, still being worn for the third day in a row (with very authentic pieces of straw poking out of it, because he attends a Waldorf pre-school, and, well, that’s the kind of stuff we play in there).  The large blue blob is my Clapotis.

I have to stop here and say, do not, friends, be tempted to knit a Clapotis from Debbie Bliss’s Alpaca Silk yarn.  Yes, it is stunningly beautiful.  It’s very soft and warm, too.  Ollie is quite taken with it, and believes it is a cape I have knit for him.  But, do you see the solid portions, down near where Hermione’s paw is placed on the "cape?"  Solid, where there should be a row of rundown stitches?  The reason not to knit a Clapotis from this yarn is that it does not run and each stitch has to be picked out by hand.  I can’t even begin to tell you how tiresome this is. 

Would I do it again?  Yes.  This is one of my favorite things I have ever knit and as soon as I get all the ends woven in (still more downside, this yarn comes in small skein-type things that fall apart and tangle while you’re knitting, and because they are small and the yarn doesn’t spit-splice nicely, I have the ends from about 12 balls of yarn to weave in) I’m going to wear it every day, but y’all, unless you have some weird type of obsessive-compulsive disorder that makes you enjoy picking out hundreds of stitches, save yourself!  Pick a different yarn.

In studio news, I promise I haven’t been holding out on y’all art-wise.  First off, I’m working on Chris’s absolutely beautiful round robin piece, which she calls an Artistree.

Artistree

We’re each journaling about our ancestors on it.  It is one of the coolest projects I have worked on in what has to be the most out of the box art journal round robin ever!  Here is a close up of some of the panels.

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I also have a collage-painting that I have been working on for the last couple of weeks.  It has been through some obsessive background changes this week, but I still don’t quite have it where I want it before finishing the angel.

Angel_1

Not art, but new in my studio and something I am in love with is my new set of Elfa drawers.

Wrapping

It holds all of my shipping and wrapping supplies, and is a huge boon for a small home based business like mine.  I managed to score this and a frame for hanging files that I’m using for my collage papers during a January sale on this cool stuff, which I will fill my home with if I ever win the lottery.

You can see that unlike the brief period of time before and after I filmed my segment for HGTV’s That’s Clever (I’m expecting to get an episode number in early June and I will let y’all know when you can tune it to watch me make a total idiot out of myself on TV) when my studio was very clean, it has reverted to it’s usual sense of disorder and disaster creative mess.  I turned my desk around to make a little bit of extra room, and rediscovered two wonderful things on it:

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My doodah and registration packet for Art & Soul East in Virginia this May.  I cannot, cannot wait to go and see all my Art-Sistahs and take classes and immerse myself in art.  I have to alter the doodah first, though, and I have no clues at the moment.

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Also, waiting for a free moment, I have the knitting DVDs that Stephanie McPhee raved about a while back.  I am a visual learner, and reading knitting directions does absolutely nothing for me.  I thought these DVDs might help with some finishing techniques and generally be of interest to my family, but can you believe they would rather watch stuff like this?

George

Actually, I confess that I too love Curious George, especially this scene where he goes artist on the stuffy, rich lady’s penthouse walls.  As the Man in the Yellow Hat says, "Praise Science."

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The Peace Fleece Vest

I love Peace Fleece yarn.  It’s one of the first yarns I knitted with and I loved its deep colors and the reasonable price that made it a good yarn to experiment with when I was first getting back to knitting several years ago.  I also like the idea behind the company, the idea of bringing people together through agriculture and commerce.

My stash includes several different colors of Peace Fleece, as well as a good bit that I have handpainted.  I gave Ollie the choice of any yarn in my stash for the vest he wanted and, child of my heart that he is, he selected some Peace Fleece in the Sheplova Mushroom colorway.

I finished the vest tonight and he is very happy with it.  It’s amazing that such a simple thing could make a person so happy.  Isn’t he cute?

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The pattern is simple and it’s a quick knit.  Somehow I managed to get my camera on a goofy setting (if anyone wants to tell me what I did here, I would appreciate it), but you get the idea.

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Back_2

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Things that make you feel happy inside

It’s a wonderful world full of knitters out there.  Generous, kind people who populate my world and make me feel happy and fortunate.

First, there is Shanna’s new blog.  Shanna is one of my favorite knitters, a transplanted Alabama girl in Japan.  She linked me to this picture of an adorable pair of baby pants she knit from some of my yarn.

Isn’t she amazing?  Look at those beautiful little flowers!

Then, there is Lantern Moon, the company that makes my favorite knitting needles.  There is something about those smooth, simple pieces of wood and the knowledge that they are produced in an environmentally sustainable fashion that supports the lives of real people.  Some of y’all may remember my sad post about the passion the stray dog we adopted last fall developed for these needles, and the fact that she managed to chew one into smithereens.  I sent the people at Lantern Moon an e-mail, asking if there was any way to purchase just one replacement needle.  I had forgotten all about it, but when I got home from our New England trip, I had this email: 

     Hello Joyce,

     Thank you for your email to Lantern Moon. So sorry for the delay in responding! Your email had fallen into a spam file which I’ve just recovered. Typically a reply does not take a month!

     Darn doggie… we will provide you with a replacement for your Lantern Moon ebony needles. Let me know what size and length as well as your mailing address.      

Looking forward to your reply.

     Annette – Lantern Moon

Can you believe that they’re just sending me a free replacement needle?  That has to be some of the most amazing customer service I have ever received!

I’m off to work, with a four year old in tow!  My babysitter is sick, so he is going to be a part of my exciting world at work today ("Mommy, can I drink your warm coffee at work?")  Wish me luck!

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In my Dyepots

I’m so happy to be back home!  After getting settled in, I decided I was entitled to induge myself and dye all the colors that were swirling around in my head.  So, in between helping Teddy catch up on missed school work and answering Ollie’s numerous questions ("why can’t I see God?"), I’ve been playing.  Peace Fleece, Organic Merino, Silk Merino blends — all of my favorites.  At one point, I had this unusual mix of colors out drying on one of my racks.

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Mmmmm……..

This yarn is going to be a sweater for my son.  I’m timing this one just right because we wear the same size right now, so when he outgrows it, um, gee, I guess it will be mine.

Forestfloor

This is the silk merino yarn, similar to the yarn I’m using for my Clapotis.  (I have to digress here and confess to utter boredom with the Clapotis.  I’ve made it through the 144 rows in the straight section and have started the decreases.  Will it never end?)

Seabreeze

I love to dye yarn.  I guess it’s a sickness.

Most of the weekend’s yarn is for me, but there will be a few skeins available at Midday Faire   beginning Tuesday at noon Eastern Time and more going into Elliebelly later this week.  Go buy some, ok?  You know you want to.