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Drum Roll Please

And the winner of the silk hankies is…….

……#10 – Kathy.

You have Ollie to thank for pulling your number.

Please email me with your shipping address and I'll put your silk hankies in the mail to you.  We'll all look forward to seeing what you knit with them.

And if, like me, you are curious about how silk fibers are worked from cocoons, here is a fascinating (and quick) video showing cocoons being stretched over frames in a store in China.

 

 

 



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Knitting with Silk Hankies. Who Wants to Try It?

Silk hankies anyone?

Silk2

 

I've had so many conversations with people about knitting with silk hankies since my original post on the topic, which piggy-backed on Stephanie McPhee's project, that I decided to share some of my hand-dyed hankies with a lucky reader.  Post in the comments below (make sure I have an email address so I can contact you if you win) and I'll pick a winner next Friday night. 

To get everyone started, here's a YouTube video that's very helpful.  It has very cute cats as an added plus.

 

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Knitting with Silk Hankies

Stephanie McPhee had a post earlier this week that was fascinating.  She talked about knitting mittens from silk hankies. 

Silkhankies undyed

This is likely not the item that comes to mind when you think "silk hankie."  It is not a neatly hemmed square of shiny fabric.  Rather, it is a single cocoon spread out over a frame to dry.  There is more on the process here.

I loved Stephanie's post, because I had recently found some silk hankies tucked away in my studio.  I had dyed and used a small amount in a fabric collage.  I was wondering what to do with them.

Silkhankies

Stephanie's post made me think it would be fun to experiment with knitting them like she was, but alas, she had no directions.  It turned out to be a simple process.  The hankies are deeply layered, so the greatest difficulty is in thinning them out.  It's important to pull just one gossamer fine layer off the top.  Making a hole in the middle permits you to gently pull the fiber around until you have a big fine lasso loop of silk.

Silkhankyyarn

If you continue to gently stretch the fibers out you can achieve a "yarn" of your desired thickness, and gently pull the circle apart so you have a beginning and an end.  Then, you begin to knit.

Silkhankyknitting

You see now why it caught my interest.  I decided to knit just a bit to experiment with how it works.  It's a soft but at the same time sort of rough looking fabric.  And look!  A big tail of silk winding off of your knitting!  If you wanted to be precise, I suppose you could pull your hankies out to an even measure for a uniform fabric, although that would seem to defeat a lot of the fun of this process to me.

Silkhankyknittinginprogress

I'm sensing little silk hankie knitting kits as Christmas presents for some of the charming, crafty, young ladies in my life.  If you want to try this, there are plenty of dyed silk hankies available on etsy, but you could easily dye some of your own or try this with undyed.  This is pure fun for an evening when you find yourself in need of a little destress, but be forewarned, everyone who is near you is going to be completely fascinated by the process and insist on getting involved, whether it's little ones who want to stretch the hankies or grown men who want to try and knit a stitch.  There is something fascinating about knitting more or less straight off of the cocoon!