ArgoKnot

Fine Craft

>Spring Clean-up

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This is what I found when I began raking out the gardens yesterday!
(It’s a clump of celandine poppies!)

And the next amaryllis is in bloom! I bought this bulb last year at the Philly Flower show because I loved the green and maroon striped flowers!

Today I’ve spent the morning working on the collar of Arwen, and after I do some errands I’ll be back to work on the historic tapestry!

>Unexpected Gifts!

>Aren’t unexpected gifts the best??

Well, this was actually expected, but I didn’t know when it would arrive or what it would be! This is what I received from the gift exchange of the Traditional Knitting yahoo group. The rules were we had to knit something using yarn from our stash.This kitchen towel with the loop and button on top is a style that was quite prevalent when I was a kid! My mother had a few, and both my grandmothers had a lot of them! It brings back memories of wonderful times in the kitchen with my grandmothers, usually due to a special event like someone’s birthday, so there was the anticipation of a freshly baked treat! I love the colors in this dishtowel and dish cloth set. Thank you to Stephanie, who made these for me!

My guild study group met at my house last night to look at some weaving sample books that are in our guild library. That was quite a treat. Some of the books were from the 1950s, and it was surprising to us that most of the samples had stood the test of time and were lovely fabrics we’d all love to weave!

The completely unexpected gift was this lovely bracelet from Elisa. It’s loom woven, and she was experimenting with different ending finishes. Lucky me! It reminds me of Klimt paintings!

Today I am knuckling down on my Arwen cardi. The pieces are done so I will block them, then sew later today or tomorrow. Finally, I will work out the details of the collar I want to add: a sideways knitted version of the cable that is used on the center fronts and cuffs. I’m excited!

>Swallowtail and the Flower Show

>At last, finished and blocked. Some projects just take a lot of fiddling, and sometimes I wonder how I stand it. First, buying only 2 oz of the handpainted silk top when I knew it would never be enough. How casual I was about that! ‘Oh, I’ll just whip up a little something to go with it!’ That led to the miserable experience of trying to dye my own silk top which matted and made spinning a very un-zen experience, which put me off spinning for several months! Being put off spinning is not a healthy place to be! Then came the rewarding experience of dyeing some commerically spun silk in my own indigo vat. I did find that exhilarating, but wanted to scream when I ran out of the lovely blue before reaching the end of the lace border. Some projects just seem like one hurdle after another. And yet….I can see myself doing this all over again, ad infinitum!

And here are highlight from this year’s Philadelphia Flower Show. The theme was Italy. At the tail end of a very cold winter, at the end of a week that started with a blizzard, I wanted to skip town and head straight for a warm coastline….I’m thinking Amalfi!

And shoes were big this year….

>Busy, busy….

>I’ve wanted to post several times in the past two weeks, but didn’t manage to squeeze it in! Now I have too much to say all at once!

I should be posting a photo of the finished Swallowtail shawl….but I’m not. When I attempted to block it I discovered my bind off was too tight to get the appropriate scallops. Rushing to finish made me forget to do the specified bind off, so it’s rip, rip time for me. Hope to rip it today and get it blocked this evening…. I had to leave out the last pattern row in order not to run out of my handdyed indigo silk border!

Also, I’ve got a Hudson River design for my next tapestry! (Never mind that two tapestries are not finished yet, as I begin this one.) Soyoo photo shopped two images together for me so I could get what I wanted: a view of the Palisades with a Herreschoff NewYork 30 sailing by. I’ve warped up and started weaving. I will not weave the derelict pier and birds that are in the foreground.

Here are the two photos which were photo shopped together. As you can see, the Palisades image was flipped so that the light would be coming from the right direction.

That wonderful box of tapestry yarn was great to look at but quite a bear to wind into balls. The yarn is snarled and broken in many places, almost like it had been attacked by mice. It has been a horrible chore trying to wind it, and I’ve got 4 more skeins to go. I’d rather be weaving….

>Hoarding

>Various thoughts are coming together here to make me evaluate both my commitment to using up my stash and my incredible excitement (and sense of conquest) at purchasing a large quantity of discontinued yarn from Weaving Southwest.

Whenever I go searching through my closets and bins for yarn for projects, I’m thrilled with what I find in my stash. It’s like going into a yarn store! The yarns I’m not searching for inspire so many creative ideas that I end up thoroughly distracted, sometimes aborting the idea that sent me searching in the first place. I have a treasure trove of beautiful materials, and I know I’m not the only one.

Many years ago I heard Daryl Lancaster give advice not to feel guilty when we impulsively buy a beautiful yarn, but to promise ourselves to ‘design from our stash’ in the future to ensure that those impulsive purchases get used. I’ve lived by this advice for decades. The down side of it is that is has allowed me add to my stash far faster than I can weave, knit, or spin. I’m not going to ‘fess up to how many of spare bedrooms’ closets are packed completely with my stash, not to mention the storage areas I’ve managed to squeeze into the basement. I’ve taken a sober inventory, and I realize I need to slow down. I thought a year of using the beautiful fibers and yarns I already own would be totally joyful anyway, not at all a burden.

In my current tapestry of Rob I am using only yarns that I can find in my stash or that my teacher Soyoo supplies. The combination of yarns I’m using on Rob’s piece quite surprise me, as I would never have blended such hard yarns with such delicate ones in one weft bundle. I’m sure I’ll pay the price for that when I release the tension on the loom, but I do want to begin to learn how to work with different qualities of yarn and be successful at it.

Meanwhile, during the past couple of weeks at Soyoo’s studio, she has been talking about designing and building a new house on land she has in Korea. She is quite knowledgeable about Feng Shui, and she also knows a man who advises people on Feng Shui. It’s his opinion that most Americans live way beyond their means, and he doesn’t mean just monetarily. He believes we are a culture of people who hoard everything from paper towels to cars, to big houses filled with too much of everything. We become slaves to our hoarding and it drains our energy that should be used on better things. We have so much space which could be used so beautifully, and yet we fill it up with too many things like mega rolls of toilet paper, cans and bottles of soda and water, endless food… We buy so many supplies for the endeavors we love (in my case knitting, weaving, spinning) that a lot of creativity and joy gets killed under the weight of our possessions.

I know I’m pleasantly surprised that with Soyoo’s help I can create the colors I need in the tapestry of Rob when I actually don’t have the color. So why do I have to have every color? It’s better anyway to create a color from a blend of others than to grab just the right color to start with, as we’ve all learned at some point in weaving.

I want to cut back on having things in order to have more freedom to express myself, instead of always trying to manage my stash, always looking for more storage, a better system to organize things. If I had less stuff I wouldn’t be burdened with managing it.

Meanwhile, I really did need that yarn I bought yesterday! It’s going to feel like Christmas morning when I open it, and there in lies my dilemma!

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