Category Archives: travel

Summer is for Workshops

Getting ready for my first summer workshop!  A trip to New Hampshire for a day of indigo dyeing.  Luckily no mordant is needed for indigo dyeing, but my yarns must be clean and free of sizing and dirt, so I gave them a good soak in Eucalan and hung them out to dry!

Harrisville Designs

I started the weekend with a trip to Harrisville Designs.  What a scenic spot!  The building further in the distance houses the retail shop and the workshop studios.  Other buildings house the spinning operation for the yarns and the woodworking shop for building the looms.

Harrisville Public Library

This was the first sweltering hot day of the summer, so it was lovely to be in a town so full of water.  The library sits just a short walk from the Harrisville Design buildings and is on a large body of water called Harrisville Pond.  Such still water here funnels into a stream that rushes past the mill buildings in the previous photo.

A delightful place to have lunch, overlooking the Harrisville Design buildings, the rushing stream and the distant mountains!  What an idyllic spot!

The dyeing workshop took place at Long Ridge Farm in Westmoreland, New Hampshire, owned by Nancy Zeller.  The studio is on the right and includes a beautiful balcony on the back where we had lunch in the canopy of the surrounding trees. The barn is on the left.

Nancy Zeller (center) instructs us on making an indigo vat

The next morning was the workshop at Long Ridge Farm in Westmoreland, New Hampshire.  Another idyllic spot, with beautiful views of mountains, gardens, and sheep!  Nancy Zeller owns this bit of heaven and runs various workshops from her studio and barn.  We started the day in the studio, pictured here, but moved outside when the going got messy, and then moved into the barn when a thunderstorm passed by!  Through out it all, Nancy remained calm and organized!  She is a terrific teacher!

Mixing the stock solution from powdered indigo from India.

The color change: blue on top where the stock has oxygen, and yellow/green beneath where there is no oxygen.

Ready to Dye!

After the addition of Thiourea Dioxide and Lye (both of which get mixed separately with water in their own container before being added to the vat) we checked the color of our new indigo vat.  Yellow/Green color along with a Ph between 9 and 10 meant we were ready to dye!

My friend Susan standing near the growing skeins of indigo dyed yarns.

Look at all our gorgeous skeins of blue!  My friend Susan joined me for this workshop and she brought lots of cotton skeins which turned purply blues.  My skeins of merino and mohair and mohair/merino blends turned various shades of French blue!  It was so exciting!

The Artist Loft B&B in Brattleboro

During the weekend my friend Susan and I stayed at the Artist Loft just over the border in Brattleboro, Vermont.  What a lovely spot.  The large picture window overlooks the Connecticut River and the scenic bridge that crosses it. (You can tell I did not take this photo since there was no snow during our visit.)

View from the Artist Loft

Our stay was enhanced by a bit off shopping in Brattleboro.  The fabric shop Delectable Mountain Cloth is a must!  It is full of beautiful textiles, and I believe they are all natural fibers.  The food in Brattleboro was also a high point of the weekend!  Dinner at Fireworks and breakfast at Elliot Street Cafe were both great. The ultimate dining experience occurred at Burdick’s Restaurant in Walpole, New Hampshire!  That is a destination in itself!

Back home with my newly dyed skeins drying in the birch tree.  It was a great workshop, and I highly recommend Nancy Zeller as an instructor!  Her farm is a wonderful destination and she is a thorough and organized teacher.  What a terrific weekend!

Settling In

I started a post on moving day, April 18th, and thought it could be a work in progress following  leaving my New Jersey home and arriving in my new home in Connecticut.  Few things ever go as planned, do they?

The first hurdle was that there was a bad cable line at our new house which prevented us from having internet service for a couple of weeks!  By the time we had it, I was really buried in unpacking/organizing/cleaning chores.  It’s been a long six weeks, but I’m feeling quite settled now.

I love my new little part of the world.  Everywhere I drive is full of inspiration; every morning when I wake up I’m happy to be here.  I know what a blessing that is!

My studio is almost set up.  The looms are in place, the bookshelves are full.  With a bit of patience I can sort of find all the tools and yarns I might need to finish several works in progress and even start the projects I’ve been designing in my head.  But I’m a long way from finished.  I’m not sure if I’ll ever get completely settled!  The hard truth is that I just have too much stuff.  Don’t we all?

In my perfect studio dream I will have a stone terrace outside the door (oops!  not in the photo….it is right next to the window) where I can admire my perfect garden, where all the flowers bloom in profusion with no pests, where I can sit and spin on perfect spring and summer mornings.  My looms will all be warped with projects that will become treasured heirlooms.  I am dreaming about a peaceful life here.  I hope I mostly make that happen!

This photo (above) is looking toward the wall of shelves and cabinets for my tools and books.  You can just see a bit of my Baby Wolf which sits around the corner from the two larger looms.  I have a lot of tweaking to do with this storage area.

So I christened the room today by actually working here, instead of unpacking and arranging.

In the near future I hope to knit and spin here!

….or better yet… in the imagined perfect garden….

Yarn from Latvia!

All the yarn from Latvia arrived over a week ago, on Friday, January 20, but I’ve been remiss to photograph it and talk about it!  Here they are:

Three hanks Aade Long 8/2 artistic, in "Red," "Pink/White," and "Brown/Pink"

 

These yarns shipped from Riga, Latvia on Jan. 10, from two different vendors.  Actually,I did not order the “pink/white” colorway, and it was accidentally shipped from the vendor on ebay the previous day, Jan. 9 (it arrived on the 19th).  She wrote me immediately to say that she was sorry and the correct colorway “Brown/Pink” would ship the next day.  Both the “Brown/Pink” which was from the ebay vendor and the “Red” which was from an individual on Ravelry arrived together on Jan. 20th. Ten days door to door from Latvia to New Jersey is quite good, I think!  Aren’t they lovely?

The Red colorway is smallest hank, and it is exactly the yardage for the Revontuuli shawl.  The other two colorways are larger hanks and should have enough left over for gloves or socks.  I’m interested in seeing how the long the color runs will look on a pair of socks.  If I knit socks I must remember not to carelessly throw them in the dryer since all my socks are superwash wool.  That would be tragic!  I don’t usually dry my handknit socks, even if they are superwash, because I prefer how crisp they look when air dried on sock blockers.

Naturally, I’d love to start knitting the Revontuuli right this minute!….but there are other things I really should finish before starting another project.  Let’s see if I can be responsible…. hmmm….

Our house went on the market Wednesday of last week and got a full price offer on Thursday.  On the one hand it’s a great relief that all our work has paid off so quickly and I don’t have to make my bed by 7 am, or hide the laundry; on the other hand now it’s time to really get serious about packing and finding a new home.  Out of the frying pan and into the fire, as they say…  These days there is always something to keep me from weaving….sigh….

Meanwhile, the first bud on my Camellia has opened….there are four more to come!

Rhinebeck Souvenirs

I’m quite late posting about Rhinebeck.  The internet abounds with images of what a beautiful weekend it was up in the Hudson Valley with the color just starting to turn and lots of promise for the weeks ahead.  I love the one on Ravelry’s Homepage!

The drive was terrible!  One hour, 30 minutes to the Kingston exit on the NYState Thruway, then another hour and a half to get across the Rhinecliff Bridge and crawl to the fairground!  I’m not sure I can do this again next year….

Meanwhile, here are my treasures:

Alpaca/Wool/Mohair from Brooks Farm (Lancaster, TX) and buttons from Gita Maria

The Brooks Farm booth is always impossibly crowded, but I had an idea for a gift for a friend: a skein of luscious alpaca/wool/mohair with fund buttons from Gita Maria.  The pattern is from Spin Off Magazine, Summer 2009.

 

 

 

And for me….

Rhinebeck Treasures

Eureka!  I found buttons for my Einstein coat!  …also from Gita Maria.  She had baskets full of buttons, and they were all so pretty that I just dug through the lot until I found six that matched!  I added to my Signature needles stash (usually one a year when I see them at a show so I can avoid shipping!).  And I couldn’t resist the fun double pointed needles from knitpicks.

Handpainted 54s Corriedale Wool Top resting on a bed of Suri Alpaca/Silk

 

And although I am drowning in fiber, I cannot go to a wool festival without getting a little something…. look at that beautiful braid of handpainted Corriedale from “into the whirled”….sigh….resting on top of  a cloud soft cushion of Suri Alpaca/Silk from Biltmore Wool Barn in Brewster, Mass…. bigger sigh….

3rd Annual Local Fiber Festival!

 

 

Who doesn’t love a fiber festival?  I look forward to the NY State Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck each October….and the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival each May!  Three years ago a group of  fiber loving women decided to try a small festival in Ridgewood, NJ, and it’s it’s been a success!

There were vendors with great stuff for sale; demonstrations by local guilds that include spinning, weaving, lace making, quilting, embroidery; and classes in knitting, crochet, rug hooking, felting, and natural dyeing.  In hindsight,  I wish I’d signed up for the workshop on rug hooking.  The design for this class was a small sheep, and the beautifully dyed, lightly fulled, wool fabric was lovely.  The little sheep was adorable!  Although I couldn’t take the workshop (because I was too busy demonstrating for my weaving guild) I am ordering the kit from Foxview Needlepoing and Rug Hooking,and hope to figure it out on my own! This is another design that tempted me (well, the sheep anyway!).

Three Of Us

It was great to spend the weekend with other local people who love the things I love!

 

Another tale of the Spider Silk brocade panel

Weaving with Spider Silk

 

This amazing handwoven panel made entirely from the Golden Orb spider’s silk has moved to Chicago, and they have done a more thorough video of what went into this stunning textile.  I saw it last fall at the Museum of Natural History in NY.  I can’t tell you how badly I wanted to reach out and touch it!  ….not possible since it was covered by a plexi panel!

 

 

Here is the 10 minute video:

Wednesday Group Project

Pairs of Pears….

Archie enjoys looking at pears and drawing pears.  He says they have such personality.  A pair of pears appears to be in conversation… some of us began calling the project ‘Talking Pears.’

For a workshop quite some time ago we all brought in pears and drew them for the morning.  In the afternoon we took colored paper and began tearing and cutting to make very simplified pear arrangements.  I wrote about it way back then….

Yesterday I cut my long finished pears off the loom!  I need that loom for our next group project.  They have languished on the loom for about a year, so I no longer remember how we are supposed to mount them in order to hang them together.  Some of the group did a dozen pairs of pears!  I did only two.  Here they are:

Two Pairs of Pears

Talking pears 1

Talking Pears 2

Now I can warp up for the next group project….and perhaps for one of several small ideas I’ve had over the summer….

Ending the trip with a Bang!

My last few days in Maine will be spent riding out what remains of hurricane Irene when she hits these shores.  Hopefully she will be spent by the time she arrives, but everyone has to be prepared for the worst!

We are in a small island harbor called Pulpit Rock in Penobscot Bay. There is a big rock formation at the mouth of this natural harbor that does look a bit like a pulpit.  More than looking like a podium this rock is famous for having a 200+ year old osprey nest at the pinnacle of the pulpit.

Our preparations for the storm are almost complete.  We have two anchors out to keep us from swinging when the winds increase, all the sails are furled and lashed down, loose items have all been stored below.  The larder is well stocked so I intend to cook some comfort food today, perhaps an egg/veggie/cheese timbale, onion soup, and warm homemade chocolate pudding!

Chocolate Pudding from Cook's Illustrated

Thank heave there is a good internet signal because I got the chocolate pudding recipe from this month’s Cook’s Illustrated!

 

 

Also on my agenda after we have finished our storm preparations, is watching a couple of good spinning DVDs I have on board while doing some spinning! I have Margaret Stove’s “Spinning for Lace” and Judith McKenzie’s “A Spinner’s Toolbox,” both from Interweave Press!

Handpainted cotton roving "Phoenix Garden"

And in my large bin of toys I have some handpainted cotton roving from Girl Meets Spindle in a colorway called “Phoenix Garden.”  Now doesn’t this sound like a good plan for riding out a tropical storm?

So I’m hoping that wherever you are you are safe and dry, and doing something fibery on this stormy weekend.

A Nip in the Air

It’s August 21 and for several days now I’ve been wearing sweaters as well as knitted wool socks. This aint Kansas! (or NJ!)….this is Maine.  The fog has rolled in and out for days; when it rolls in the temperature drops quickly.We’re in Southwest Harbor, and sadly I have discovered that Lilac Lily is no longer in business.

Sailor Sweater from Debbie Bliss's "EcoBaby"

The Debbie Bliss sailor sweater is finished!  I just haven’t been able to post it since we’ve been out of internet service for almost a week! My own concocted sweater made with Tess Designer ribbon yarn is waiting to be sewn together….not my favorite part of sweater making!  So instead of tackling that I cast one for another sweater.  This is a top down design by”Knitting Pure and Simple.” I’m holding two strands together, a 16/2 linen in a muted purple and a linen/cotton/rayon mix, also in purple. I left a good portion of this yarn in the car, thinking I’d never get started on this sweater.  I knitted down to the underarms just beyond the point where the sleeves get put on holders, and now I’m out of yarn.  I have several projects that I brought from home (the Interweave Knits “Beach House pullover,”  Sally Melville’s Einstein coat,  Marianne Kinzel’s lace curtains, and the Manos del Uruguay “Serena” that will become a shawl) so I’m not wanting for more knitting!

Some photos from the past week…

Lush undergrowth on Long Island

Heading up Penobscot Bay to Belfast under N C Wyeth clouds....now I understand where he got his skies!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

finding Lichen at Holbrook Island Sanctuary

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I found some treasures during a walk on Holdbrook Island Sanctuary: two kinds of lichen that I have not gathered before. I only take lichen that has fallen on the ground. I’m looking for the species that contains orchil and therefore will make a purple dye. Until I find it I’m only taking a small bit to test for color. Once I find the purple producing lichen I hope to gather more on future forages! …not tons as lichen grows so slowly….just enough to dye an ounce of precious handspun or so…. Also, I had to have the little green urchin….so pretty!

 

Thuya Gardens in Northeast Harbor on Mt. Desert

 

This is an unbelievable garden!  In August there are still some flowers on the rhodies, and there are foxglove blooming along with the later summer flowers of rudbeckia, fall anemones and monk’s hood!  It’s quite a steep walk up to this hidden gem from the dock, but those who visit Mt. Desert by car can drive up!

 

Fog Banks come and go!

 

 

 

Fog banks roll in without warning and lift just as quickly!

 

 

 

 

Moss and Lichen grow everywhere!

 

Look how much moss and lichen is growing on this building built on a dock at Islesford on Cranberry Island! This is the entrance to a lovely restaurant that draws people from Mt. Desert to visit by ferry just to enjoy a meal here!  There is a gallery and a potter’s shop on this dock, and the owners told us that every winter the storms throw up all kinds of weather that raises the floor boards and sending seaweed and debris into their shops!  Every spring they clean up and nail the floor boards down again!

 

 

 

Pottery studio on the dock at Islesford on Cranberry Island

 

Truly wonderful wares in this shop!  Lucky for me that Kaitlyn Duggan has a website and Etsy shop so I can consider getting some of her whimsical, lovely dishes without coming all the way back here!

 

 

Button Bracelet by Kaitlyn Duggan

 

 

I couldn’t resist this fun bracelet from the pottery studio….

 

 

 

 

Bob has just returned from visiting a boat on the docks that is a floating veterinary clinic.  Dr. Barbara Shively visits various islands throughout the midcoast to take care of dogs and cats, horses, cows, sheep.  While she examines dogs right out on deck at the back of her trawler, she always examines the kitties down below in a closed room!  What an interesting life!

Maniacal Knitting

Can there be such a thing?  I don’t feel driven, but I will surely finish two sweaters this week (I am so close!), and that will make four sweaters in six weeks.  Three of the these sweaters are for me….how decadent!  The fourth sweater is an adorable Debbie Bliss design from her pattern book EcoBaby.

The  yarn is luscious to knit with….soft and almost as bouncy as knitting with wool.  It makes a heavenly knitted fabric.

This is the sweater I’m working on.  It is for my niece who is 18 months old.  I’d love to make some linen pants to go with the sweater.  I’m ready to knit the collar, and I realize now that the collar ends  wrong side out in the pattern which you can see in the photo!  Yuk!  I thought it would be a simple change to pick up stitches for the collar and just knit it with the right side facing in so it would be right side out when folded back.  But it won’t be that simple!  The collar is knitted as your finish the front the of the sweater so it is all one piece. I need to keep the shoulder area right side out while the collar part switches to right side in. I’ve got one idea on how to transition into having the right side switch, but I think I will check on Ravelry and see what others may have done to improve this design.

Aside from that glitch, I do love Debbie Bliss’s designs!  I met her a couple of years ago when she had a trunk show at Creative Knitworks when they were in Hillsdale, NJ (they have since moved to a larger space in Westwood, NJ….now isn’t that a great situation for a LYS!). At that time I got to handle and even try on a number of Debbie’s sweaters.  I saw first hand how many differently shaped women looked attractive in her designs and how well one size could fit a rather broad range of shapes!  Kudos to her!

And we are still sailing the coast of Maine and the islands of Penobscot Bay.  Yesterday was our first rainy day in six weeks of being here….amazing. Previous to that we have only had rain during the night!  Pretty perfect! I spent the day down below knitting the sailor sweater until I ran into the collar dilemma.  We ate hot comfort food all day, our favorite way of passing rainy days on board, and I also made a second beaded bracelet and did some reading.

Debbie Bliss's sailor sweater in Ecobaby cotton

 

Restaurant in Stonington, Maine....I want awnings like at home!

This was a lovely spot for lunch in Stonington, which has always been a busy harbor, initially for the schooners picking up granite and now for lobster fishing.  Last weekend we ate out at the very end of this dock overlooking the water!

 

 

 

 

A magical spot in Stonington

Isn’t this stunning?  I envision myself having coffee in the morning, wine in the evening, knitting, reading, star gazing…. in other words, living in this magical garden on the water!

 

 

Tila Herringbone Bracelet by Robin Tanenbaum

I bought this bracelet pattern as a download from I Dream of Beading in Poughkeepsie, NY.  I am not a beader by any stretch, and I had no experience with either herringbone or tila beads, so if I can follow the directions they must be superb!  I love wearing my new gem!

There is more news, but I’ll save it for another post….