Monday 30 July 2012

Ravellenics 2012 and SPAKAL inspired!

So I have joined in with the 2012 Ravellenics - but only with the Lunatic Fringe of Jane and Jen's Knit Funny Podcast, because I liked their irreverant approach. With no real "rules", it meant I could do what I was planning to anyway and use the extra knitting time to finish up a WIP, and hoping to turn this:
Into something a bit like this:
This is, of course, Spring Cloud, which I have blogged about before.

I am also lurking on the SPAKAL 2012, being run by the Knitmore Girls - although very, very new to spinning I love the idea of spinning and knitting my own sweater. I was fortunate enough to receive a donation of fleece this past weekend (more on that in a future blog I think), and if I get going now should have enough to knit the Rocky Coast Cardigan sometime soon, which they are not, I think, doing over at the SPAKAL, but I think this one I am just being inspired by, rather than actually joining. Also inspiring is that a number of people, Jasmine included, are drop spindling, so it must be do-able! Tonight I have swatched up and washed 2 samples of the first bit of spinning from the fleeces. Pics to follow...

Sunday 22 July 2012

I'll sail her up the west coast...

Readers, I have taken a little pause from blogging to travel up the west coast of Scotland, and across the highlands to Inverness, over the past week or so. Here is a little summary-in-yarn of the trip:

Our first stop was the historic mill town of Paisley, home of Paisley Shawls, and the Coats/Patons crafting empire, just outside of Glasgow:


This is the now defunct Anchor Mill - the last mill closed in the early 1990s, but you can see the largest exhibition of 19th century Paisley shawls in the world in Paisley Museum's Shawl Gallery - exquisitely beautiful, but of course I couldn't take photographs due to the delicate nature of the silks and wools used to make them. Despite the closure of the mills, there is still one weaver left in Paisley (Whitehill and Wilsons), and I purchased one of their wool shawls from the museum shop, and am wearing it in this rather poor photograph, taken in a hurry just before we braved the rain and went out for dinner.

I also finished an object in Paisley - the Sand and Sea Shawlette from Coastal Knits, made from the two skeins of sock yarn I bought in Helsinki in February:



It doesn't really go with the striped tee, but here is a pic from the back:


I am really pleased with how this turned out - the colour combination looks just like waves on a shingle beach.

We left Paisley for the west coast, and were busy cycling, sightseeing, and swimming there so I didn't progress that much on my other WIPs. But in the beautiful town of Oban:


I made a little purchase of a skein of pure, undyed wool from an Isle of Mull sheep grower, spinner and weaver (Ardalanish), being sold in a local handicrafts store. In a soft brown shade, it is very likely to become a hat for the husband. There was another store selling yarn in Oban, but when I tried to visit (at 11.40am) it hadn't yet opened. Time was getting on and we couldn't wait, so it went unvisited.

Passing up along the west coast, we briefly stopped in the town of Gourock, where we swam in the (heated) open air pool and I spied this yarn shop:


They sell spinning supplies and run spinning courses as well as knitting, and I lingered for a while at their lovely window display:


Shortly after, we left the west coast for Inverness, where I was again the victim of Scotland's eccentric opening hours, as the main yarn shop In the Victoria Arcade there decided to close early yesterday. However, I popped into the craft store nearby and bought two metres of pretty tartan ribbon, possibly to use on the Apple Strudel Cardigan, which I worked on in the car all the way home.

Sunday 15 July 2012

Raspberry cake with coconut icing

I have three WIPs on the go and this one is the Sand and Sea Shawlette from Coastal Knits.

Sunday 1 July 2012

An Envelope for Tea

So I was listening to a podcast this week, on my way to or from work, and I can't even quite remember which podcast it was - the Commuter Knitter (http://www.commuterknitter.blogspot.com/)  maybe - when the podcaster mentioned a Tea Wallet she'd seen on Ravelry - basically a little knitted envelope for carrying teabags around in your handbag. I snorted to myself - honestly, what was the point?

Fast forward a couple of mornings later, to our hotel room in Prague, and I found myself saying to my husband "oh, we have a kettle and even some longlife milk, if only I'd brought some teabags!". Readers, I ate my words (or, rather, thoughts), found the pattern on Ravelry (www.ravelry.com/pattern/library/tea-wallet) by Diane Trap, and knitted up a Tea Wallet last night while watching Andy Murray play at Wimbledon (and by the way did anyone else spot the knitter in the audience? I think that might have been a Citron (www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/citron) she was wearing - a pattern I have long wanted to do, and it looked lovely on her).

But back to the Tea Wallet - I did mine in Debbie Bliss Cathay, for that Silk Road to China vibe (in fact I do have some Road to China in stash, but wasn't quite ready to sacrifice that!), and added a button from my La Drogerie button stash; making it with beautiful things will mean I will definately want to use it. I altered the design somewhat (more by accident than intent) so my front is more of a checkerboard: