Why Sampling Makes Me a Better Color Spinner

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If you’ve been here before you know I sample a lot, especially color. I started out sampling to answer questions I had about construction and color, and it still makes me giddy to crank out tangible answers to my never ending stream of question. Along the way I realized something else, sampling makes me a better color spinner.

All of the sampling I do with braids or solid colors (or both) creates a short cut. I have samples that will show me what a braid will look like spun in any number of ways, with a variety of add-ins, subtractions, and mix ups.

After some time I noticed that when faced with a similar braid, similar dye pattern, not necessarily the same colors, I could predict how the braid would look spun and knitted. It’s nearly magic.

The photo above is from a recent class I taught at WEBS, it’s from my delightful student and friend Amy O’Malley, a talented artist and a world-class experimenter. The class is all about exploring 5 different dye patterns, spinning them mixed-up with themselves, and of course adding other colors.

While I was making the samples for this class, I had a really good idea of how my yarn and knitting would turn out, and I was right most of the time. I could pick and choose colors and fibers to go together quickly. It really cut time, there was no time spent dithering over method or color or remaking samples. That’s not to say there weren’t surprises, but that is always to be expected in an organic process.

What I hope my students get out of this (and most of my classes) is the feeling of possibility that their stash holds, the value in sampling, even if it’s just a little, and that experimenting is fun, everyone does it their own way. There is no ‘have to’, as long as you are happy with your yarn, it’s wonderful yarn.

Maybe we should have a Sample-Along this winter?

Big Teaching Events for Early 2020

It seems like the beginning of the year has become a hot time for fiber retreats. I remember when it seemed like most events were in the fall. I’ve got three big events coming up if you want to take a class with me. Vogue Knitting Live and PLY Away are already open for registration, and Red Alder opens November 9.

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February - Red Alder Fiber Retreat

I am thrilled to be teaching at the inaugural Red Alder Fiber Retreat in Tacoma, Washington. The line up of teachers is stellar, and it looks like there is a lot of fun to be had, including a disco.

I’m teaching:

Thursday: Yarnitecture : Building Exactly the Yarn You Want 

Friday: Paint the Town Red: Planning for Color in a Knitting Project

Saturday PM: Match Game: Spinning for Knitting

Sunday AM: Yarn Detective: Decoding Your Yarn for Better Knitting

Sunday PM: Light and Shadow: Hand carding Tints, Tones and Shades

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April - PLY Away 5

Can you believe this is going to be the 5th PLY Away? I remember when Jacey said, ‘Hey, should we do a retreat?’

I’m teaching:

Wednesday:

True Color: Exploring Dye Patterns In Braids

Combo (Cubed) Spinning All The Combinations

Thursday:

Plying For Color And Texture

Friday:

Spin And Nosh

Saturday:

Every Yarn Has It’s Silver Lining

Spin And Nosh

If you have questions about any of the events or classes please email me. I hope I get to spin with you next year!

Organizing Fiber and Yarn for Work

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There is something about the fall that makes me want to organize things. Don’t worry this will not become a love song to Marie Kondo, I like having lots of stuff around, a nest, it’s comforting to me. But sometimes my nest overflows.

Making my living at something I also do as a favorite hobby can be tricky when trying to organize all of the stuff. Worse, when I don’t really like to tidy or organize things. A few times a year it gets to be too much and I toss everything up in the air and set it rights.

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There are two spots where things really gather for me. I pile and stuff until either I can’t pile anymore or I can’t find something I need. As you know, there’s a lot of stuffing that can happen with fiber and yarn.

My basement is full of my fiber for teaching and most of my fiber for personal spinning. It is now all sorted, like with like, into those big Ikea clear bags and labeled clearly. That is another great use for tyvek wristbands, labeling bags; I will forever be indebted to the Spin Doctor podcast listener who mentioned using them for fiber pursuits.

It really is more organized than the pile other there looks, that was in the middle of it all. Glamourous, no?

The other spot is the top photo. A corner of my family room is my ‘office’. I have a standing desk, a set of shelves, and a couple of carts to organize my working paper, fiber and yarn for classes, articles, reviews, and blog posts that I’m currently or soon to be working on. It’s a lot of moving parts in a small space. I am terrible at putting things back where they belong, but I like it when it’s all there. I may need to implement the Barney clean up song at the end of my day, or not.

I’m about halfway through this corner of my world. Having to wear a brace on my hand from my injury keeps my spinning and knitting time down, but I’m using that time to sort and organize.

What organizing tips do you have for me?

Hand Cards for Textured Rolags and Roving

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I really like the rolags I make on my blending board with all the stuff, all the shiny, sparkly and loopy locks.

Some times I only want one or two of these rolags ,or sometimes I just don’t want to get out my blending board. When it’s that kind of a spinning day I use my hand cards.

That’s right, I don’t always use my handcards for carding or blending. Sometimes I use them just like a mini blending board. I work in one of two ways, either stuff then wool or wool then stuff for different uses.

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I made a couple of rolags after taking a walk after it rained. I wanted to catch the changing of the leaves green, gold , a little read on a base a brown, with some shine for the water clinging to everything.

Stuff first, I paint on all the locks, silk, bamboo, intersperse with a little wool to stabilize it then topped with wool to hold it together.

I use the same tools I do for my blending board, a paint brush, a wallpaper brush, and dowels to roll the rolag off. It makes chunky, wild yarn.

There are times when I want the sparklies and locks to be more diffused, but not blended.

When I’m after this look I work with wool first, then all the bits.

I roll it into a rolag which looks plain, then I pull it into roving and, hello, all of my pretties.

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I use both of these short and sweet methods of textured rolags when I want just a bit of that art/textured look in an otherwise plain yarn.

Sometimes I add them in randomly sometimes I plan the look like a painted colorway.

Do you use your hand cards this way?

Why I Swatch More Than Once

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Yes ,I know I am a bit of a swatching freak. It’s all of the possibilities of a yarn that get me excited and all of potentials problems that keep me on my toes.

I almost always swatch more than once for a bigger project or for a project when gauge is critical. Not necessarily because I always love it, but because I know something about how I swatch.

I’m currently swatching for the Felix Cardigan by Amy Christoffers in Weekend Wool from Green Mountain Spinnery. This is yarn I rescued from a failed Carbeth due to gauge issues.

This pattern calls for a yarn to shift gauges, to be knit bigger than the suggested label gauge. Not all yarns can do that, but the wonderful woolen spun Weekend Wool can.

I swatched with a couple of needle sizes. I guessed at a 7, and also used a nine. I washed and measure my swatch. According to this swatch, which is small I know, & was a little tight and 9 was spot on at 3.5 stitches to the inch.

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Me knowing me after a couple of decades of knitting. I took my 9s and yarn to the couch. I cracked a beer and put on a mystery. I recently switched from BritBox to Acorn, so many new to me shows. I’m currently loving Queens of Mystery.

I knit until I forgot I was knitting and then knit some more . I knit a bigger swatch, with out any edge borders, so I could really relax into my knitting. Relax I did, you can see the difference in jut the knitting of my two swatches. My beer + mystery swatch is more my true knitting swatch. It’s clearly relaxed and looser than the part of the smaller swatch knit with the same needles.

When I swatch and I’m thinking about swatching and my needles/yarn are close to gauge I can make that gauge work, my tensioning goes looser or tighter as I need it. When in reality, when I start knitting my project my gauge is frequently off by 1/2 a stitch to the inch.

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How do I know? Experience, apparently I’m not just a people pleaser, but a gauge pleaser too. I can see it in my relaxed knitting swatch.

I can see the exact point where I stopped thinking about getting gauge and relaxed, right at the pink arrow. Above that it’s all relaxed knitting, then when I start thinking about binding off my knitting slips back into gauge pleasing mode, at the green arrow.

My relaxed and finished gauge is 3.25, a 1/4 of stitch off of the pattern gauge. Now I have to decide do I really like the hand of the fabric (or do I just want to start the sweater), or do I knit a relaxed swatch with size 8 needles?

The Last Make, Wear, Love Retreat

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This past weekend, I was lucky enough to teach at the last Make, Wear, Love retreat, run by Amy Herzog.

I am grateful to have participated in such a tight-knit retreat. Everyone supported each other, students and teachers. There was joy, and silliness. A lot of relaxing happened, and learning and shopping.

I took a few pictures, but nothing can capture the feeling of being among people who have come together for several years thankful to be together one last time.

If you’d like a taste of it, take a look at #makewearloveretreat on Instagram.

There was a fantastic fashion show, hosted by Patty Lyons, who kept everyone laughing and moving quickly.

I fell for the sweater Twitch by Kim Mc Brien Evans (the fabulous dyer Indigo Dragonfly). I bought the yarn from her too, the amazing Chameleon Sock. I like the sweater so much I’m willing to knit at a gauge of 7.5 to the inch.

The retreat has been in Maine since it started, and the state gave us beautiful days and glorious views.

I want to thank Amy for having me teach, my students, and the other teachers for being so welcoming to a first-timer.

October Teaching: River Colors Studio and WEBS

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Do you live near Cleveland, Ohio or Northampton, Massachusetts and are in the mood for a little spinning or knitting in October?

In October I’m teaching in Cleveland at River Colors Studio. I’m teaching Yarnitecture all day on Sunday October 13. On Saturday October 12, I’m teaching knitters about the construction of yarn in my Yarn Detective Class in the morning, and about yarn swapping in my Yarn Substitution class in the afternoon. If you follow my posts on Mason Dixon Knitting, these are live versions of all that goodness.

Later in October, right after Rhinebeck, I’m teaching at WEBS for the weekend of October 26th and 27th. I’m teaching four classes, Draft-O-Rama (woolen and worsted drafting), the Gist of Grist, Intuitive Spinning, and True Color: Exploring Dye Patterns in Braids. Any (or all) of those classes will help you spin your new Rhinebeck acquisitions.

I’m always happy to answer any questions about my classes. I hope to see some of you this fall!

Sparkly Threads

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The end of the summer in the US usually means all kinds of sales. I went to a sale at one of the big box craft stores and came home a happy women with a pocket full of sparkly threads. It’s almost as good as sunshine, but not as catchy. I bought rayon threads, some holo threads, a glow in the dark thread, and some sparkly embroidery floss. They make me so happy that they are still sitting where I took this photo so I can look at them every day.

No, I haven’t started anything with them, but I have plans. Because plans with yarn and thread are what I love.

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Here are two of the plans I have for these fabu threads. Two Cozyblue Handmade patterns to stitch, Galaxy Girl and maybe Lunar Blossom.

Other plans I have for those sparklies are spinning some thread plied yarn, some spirals and boucle featuring the glitz for scarf weaving and knitting.

I may do a touch of mending on a commercial sweater with one or one plied with a fine yarn for grip.

Clearly a little shine was key to finding some new ideas for myself. Have you made anything sparkly lately?