Tag Archives: life in maine

ooooh spahkly!

I had no intentions of joining Tour de Fleece, but somehow it seems I might have. This is a “spin-along” that takes place during the Tour de France. Anyhow, I finished spinning up that purple batt I started over a month ago, spun up the sparkly batt I made at Gilead Fiber Farm, and spun up some wool-mohair I got a few years back from Friends Folly Farm. I even Navajo plied the purple yarn!

Here it all is:
purple wool single (1)
The purple wool single… I let it rest a day before plying. I swore rather a lot until I got into the swing of the chain plying.

purple wool navajo plied
Navajo or chain plied, a pseudo three-ply yarn. I ended up with one small skein (the single broke, thus the swearing) and one larger, 17 and 115 yards, respectively.

The glittery batt was like a creature. It seemed that no matter how much I spun, there was still this big fuzzy thing hanging to my left…
glitter batt glitter batt (1)

Eventually, though, the wheel ate it all up. I’m not sure what to do with this single. It needs plying, but I think I’d rather it as a two-ply than a Navajo plied yarn.
glitter batt (3) glitter batt (2)
The color is probably most correct in these photos, but it shifts and varies, and it is very sparkly.

And last for the day, a loosely plied single. This is a 50-50 wool-mohair mix.
friendsfolly_loose_single (1) friendsfolly_loose_single

I soaked all the skeins, smacked them a few times on the decks, spun the water out by swinging them around, and hung them to dry.

Oh, and I ate this today… the first sungold.
sungold 1july2012
It was very nom!

There’s another almost ready…
sungold 1july2012 (1)

June ramblings

Knitting and Fibery stuff

There has been some knitting going on around here, though admittedly not the past week or so. I’m about halfway on one of the sleeves for DH’s birthday sweater (it should be noted that his birthday is in January).

We finished and presented the “fish mobile” aka One Fish Two Fish. Mom and baby both seem to like it!
fish mobile done (3) fish 009

It was a joint project for somebody at work. More photos, the pattern link, etc. on my Ravelry project page. The actual fish pattern is for a cat toy, and we made the rest of it up.

I made a little shawl (Rav link), but I’m not sure what I think about it. I wish it were longer, shallower, and perhaps a different color. It’s too hot right now to give it much serious consideration.
sss_shawl (3)

Made it to the Fiber Frolic earlier this month! I’ve missed the past two years because of funerals or memorial services. Double bonus for me this year: nobody in the family died, and I got to go hang with friends! I brought home some bamboo/cotton, and some plain bamboo tencel… secret project in progress.
yarnsonnets (5)

The best part of the day was hanging with some fibery friends, and seeing more of them there. We were all quite smitten by these angora bunny babies. And I want some of these rubber chicken earrings!
frolic2012 (1) frolic2012 (3)

Lucia is a cake making machine! She untangled the skein and wound it up in a center pull cake!
yarnsonnets frolic2012 you fight like a girl

And Sara fights like a girl. And she’s in love with a yarn colorway of the same name.

Around the gardens

That sounds so posh, no? How about around the yard…

Our peas are finally flowering, as are the peonies (mmmmm!) and roses. The iris are done (and didn’t put on a big show, except for the weedy purple siberians, which I adore). This might be the first year I really noticed how beautiful the pea flowers are.
flowers 19june2012

Peonies are just behind the peas… If you embiggen, you might see what is hiding up in back of the peonies… near where the roses are.
flowers 19june2012 (3)

It’s this guy! He served for years as a place to put bird food.
flowers 19june2012 (10)

Yowza!
flowers 19june2012 (9)

The roses are also quite lovely… I have no idea what the ones out back are. Likely some old fashioned thing.
flowers 19june2012 (7)

Out front we have a bank with Rugosa rose aka beach rose. They’re weedy, and they can be invasive in coastal situations, but they work pretty well in our yard.
flowers 19june2012 (17) flowers 19june2012 (18)

And on the other side of the yard, in the shade, the hosta are doing well.
flowers 19june2012 (28)

Even that gawdawful goutweed has a certain appeal on a hot day…
flowers 19june2012 (24)

Yesterday’s lunch

I was gifted some wonderful stainless lunch pails at Christmastime. I’ve been carrying my lunch in them, and for the past few weeks it has been salad. For quite a while I’ve had a thing for baby arugula, but lately it’s been the lettuce from the garden. And berries on the salad. And stinky cheese (gorgonzola is my favorite). And usually some bit of protein: eggs, nuts, leftover fish or chicken… numm numm!

It has been stinking hot here the past couple of days, and the AC wasn’t working at work. It was actually much cooler outside, so that’s where I headed for lunch.

lunch20june2012 lunch20june2012 (1)

lunch20june2012 (2)

Crochet??????

And here’s what I did at lunch: worked on the beaded crochet bracelet! I strung the beads at breakfast, crocheted a bit here and there, and by the end of the day I was done! The instructional video at the link is really clear, even for me. But this suits my crochet skills, which are “chain”.
crochet bead bracelet (1) crochet bead bracelet

I wanted it really long, and to wrap several times. Mission accomplished. And there are enough beads left on the string for another. And I have loads more beads. I see an obsession coming on…
crochet bead bracelet (2)

Other obsessions

Bras, but you know that, right? I gifted my two nieces (19 and 17) with a fitting and a nice bra. They were happy! Mom came too. We went to Bella Intimates in Rye, NH. It’s a beautiful little shop run by a lovely woman, Shelley.
bella (2)

I feel like such a giant next to these girls (and mom)… height-wise and boob-wise.
bella (3)

But it was all good. Shelley says she has a friend doing a photo shoot for a calendar, and wants us to be part of it! A multi-generational thing. Plans are for July 8. I forget what the calendar is for (I’m thinking breast cancer), but I’ll keep you posted.

And finally

Remember the Gilligan’s Island meeting props? I finally got around to making a small Bond set. These are for somebody who is switching jobs to another agency. I made his reversible.
glenn (3) glenn (4)
The Bonds are easy to name… but can you name the girls?? Two of these have the appropriate Bond girl on the flip side.
Dalton as BondFamke Janssen as Xenia Onatopp
Roger Moore as BondLois Chiles as Dr. Holly Goodhead
And of course, Sean Connery as Bond – and the best named Bond girl, Honor Blackman as Pussy Galore

Holy Tomato Trellis Batman!

I have grand plans for the sun gold tomatoes I got from the FedCo sale last weekend…
tomato trellis (2) tomato trellis (1)

Actually, I was playing with goats and sheep last weekend, so a friend who works up there grabbed me a couple. They are twice the size of the one I got last year! Last year my single plant was about 2.5 m tall, and that was with pinching off the suckers! My friend says she doesn’t bother pinching the suckers on these, and her single plant grew to ramble about 15 feet across the yard.

So, I have high hopes that the two plants will cover this trellis with mounds and mounds of little golden orange jewels.

I built the trellis today out of a junk Norway maple that DH cut down last weekend (so the back garden would get more light). He just rolled his eyes at the thing when I started it, but I like it, and the neighbors commented that they like it… and in the end he likes it too.

The weekend was also about iris… cleaning out the front bed… the nasty goutweed is winding its way all through the iris and I think it keeps it damp and nice habitat for those snails that like to munch it. Hopefully a bit of air will help them. They have good and bad years, not sure how last year was.

Here’s the nasty goutweed in the Siberian iris, on the left (didn’t get to this yet), and the weeded out part on the right.
iris (1) iris (2)

And somebody gave me some dwarf dark purple iris! So I made a place for them… bigger iris to the side and bee balm behind. I dug up some big clods of the Siberian iris that had pushed its way into this little bed… and put it down in an open spot left from clearing out some goutweed.
iris

I’ve been knitting little fish. But no spinning… yet! Maybe next weekend!

a grain bag bag! and other stuff…

the grain bag

Last year I bought a grain bag bag, and I have been using it a lot. However, I’m heading to Spain (in a week!!!), and the bag isn’t especially at all secure. And so I made my own, with a zipper on the top and inside zippered pockets for the ipad and passport/money.

Start with this:
grain bag bag

Fold, iron, duct tape, sew, add zippers, seat belts…
grain bag bag (1) grain bag bag (3) grain bag bag (6) grain bag bag finished 001 (2) grain bag bag finished 001 (5)

And end with this:
grain bag bag finished 001 (9) grain bag bag finished 001 (1)

The new bag is a tad bigger, and it’s wider at the bottom. This will be great for my upcoming trip. The older bag has better placement of the writing and logo.

Lessons learned:

Going to the junkyard to cut seatbelts out of cars is way a lot of FUN. It was a cold day with snow on the ground, so I didn’t fully explore the place. I’d been looking into trucks, thinking that they might have longer belts, but not really. Then I turned around and saw the “caution” writing on the belt in a trans am. So I just grabbed the two from that car.

Actually, it took a lot of effort to cut them out with a box cutter… which is a good thing!

The seatbelts from trucks, where they exist, are generally dirtier than those from cars. The passenger side belt is much nicer than the driver side belt. It’s likely that the two belts from a single car won’t match perfectly due to dirt and use, but a good wash helped that.

Having a business that begins with A does pay. Aable was the first junkyard I found in our area, so I phoned and then went out later that day. On my way I passed FOUR other junkyards. It’s as though every second business in Chelsea is a junkyard… it’s what a lack of zoning can do. I still think it was worth driving the extra couple miles… it was a huge yard, and the guy there was great.

I love my kenmore! It sewed through four layers of seatbelt, no problem… though by the end, and maybe it was six layers of seatbelt I tried to push it through, the needle bent…
grain bag bag (7)

Though it was a fun project, and something I wanted to do, it was also a royal pain in the ass. I think I spent four or five hours on the sewing, never mind getting the seatbelt, zippers (a trip to Waterville), buckley things, and most recently and yet to be added, a magnetic clasp.

There are a few other photos in this flickr set.

mushroom sweater update

The body is done! It was done two or more weeks ago… and I haven’t gotten around to picking up the sleeves. It’ll happen, but it probably won’t be finished until sometime in May.
striped mushroom sweater body striped mushroom sweater body (1)

It looks skinny, but as you can see, it’ll stretch. It’s sized for 50 inch chest, though I tapered for the waist. I’m happy with the shoulder detail, and that the back is about 2-3 inches longer than the front (the sides match up, I used shortrows).
striped mushroom sweater body (2) striped mushroom sweater body (4)

gratuitous doggy pic

Gravy in socks…
gravy in socks

crazy sink

I had to go to just about the world’s worst and least effective training a week or two ago. I work in an office… I don’t need somebody who is reading the slides and doesn’t really know anything about the subject to inform me about hazard communication (label your chemicals) and blood borne pathogens (um?).

Do you have two containers of toner? You need your material safety data sheet posted in the location where you store your toner. In case somebody accidentally ingests it. Give me a frackin’ break! And the bloodborne pathogens was all about hiv and hep C, and the information was not exactly right. I pointed these things out of course. And that all of us in the room were more likely to be exposed to ticks and Lyme disease, and even rabies in an office environment (bats flying about the old buildings) than what they covered. The response? Well, unfortunately OSHA doesn’t have standards for these things. Again, give me a break!

But the sink in the bathroom was way cool…
sink
You have to step on the metal bar near the floor to turn it on, and then warm water sprays all down and around. Talk about a waste of water! But apparently the place used to be a factory, and everybody would have break at the same time, so at one time these sinks saved money.

Not so much anymore.

oddities

knife shadow
Can somebody explain this shadow?

etc

I had that nasty cold that’s going around. Mom felt bad for me and sent some lovely flowers!
flowers

I turn 51 tomorrow…

I hope to post about the snowpile. It’s practically non-existent, but it has become a tradition. So, stay tuned… I’ll take a photo on the first day of spring as usual, and announce a contest.

Clearly I have not been blogging much, nor have I been reading many blogs. In large part I blame Facebook, and also the Ravelry forums. Also, I have a new toy, that iPad, which is a lot of fun. However, I think I need something better to synch feeds with my Google Reader.

Feedly displays nicely, but there’s no organization… I can’t mark things as read, it doesn’t record that I’ve read things, AND it doesn’t grab all of the feeds, and of the ones it does grab, it doesn’t display all of them correctly or allow me to visit all the websites. So I’ve stopped using it. Anybody got a recommendation?

Did I mention I’m going to Spain?!?!?!?!

For two and a half weeks! With a friend!!! I’ll be posting pics to facebook, since that’ll probably be the easiest.

cakes and fractals

This is what my weekend’s been about, cakes and fractals.

Cakes

Yesterday I took all the yarn I dyed with mushrooms and made “cakes”!
cakes 013

It’s easier to see how the colors might play together this way, rather than when the yarn was all in skeins.
more dyeing 2

This is for a DH birthday sweater… his birthday was over a week ago, though. But this sweater has taken a LOT more work… finding the mushrooms, drying them, getting the wool (at Rhinebeck! over a year ago!), dyeing the wool, and getting it ready to knit. Now to figure out how to make the sweater… It’ll be a basic pullover, he wants stripes.

I played around with a swatch, more for gauge than color (two of these are too close to be together throughout the sweater, but I used the crummy little hanks)… I’m thinking some combination of stockinette, garter, and linen stitches.
cakeswatch

Icing!

Yesterday I also headed out to Pogo’s aka Friends Folly Farm to pick up some yarn to ship off to Scotland. I’m sending her yarn. She’s sending me a couple of bras.

pogos (2) pogos (1)

I went with a few friends, one wearing a hexagon sweater she just winged using remnants from Pogo’s bargain bin (she’s in the background). The sweater in the foreground was also just winged. I have talented friends…

Anyhow, there was little excitement to be had in the bargain bin this weekend (which I wanted for me). The friend in Scotland is getting some of the friendz blendz.

But look at the icy beauty that was still about when we walked out of the yurt!
pogos (5)
Crazy pretty tinkling sound as it fell from the trees and hit the hard icy snow. Except for reminding people of the Ice Storm of 1998, it was beautiful.

Fractals

Lazy Katy! This is a shawl that has some fractal pattern…
lazykate (1)

I had a lot of issues with the lace. I’ve made much more complicated lace (see that maplewing shawl), but for some reason, this one kicked my butt. I decided to just go with it. It’s going to be scrumpled and scrunched around my neck anyhow. Also, I was going with the notion that if you repeatedly did something, even if it was an “error”, you can just consider it a design feature. This shawl has a lot of design features in the lace….

Here it is before blocking it out,
lazykate

And the color is probably best here,
lazykate (5)

It’s from some gorgeous yarn, madeline tosh sock (lichen color), that I got in Brunswick ages ago, at Purl Diva. (ooooh, Ellen’s got a new website, it looks great!)

Way more details over on my Ravelry Project Page for this.

more experiments

And a lovely walk in the woods. Yesterday we went to the Macdonald Conservation Area, a Kennebec Land Trust property, for a mushroom walk. Yikes there were a lot of people there! Several of us wandered off on our own, and everybody met up about an hour or so later.

I found my new car!
macdonald woods my new car

Loads of beechnuts,
macdonald woods beechnuts

Sweet little eyelash cup fungi,
macdonald woods eyelash cup

And other stuff that I didn’t get photos of. It’s late in the season, and after the recent week of rain, the fungi were really soggy.

Anyhow, Michaeline (the mushroom whiz on the trip) asked if I’d been dyeing. Well, no… but she inspired me to get crackin’! And so, not knowing much, but what the hell, it’s all just a big experiment…
macdonald woods michaeline

I dyed 8 ounces of Bartlett (that I got one year ago at Rhinebeck) with 8 ounces of Jack-o-lantern mushroom. It is known as a good dyer, but I think they are referring to a different species. Frankly, I am really confused. The Bessette’s wonderful book refers to Omphalotus olivescens, but Michael Kuo indicates this is a western species, replaced in the east by O. illudens. We think we have O. olearius.

Anyhow, I’m not hugely satisfied…

I pre-soaked the wool so it would be wet, but I didn’t pre-mordant it… I just added the alum and cream of tartar to they pot (at the same time, I learned this morning the CoT should be added at the end).
Omphalotus dyeing (1)

Here it is after about 2 hours of simmering away and sitting overnight to cool. Wrung out but not rinsed.
Omphalotus dyeing pre rinse

The three horizontal yarns are pieces then soaked in vinegar, ammonia, and simmered 15 minutes or so in an iron afterbath.
Omphalotus dyeing prerinse vin amm iron (1)

And here’s everything rinsed, with an un-dyed skein for comparison. Again, vinegar, ammonia, and iron after bath (top to bottom).
Omphalotus dyeing post rinse vin amm iron (1)

I’m thinking I’ll just let it dry as-is. It might be a decent neutral color with some others… I might experiment with a different species today!

Remember the lichen and urine experiment I started at the beginning of the year? It was using these lichens, a gift from Michaeline!

Well….

Let’s just say I’m learning a lot. One is that to use urine for this, the urine should already be fermented. And who wants that smelly mess around? The other is that I don’t think I aerated this enough. It lived for a few weeks under the bathroom sink. I would open it once in a while and stir it around… but then it began to smell. And even with my anosmia/disosmia thing going on, whew, it stank. So it was banished to under the utility sink, until the spring, when it went outside. I opened it a few times then, but would receive complaints from family members that it stinks.

Shhhhh… I opened it again and gave it a big stir.
lichen experiment lichen experiment (1)
(pre and post stir)

Where is that lovely fuchsia??? I think this will live in the cellar for the winter. And I’ll aerate it more in the spring. Maybe then it’ll be a good color…