Tag Archives: The Shepherd & The Shearer

TSATS Designer Cecily Glowik MacDonald’s Inspiration and Progress

**Today’s post is written by Cecily Glowik MacDonald, one of our awesome The Shepherd and The Shearer designers. She’s got some great sneak peek photos of her nearly finished pullover. For more details about purchasing a TSATS kit, read here. -SG**

The Shepherd and Shearer is such a wonderful project and I am delighted to get to be part of it this year!

The design began when I received this beautiful yarn-

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 I tend to find the most inspiration for designs from the yarn itself. After much swatching and then sending a few design ideas over, this was cable pattern that I used in my design.

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 The center cable reminds me of twisting ivy that climbs along the brick wall next to my house.

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 The outer cables are reminiscent of the tops of the andromeda plant in my backyard.

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The yarn is such a delight to knit with that my progress on this design has moved quickly! Here are some in progress shots-

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Just a sleeve and the pocket linings to go! I can’t wait to get to wear this sweater!

All the best,

Cecily

The Shepherd and The Shearer 2014 Has Landed!

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After much fighting with our e-commerce software system this morning, I am thrilled to announce that The Shepherd and The Shearer 2014 is now available for sale!

**Just a reminder– we only have 300 TSATS kits available this year. When they are gone we will be done for the year, so get yours before they are gone! Between the 2000+ people in our Ravelry group and the almost 6000 people who like our Facebook page, I think we will probably sell out by the end of the week.**

I am really excited that we were able to use the knowledge with gained from our experience with this project last year to figure out some cost cutting measures so that we could lower the price on this year’s The Shepherd and The Shearer kits. One of the ways we did this is by making all the patterns deliverable digitally this year. We will not be printing booklets like we did last year. Instead, the ebook containing the patterns will be downloadable for everyone who purchased the kits. You will also be able to download the pattern into your Raverly library with a using special coupon code available only to TSATS participants.

Also to keep the costs down, we have divided the kits into four size groups this year. There will be instructions for making each sweater in 12 or more sizes in every single kit, but we’ve streamlined the shipping process by making four kits sizes.

Another change from last year– those who wish to purchase enough yarn to be able to knit BOTH sweaters from this year’s project will be given the opportunity to do so on the front end and at a substantial discount. Details here.

Designers Pamela Wynne and Cecily Glowik MacDonald will be writing blog posts later this week to show you a little behind-the-scence of what goes into their process of creating a sweater and taking it from the concept/sketch stage all the way through the finished pattern.

To purchase your The Shepherd and The Shearer 2014 kit, click here!

The Shepherd and The Shearer: The Sketches

I am a couple days late posting the sketches for The Shepherd and The Shearer 2014– a million apologies!

As I mentioned in my last TSATS post, we are crazy excited to have, once again, collaborated with two ROCKSTARS of the knit wear design world, Pamela Wynne and Cecily Glowik MacDonald. Both designers started on this project months ago and we’ve been seeing some sneaky peeks along the way.

Both designers will be blogging here next week about their own project, their inspiration and their process, but I did want to give you a taste of what’s to come in the meantime. Remember these are just sketches– the designer will elucidate their own visions next week.

Our brief to the designers was to create an heirloom quality, cabled, unisex sweater that would pair with our purpose-made, Sheep-to-Sweater TSATS yarn. We love what they have come up with so far!

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Cecily Glowik MacDonald

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Pamela Wynne

Our TSATS kits will go on sale on Monday– so many more details then. For full background on The Shepherd and The Shearer, start here. For more info on this year’s project, read here. And for more info on Pamela Wynne and Cecily Glowik MacDonald, read here.

The Shepherd and The Shearer 2014: The Designers

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I am so excited to share The Shepherd and The Shearer 2014 designers with you. Both of these designers are well-known for their style and innovation, as well as for their well-written patterns. (Believe it or not, those two things don’t always go hand in hand.)

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Pamela Wynne has been working with Juniper Moon Farm almost since the very beginning. She is famous-famous for her February Lady Sweater which, according to Ravelry has been knit by more than 13,150 people.

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She also created one of my favorite children’s patterns of all time ever, Ella Fun.

My favorites of Pam’s designs, though, are the ones she has done for us.

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Edie has such amazing details. The trompe l’oeil tie kills me.

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Maeby is such a show stopper! There are always audible gasps when I pull this one out at trunk shows.

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Pam also designed the Whistler pillow and Smith blanket, two of our most popular patterns from this season.

I love working with Pam because she is incredibly professional but also incredibly fun to work with. I’ve always considered myself pretty lucky to get to work with Pam and I can’t wait to see her finished TSATS design for 2014.

We are also thrilled to pieces to be working with a designer who is new to us, Cecily Glowik MacDonald. When we were looking for another designer, it seemed like everyone we talked to recommended Cecily, and it’s easy to see why. She is super prolific and her garments are every so lovely.

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I am in love with Graham.

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And Jetty.

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And Lakeside makes me positively swoon.

In our editorial meetings, we’re always talking about how a Juniper Moon Farm design should be lovely and, as importantly, wearable. Cecily is the perfect example of a designer who’s  garments are lovely and wearable.

Once we had settled on these two amazing women to design our TSATS 2014 sweaters, we turned them lose to do what they do best. Tomorrow, I will share with you the sketches and swatches they came back with.

The Shepherd and the Shearer 2014

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Last year, we had a really cool idea. We wanted to put make a sweater that was a collaboration between the shepherd who grew the fleece, the shearer who carefully harvested it, the designer who created  the pattern and the knitter who brought all of those people intentions together with her own hands. We worked with some really amazing people to make this happen, including designers Kate Davies and Kirsten Kapur.

I love peeking at the finished TSATS sweaters you all have made. (You can see The Shepherd here and The Shearer Here.) It makes me so proud to see what started off as an idea being fully executed and loved.  Knowing that the fast knitters wore their sweaters to stay warm this winter actually makes me tear up.

All around, Emily and I were both very proud of what we did with The Shepherd and The Shearer. Which is not to say that there wasn’t a huge learning curve involved! There were definitely bumps along the way, but we learned from them and, when we decided to go forward with The Shepherd and The Shearer  2014, we knew we could do it even better than the inaugural project.

There are several big changes we’re making this year but I wanted to point one in particular out here: we will be using a different mill this year. In fact, we’re using a local, family-owned mill and they have assured us that accuracy is as important to them as it is to us. No more mailing out extra skeins due to yardage issues! We made sure everyone got the yarn they needed last year but it honestly nearly did us in.

One other difference is that we will be limiting participation to 300 knitters this year. Last year we originally started by limiting ourselves to 200 available kits but we were so overwhelmed by emails from people who wanted to buy a kit that we ended up selling way more and it lead to a lot of confusion. This year when the 300 kits are gone, we are done. I know it stinks that we won’t have enough for everyone but the truth is, we are a small business, and we want to give the proper attention to detail to each and every kit. We can do that better by limiting the numbers.

There is so much more to tell you– like which two AMAZING designers we are working with this year– but I don’t want to bore you to death, so I’ll save that for tomorrow.

“What I learned at the Washington State Sheep Shearing School 2014” by Patricia Ford

**** I am super excited today to bring you a blog post by Patricia Ford, the winner of our first ever The Shepherd and The Shearer  Shearing School Scholarship! Thanks so everyone who participated in the 2013 The Shepherd and The Shearer Project. YOU made this happen for Patti! We will have details soon about The Shepherd & The Shearer 2014. -XOXOXOX,  Susan****

Sheep Shearing is one of the oldest professions there are. It is a skill that does not involve any type of technology and it is a method that has not changed for many years. I’ve always dreamed of having my own flock of sheep and shearing them myself but for me this is not possible. I am a military spouse and our family moves around every few years. A couple of years ago, I decided to intern in sheep farms so that I could learn as much as I could about animal husbandry.  I figured if I can’t have sheep of my own, might as well be around them when I get the opportunity. It was this desire that led me to attend the Washington State Sheep Shearing School in Moses Lake on April 7th thru the 11th.  It was a five day class with the sixth day being an Advanced Tune-Up session for intermediate shearers to “sharpen” their skills.

I had been looking forward to taking this class for a long time and finally the day had come. On my way to the Grant County Fairgrounds, which is where the class was held, lots of questions crossed my mind for example, “How many women will be there?” “Will I be the only middle-aged woman attending?” “Will I be able to learn how to shear?”  The first day of class we had a brief introduction between everyone there including 16 students, instructors and volunteers. The age range between shearing students was majority 30’s to 50’s and there were students from all over the Pacific Northwest, California and Alaska. Plenty of women were involved in the school including eight students, the school’s coordinator and a teaching volunteer.

On day one of instruction, each student received a binder loaded with information about sheep shearing, and everything there is to know about the sheep production industry including, handling and repairing equipment to wool packaging and care, animal health, physical conditioning, setting up a business and marketing plan and more. We were briefed on how the five day lasting class would go and then we went to the shearing trailer.

The shearing trailer is a mobile unit that has eight stations. It accommodates 16 students at two per station. There are four stations on each side allowing the instructor to observe everyone.  The trailer unit is constructed of 2 inch square tubing and is bolted to a flatbed trailer. It has a fold up roof, sides that fold down and a tip up wall and chute. The sheep enter on the left rear and circle around the front to the right rear. When set up, the trailer forms a 20 x 32 foot building with a wrap-around chute, with drop doors for accessing sheep easily and effectively. The trailer is set up each year and put away the day after the shearing tune-up session.

We were assigned two students and an instructor per station and all of the shearing equipment was provided by the school. There is so much to learn in sheep shearing and at first it seems so complicated to coordinate holding the sheep in place and properly shearing in the least blows possible and avoiding second cuts. The main instructor, Mike McWilliams has been teaching this class since 1993.

I have to admit I was a little bit intimidated on day 1. It seemed a little but much to take in at one time. I was being instructed on what to do while hands on a sheep and shears. We learned the New Zealand sheep shearing method with a goal to sheer in 48 to 50 blows per sheep. We also learned about shearing equipment set up, shearing moccasins as well as throwing, skirting and rolling a fleece. The first day I sheared three sheep and I was proud.

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Day 2 was the most difficult for me because my body was sore from using it in a way that I was not used to and I was a bit discouraged at not being able to properly sheer on my own yet but I sheared six sheep anyway and continued to give it a go. Besides shearing instruction, the focus of day 2 was: handling sheep without hurting and exciting, quality wool clipping, preventing wool contaminates, wool packaging and care and physical conditioning. We also learned how to trim hoofs.

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By noon on day 3 I began to gain confidence in what I was doing and suddenly I understood what the instructors were saying. We learned how to do maintenance and repair to the hand piece as well as sharpening electrical blades and hand blades. This was a very “hands on” exercise as we all had the opportunity to sharpen the blades.

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On day 4, I had gained my confidence and still with observation of an instructor was able to sheer by myself. On Thursday we learned why sheep should not be fed for at least 12 hours before shearing. We got a flock of sheep that made a mess in every station of the trailer. It was a bit icky but it gave us the opportunity to see for ourselves how there must be cooperation between shepherd and shearer. After lunch on Thursday we also learned how to properly sheer alpacas and llamas. Some students were able to shear these hairy creatures but I didn’t. Instead I opted to go back to the trailer and continue shearing ewes, withers and rams. There was no telling what kind of sheep we would get from the chute when we reached in for one.

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On Thursday we had a Shearer Dinner Recognition sponsored by the Columbia Basin Sheep Producers. Dinner consisted of all you can eat lamb chops and leg of lamb, it was quite the feast. The invocation was given by WSSP Director Jerry Richardson.

Friday we had a demo on shearing with hand clippers. Being the last day of school for us, we sheared for half of the day. We had a review and questions and our shearing school ended with the handing out of certificates. A couple of the students received a Junior certificate of achievement meaning that they have the ability to sheer 10 sheep per hour, but the majority of us received a Learner certificate indicating that we completed one week class and can properly shear sheep.

On Saturday the Advanced Tune-Up Session was offered in the trailer. Beginners were invited to attend the advanced shearing instruction. I attended this session until noon and I am glad that I did for it was on this day that I sheared on my own from start to finish from grabbing the sheep from the chute and shearing by myself. I was proud to have sheared eight sheep including one ram and one wither, all in a time lapse of three hours. I don’t know how other schools are offered for only two days, for me the second day was the most difficult and I am glad I was able to shear for six days.

Thanks to the Washington State Sheep Shearing School I am now able to shear a sheep within a time frame of less than 20 minutes. I am certain that with time I will get better at shearing. My next step is purchase my equipment and network around the Monterey and Santa Cruz areas to shear small flocks. I’m not certain where my husband will be stationed next, East Coast or West but I am certain that wherever we go, I will be shearing sheep.

The school is sponsored by the Washington State Sheep Producers, the Washington State University Cooperative Extension and the Columbia Basin Sheep Producers Association.  Further information about the shearing school is available on the WSU Grant-Adams Extension web site, http://animalag.wsu.edu

Calling All Would-Be Shearers!

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As part of our The Shepherd and The Shearer project, Juniper Moon Farm is super-excited to be in the position of accepting applications for scholarships to go to women who are interested in learning how to shear sheep!

Here’s how it will work:

1. Applicants should submit a proposal for funding that includes the shearing school you would like to attend, the dates and location of the school, and the expenses involved in attending, including tuition, hotels, travel, etc.. Please be sure that space is available in the shearing school you plan to attend before applying. Additionally, please attach a short essay telling us why you want to learn to shear sheep. All applications must be submitted by 6:00 a.m. Monday, March 17th. Please put “Shearing School Scholarship Application” in the subject line.

2. We will sort through the applications and figure out how many of them we can fund. Once we’ve made our decisions, we will get in touch with the lucky winners.

3. The winners will learn to shear, take lots of pictures and come back here to share their experience with us in a blog post.

Here’s what you need to know:

Successful candidates will be required to write the blog post referenced above and provide us with pictures.

Choosing our winners is going to be super-tough! That said, our decision will be final. Those who don’t get lucky this year will be strongly encouraged to apply again.

If you’re looking for a shearing school in your area, Sheep Industry News maintains a a running list of them nation-wide. Emily teaches at the Maryland-Delaware Shearing School, scheduled for  Friday and Saturday, April 18-19, 2014, and I have sent several employees there, but there are lots of great workshops across the country.

So find a shearing school and get your application in ASAP. We want to see what you can do!

**Applications can be emailed to susie at fiber farm dot com.**

 

 

Amber’s Shepherd Hoodie — Body and Sleeves

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It grows! Judging from these pictures I took in my front yard, one of several things happened after the right front was done:  A) I lost my head amidst the lanolin fumes and thought I had a lap full of sheep that needed to graze, B) I have a thing for tossing lovely white sweaters on the dirty ground, or C) There was no light and/or no clean spot on the floor in my house at the moment I felt like taking a picture. (I’m leaning toward both B & C personally…)

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Sadly, the other front was finished late in the evening a few days later when it was much too dark outside for a picture, so I had to settle for throwing it on my dirty floor instead.

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Then yesterday the back was finished (AND I FORGOT TO TAKE A PICTURE CRAP CRAP CRAP),

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and today the shoulders were seamed.

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I was so excited to finally try it on today and it’s a nice fit (or will be once it’s blocked of course), but I will admit to having a momentary twinge of wishing I had made it a little longer. Actually, I almost did make it a few inches longer, but with not being sure about yarn amounts and all that, I didn’t think it would be smart to risk running out and having to sacrifice the hood at the end, so I only went over the length the pattern called for by a teensy smidge.

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But ANYWAY, enough of my incessant public hand-wringing. I know it will block out a little bigger in all directions, and I will still love it no matter what, so that’s all I need to say about that.

In the realm of real regrets though, I do wish I had more sleeve progress to share this week. It took me so long just to get to the point of starting them, I’m afraid I didn’t get very far in time for today’s post.

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And in the spirit of full disclosure (yes, one of my all time, most-overused phrases, sorry), I had some difficulty understanding the pattern directions when it came to the sleeve stitch slipping and picking up part. I’m not going to write it all out here due to specific pattern discussion and all that, but I will direct you to the ever helpful Juniper Moon Farm KAL thread on Ravelry in case you’re having a similar problem. Or perhaps you just want to have a chuckle at my apparent ineptitude, either way is good.

So. I leave you until next time with this picture of my wee sleeve baby, and the hopes that I have two full ones to share in my next post. Happy Shepherding, friends!

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meAmber resides in sporadically idyllic Berks County, PA with her husband and three children.

This time of year, she can most often be found knitting, baking, sewing, or DIYing her house to heck and back. She definitely should leave that house more often.

Amber’s Shepherd Hoodie — Moving Along

Well, trying to move along, anyway…

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Between a million house projects (full disclosure: I am dreaming up some shoe shelves for our coat closet as I type this) and a vigorous jump start on “spring cleaning,” I’m afraid my knitting time has been somewhat cut into as of late.

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I had hoped to be done with the entire body by this post, but I’m afraid it was not to be. In fact, it was just yesterday that I added in my fifth ball of yarn and finished my fifth chart repeat.

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Oh! And because I apparently like some degree of public humiliation, I will share a close-up of my crappy buttonholes.

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Not only do I totally stink at making these Tulip buttonholes (my edge is really pulled in at each one, despite trying very hard not to over-tighten), I also messed up the spacing between TWO holes now, by like two rows each time, and it is super noticeable. You’ll forgive me for not sharing that this time — a little shame goes a long way…

On a brighter note though, I gave my fabric a little tug sideways to see how it will block out eventually and I am quite pleased! The texture of these cables is so dynamic, you’d never suspect that it is such an easy knit.

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Late yesterday evening, I finally made it to the dividing row,

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and got a tiny start on the right front.

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Next time I certainly hope to have a finished body to share, and maybe even some sleeve progress. How are your Shepherds going? I’ve seen a lot of gorgeous projects in various stages of completion in the project gallery on Ravelry and the finished ones are making me want to pick up the pace here!

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meAmber resides in sporadically idyllic Berks County, PA with her husband and three children.

This time of year, she can most often be found knitting, baking, sewing, or DIYing her house to heck and back. She definitely should leave that house more often.

Amber’s Shepherd Hoodie — Getting Started

Before folks received their yarn, we all goaded Amber into sharing her The Shepherd progress on the blog. Fortunately she’s holding true to her our bullying and is sharing her journey with  is. After being sick to death of this yarn, I love being able to see it through fresh eyes. If you missed out on this opportunity, come back later this week for more info. And come back later today for more giveaways and some of the giveaway winners! — Lauria

The Shepherd and the Shearer yarnIt may come as a surprise to any of you who read my Tags post a while back that I have seen the error of my ways and am now knitting with the packing material (or “yarn,” as people keep calling it) rather than the tags themselves. Learn something new every day!

The Shepherd and the Shearer yarn

Seriously though? This stuff is the yarn of my dreams. Even before I (finally) successfully learned to knit a few years ago, I yearned for a yarn like this for my someday knitting hobby. I dreamed of creating hard-wearing garments, durable things I could treat with the usual tough love I subjected my clothing to, but things that would actually hold up under that duress. And therefore things I wouldn’t mind knitting in the first place, knowing they wouldn’t be falling apart a year or two after I put all that effort into them. If anything, this is even more important to me now that I do know how to knit, and I really understand what it takes to create a finished garment.

The Shepherd and the Shearer yarn

So for me, everything about it is perfect: the look, the feel, the smell. I mean, come on, in the sunlight, it actually glows!

The Shepherd and the Shearer yarn

As far as the patterns go, I will be knitting both The Shepherd and The Shearer; The Shepherd in the actual The Shepherd and the Shearer yarn, and The Shearer in 2013 Colored Flock share yarn.  Were I not already in possession of a cabled pullover in a natural off-white yarn, I very well may have waffled for quite some time on which one to do in which color, so I was rather lucky to have the color decision made for me.

After what amounted to an elaborate game of Eenie Meenie in my head, I started with The Shepherd. I knew I was head over heels in love the moment I swatched. Even in its unblocked state, the cable pattern was something very special, and the pattern was such a pleasure to knit.

The Shepherd swatch - unblocked

Blocking it only made me love it more.

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I tried to finish up a few other projects, or at least get a little farther on some of them before I couldn’t stand it anymore and finally cast on, and it has been hard to put down since then.

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Seriously, that GLOW!

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The Shepherd progress

The Shepherd progress

I’ve heard people worrying that the cables look too complex for them, and truthfully? I was even a little intimidated at first glance, despite having cabled before. But once you get started, you will find it is actually a rather simple pattern, and one which is very easy to follow. Written with Kate Davies‘ usual flair for making even the most daunting knitting goal seem attainable (*cough* remember my steeking?), The Shepherd is sure to pleasantly surprise even the most trepidatious knitter with its simplicity and its fluid, rhythmic pattern.

This is how serious I am about this: I drink wine and watch All Creatures Great and Small while I knit it (by candlelight) and I have not made a mistake yet. (Well okay, not any that I didn’t catch a few stitches later, but I do those in broad daylight too.)

a little nighttime knitting

The Shepherd

I feel my Shepherd is growing a little more slowly than I would have liked, but it is growing nonetheless! It is so exciting seeing the cables unfurl as I go, and I really cannot stress enough what an enjoyable knit it is. The only thing better will be to wear it someday.

The Shepherd

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One other thing I will share that helped me immensely was the Shepherd KAL thread in the Juniper Moon Farm Ravelry group. A discussion on the tulip buttonholes proved to be a lifesaver to my number-addled brain, so if anyone is having trouble, I encourage you to check out that conversation for some great tips and suggestions.

Until next time, fellow Shepherd enthusiasts!

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meAmber resides in sporadically idyllic Berks County, PA with her husband and three children.

This time of year, she can most often be found knitting, baking, sewing, or DIYing her house to heck and back. She definitely should leave that house more often.