Just wanted to post this pic of the finished yarn. As usual, really different from the singles. I'm not terribly crazy about the barber poling but, based on past experience, I'll probably LOVE the socks. Just don't know when I'll be able to start them.
Knitting and more...spinning, beading, crochet, tatting, bobbin lace, tambour, watercolor....
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Monday, November 14, 2011
Bluegrass Weekend
I hadn't planned to spend the weekend with bluegrass pickers but I did and boy did I have a ball. The Friday night concert was fabulous. I love bluegrass music but I don't really know any of the bands or many of the players. There are some that I knew about from living in Nashville but I know a few of the names now. The band that knocked my socks off was Michael Cleveland and Flamekeeper. I can still barely breathe thinking about them. I also saw the mandolin of my dreams. Natural wood, with rounded edges, beautiful tone. Fortunately it was almost $300 so the temptation only went so far!
In fact the concerts were so exciting that I finished a pair of socks, one Friday night and one Saturday night. Of course, the concerts went from about 7pm to after 11:30 and the pattern was plain Jane but I will still pretty amazed at how quickly they came off the needles.
This was wool yarn I'd bought at 365 Days on a Farm in IA over the summer. I bought it particularly to make socks but I cast on about 4 times before I got something I liked. (That was totally on me because the yarn is gorgeous and soft and wonderful.) I'm afraid I can't remember the name of the yarn but I do know it's yarn made in the US because that's all 365 Days carries. I knit them on size 2 needles and even though it really is a fingering/dk weight, it's so lightly spun that I could have used a size 1 needle and not worried.
I've even got a spinning project going. This was 4 oz of blue-faced leicester fiber I bought at Bishophill particularly to spin for sock yarn but once I got the singles spun, I wasn't sure I wanted to lose my yardage. The colors are so amazing that I really wished I had enough for a sweater. Here's the bobbins of singles:
How beautiful is that? But, as you can see, I decided to go for the 3-ply after all. It will be very interesting to see how the various colors play together. Of course, I could have kept the color bands but the changes would be too short and I didn't want to do a Navajo ply for the socks. I wanted a true 3-ply and I think it's going to be very interesting. The singles were spun with about an 8:1 ratio and I'm plying using the 12:1 ratio whorl to see if I can reproduce my recent experimentation results. I'll let you know when I get this washed.
In fact the concerts were so exciting that I finished a pair of socks, one Friday night and one Saturday night. Of course, the concerts went from about 7pm to after 11:30 and the pattern was plain Jane but I will still pretty amazed at how quickly they came off the needles.
This was wool yarn I'd bought at 365 Days on a Farm in IA over the summer. I bought it particularly to make socks but I cast on about 4 times before I got something I liked. (That was totally on me because the yarn is gorgeous and soft and wonderful.) I'm afraid I can't remember the name of the yarn but I do know it's yarn made in the US because that's all 365 Days carries. I knit them on size 2 needles and even though it really is a fingering/dk weight, it's so lightly spun that I could have used a size 1 needle and not worried.
I've even got a spinning project going. This was 4 oz of blue-faced leicester fiber I bought at Bishophill particularly to spin for sock yarn but once I got the singles spun, I wasn't sure I wanted to lose my yardage. The colors are so amazing that I really wished I had enough for a sweater. Here's the bobbins of singles:
How beautiful is that? But, as you can see, I decided to go for the 3-ply after all. It will be very interesting to see how the various colors play together. Of course, I could have kept the color bands but the changes would be too short and I didn't want to do a Navajo ply for the socks. I wanted a true 3-ply and I think it's going to be very interesting. The singles were spun with about an 8:1 ratio and I'm plying using the 12:1 ratio whorl to see if I can reproduce my recent experimentation results. I'll let you know when I get this washed.