Blending with Natural Samples One and Two

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I did my first few samples of blending variegated fiber (Maya from Cjkoho designs) and a taupe-y natural colored fiber. They are my standard three variations, the ones I do first. I make them a lot, teach them in my color classes, and I never ever get tired looking the the results. And having all of the samples in the same colors and all together to compare is even better.

My first sample is a single of variegated and a single of variegated plied together. It's the classic candy cane, barber pole or marl. When the colors are high contrast I don't like how it looks, but marled yarns where the contrast isn't so extreme are growing on me.  In these samples the natural color and dyed colors are mostly evenly distributed in the yarn. In the swatch the taupe looks flecked on the colors.

The second sample is variegated fiber and natural drafted together in a singles, a combination draft or single marl. I like the blendy-ness and uneven distribution of color in the yarn and the swatch in combination drafted yarns.

The third is the variegated and natural drafted together and then plied, in this case into a 2-ply, double marl or combination draft 2-ply. This one is always my favorite. I like the smaller spots of color and the extra random distribution of color and natural. I like how the natural look more integrated into the colors.

If you are in the mood to knit with marled yarn, but don't want to spin one, Jill Draper makes a gorgeous tonal three-ply yarn called Rockwell.

In my next round of samples I'll add plies and play with adding the neutral fiber between colors in a single before plying.

What are you experimenting with?

Handspun by Floyd Skloot

Handspun by Floyd Skloot
 

My wife sits in her swivel chair

ringed by skeins of multicolored yarn

that will become the summer sweater

she has imagined since September.

Her hand rests on the spinning wheel

and her foot pauses on the pedals

as she gazes out into the swollen river.

Light larking between wind and current

will be in this sweater. So will a shade

of red she saw when the sun went down.

When she is at her wheel, time moves

like the tune I almost recognize now

that she begins to hum it, a lulling

melody born from the draft of fiber,

clack of spindle and bobbin, soft

breath as the rhythm takes hold.

Folyd Skloot lives in Oregon. His most recent book is Approaching Winter, from Louisiana State University Press.

Thanks to Beth at Lorna's Laces for first posting this!

 

 

Christmas on the Road

We are on the road this year for Christmas. Our whole clan is converging in Portland, Oregon this year to meet the newest member of the family, a beautiful little boy.

I have one knitted Christmas gift and I bet you suspect, knowing me, that it isn't done yet. Well, you'd be right. I'll be knitting right until the second I hand that gift over.

I can't wait to be back in Portland, even without family there, it's one of those cities that feels like home.

I wish you all a Merry Christmas, if you celebrate, and a wonderful relaxing day off if you don't.

If you see me in an airport, plane, coffee shop or bookstore knitting away on the gift that never ends please come say hi and keep me company!

Blending with Natural

I am hearing the siren song of natural colored fiber. Not by itself, but as a mixer, a little tonic to my colorful vodka braids.

I am smitten by both of these. The dyed fiber is Maya by Cjkoho designs and the gray/taupe is a natural BFL.

I want to combine the two in a variety of ways over the holidays. First up will be the usual one single of each plied together, but I want to work through as many variations and combinations that I can think of, including working beyond 2-plies, drafting the two together and maybe even making a type of ombré.

If you combine naturals and color in your spinning, what do you like to do?

I love Christmas Music

I love Christmas music. I have an old iPod Nano that has over 800 Christmas songs on it. I can't wait to get it out every year. How long do I wait? I try for December 1, but usually it comes out right after Thanksgiving.

I feel the most Christmas-happy early in December and then the few days right before the 25th. There is a week in between, about the 15th-20th, when there is just too much 'buy me' and 'gimme' going on and I feel a little grossed out by it all.

But even in the days where I am Grinchy, Darlene Love singing, Christmas (Baby Please Come Home), makes me smile and sing along.

I add to my stash of Christmas music every year. This year it's the amazing Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings, the Ventures and Tracey Thorn. I have the standards, Elvis, Frank, The Vienna Boys Choir and Charlie Brown, but around our house it's not quite Christmas without Brian Setzer, Motown and Louis Armstrong.

What's your favorite Christmas music?

Frankenfinger Lives!

Twelve long days after I cut my finger in a kitchen mishap I got my stitches out. I celebrated by spending most of the afternoon just bending my finger and typing on the computer without holding my injured pointer finger skyward.

I have no nerve damage, full motion and the cut healed without infection or anything else gross. I am going to have an excellent scar.

Even though I can now type, knit and spin with all of my fingers, it's good to know that I could work around the injury and still do all of the things I do to make my living.

Working: I'm a Weekly Planner

In the world of trying-to-be-organized folks, we talk about being a daily or weekly planner. Do you like to look at the things you have to do in a daily view (one page per day) or a weekly view (a week over a page or a page spread).

I know that I am a weekly planner. My day to day, while having deadlines and some specific times to work, is fluid. I like to look at everything I need and would like to accomplish for a week and every morning plan my strategy for the day.

My planner, which is an inexpensive Muji notebook, has a weekly 2 page spread that I draw. The top of the spread has my week marked out by day. The bottom, the things I'd like to get accomplished that week by category.

In the daily columns, I list tasks in the largest part, using Bullet Journal notations, the middle section is for appointments and the bottom part is what's for dinner.

The weekly category lists are filled by looking at my project task lists and calendar. I also have separate spots in the spread to list the important must-do things for the week, big things that are coming up quickly, what I need to remember for next week, weekly check boxes for things like daily yoga, and a spot for wild hair notes.

I've been doing a weekly spread for a couple of years and know that is the one true way for me. I've been using this particular spread for a few months and still tweak it a little every week.

How do you organize your week?