Posted in knitting, pattern, Ravelry

Indie Design Gift-a-Long 2015

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Photo from Unsplash.com, used by permission.

Something big is happening on Ravelry, the 3rd annual Indie Design Gift-a-Long!  The Gift-a-Long (GAL), a collaboration of 335 independent knit and crochet designers, features a week-long sale and a knit-a-long/crochet-a-long (KAL/CAL) through the end of the year.  There are tons of prizes, for ongoing games throughout the GAL and, at the end of the GAL, random winners drawn from among those who have posted pictures of their finished objects.

All 335 designers are here.  There’s one post per designer – most posts include a photo indicative of the designer’s style, and each post has a link to the designer’s Ravelry page.

This bundle shows all the sale patterns.  The sale ends November 27, 2015 at 11:59 P.M. EST.

I love this infographic!  It’s amazing the amount of effort, talent and enthusiasm being poured into this event!

Infographic Square (2)

I am hoping to have the time to make these lovely mitts, Carry On Fingerless Mitts, by Cheryl Chow:

Cheryl Chow Carry On
Picture copyright Cheryl Chow; used by permission.

I think these mitts are a lovely design, and I love the muted colors Cheryl used.  The pattern is clearly written and the mitts look to be a fun project.  I can’t wait to go hunt through the stash to find the right yarn.  Also very cool, Cheryl is another Pacific North Westerner, hailing from North Bend, Washington!

Knitting friends, I hope you’ll come check out the Indie GAL.  It’s lots of fun and is a wonderful way to meet some new designers.


 

These are my patterns which are on sale through 11/27/15 11:59 P.M. EST as part of the GAL (see details, here), and they’re also prize-eligible patterns:

GAL Collage 2

See you at the GAL 😉  …

Posted in Photo Challenge, photography

Camera Lucida: Garden Treasure

I don’t think it is any secret that I do not have the gardener’s gift. I don’t have the patience, nor the memory (!), to be a good caretaker of plants.
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So when I designed this pattern, Topiary Fingerless Mitts, I found the solution to my problem. A garden is a thing of beauty, and this one is a joy forever. This is where the trees are never harmed by winter, drought or neglect; where the leaves are always green and the jonquils are always in bloom.

This week’s theme: Garden Treasure

  1. a piece of ground adjoining a house, used for growing flowers, fruit, or vegetables
  2. a quantity of precious metals, gems, or other valuable objects.

This week your challenge is to share what is your garden treasure…it is your beautiful and personalised box of gardening utensils…maybe your secret corner of heaven…a rare flower that makes you proud…your dirty boots and gloves…

What is your garden treasure…how does your garden reflect you?

Share this week a piece of you…maybe a little secret that you’ve kept hidden behind a beautiful evergreen pot:)

Camera Lucida: Garden Treasure

Posted in Columbia Gorge Fiber Festival, design, knitting

Columbia Gorge Fiber Festival 2015

The 2015 Columbia Gorge Fiber Festival was wonderful!  Amazing, inspiring, fun, local(ish), lovely – a great success!!!  Held November 6-8th at the Fort Dalles Readiness Center, this was truly a first-class event.Beautiful venue

I traveled up with my good friend and fellow designer, M.E. Greene, Olive Knits.  We had so much fun on our road trip, seeing the beautiful Oregon countryside on the way up and back, and waxing rhapsodic about the entire experience on the way home.

I was fortunate to be able to take three classes.  On Friday afternoon, I took Stephanie Pearl-McPhee’s class, Knit Smart.  Stephanie is a kick in the pants.  If you have read any of her books, you might imagine that she could be a stand-up comedian.  She’s the same in person…she has that comic timing thing down pat.  At any rate, the class was an overview of knitting principles: basic concepts that we may or may not have picked up in today’s less formalized approach to knitting education.  Most interesting to me were learning about the components of knitted fabric: courses and wales.  I was also interested in causes of consistently loose or tight knitting.

…OK, well.  My pictures of that class are completely blurry and useless.  So instead, I’ll send you to Stephanie Pearl McPhee’s website.  Her take on her visit to Oregon is hilarious and spot-on at the same time!

The Saturday classes I took were near and dear to my heart.  Marie and I took two classes from a favorite sweater designer of both of ours, Norah Gaughan.  Her designs are amazing.  I particularly enjoyed slide shows in which she shared the inspiration for many of her designs.  The classes were Creative Geometric Design and Knitting Polygons.  So much fun!  Norah was a sweetie and her classes were such fun, too.

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Norah demonstrating using a geometric shape in design, and Marie modeling.

Next, we got to work with the fleece we brought to come up with our own creative design based on geometric shapes.  We learned that fleece is great for this because it drapes in much the same way as knit fabric and so is great to use for templates. Here I am – this one is going to have a square neckline.

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In the afternoon class, we worked with fun shapes such as pentagons and hexagons. You can see them in the edging of the sweater I’m modeling below.  It’s one of Norah’s, which I borrowed just for this picture.  I wanted to take it home with me!  It fit like a dream.  Marie and I were total fangirls!

Marie, Norah Gaughan and Me
Left to right: Me, Norah Gaughan, Marie. Marie and Norah wearing sweaters of their own design.

The other two things I love about Fiber Festivals as Travel Destinations are the people – both new and old friends – and the fiber.

This festival was no exception!  Saturday night there was a  banquet, with Stephanie Pearl-McPhee as the keynote speaker.  I got to hang out with Marie and these two friends, Leanne and Martha.  The four of us met for breakfast Sunday, as well, and had such a lovely time!  DSCN8393

Stephanie’s keynote speech was very inspiring, and funny, of course.  She began by mentioning the propensity of some to aver that many of us are “addicted” to knitting, yarn, and the fiber arts.  As you can imagine, there are many appropro comparisons. But in reality, we knit because we know it’s good for us. It makes us better. We are happy when we have faced and overcome something that is a challenge to us.  That’s what’s great about knitting, there’s always something new to learn and to try.  It’s also why I love designing!

Finally, here’s my stash enhancement:

yarn haul

I just can’t wait to get my hands into this beautiful yarn!!!  Can’t wait to see what it will become!

The trip home was filled with chatter, with exclamations about the inspiration we had garnered from the instructors and speakers. The landscapes on the drive home seemed especially beautiful – sunlight through rain creating such depth of color.  So blessed to live where there is such beauty.

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trees

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And finally, the whole festival was done so well.  Everything was top quality, from the venue to the marketplace to the slate of instructors and the banquet. I’m already thinking about the CGFF 2016!

Posted in Columbia Gorge Fiber Festival, knitting, Oregon

Columbia Gorge Fiber Festival – Day One

It has been a great first day of the Columbia Gorge Fiber Festival!  This morning I picked up my good friend, fellow designer M.E. Greene, Olive Knits, and we road tripped it to The Dalles, Oregon.  This is just a quick post to let you in on the fun, and then I’ll post a full report sometime later.  I hope you’ll enjoy this peek at this wonderful event!

Here is the beautiful venue as we arrived:

Beautiful venue

And inside:

upstairs

Right away we found a place to knit.  This is Marie working on her newest design:

Marie knitting

And look at the view!

venue view2

The fabulous Marketplace, which I can’t wait to explore more tomorrow:

Marketplace

Marketplace 2

Lovely grounds:

venue

And finally, a Burgerville for dinner.  I was thrilled when we drove into town and saw this. Burgerville, a Northwest classic!

Burgerville

Sweet potato fries

Sweet potato fries.  Perfection!

Tomorrow, two classes with Norah Gaughan, shopping in the Marketplace, a banquet featuring Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, and time to visit with new and old friends!

 

 

Posted in Photo Challenge, photography

Camera Lucida – Reflections

Salishan Reflections1

The ocean is always fascinating to me, and on days like this one, the lighting was perfect for capturing reflections in Yaquina Bay. I love this photo taken during the photoshoot for the Salishan Cowl – precisely because of the beauty of the reflecting sky and the shimmering reflected fishing boats. Even the colors reflect. In this picture, everything is more important than the cowl – hence it did not end up in the pattern. But I love it!

This week’s theme: Reflections

  1. the throwing back by a body or surface of light, heat, or sound without absorbing it
  2. an amount of light, heat, or sound that is reflected by a body or surface

It’s always interesting to look at reflections…are they really the same as the reality?

How many times did you look at your own reflection and wondered if that’s how the world sees you…?

This week’s theme is: Reflections…show us how we look at the world upside down…how we see ourselves from the other side…how water seems to be the borderline between reality and imagination…show us who looks back from the mirror…make this week your own and tell us a story that will make us reflect:)

Two other photos taken at the same time:

Salishan Reflections2

Salishan Reflections3

Camera Lucida – Reflections

Posted in knitting, Wordless Wednesday

Wordless Wednesday: Knitted Animals

Winnie the Ewe
Lamb, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
Lamb in garden
Lamb, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
Lamb legs
Lamb, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
Sheep ornament 1
#31 Sheep, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
ribbit3
Ribbit, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
ribbit2
Ribbit, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
Ribbit
Ribbit, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
Happy birdie
Happy Bird, Pattern by Frankie Brown
Giraffe reading
Giraffe, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
Giraffe in progress
Giraffe, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
frog legs
Ribbit, Pattern by Susan B. Anderson
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Later Gator Mitts, Pattern by Laura Grutzeck