Friday, March 11, 2011

Salvaging the Selvedge

When I first started dyeing wool and didn't really know any better, I kept the Selvedge on. I still leave it on -- not just because of my tendency to be lazy, but because usually it's good wool and sometimes, if you're lucky, it will give you a couple of interesting strips that are different from the rest of the wool. And, on occasion it's provided me with that little bit of extra wool needed for a rug.

If you've ever tried to run the selvedge through your cutter, you've no doubt regretted it some of the time. In my experience it tends to pull to one side, cause the handle to be tough to turn, make you think you are going to break something, or worse: all of the above. But since I still can't get past the idea of wasting that 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch, I persist.

Usually I start cutting at the opposite side of my piece of wool, leaving the selvedge for last, and hoping that my last cut will just barely miss the tricky part. But with my new cutter head (that cuts twice as many strips), this is working out less and less often for me.....so I had to come up with a new plan.

My new method of 'salvaging the selvedge' is to cut my piece of wool starting with the selvedge edge....


The trick is to take your time and not try to rush this first pass through the cutter....and as you can see, the end result is a perfectly usable strips -- even the first (proper selvedge) strip is usable on this wool and can provide some sought-after texture.


But the selvedge is not always a perfectly flat extension of the rest of the piece. Sometimes just a small section of it is flipped and folded back. There was a piece in my pile that had this happen.


So I started cutting, and slowed when I got close to that part, folding it back to run along the guide and holding it down with my left index finger. I carefully hold it flat as it enters the cutter head, making sure that the wool is still straight and that the little blip doesn't fold back and get caught.


After the wool passes through the cutter, it will likely fold back on it's own.....


But not to worry.....all of the remaining strips are in perfect condition.....


Even though there is a white thread running along the edge of this wool, the 2nd (quite usable) strip has a different weave and texture from the rest....and can add a hint of contrast to your work. A little planned imperfection....

And not all wool is perfect. Sometimes after dyeing, the selvedge has shrunken a little or a lot less than the rest of the yardage and it's a wavy, ruffled mess.


When this happens, I usually opt for the simpler solution of ripping off the afflicted section. And then I 'fix up' the first strip (with the torn edge along one side), by running it through the cutter a second time....running the cut edge along the guide.


The resulting strip looks just like all of its cousins, once the fuzz is trimmed.

Please note....if you are ever cutting wool and your handle doesn't seem to want to turn, STOP -- don't force it. Chances are that something is caught -- and if it's causing one of the plastic spacer rings to go out of alignment. If this happens, then you can chip, split or break one or more plastic spacer ring(s) -- which will have a detrimental effect on how easily and smoothly your wool feeds through the cutter and you will likely cut wonky strips until it is repaired. My suggestion is that you try to get the wool out of the cutter as quickly as possible -- which usually means cutting it off as close as possible to the intake and making less than a (very slow and cautious) 1/4 turn of the handle, to remove all of the wool.

Luckily this has never happened to me or mine....but ever since I used a cutter that had big chunks missing from its rings, I've been a lot more careful. It's important to baby our tools....

Thursday, March 10, 2011

new handle shipment

In preparation for the Annual at the end of April, I ordered some more leather handles and they arrived in the mail today. I took a couple of quick snaps when I was putting them away.....here is the the current colour spectrum....


Long rolled (L>R): old brown, new brown, amber, new nude, old nude, olive, lime, turquoise, hot pink, red, black....all in leather ($46 per pair) + NEW in suede: denim, red, burgundy, black ($48 per pair)


Urban (T>B): brown, red, hot pink, grape, turquoise, olive, black ($68 per pair • $35 for one)

I didn't think I would ever feel like making another purse.....but I gotta say that I'm feeling pretty tempted lately. Maybe it's just because I know that I don't have time for it right now -- just a fantasy -- or maybe it's because I want to design one with a special iPad2 pocket. Not sure -- but there is lots of time to sort it all out. I can't even think about starting until mid-May, anyway. Maybe by then the novelty will have worn off (and I can devote all of my spare time to working on Jumbo ...)

Monday, March 07, 2011

how dyeing is like golf...


Have you ever golfed? I made a bit of a serious go at it several years ago -- I even took lessons....(which is so amusing to me now -- oh, the wool I could have bought with all of those green fees..... :-D). I was tired of everyone I work with leaving early to go and play, so for a couple of summers I decided that I would join them. The one thing I will already remember from my time golfing is that it doesn't matter how good you are, or how long you've been playing.....but everyone is capable of making an amazing and unbelievable shot (....like the time I was in the sand pit and chipped up, my ball went right into the hole!) Of course, you can also have a very horrible, not-at-all-what-you-expected shot, even if you are a pro.

I feel the same way about dyeing, especially dyeing slub yarn. Now I don't profess to be an expert dyer -- I'm not a chemist, I don't follow recipes, I may never be able to duplicate the same thing twice.....and it doesn't bother me. It's all part of the fun of dyeing for me -- the experimenting and playing and just never quite knowing for sure what you have until it's dry. Plus, early on I did try using recipes and not once did I get what I was expecting....so I've learned to trust my own eyes instead.

Okay, so back to the golf. Sometimes when I'm dyeing, I have that same golf luck...and wonderful, exciting and completely unexpected things happen -- waaaaay better than I was aiming for in the first place or I could have even hoped for.... And for me, it's why I love dyeing so much and why I find it such fun. Sometimes there are last minute surprises that happen in the cook-off pot (where I put my wool to simmer and set, once I declare it 'ready'), due to a little bit of transfer from one piece or skein to another...like the goldy-brown patches on these sky skeins.....


Of course, I've also have my fair share of 'mulligans' -- I just put them back into my dye cupboard and forget about them until the next time I dye, when they can be reincarnated..... one day I'll do a post with before and after shots -- I forgot to take pictures today).

So what prompted this philosophical reflection? I decided to dye up a bit of slub tonight....and on top of a dozen new skeins, I also breathed some new life into last months uggers ....and they are now whole (like the beauty, at the top of the post that was a too bright cerise). Some of the skeins are simply too pretty to contemplate cutting, let alone selling (LOL!). I will try to remember to take some snaps tomorrow....when the rest is dry....

Friday, March 04, 2011

it's good to be home....

...and the best part about being at home? My morning latte...I like it better than Starbuck's (even though I do use a teaspoon of their Vanilla syrup)


Well my own bed is pretty nice, and my shower.....and my hair is loving the well water (free from all of the chlorine and whatever else is in city water....yuck!) Plus I'm happy to report that no one came in and started mixing up all of those wool piles. No one cut any either, though....which would have been nice.... :-D

My goal for today is to get stuff done, but at a relaxed pace. No real expectations for what or how much or how fast. The only deadline I have is that I need to get into town in time for my 1pm massage appointment. Yes, it's going to be a tough day today.....LOL!

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

welcome to March


I'm very glad that February is over....it is always a crazy busy month for me at work. I'm not exaggerating when I say that I am away more than I am home. 'February' will end a few days late this year – I'm in the middle of a week-long interview trip that has me coming home on Thursday. 7 nights in 6 different hotels is a lot of strange beds....so it will be great to get back to my own cozy bed and maybe even wake up without an alarm for a couple of days.

I'm also eager to get back to work on preparing stuff for the Annual and a couple of upcoming workshops. Although it's a lot of work, it's a fun kind of work that I enjoy doing. I was thinking that I might do some more dying on the weekend, but I've since had a change of heart and think that I should finish off some of the other things that are lying around half-done - like cutting up the many piles of wool that are waiting to be made into Crazy 8s, drawing matrix mat grids onto the backing I cut and zig-zagged over a month ago, and getting my year-end business reports done so that I can do my (yucky) taxes. Oh how I long for the day I feel I can afford to pay someone to take care of that pesky job.....

Soon I will be home and back to doing fun stuff to share. Right about now I am tired of eating out, and even the thrill of Starbucks is waning.

I had a quick stroll through Crate and Barrel the other day though, and saw the tablecloth or runner pictured above.....seeing it instantly made me feel like hooking pussywillows. Not a subject matter you see every day in hooking -- but I think it would be fun.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

MP by OP • Sunny's Henry's Pomegranate


Two finished purses in one week.... it's like an early birthday! :-D

Sunny sent me these pictures this afternoon and made my day. Her purse is beautiful - inside and out. She did a wonderful job on the finishing, and the wool used to line the flap is lovely.


Sunny writes...
Your directions were great. The only difficulty I had was where to put the fusible interfacing. I consulted a lot of other hookers in my group and finally decided to fuse it to the back side of my lining. It made sense to me to make the lining stronger so any weight in the purse wouldn't distort the hooking.I changed the interior pocket a bit. I made it a little shorter so that it is rectangular in shape and put a pleat in each side that's sewn down across the bottom. It gives the pocket more room.
Great job Sunny! Better brace yourself for the compliments -- they are sure to coming whenever you venture out and about.... :-D

Edited to add this note I received from Sunny.....
I just thought of another addition I made to the structure of the purse. I wasn't keen about the magnet to hold the flap down. One of our group suggested buying a strip of weights from the fabric store. I guess you use them to add weight to the bottom of drapes. I just whipped them into the edge of the flap when I was doing the finishing and it seems to have worked really well.
....another great idea!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

MP by OP • Marcia's Bar-Jello


I never seem to tired of seeing pictures of finished purses. I was especially happy to get this picture from Marcia on the weekend -- since she really changed up the pattern and made it her own. I think making it your own is really where it's at.....

It's always great to see something different and I find that the more I hook (and the more hooking examples I see), the more I am drawn to work that is very different from my own. When people use and combine markedly different colours, or hook in a unique or different style than I would (or) do...I want to just sit and stare, and cross my fingers that I will learn a little something.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Since Friday night....

What can I say....when I go into 'production mode', I produce! :-) Since Friday night, I've dyed over 175 pieces of wool (35+ yards) and 45 skeins of slub, cut up just over 7 yards into #8 cut (oh, how I love my double-wide cutter head....), washed 20+ yards of as-is wool, schlepped it all to the laundromat to wash and fold (twice!), created some labels for a new product, and made a bit huge mess!

Since today is Family Day here in Ontario....I was planning to reward my busy couple of days with 'a day off' ....and go and have a visit with AJ and then go north and visit my sister and folks. But when I woke up (after a wonderful sleep-in) and saw the state of my apartment, I decided to spend the morning tidying up a bit first. I was just too tired last night to do anything more than braid some slub.

If you've ever been to my place, you know that it's not really very big. Here are a few snaps that I took this morning....




Now I'm off to tidy....

Monday, February 14, 2011

Happy Valentine's Day.... (to me!)

(punch hooked by Sandra Marshall)

Happy Valentine's Day everyone! Hope you are pampered and cherished all day long -- and if not by others, do it for yourself. You deserve it!

I took my own advice this year, and bought myself some new footwear. I've been a fan (from afar) of El Naturalista shoes for a couple of years now.....and the price planets aligned last week during a little detour. I was down in Belleville for work, and made a little side-trip to go and visit Christine for a sleepover and talk all things rug hooking on Thursday. We went on a mini-road trip to nearby Kingston and she took me to her favourite shoe store - where they were having a big sale - and the rest, as they say, is history.....


So far I've worn the navy boots almost every day....and the clogs just around the house. They are sooooo comfortable.

I'm heading off on another work adventure momentarily....but will be home again at the end of the week and ready for a big dye-fest on the weekend. So there won't be much exciting to report until then. Have a great week - and don't forget to eat some chocolate today!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Trish Johnson's Rugs - part four

As interesting as it was to see all of Trish's rugs on Saturday....what really caught my by surprise were her little art quilts. They were all the more wonderful because I arrived expecting rugs - not quilts. All of these quilts are companion pieces for rugs that she hooked....and I think that they make great little studies. I didn't think to ask which came first (Trish, if you read this....maybe you can fill me in?).

Regardless, I think quilts such as these would be a great way to try out a design idea, sample colour combinations or play around with composition - without requiring the same time commitment as hooking a big rug.



I was particularly fascinated by the backs of these pieces. The sometimes random thread colours, the interesting designs and the stitches coming together to form a simple sketch, without the clutter of the fabric colours or patterning.









My new sewing machine is capable of doing free-motion quilting, and I've been looking forward to taking a chunk of time and having a big play and experimenting with it (still waiting for things to settle down....LOL!) I've been waiting for years to give it a try -- ever since I set eyes on Diedre Scherer's fabric portraits.

From everything I've read on line, it can take a long time - and a lot of practice - to really get the hang of FMQ - which makes Trish's quilts all the more impressive in my eyes.

Thanks again to Trish for sharing all of her creations, and allowing me to share them on my blog. What a treat! :-D

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Trish Johnson's Rugs - part three

Here are 4 more bigger rugs - each one very different from the next. Again, the range is incredible - if I didn't know better, I might think they were hooked by different people.....





I have one more post to come with Trish's work - little art quilts....hopefully tomorrow.

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Trish Johnson's Rugs - part two

There are still lots more lovelies to come....

Most of these rugs are smaller mats....and they show a very eclectic variety of styles and colours -- and a number of different edge treatments.

During her talk, Trish said, "If you can't get what you want, sometimes it's good to like what you get...." Wise words. I can't remember which rug in particular she was referring to -- frankly I would be very happy to have ended up with any of her results.

Love the song (by Leonard Cohen)....and love the mat....





I want to dive deep into this water.....



The detail in this house mat is incredible -- and it's only about 10" by 15". I think it would take me a whole lifetime of constant fiddling to try to capture this much resolution! And the red tree with the red brick house.....wow!



Sweet little mat of Trish and her sister as children....featured in A Needle Pulling Thread a couple of years ago....I think it was the smallest one (about 10" by 10" or smaller?)

Monday, February 07, 2011

Trish Johnson's Rugs - part one

After 3 full days of travelling last week, that finished with me arriving home late Thursday night, the last thing I wanted to do was get back in the car on Friday and drive to Toronto. Except for the planned PJ party at Elaine's with Wendie....and the rare opportunity to hear Trish Johnson talk about her rugs and see almost all of them together in one place. Needless to say, it was totally worth the drive.

Wendie already blogged about some of the wonderful stories behind Trish's rugs....and really nothing bring a rug to life quite like the story behind the rug - especially when you are a good storyteller. Unfortunately you will have to be content with some pictures of the rugs themselves.....and a few fuzzy ones at that. Sorry. No photograph (at least none of mine, and none that I can recall seeing) can do justice to a rug.....but they are better than nothing :-)

I took a whack of pictures, so I will break them up into a few more manageable posts. This first part contains Trish's first few rugs and a number of larger, pictorial/landscapy rugs.

I'm pretty sure the rug in this first photo was also Trish's first hooked rug.....
All of the wool was used 'as-is', except for the sky, which was a white skirt she dyed with RIT.


Most of these next few scenes recall childhood memories and family homes....







One of very few 'patterns' that Trish has hooked - Culley's cottage with lots of additions and customizations. I love the snow on the trees and the bright yellow on the scarf with the turquoisey water.....



I 'met' this rug on the pages of Celebrations years before I had the opportunity - or the nerve - to meet it's maker.....incorporating her grandmother's actual handwriting to help illustrate the store is such a terrific idea...


I don't think I will ever tire of seeing this next one - another Celebrations winner. You can see some close-ups on a previous post here.


Pretty amazing, eh. And there are still more to come.....

P.S. You can click on any of the photos (as with all photos on the blog) to see a larger, more detailed image.

Under the 'C' cup.....


I finally got around to putting the finishing touches on my bra at the hook-in this weekend (more to come on that later when I have time to crop all of the photos of Trish's wonderful rugs). All that was left to do was the sewing on of the little fish beads, and it took all of about 20 minutes. Now I just need to add it to the collection online.

I'm happy with how it turned out. I hooked right into the holes of the lace, using a variety of hand-spun and hand-dyed yarns, then embellished with an assortment of beads. It had a bit of an ocean look to it, so I added a little hematite fish bead that was in my box and then immediately wanted more. The next best thing (and only readily available option) were some little glass fish beads found at a store in town.

P.S. just in case your wondering (like several others before you), the bra was not dyed - it was purchased that pretty colour.