Sunday 27 January 2019

Rag Time Blues




Like many I have wanted to have a homely rag rug, maybe next to my bed, or a large one in the sitting room
To that end I have a box of fabric that I would "get-around-to-one-day"













These past holidays I got a bee in my bonnet and decided to make one. One of our members has been making them and I was going to get a lesson but she was too busy.
Trawl through online videos gave me a lot to think about, including that there were 3 types- rag rug weaving; braided rag rug; woven rag rug.










After getting various tips from 3 different videos on rag rug weaving, I gave it a go

The start was fiddly but working. Increasing was fine. Tension needs work. Effect on my arthritic  hands.... mmm. Not good. As I find out later, bed sheets are rather stiff to work with when trying to manipulate it like yarn






I decided to make the rug into a bag. Stopped increasing and kept going around. Towards the top I went through each stitch instead of between stitches. Looks neat

As my tension is dodgy I will line this, and maybe add handles to make it a project bag, or leave as is for a yarn/fleece bucket

So. What to do with the still quite large ball of fabric, and fabric strips??





I wound off 3 strands each 8 metres long. I tied the ends in an overhand knot and braided/ plaited it all.
The video showing the braid rugs showed people sewing them into a spiral using a sewing machine. Those were factory machines though and I wasn't going to try it on mine.
I used the leftover fabric strips to sew the braid sides together, using the same joining technique used for the rag rugs. Worked well









This was closer to what I wanted.While I was joining it I thought about having a mat. and decided it wasn't a good idea for me. It would be a trip hazard.
What to do? By the time I finished the section of braid the shape reminded me of the base of a Moses basket.
I wasn't going to braid, nor rug weave anymore, and crocheted the remaining blue sheet yarn around the new base.








It needed to be taller. Digging around in the afore mentioned fabric box, I found a couple of old summer dresses I wore when pregnant with John. Had to cut them, in the round, with scissors, rather than rip as dress made on the bias.

My hands welcomed the change to a softer fabric












Height of basket achieved.
Now for handles. Knit and crochet handles always stretch. Braiding would make it all too thick to sew. Inkle loom would be the thing
Colours?? Cotton?? Acrylic??

💥Brainstorm!!
💡 Light bulb moment!!
😲Eureka!!









USE FABRIC!!!


Warping up on the inkle floor loom. It can make straps about 3 metres long



Went better than I hoped. I was worried about the fabric ripping and having to try and sew ends together, Which didn't happen til the last 1/2 metre.
I used a lilac acrylic yarn for weft




2 1/2 metres of inkle strap



The last 1/2 mt I plaited. Looking at the side width I am glad I chose inkle instead of braid for a handle.




I considered hand sewing, partly as it was so hot and the aircon is upstairs and the machine is downstairs. Thinking about the damage to my fingertips I did 2 stints slowly  machine sewing the handle on

















Fairly sure I could fit a baby in the basket. May have a few years before grandkids come along, so project bag in  the meantime







And what to do with the 1/2 mt of braid?
Following a style found in a few different cultures and eras, I sewed the end together, about 15 cm long to make a rectangle on the end of the "chain". I can then pin any brooch to it. Right now it is a piece I made last year after receiving a book for xmas (story for another day)



Will be just right for wearing to meetings, camp, exhibits

or anywhere :)


Saturday 26 January 2019

The Hand of Friendship






A friend was destashing before she moved to chillier climes, and giving away some beautifully prepared fleeces to our group. I picked up 1 big and 1 small bag.

This alpaca is from the small bag.













The fleece was delightful to spin, soft and silky.
As it was a fine fleece I spun it extra fine. Barely enough to fill 1/3 of a bobbin, wasn't worth trying to divide for 2 ply, so I Navajo / chain plied it.













It really was a very small amount, This was the entire amount in one itsy bitsy squishy ball












And what to make?
The yarn was so soft, so smooth, that I could wear it on my skin. However I didn't think there would be enough for the size of scarf or shawl that I like.
As I have arthritis in my fingers (and other places 😕) I have made a few fingerless mitts but none just right for our mild winters.




I did have a start of an idea from a magazine knit pattern but it just wasn't working. And then I started designing my own using a knit stitch I saw in passing. Still not working. No stitch definition.

I really liked the idea of the lace part of the sttich though, so I adapted it by taking out 3 rows and flipping a purl row to a knit row. Worked a treat!











I knit from arm up to thumb, cast off a few stitches, then knit up to knuckles. Keeping yarn attached I crocheted the seam all the way down and then crocheted dc in each stitch around the wrist. Three rows of *dc, fpdc,* to complete.

The result is an open lacy fabric that keeps my joints warm but not overheat. The wrist length will tuck into long sleeves. The knuckle length enables me to crochet or knit

Every time I'll wear them I can think of her and her love of cold ⛄









Turtle Trek



My daughter got a fabulous opportunity to go on a camp to see turtles hatching during school summer holidays
While going through patterns to find a particular design I came across a No-Sew Sea Turtle pattern by Primary Patterns ( I think on Ravelry).













I just /had/ to make one for her camp hat!

I dug around for some turtle-ish green. This is a handspun I did last year. Wool fleece was a foundling, which I had spun a bit thicker than usual, then dyed with some Landscape dye. It hadn't gone as dark as I was expecting so once clean and dry I had put it in my handspun stash












To add a bit of colour to the shell I grabbed a dark green thread to work in with the handspun















The construction was a little tricky but only as I hadn't done it before. Instructions are quite clear. Added  brooch back.

Gwen was thrilled 🐢🐢🐢

And then I made another for her LIC who was equally thrilled