Random thoughts of a fiber enthusiast - mostly fiber related, sometimes coherent

Month: November 2008 Page 3 of 4

#8 & 9

There’s been a dry spell on socks. Unless there was another pair of finished socks that I can’t remember. Completely possible.

October Socks (Socks #8)

Yarn: I can’t remember — Lana Grossa?
Needles: 2.5mm
Pattern: My standard toe up socks with 64 stitches around.

It was a limited time colorway, sold in hanks.  The colors reminded me of fall colors.  I worked on these during SOAR.  The first sock was finished during the field trip to HTTM.  My eyes were on the fall colors in the hillsides from the bus.  My fingers were working on these socks.

I’m rather disappointed how the yarn patterning turned out.  It’s too mottled for my taste.

November Socks (Socks #9)

Yarn: Handspun Spunky Eclectic 100% BFL; 3 ply; fingering weight; spun in October 2008.
Colorway: Burning Bush
Needles: 2.5mm
Pattern: Standard toe-up socks with waffle cuffs.

Waffle pattern:
Row 1 & 2: k2, p2
Row 3 & 4: k

The yarn is extremely cushy.  I was aiming for the look of my favorite sock yarn — Zitron’s Trekking XXL.  I love how Trekking gently flows from one color to another without repeats.  I think I really came close with this.  I stripped the roving into thirds lengthwise, but otherwise, just let things happen.  The yarn is still thicker than Trekking, but it’s much softer and has more loft.

Granted, it probably won’t wear nearly as well, since it is 100% BFL, but it is lovely.

I added the waffle pattern to the cuff, because I’ve always loved the Blueberry Waffle sock pattern, but have never actually made a pair because I merrily knit along and forget to switch to pattern.

I started out the year making about 2 pairs of socks per month. It was because I was trying out a bunch of different toe/heel methods. Things have slowed down dramatically since then. I wonder if I can average 1 pair a month for the year? 7 weeks remaining for 3 more pairs. We’ll see.  Maybe there’s a miracle and there were completed socks that I forgot to document.

Bliss

Bison Bliss from Spunky Eclectic: 50% bamboo, 30% merino, 10% bison, 10% cashmere. 6 ounces, 1040 yards. Definitely lace weight, about 20 wpi, but I haven’t measured it.

I finished these a while ago, but never got around to taking a picture of it.  The color in the picture is pretty true so it means that it will be hitting the dye pot sometime soon. I plan on firing up a cochineal pot in the near future, so this will likely go into the exhaust pot.  I don’t want a super saturated red.  Since it will be dyed, I haven’t washed the skein to finish the yarn

Function over Form

It hurts. It hurts a lot. I’ve always weighed aesthetics highly.  Function alone just doesn’t cut it for me.  But last week, function won out over form. I needed a warping board that allowed me to measure out a warp of 8.5 yards. (Cottolin Tea Towel kit from Halcyon Yarn) My small Schacht warping board is up in Washington.  Besides, it only measured out 4.5 yards.

A fellow weaver from the guild gave me the warping board her husband made her, with the promise to pass it on to another weaver in need when I no longer have need for it.  (She moved on to sectional warping, and hasn’t looked back since.)  The warping board, unfortunately, only measured a scant 7 yards.  There is about 6″ between the pegs, so I thought I could just drill holes between the pegs and put a few more pegs in.  The pegs were 1/2″ and I just wasn’t strong enough to hold the drill steady while I drilled these big honking holes.  I started with 1/4″ drill bits, and gradually moved up, but I still messed up the holes.  I finally gave in and started looking for alternatives.

Then I remembered the article in March/April issue of Handwoven on building your own warping board with PVC pipes by Karen Wetzel.  It was interesting, but just plain utilitarian and not very pretty.  And cold.  But it was something I could do by myself.  So, off I went to the hardware store, again and again and again.

I’ve modified the design somewhat. I drafted out on gridded paper to see how large it needed to be to measure at least 8.5 yards.  I only wanted pegs at the top for the cross.  I didn’t need/want it on both ends.  Since it was going to be taller than the original design, I wanted extra cross support.  I also wanted to be able to break it down for storage.

There’s the fine balance between stability (don’t want the loom to come apart in the midst of winding a warp), and the ability to break it down, I used PVC cement on all the horizontal cross pieces.  These are the longest pieces and will not fit in a box, but I can tie them together. I also cemented each T section with a 4.5″ spacer.  This gives me the option to create a warping board on the fly to just the size I need.

I had a few false starts. The PVC cement in the garage was too old. Back to the hardware store. Although I had dry fitted all the pieces, I cemented the top bar incorrectly — I forgot to ensure that the T leg of the T connectors were pointed straight up.  More pieces were necessary.  Then I followed my directions exactly, and created a piece exactly like my drawings.  Forgetting that I changed the dimensions while I was actually building the darn thing.  Now the new cross piece is too short.  And I’m out of spare parts.  Third time was the charm.  I finally have a new adjustable warping board.  I actually have another set of pegs built so that it can measure a warp up to about 10-11 yards.  But I can make it even longer by adding more pegs.

There will be a point, though, that I would need to go to either a warping reel or sectional warping.

Aside: I didn’t want to buy a large warping board because they usually are very wide, and I can’t span the width without a lot of walking back and forth.  I really think that a sectional warping beam may be in my future.  This warping board is about 22″ across.

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