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in praise of SilkMo

I love it when a yarn and a project come together in perfect harmony. It’s a little slice of knitter’s heaven. And I found two such combinations recently! Double-dose of heavenly goodness.

May I turn your attention, Fair Knitter, to the fluffy wonder that is SilkMo?

It might not have crossed your radar recently – but let me tell you, it should have. Mohair has a bit of magic to it: the stickiness of the fuzzy ‘halo’ around the core fiber (silk, in this case, just to gild the lily) lets you knit it on bigger needles than you think you ought, for a fabric that is light-as-air and oh-so-warm.

Tina describes SilkMo as “soft, furry, goodness,” and boy is that apt. As you knit with this yarn and the project grows, you find yourself stopping to pet the fabric, like a cat in your lap. The knitting just gets better when you make it mindless – just a bit of stockinette in the round, and round and round, so you can meditate and drift off into your happy place.

IMG_0009So here’s my offering of a perfect marriage of yarn and project: Alexandra’s Airplane Scarf by Churchmouse Yarns & Teas in SilkMo (This is colorway “Heckley Speckley.”) Pattern calls for a bit more than 800 yards – and lo and behold, SilkMo’s generous skein boasts 794! Knits up beautifully (and surprisingly quickly) on US8/5mm needles – and the joy is, once you’ve cast on, it’s just round and round and round you go! Nothing to fuss with, nothing to worry about; just stockinette until you bind off. It was fun for me to see how many places and opportunities I had to pick this up and knit it: after lunch at my mother-in-law’s; watching “Gilmore Girls” with friends; over a glass of wine after dinner … Mindless knitting fits in just about anywhere!

And the result? A light-as-air, warm-as-a-down-comforter scarf that’s wide and long enough to keep you warm in the worst of winters without adding a ton of bulk. The gang at Churchmouse named it ‘Alexandra’s Airplane Scarf’ because the gal who brought them the original idea loved to knit them on cross-country plane flights… and because the fabric is so fluffy and light that it’s the perfect piece to pack to wear on a long trip. It would take up almost no room at all in your suitcase, yet be the perfect thing to throw over a dress or under a coat to keep you warm as you wander back to your hotel from the sidewalk café in your favorite European city.

Want to play with SilkMo in a different way? I’ve got another great project for you: pair SilkMo with IMG_0011Targhee Worsted, and you have a fantastic combination that’s ideal for another Churchmouse pattern: the Picot-Edged Mohair Throw & Afghan. SilkMo held with Targhee Worsted is the ideal gauge for the ‘super-chunky’ option on this pattern, and it works up lickety-split on size US15/10mm needles.

The pattern gives you the option to work picots at the edges or not (my sample, started here in colorway “Motley Hue“, is without picots), and the choice of two sizes: Throw (42″x42″) or Afghan (52″x52”). But I’ll let you in on a little (not-so) secret: since this piece is knitted from one small corner out to the center width and then back down to the opposite corner, you can make it as large or as small as your yardage (or patience) allow!

With 2 skeins of SilkMo and 2 skeins of Targhee Worsted in the same colorway, you can make the Throw size or something a bit larger; the trick is to start the decrease section before you run out of yarn in your first skein of Targhee. If you want the Afghan size, or something large enough to really cuddle several people under, you can get one more skein of Targhee and start the decrease section before your first skein of SilkMo runs out.

Oh, and if you want tassels on all four corners, make them before you begin knitting so you can really maximize your yarn usage: hold a strand of SilkMo and a strand of Targhee together and wrap them around a hardback book of the right size. Wrap and wrap and wrap until you have an ample chunk, then take a separate strand and slide it under the top fold before you cut the bottom fold; take another separate strand to make the ‘neck’ of the tassel, tie that off securely and give it a haircut! Two tassels from one set of skeins and two tassels from the other set of skeins will ensure that you can still knit from one set of skeins to the middle of the project as described above.

Whether ‘Winter is coming’ to where you are, or it’s already arrived, now is the time to try knitting with SilkMo – it’ll warm you twice, once during the knitting, and a second time during the wearing! (Plus, knitting’s a lot easier than cutting firewood.)

 

 

A little lighthearted knit fun!

One of the parts of my job that I really, really, really love is creating themed colorways! I especially like doing so with the designers and stores we work with. Usually I get a theme form and maybe some photos or we come up with a theme together and then am asked to put my spin on it. It’s the translation and the challenge of it all that I so love. I do love me a good color challenge. Of course themes speak to me and are more fun than others. However there is always that challenge aspect that pulls me in right in and inspires me.

I am sure the over 11 years I’ve spent dreaming up themes and colorways for our notorious knitters in our Rockin’Sock Club kind of trained me for this kind of color work and play.

Here is a current list of the stores that I am working pretty intimately with on pretty large color projects.

For years I have designed colorways for Twisted in Portland for the Rose City Yarn Crawl. We plan on expanding that this year with some PDX themed one also.

I have created all kinds of club type kits for both Simply Socks Yarn Company and The Loopy Ewe. Most of these have been one-time-only hues only available for a very short period of time.

Last year I started working The Loopy Ewe on a once a month specific colorway based on Sheri Berger husband’s photography. He’s a brilliant photographer so it is all kinds of fun to go through his files and choose pics that bot Sheri and I are inspired by and then translate all that beauty onto yarn. We had so much fun we are doing it again this year. We are doing this again this year. So look for those colorways mid-month of the Loopy Ewe site.

We also work with Erin Walker and her ridiculously fun team at Eat Sleep Knit on their Yarnathon
Last year they had a space theme which was pretty great since I am a big Trekkie and Rd Who fan.
This year though has just been a blast because the theme is the game Candyland which was my favorite game as a child. We have come up with 9 count them…NINE special Candyland inspired hues. I did a ton of research on these. I used the older board that I was more familiar with for my inspiration and of course also tons of feedback from Emily Ann and the rest of the ESK team. Yes, as you can tell I am pretty excited! How could you not with characters like Lord Licorice and his bitter bats and Mr. Mint and of course his royal sweetness himself the Imperial Head Bonbon King of Candyland.
Here they are in all of there color glory!
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I cannot tell you just how tickled I am with these. The colors and the names and just every little thing about them. If you do not know about the Yarnathon do check it out it looks to be all kinds of fun. Look at the board they made!!
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So very much fun!!!!

Okay so that is it for now! I will do my very best to post here or on instagram when one of our stores has a colorway of ours to introduce.

Oh…almost forgot there is still time to join us for our themed color project the 12th year of the sock club for Sock Opera the Musical!

Knit on!!!

Snowpocaplyse and shipping updates!

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Guess who?!
Yup it’s me. I am alive. Although I have to tell you, it really does not feel that way. I have been sick since right after Christmas with what started out as the current viral thing going around but morphed into a wicked case of bronchitis. I am still wheezing (asthma) and coughing and it feels like I will never stop. My whole family got hit with this nasty bugger.
I had all of these great plans with my girls who were home for the holidays and to also do some planning for the upcoming year and New Year clean-out. None of that happened. We took turns taking care of each other and watched our comfort shows Gilmore Girls, Will and Grace and Parks and Rec. and I knit when I could.
It certainly was not what I had planned but at least we got to be together!

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And then there was the weather. Do you know that we here in Blue Moon land have had snow on the ground since around December 14th. I know! Crazy-pants! And not a small amount of snow either.
After the last dump last week we had about 3 feet of it. Frozen Solid!! I will tell you my friends that is a whole lot of snow. The Pacific Northwest is not really equipped to deal with this kind of winter. We lost power for a few days and it took a 2 days and a big ol tractor to dig us out.
Because of this we are a bit behind schedule. Team Blue Moon could not get here for most of last week and I was too sick to work. Most of us got to work today and it looks like there is going to be a warming trend (fingers crossed) to melt some of this and clear the roads and packed snow and ice.
I am very sorry about the delay! Please know we are doing our very best to get you your yarn!

Thank you for your patience!
Stay safe and warm!

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every little bit counts

It’s a new year, and if you’re like me, you’re filled with the enthusiasm and vigor that comes with new beginnings. It’s easy to get swept up in the energy and vow big things, like losing a lot of weight or decluttering your whole house, or knitting 12 pairs of socks this year. Three-hundred-and-sixty-five days to get it all RIGHT!

It’s also the perfect time to learn from any mistakes we might have made this last holiday season: did you (like me) overcommit to too many handknit presents and not get them done in time? Did you vow THIS YEAR WILL BE DIFFERENT and you won’t knit 46 presents in the last 6 weeks of the year…?

As much as I love the sweeping grand gestures of these first weeks of the year, let me insert a bit of quiet advice here. Those smart folks who study habits and resolutions and how efficient people get things done will tell you: it comes down to what you do Every. Day. The little, good-for-you habits that you tuck in to your day will determine who stands at the end of 2017 in front of your mirror. They don’t have to be big decisions – in fact, it might be more do-able if they’re small things. A salad for lunch every day. Brushing your teeth after lunch. Washing your face before bed. And knitting in the car.

No, let me explain! Not while driving, of course (we would never tell you to try something dangerous), but for taking advantage of all those in-between moments when you’re out and about. Quiet hours in your cozy spot at home, working away on a project may be fewer and farther between than you really want; but I guarantee you that there are moments in your day where you could squeeze in some stitches and make some progress on a little project.

For me, thaimg_6122t spot is in our truck. Boyhood and I like to save up our running-around errands (bank, hardware store, groceries) for days when we’re home together, and that’s when I pull out my secret weapon: the Car Sock Project. A skein of tempting sock yarn tucked into a project bag with its needles lives in a little cubby between the seats (props to Honda for building the Ridgeline around the Center Console Knitting Cubby™: they must have knitters on their design team!). This project doesn’t come back and forth with me – the secret is that it lives in the truck all the time. Yours could be in the glove box, or in the passenger footwell – just have it somewhere where you can reach for it in a spare moment. Stuck in line waiting for the Bainbridge ferry? (That’s a notorious knitting spot.) Does Coach need five more minutes with the kids at the end of practice? Take your time, Coach. I’m over here, working on socks.

Shown here in action is Socks That Rock™ on two 20″ circular needles; since our errands sometimes take us on the highway, high speed with circulars feels a bit safer than pointy DPNs. (Bonus: not having to worry about needing point protectors.)

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So knitworthy, he posts his new pairs with pride on Instagram right after putting them on!

A ten-minute junket to the grocery store here, a quick nip out to the Post Office there, and the sock just quietly grows and grows. In a few weeks or months, I’ll have the first sock done, all done with incidental time that would otherwise be lost. But for me the real kicker, the twist that makes my little January-of-fresh-starts heart go pitter-patter, is that these socks are part of my gift knitting for next year. Brother loves nothing more than a pair of handknit socks, so he gets a pair for his birthday in November, and another pair for Christmas. In years when I don’t plan well, that means 4 socks in 4 weeks – not a recipe for a stress-free holiday season.

I might just be giving myself a little cramp from patting myself on the back for starting his birthday pair this early, in this stealthy way. One set of errands at a time, I’ll get these done – doesn’t really matter how long it takes because I have until November! They’ll be done long before that, of course, at which point I’ll put the next pair in the truck. And off we go again, a little bit at a time – getting it done.

And if you have the great good fortune to sign up for the Rockin’ Sock Club, you’ll have a fresh, exciting skein in your mailbox every other month to play with! That sounds to me like the ideal way to squeeze in that extra bit of knitting fun into your day-to-day.

See you on the road, knitters!