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wool tasting

You will remember that as part of Podcast Lounge I had organised a wool squishing session and Blacker Yarns provided me with the wonderful yarn to do this with.

If you have ever wondered what you might get in one of Blacker Yarns Pot Luck specially priced packs, let me tell you, you get a lot of great British breed wool to explore. I think this would be an excellent choice for anyone looking to try different breeds – 600g of breed wool, to be precise.

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My main objective in doing these sessions wasn’t based on teaching about different breeds, rather to get people to start exploring the textures of different breed yarns.  There can be over-riding ideas that wool is largely itchy or rough. I really fell in love with the idea of just getting people to explore the different handles of the yarn –  in the ball, in a knitted swatch and in a washed and blocked swatch – and think about about the texture in a positive way; think about what the yarn would be most suited to and create some tasting notes on those yarns.

Who isn’t guilty of squishing  a ball of yarn, feeling a little crisp handle or something less than buttery soft and thought “nah!”. In that kind of setting we rarely think what that little ball of yarn can achieve – what it will look like knitted, how it will feel when washed, how it might drape, what it will wear like….

…I wanted to take that initial hand-squish-grab and explore a little more.

We had a lot of fun with this at Edinburgh Yarn Festival. I passed around baskets of yarn swatches and asked people to start squishing.

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The conversations around the lounge were fantastic; some knitters were discovering certain breed yarns for the first time and others realised that yarn they had perhaps steered clear of before – perhaps due to the grab being a different feel from the washed and blocked knitted item – was something they would consider knitting.

Hearing people talk texture was music to my ears. I only had one rule, that when writing the tasting notes the group could not use the words itchy or scratchy. my pink tasting notes flooded in over the weekend and I really loved reading those key words…

Pliable, bouncy, friendly, silky, dependable, floaty…

Not even a word remotely like scratchy or itchy – achievement unlocked!

This exploration of texture, of squishy yarn balls and of knitted swatches was a lot of fun and so many people have given me feedback since on how their eyes were opened. I definitely plan to do more of this and let the exploration of textures continue!

Thanks so much to Blacker Yarns for supplying the yarn. Don’t forget you can still use the checkout code KNITBRITISH2015 at their checkout for 15% off your order. I heartily recommend their 4ply and DK potluck packs, which are currently £35, (these are not reduced further by the KB discount, as the price is already so low). You will see from my photograph that there are natural colours as well as dyed yarns, and more than enough to blend into larger projects, or make several smaller ones.

Today is also the launch date of Blacker’s summer Lyonesse wool, which you will have heard me discuss recently on the podcast, so if you needed further enabling you could check out this creamy, glossy, summery yarn with your discount!

I will leave you with some of those tasting notes and those wonderful key words and phrases. Thanks to all my squishers for your awesome enthusiasm.

Portlamd south down North Ron Norfolk horn manx leciceter lomgwool FM gotland llanwenog

 

 

 

 

Gwlana: wool and community in one special weekend

Welcome to stop five on the Gwlana blog tour and hello if you have made your way over from one of the other blog tour stops along the way!  For the benefit of those who have no idea what gwlana is then let me explain.

Brenda Dayne, host of the Cast On podcast, is the founder of gwlana, a series of knitting retreats held in Pembrokeshire, Wales. What started as a concept to create the best knitting weekend ever has become a twice annual retreat at the Beggar’s Reach Country Hotel and they occur in May and October.

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Next month the retreat is 15th-18th May and there are a total of 28 places available on the retreat. In addition to the stunning surroundings in west Wales and a gorgeous, intimate hideaway hotel in which to gather and knit, there will be some very special workshop focuses over the weekend.

Brenda Dayne and Felix Ford are your tutors for the retreat. Felix will be teaching her phenomenal Quotidian Colourwork class and listeners of the podcast will remember me talking about taking this class at Shetland Wool Week last year. Armed with an object or image that gives you inspiration you will play with shades, pick a palette and set about creating colourwork charts and ultimately a totally unique swatch based on your interpretation of that inspiration object. I cannot recommend this class, or Felix’s teaching, highly enough and you really will see charts and Jamieson and Smith colour shades in EVERYTHING you look at after this class!

Tunnockstopia!

My Tunnockstopia!

Brenda will be teaching Bespoke Yokes, which gives you the tools to create yoked sweaters that are perfectly made to measure and in which you can incorporate the colourwork you create in Felix’s classes. Just look at Brenda’s yoke here which is an interpretation of Felix’s Wonders of Electricity swatch.
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So, Lovely location – check; hotel – check (did I mention the fine local cuisine you’ll get to sample?); classes – check; excellent tutors – check and check.

In addition to all that – not to mention a pop-up market place and goodie bags – there’s one other thing that really sings to me about the gwlana retreat and it’s the sense of community and connectedness that the weekend will bring. There are 28 places – twenty eight people all drawn together with a shared love of sticks and string (and all the magic these can do). The creative energy, the sharing of skills, the camaraderie and the friendships that will form will be really special indeed.

You can still book a place on the Gwlana retreat for May and you can do so by visiting www.gwlana.co.uk. There is also a facebook page – if that’s your bag – and you can get there by clicking here. Tomorrow is the last stop on the Gwlana blog tour when it draws in at the ShinyBee’s station, with my mucker Jo.

hapalong gallery

I have to share some of these #hapalong images with you from social media and Ravelry. I am utterly blown away from the amount of hap knitting that is going on and how many crafters have embraced the hap and the sheer number of posts in the KnitBritish hap thread on Ravelry.

We are going to have another #hapalonghangout on Sunday 10th May from 7-9pm (GMT) and so please do join in again on twitter and Instagram using that hashtag. It was great fun last time and there was lots of chat in ravelry group too.

In the meantime let’s  r-hap-sodize on these awesome haps.

This is just the tip of the iceberg, please do check out the hashtag #hapalong on instagram and twitter and dip into the chat in the Ravelry group too.

 


Jess is knitting Kate Davie’s Hap for Harriet in her Swanky Lace yarn

 


Knitstostaysane was walking and knitting on her hap. Talk about multitasking!

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AnnaKika has finished her Northmavine, in exmoor yarn.

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TravelsWithaYarn has an amazing border of colours on her hap

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SpinningBelin in the KB rav group said after knitting her Liz Lovik hap “I LOVE KNITTING HAPS


Deb from FondantFibre spun her own yarn, from her British Breed fluff packs (Available in her shop!) and I love the look of her Northmavine hap


Louise Tilbrook is knitting Aestlight and look at that iridescence on the hand-dye!

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Time for a little bit of #hapalong #crochet #crochetersofinstagram

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Shelley is crocheting her hap in Drops. I adore the fabric that crochet stitch has made. Great colour for summer too.

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WhalsayKnitter has just joined in the hapalong as is choosing colour configurations!

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Roadside knitting #hapalong #shetland

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I took my hansel hap to the hills on sunday for a nice sunny knit.

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Frisabi was one of the first to post in the Finished Object thread. What glorious colours in her Hansel

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Sonja is using the new Blacker Lyonesse yarn – a wool and linen blend – which will make a lovely hap! The yarn hits their shop on Friday!

 

: : Info : :

All images used with kind permission. 

episode 28: Indie Burgh Yarn Crawl

UPDATE: Due to space I can no longer host the audio files on the blog, please use your favourite podcatcher or right click the Podgen link below, to listen in a new tab (y’know, so you can also refer to the shownotes whilst you listen!)

A little fatigued here at KB HQ this week, but episode 28 still has some juicy news for you on the Indie Burgh Yarn Crawl, a new yarn from Blacker and I have had my spindle out spinning some lovely fibre from Fondant Fibre.

You can listen on iTunes, via podcatcers or my Podgen page

| Indie Burgh Yarn Crawl

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Jess, from Ginger Twist Studio, spills the beans on the Indieburgh Yarn Crawl, this year happening on 13th & 14th June, again in collaboration with the other Edinburgh LYSs Kathy’s Knits and Be Inspired Fibres. In addition to the crawl there will be classes this year taught by Clare Devine and lots of time for socialising, including a Night Out With Socks. Clare will also be launching her newest volume of Sock Anatomy and signing copies at the crawl. You can turn up on the day, you can join a lucky dip group of other yarn crawlers, you can even volunteer to lend a hand. Check out Jess’s facebook page for up to date news!

I will be going to the crawl and looking forward to the weekend very much!

Jess also lets slip that the wonderful Neighbo(u)rhood Sheep Society rare breed yarn and pattern clubs will become an annual club.

| Blacker Lyonesse

Blacker Yarns are soon to release a brand new yarn, just in time for your summer knits. Lyonesse, named after a mythical land that is said to have been sunk off the coast of Cornwall, is a Falkland Corriedale wool and linen blend, which has been worsted spun for a smooth finish.

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I decided – amateur weaver as I am these days – to warp it up on my sample loom and give it a whirl. My first impressions were of the softness of the wool and how creamy it felt through the fingers as I warped the loom. Listen in for my full appraisal of the yarn, which will be available on May 1st, in range of 6 summery colours in both 4ply and DK weights, costing £5,75 per ball.

| Spin on / Spin off 

No casting on this week, but I have been spinning with some awesome rolags from Fondant Fibre. Deb sent me these awesome Shetland, alpaca, merino, and silk rolags in Toffee Apple and they have been spinning like an absolute dream!IMG_6786IMG_5821

 

I have never spun from rolags before, usually combed braids or batts, and I have spun 30g in one evening sitting!

Deb had a shop update this week and you can use the code MORESTASH for a wee 10% discount in her shop.

 

| Hapalong

This has been an amazing KAL so far and I can’t believe the amount of hap-ers out there. The hap chat thread is bursting with chat, with inspiration and great images and I am blown away by the effort and embracing of the hap design. Last weekend it was so warm here I did some wild knitting and took my hap on the road. 

it’s not too late, you can still join in as the cast off date isn’t until 12th July! We will also have another #hapalonghangout on twitter. IG and Ravelry soon to keep up the excellent momentum of this KAL.

 

 I will be back in a couple of weeks, perhaps with an interview I did at Jamiesons of Shetland – till then keep happing, keep chatting and check back on the blog later next week for a post on the wool tasting I hosted at Edinburgh Yarn Festival.

| Information

Opening Music: Boscobell Golden Days. Closing music:  Mind’s Made Up by Antiqcool. Both Available from Noisetrade.com

episode 27 In the lounge with Karie Westermann

Last week I promised a special episode, recorded live at the Edinburgh Yarn Festival, with Karie Westermann. I am delighted to bring you that interview now and I think you should get yourself a nice cuppa and just pretend you are sitting there in the podcast lounge with us.

Karie discussed her inspiration behind the as-yet-unreleased designs for the Authors and Artists series. We look at some of the designs she had with her in the lounge, such as Byatt and Proserpine and Karie also discusses the next big project following Doggerland: Knits from a Lost Landscape, which is going to form a trilogy. In addition to this she also answers some of the audience questions.

I am really chuffed with this interview; it was laidback, it was good fun and it was very warmly received by those who attended – in fact, those are the very things that I intended the Podcast Lounge to be, so I am doubly chuffed.

You can also listen on iTunes, via any podcatcher, or my Podgen Page Read More

episode 26 – hap-py

Episode 26 is here and I am all about the spring patterns, the summery yarns and getting hap-py.

 

UPDATE: Due to space I can no longer host the audio files on the blog, please use your favourite podcatcher or right click the Podgen link below, to listen in a new tab (y’know, so you can also refer to the shownotes whilst you listen!)

Listen via any podcatcher, or my Podgen Page

| Shownotes

The Edinburgh Yarn Festival 2016

EYF2016 is definitely a goer! Whoop Whoop! Next year it will be FRIDAY 18th and Saturday 19th March 2016, with the teaching sessions starting on Thursday 17th March. Get it in your diaries, get your hotels booked, I can’t wait!

The Hap-Along starts today so get casting on!

You can chat in the chatter group, which is now open and we will also have  bit of a #HapalongHangout on Twitter and IG tonight from 7pm. If you don’t do social media don’t forget to share your cast on pics and your hap chat over on raverly!

There have been over 800 comments on the initial thread already and I really can’t wait to watch the hap progress.  
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Shetland Wool Week  26th Sept – 4th Oct 2015

It is getting very close to the programme release for this year’s Shetland Wool Week – then comes the excruciating wait til September! At EYF I spoke to Misa Hay, from Shetland Wool Week, who had a few little tidbits and also spoke about their Shetland Wool Holidays, starting in July. This year at wool week you can also buy memberships so that you receive exclusive benefits, such as a first look at the programme before its launch!

Eden Cottage Milburn Review 

A few episodes ago I reviewed the lovely Bletchley Collection book, by Joanne Scrace with Eden Cottage Yarns. Victoria from Eden Cottage gave a copy of the book to give-away and the winner, chosen by Random.org, was comment 45 and that was Shelley MacKay! Congrats.

In addition to the book VIctoria also gave me some Milburn yarn to review, which is what all the designs in Bletchley are created in. 

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A yarn drenched in shine with a really special twist, the fibre content of 85% BFL and 15% silk and is quite a dreamy combo. Mill spun and dyed in Italy, using British wool,  Milburn has had a bit of a revolution since its initial launch and has been re-designed with that lustre and spin in mind. My verdict? Italian suits would weep to have such fine spun, luxury fibre within them!

I knit Janina Kallio’s Interlude shawl in this yarn and used three colours of Milburn, one of which was the older incarnation – which is not a patch on the new yarn, not one patch! Listen in for the full review (and love), but I really enjoyed knitting this shawl in this charming yarn (and it blocked with attitude!) I will put up pics once it is off the blocking wires!

Milburn is available in 50g skeins in 200m and available in 7 beautifully saturated colours and costs £8.  My only downer is that it isn’t available in 100g skeins for even more milburn loving! I think it will make an awesome summer garment yarn and while I can never quite get down with knitting 4ply garments I do covet Tiny Shoots, by Kate Heppell and Gudrun Johnston’s Amelie in this yarn!

Thanks so much to Victoria for allowing me to have a play with lovely Milburn and do check out her awesome hand dyed too at www.edencottageyarns.co.uk

Remember The Daffodils 

© Jenny Rose Photography used with kind permission

© Jenny Rose Photography used with kind permission

Spring may be springing, but my hands are still cold! I love Aurelie Colas‘ latest pattern from her Castle Fraser Throughout The Year collection. Featuring lace and a little cabling detail, this pattern will be perfect for that special hand-dyed you have in stash. It costs £3.75 for the single pattern or £8.50 and £1 will be donated to SANDS, which is a charity which helps bereaved parents after the loss of a child.

I really love the Castle Fraser collection and the relationships between the designs and the features of the Scottish Baronial building. Aurelie has more patterns to be released in this collection and is already planning her next, so watch her ravelry space for more to come!

WINNER!

The winner of the Ginger Twist Studio giveaway is Sarah Hulme! Congrats! That Super Sheep Aran yarn, in Selkie will be heading your way soon – thanks so much to Jess for her generous prize donation!

KnitLocal

This episode’s KnitLocal comes from Nadine, in Germany who tells us about the Coburg Fox sheep (go google, so cute!) and the Pomeranian Coarsewool.

If you can’t KnitBritish, why not tell us all about your KnitLocal? You can leave a comment, drop me a line or leave a voice message on KnitBritishPodcast on skype!.

That’s it for another episode. Do come back NEXT WEEK, as I have a special interview recorded live at the Podcast Lounge, with Karie Westermann.

 

 

| Information

Intro music: Not Alone by Susan Benjey. End music:  Mind’s Made Up by Antiqcool. Both Available from Noisetrade.com. Other Music: No Way By Judson Hurd, available at musicalley.com

weaving ways

I weave now! You must be the last to know as I have told pretty much everyone since Edinburgh Yarn Festival that I have bought a loom!

It is an ashford sampleit loom, which is a rigid heddle and is about 20cm in width – perfect for practising and seeing if I am any cop at this weaving lark.

Here is my first go. I was using Guernsey yarn, dyed by The Yarn Yard and this was from deeeeeep stash. 

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Edges were a bit messy and I was beating the weft yarn a little tightly at times, but I was well chuffed with the result, which I quickly fulled a little, in the washing machine.

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As soon as it was off the loom I very quickly warped it up again. This time I used more of the berry coloured Yarn Yard, and unidentified light, golden brown merino (Again deeeeeep stash) and the last of my Yarn Pony Highland Pony alpaca yarn for a nice golden yellow flash.

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For the weft I have been using a combination of Zwartbles, Alpaca Sparkle, from Black Bat Rare Breed yarns (given to me by the lovely Felix Ford) and some hebridean 4ply. 

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I’m beating less like I mean it this time and enjoying watching it grow.

Still going a little wonky in places though

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Definitely enjoying the process though and looking forward to practising more!

Join in with the #hapalong

In one week we cast on our much anticipated and talked about haps! I thought it was high time for a refresher on the rules and some of the PRIZES!

 | Rules

The pattern you choose must be called a hap – either in description or name – OR use a construction method that has been called “traditional Shetland construction” – this refers to the centre being knit first and the edge YOs picked up to create a border. You may also knit the “Border inward” method (referred to by Sharon Miller) where you knit the edging first, pick up the stitches along the knit edge and end with the centre. 

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The cast on date is 10th April and you may begin knitting just as soon as the 10th of April lands wherever in the world you are. I know that some people have been excited and cast on already, but to be eligible for a prize I will only count those who cast on on or after the official date.

Chat with your hap progress in the hap chatter thread (only open on 10th) and post your FOs in the Hap Gallery. The CKAL casts off on July 12th.

| Prizes

I am going to have several prizes on offer these include, so far, lashings of British wool and an amazing voucher prize from Fondant Fibre. I know that no-one takes part in the KALs for the prizes, but they are always a nice bonus and a good motivator in the last days of the KAL when we are struggling to finish, so expect a prize post around the end of June!

Cast on Knit Night !

On Friday 10th April, from 7pm-9pm (UK time) we are going to have a little knit night on twitter, instagram and in the KnitBritish Ravelry group (I don’t use facebook, sorry!) If you are on twitter and/or instagram then use the hashtags #hapalong and #hapalonghangout, pick a comfy spot next to your device or laptop, get a beverage and maybe a few nibbles and join in – everyone is welcome. If you don’t do twitter or instagram, you can still join in in the hap chatter thread. I am going to do my best to attend all three places and I may even have a (very small, pin badge sized) prize or two! I really “hap” to see you all there!

Any questions? Just leave a comment or drop me a line!