Archive for » August, 2011 «

Shop Update: Dorset, Gotland, Rambo, Finn, Shetland, BFL

Shop is, as always here

Colorways: Pink Grapefruit, Lobelia*, A Heady Brew*, Irene, Deep Sea*, Cucumber Salad, Cinnamon Spice, Rhubarb Cobbler, Storm Surge, Stormcloud, Sunshine*, Heart of the Green*, Plum Wine*

Fibers: Rambouillet, Finn, Shetland, BFL, Gotland, Dorset

* = Repeatable Colorway

Fiber!

Soon to come, an update on the latest fiber from the mill!

For now, gratuitous puppy. Gobo says, “Hi, Dad! Pets now!”

Gobo!

That’s all for now
~The Gnome
Gnome

Iggy’s Scarf

I decided Ignatius was too naked. So I made him a scarf. It’s BFL, a plied version of the yarn that went into my woven BFL colorshift scarf before.

Scarf

And in answer to Meg’s question… it’s a fae. I have a couple that I drew, they visit my blog sometimes. Creeping around the corners and keeping out the gremlins.

Gobo is happily done with his fixing, and has his stitches out. He’s happy.

Gobo

That’s all for now, back to the dyepots!

~The Gnome
Acornman

Bits of Shine, Bits of Happiness

So, waaay back I acquired a lovely little Greensleeves Loki.

Loki
Loki

Then in the great spindle disaster weekend… disaster struck four of my spindles. Among those, my Damsel Monique and Bosworth Mini were repairable by me. The Turkish Delight still needs a new shaft…

But the Loki… somehow it ended up on the floor in it’s spindle bag and… got stepped on. I was horrified. The hook was totally bent over, the shaft snapped off right at the whorl. I was heartbroken!

So, recently, I finally saved up some money and emailed the fabulous Elizabeth, owner and crafter of Greensleeves Spindles.

After a few emails, I mailed the poor sad whorl off to Utah for rehabilitation. It came home the other day! With a *beautiful* new shaft, even prettier than the original!

Loki
Loki

Huzzah! My favorite high twist fine yarn spindle is back! PERFECT for silk.

And now some photos of stitch markers recently made for inclusion in large ($50+) orders. Center ones are jade.

Stitch Markers

Tiger’s eye and smokey quartz

Tiger's Eye

Malachite and sodalite

Malachite

And now your daily dose of gratuitous cuteness…

Mokey Sleeping

That’s all for now!
~The Gnome
Fae

Crochet: A Moose

I make stuff! Yay stuff.

First I spun up some nice shetland in the colorway “Moose.” Longdraw so it’s fluffier, two-ply, about worsted weight.

Moose Yarn in Shetland

Moose Yarn in Shetland

Then I looked at a bunch of different patterns, and decided that while they were nice… none of them were ideal. So instead I pulled out my crochet hook and started freehanding…

Moose Parts

And made a shmoo body and then an extra piece to make the nose all moosey. At this point I’m fairly dubious about my own skills. But I forge my way forward and make some arms and legs.

Moose Pieces!

Ok, now I’ve got all the bits… except… oh wait, it’s supposed to be a moose… where are the antlers!? Time to pull out fiber for more spinning. Undyed shetland, this time…

Singles for plying

Spin it up, make a plying ball on a TP tube, and ply it up…

Antler Yarn

Aand crochet it up into antlers…

Moose' Antlers

Ok, now we hope to all the petty pewter gods that putting the pieces together makes a moose… First, stuff the nose and antlers and sew them on…

Moose Body

And from the side…

Moose Profile

Ok, I guess I can breathe. I was really unsure about the antlers and nose until I actually got them on. But now I think this might actually work!

Time to repeat the process with arms and legs, still crossing my fingers that shmoo-moose still looks cute with legs and arms. ::crosses fingers::

Moose sadly without eyeballs

Yay! It actually worked! He’s even pretty cute! Hrm… but something’s still missing… what could it be? Oh wait, I know, magnetite! I know, you’re thinking, what? Magnetite? What the heck?

Moose with eyes!

See? Magnetite! Little magnetite eyes! Meet the finally completed Ignatius J. Moose!

Ignatius J Moose

Isn’t he adorable? I say yes! Yay for projects working! I was pretty worried, I’ve never done anything like it before. Simple stitches, but all freehand, with stuffing, and then sewing things together… different process! Neat!

That’s all for now!
~The Gnome
Fae

More Loom Tie-Up

As someone pointed out, I didn’t put in any photos of the counterbalance tie-up in the last post. Which is a little tough to figure out on your first round. I figured mine out by staring at some not terribly clear photos for what seemed like hours.

So here it is. My counterbalance loom tie-up. It looks similar to a pulley system, actually.

The harnesses are attached in pairs to small rollers then the small rollers are attached in a pair to a big roller.

Here’s a front on shot. You can see that wraps are all a single full wrap around the requisite dowel.

Hammett Counterbalance Loom Harnesses

The important part is to get everything so it’s even with eachother (took some work to do alone) and so that the eyes of the heddles are fairly near the center of where you’ll put your reed. If the eyes are too high or low, you won’t be able to open your shed all they way. Here’s a shot, hard to get one that shows the placement effectively.

Try to center the heddle eyes vertically

And in case you want a closer view of the wrap part, here’s the pulley wrap. You can see it’s literally just a single full wrap, nothing fancy at all. Again all done in texsolv so it doesn’t stretch.

Counterbalance pulley tie-up

Hope that helps!

And your gratuitous doggy cuteness… SQUIRREL!

I got my squirrel

Ok, off to pack orders!

That’s all for now!
~The Gnome
Gnome

Category: Weaving  Tags: ,  One Comment