Cooking up new colors! I’m editing photos and updating the online shop now, so look for an announcement soon!

(Those oranges? I’m crazy about them. Crazy, I tells ya.)

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All photos by Chris Clark, motionmind on flickr

KSD hit the road last week for the inaugural Smoky Mountain Fiber Arts Festival in Townsend, TN.  It was a small event, but was so much fun!  I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more enthusiastic crowd of participants.  I talked to so many excited, interesting knitters, crocheters, spinners, and fiber folk.  The vibe was so happy!

The festival had a small selection of vendors (that’s our booth, in the Townsend Elementary School Gym), and with the overwhelmingly positive response and turn-out, the organizers expect a much bigger second year, and I definitely agree.  I met some wonderful fellow vendors, including Walter Turpening, who crafts the most beautiful, comfortable handwoven chairs and benches for knitters, spinners, and weavers.  He’s old school, with no website, but you can see one of his coveted knitter’s rockers at my friend Kristin’s blog.  I need to sell more yarn so that I can get one of these amazing chairs!

There were spinning, weaving, sheep shearing, livestock, and herding dog demonstrations (I didn’t get to see!  I was too busy in the booth.) And the organizers had great kid’s activities for all ages, even my friend Julie’s toddler had things she could make, including an ingenious soda straw weaving project.  This simple project completely mesmerized all of the kids who were working on it, and you could see groups of children (including teens) with heads bent over their work, happily weaving headbands and chunky bookmarks.  I saw a few kids wearing their finished pieces around the event later!

Chris and I borrowed a pop-up camper and camped at a nearby campground for the weekend, the Mountaineer Campground.  It was so quiet and peaceful, and a wonderful mini-vacation.  I could see why people call Townsend, TN the “Peaceful Side of the Smokies”.  And the campground had pet chickens!

So if you get a chance to visit the beautiful Smoky Mountains next spring, mark you calendar for this fiber fest.  This first year was so great, I can’t wait to see next year’s event!

For information, visit www.smfaf.org

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Martha Stewart Living has a great project post on making your own custom knitting needles. 

While hardcore knitters might scoff at the idea (stainless steel built for speed, bay-beee!), I think this would be an awesome project to do with kids.  The tools are pretty safe, with the exception of the epoxy to attach the button needle stops (you do that part, K?), and you get to paint the needles with acrylic paints before sealing with butchers wax, so I can imagine all sorts of fun kid art decorating these needles.  Try a 1/4" dowel and worsted yarn for a start-to-finish scarf kit.

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Image: http://www.etsy.com/shop/UkrainianTreasures

                                                          

My very first exposure to dyeing wasn’t on yarn, or fiber, or even fabric.  It was on eggs.  Sounds pretty average, right?  Hard-boiled eggs, vinegar, dye pellets?  But I’m Czech and Ukrainian (with a wee smattering of Irish and Scottish), so these were not your standard, American Paas Easter eggs, with crayon drawing and pastel colors (We did those too, so that we could play with them and eat them!).  My first real dyeing was on Pysanky, traditionally decorated Ukrainian Easter eggs.

Image: http://www.etsy.com/shop/thebeadbunny

Pysanky is basically batik on eggs, a wax resist dyeing process.  A small cupped stylus (a kistka) is heated with a candle flame and used to apply thin lines of beeswax, and the eggs are dipped in a series of alkaline dyes between layers of wax, from the lightest colors to the darkest.  Then the dye is melted off with a candle flame, and the eggs are sealed with glossy varnish.  This is all done, at least with my family, on intact, raw, room temperature eggs.   I think you can tell from that description that this would NOT be considered a kid-friendly process these days, but I grew up in a non-coddly household and learned pretty early on not to stick nasty work materials in my mouth and to respect fire and sharp objects, or else. 

So now the smell of melted beeswax brings on instant childhood nostalgia, thinking of all those happy hours with heads bent over our work at the kitchen table, learning to melt the wax without creating too much soot, applying delicate lines of wax, learning which colors layered best.  And the magic of holding your wax covered egg next to the candle flame, and wiping away the beeswax to reveal your brightly colored creation.  I learned all of this from my mom, who taught classes on Pysanky, and created amazingly detailed eggs.

My Grandma Tarasovich used a different method, sticking a straight pin into the eraser of a pencil to make a stylus, then dipping it into a candle to gather wax, making teardrop shapes in pattern, and then dyeing the eggs in solid colors, like this:

 

Image: Better Homes and Gardens

So began my love of pattern, color, and appreciation of handcraft and a bit of elbow grease.  Oh, and obsessively detailed work.  Thanks, Mom!

Interested?  The lovely folks at Learn Pysanky have online tutorials and links to suppliers and workshops.

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Vickie Howell has a cute, fast knitted shamrock pattern on her craft blog this week, great for St. Paddy's festivities! 

It uses scrap sock yarn, and she shows you how to use iron-on crystals to glam it up.  I'm thinking of using beads or tiny buttons, since I always have them on hand in my heap of craft supplies.  And I'm never at a loss for sock yarn scraps, so I can imagine these in KSD colorways, Grass, Goldbug, Liam.  Snazzy!  I wonder if I can whip up a couple to wear to the St. Pat's party at Ms. Molly's this weekend?

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Cabled cowl, fingerless mitts, and headband, with button detailing, knit in Kitchen Sink Dyeworks Eco Merino DK.  The “buttonholes” are created by the first row of cable twists!

Size: headband & mitts- women’s medium/large, cowl- one size fits most

Finished measurements: headband- 20.5" x 2.75", length can be adjusted; cowl-20” circ. buttoned, 6.5” wide; mitts- 8” length, 6.5” circ around hand, will stretch to fit.

Yarn: DK or light worsted, mitts shown knit in Kitchen Sink Dyeworks Eco DK, 100% organic merino 145yds/2 oz. mitts-145 yds, cowl- 200 yds, headband- 85yds.

Needles: Mitts -size 6 straight & DPN. Cowl-size 6 straight Headband- size 5 straight.

Gauge: mitts & cowl-20 sts & 24 rows = 4” in St st. Headband- 22 sts & 28 rows=4” in St st.

Notions: cable needle, tapestry needle, mitts-4-5/8” buttons, headband-2-3/4” buttons, cowl- 4-3/4” buttons

PDF pattern, $6.00

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There’s been a lot of chat in the internet craft community about the joy and power of FREE, as in sharing creative works for free to spread goodwill.  I love this idea, sharing tutorials and ideas, but I wanted to take it a step further.  So here’s my next big thing, a free online class where I’m not only sharing knitting knowledge, but giving you the opportunity to share some free, too.

Visit my class site to sign up for a completely free online video class on how to knit socks with the Magic Loop technique.  The class project is a teeny pair of toddler socks that can be (but don’t have to be, your choice, no pressure) donated to Children in Common.  CIC helps provide warm clothing and other assistance to children living in orphanages in Russia and the rest of the former soviet Union.

SIGN UP HERE

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Here’s an excerpt from one of my online classes, showing two methods for weaving in ends on Stockinette stitch:

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