Jul 6

A girl can’t have too many skirts

0520skirtI’ve worn this skirt several time since finishing it in May. It was one of several pieces I cut from stash fabric to coordinate and it is the same fabric as the tank I made earlier in the month. It’s from the same New Look 6470 pattern. I love it!

0620elderflowerI started this second Elderflower skirt (Ruth Sørensen design) in March in stashed Crystal Palace Maizy yarn. I didn’t actually look at how much of this sock weight yarn I had and started knitting away. This pattern is designed to be knit with any weight yarn and doesn’t specify amounts. I didn’t have enough. Fortunately it’s not an old stash yarn and is still being sold. Two orders and two months later, I finally finished it.

Sawtooth skirt
spacer

Working through the stash, I chose some Fiesta Yarns Meteor, a rayon/cotton ribbon yarn. It was a risk since the pattern called for 720 yards and I had 700. My stash made the body of the skirt and off to the internet to find one more hank. As luck would have it, not only did Webs have the yarn in Jamaican Spice, it was on sale. The pattern is Kira K Designs Sawtooth Skirt. The skirt is stockinette knit in the round (fast!fast!fast!); the lace border is knit separately and sewn on.

Gifts

In May, we headed to Black Butte Ranch to spend the weekend with Dianne and John. We went in to nearby Sisters and the Stitchin Post the local fabric and yarn shop. Dianne, an avid cook, liked the aprons featured. She picked out the fabric and pattern and I offered to make it for her.

0630apron10630apron2

In March we celebrate Dianne and Tom’s birthdays. In June/July, it’s John’s and my turn. In anticipation of our trip to Hawai’i later this year, I found a nice tropical fabric that wasn’t too garish and made John a shirt for his birthday.

0627johnsshirt

May 20

On Monday, I popped down to the Bay Area to spend a little time with Fiberly Friend, Diane. We started with lunch at Caffe 817, a nice little cafe in downtown Oakland.

Next it was to Piedmont Fabrics. Diane had been meaning to visit the shop earlier; I guess that’s why I really flew down. Maybe not. There were some lovely fabrics, including some Liberty cottons. In Lucky magazine, Diane saw a man-tailored shirt in Liberty cotton for $300. Aren’t we lucky that we can sew? We each took some home to make our own shirts for considerably less than $300. Diane suggested we see who gets her fabric made up first. Ha! That will be Diane, I’m sure.

We spied Piedmont Yarn & Apparel as we were looking for fabrics, so did a quick stop there. They had some usual and unusual yarns, including locally dyed yarns, one of which came home with me. It’s fingering weight superwash merino.

Our next stop was for a cookie break at Sweet Adeline Bakeshop. Good oatmeal cookie, but I still like mine better.

Our time was running short, but as fate would have it, I got an email that my flight was running 25 minutes late, so we had time for one more stop.

Now one could got to Berkeley and spend the day looking at everything in Lacis. Instead we spent a half hour and I come home with two cool little notions for my knitting tools bag—a small maginifying glass, since I don’t always have cheaters with me, and a neat little yarn cutter.

The day went by too quickly and to the airport we went. Fortunately OAK isn’t too busy in the early evening, and we able to prevail on the security guy to take our picture.

Good day spent with a good friend.

May 5

April was the month for starting more thing than I finished. I spent several days deciding on patterns and fabric, laying out fabric and cutting patterns – the part of the sewing process I really dislike, so I do as much at one time as I can stand. The idea was to take one piece of stash fabric and see how much I could make from other stash fabrics that would coordinate.


The first of that effort was this cowl tank from New Look 6470. The fabric is a Fabric Mart purchase from who-knows-when. There was enough for a skirt and, from other fabrics, I cut a different top and a pair of pants.

The realization that Mother’s Day was just a few weeks away prompted me to pull out the beaded fabric I’d bought for my mom on a trip to Mexico. I consulted with my Fiberly Friends, on what kind of pattern to use and decided on McCall’s 5668. It took some days to prepare, since it had to be cut one pattern piece at a time to make sure the beads were placed off seam. Then I had to cut off beads on the sleeve and lower back and sew down any loose beads. I also decided to line the jacket and had to make lining pieces. Here’s there result.


On an episode Knit and Crochet Today, they featured the cutest baby booties that I knew I’d make and the birth of Carolyn’s grandson, The Little Prince, was just the excuse I needed as a diversion from the larger projects on knitting needles.

Mar 24

With so much traveling, February was a bust for getting anything completed. I’ve done much better this month. Of course, I had incentives, since it’s birthday month for Tom and Dianne.

Three – no, make that Four shirts for Tom
I was hoping to have more shirts for Tom because I had lots of free time in Puyallup and my sewing machine, but I didn’t bring all the pieces to the cut out shirts, so only one got finished. But there was still time, so I did get two additional shirts done to give to Tom on the day.
Mike McCarthy's Chef Dogs The Jetsons Lots of shamrocks

As we have done the past three years, we celebrated the two March birthdays Sunday night, so it seemed occasion for one more shirt.
Cheri Stole's Dogs in Space

For Dianne
First there was the cute gift. I saw the pattern in the Jan/Feb 2009 Crochet Today! and thought of Dianne, who always serves tea after dinner.
Cupcake Tea Cozy

Two years ago, we traveled to the Big Island of Hawai’i with Dianne and John. We had a great time and decided it’s time to go back. We look forward to the trip in October, and in anticipation of that I made Dianne a new swimsuit top. But since I forgot to take a picture, you’ll have to use your imagination. Here’s the top that I made for Dianne before the trip in 2007 and the fabric for the this year’s version.
Dianne's swimsuit tropical swimsuit fabric

And for me
In my stash was some white Calmer that I ordered for who-knows-what. I had used some for the I Do shrug a couple of years ago. The Air jacket in the Rowan Calmer Collection called to me so and in December Lamb’s Ear Farm had a sale on Rowan yarn, so I ordered the “white” yarn – without looking a the color number. You can probably guess that it wasn’t the same “white.” While my yarn was truly white (“bleach”), what I ordered turned out to be off white (“drift”). And my yarn, I found out, was discontinued. After much searching online, I found it at a shop in the UK, but they only had 3 of the 6 balls I would need; the balance I found at Alaska Knits. And still I came up short – just. So one more ball was ordered and I finally finished the darn thing. Had I had all the yarn, it would have been a surprisingly quick knit. I think that may be a property of the yarn; the I Do shrug was the same.

Mar 5

My last post was all words. This will be a few words with pictures, to continue on February.

What I bought

Generally on trips, Tom and I stimulate the local economy, but I’ve been restrained mostly because, as you may know, my collection of both fabric and yarn that goes way beyond SABLE, and there just isn’t room for more stuff till I get some sewing and knitting under my belt.

At Madrona, it was the last day and I hadn’t made a single purchase, but a $5 certificate was burning a hole in my pocket and Just Our Yarn yarn isn’t readily available locally. Just before we packed up the car to head south, this was my choice. Almaza lace weight yarn in a colorway of plums, greens, and blues, with a little brown thrown in.

In San Jose, Tom picked up a couple of bottles of single malts – one from BevMo and one from Trader Joe’s. We visited Purlesence in Sunnyvale, but I wasn’t inspired, so walked away empty handed. Again, it was the last day, and we were meeting Margie and Ted Easter for lunch in Campbell, so we stopped by Green Planet Yarn, where it was a hard decision, but I chose this Mirasol Baby Alpaca yarn, as my trip souvenir.

It was a big market at the Sewing Expo in Puyallup. Since I was resolved not to buy fabric I passed up Vogue Fabrics, among others, several times, but I did come home with two books
 

Four DVDs

One pattern (which is much cooler than the pictures would suggest)

And some vintage buttons from Nifty Thrifty Dry Goods

Sewing related, but not sewing…I also purchased my copy of the local ASG chapter’s cookbook. I worked on the project and it includes Tom’s “Meatless” sauce and my tried and true recipes for ginger cookies and southern biscuits. You can buy a copy too. Contact Barbara to get information on ordering.

Who we saw
  
Maria, Bill and Chris

    
Dinner at the Cronins – Thomas and grandmother Connie, just Thomas, Ann, Joe, and Dave

    
Spending time with the Walkers – Thom and Jane, and Mego and Nalla

Mar 1

If I were being a good blogger (which clearly I’m not since I really haven’t been posting for six months [but I do have my reasons]), I’d have told you about Madrona two weeks ago and San Jose last week, along with a report on Puyallup.  Heck, you’d even know what I was talking because I would have posted about my anticipation of three trips in three weeks.  That said – better late than never.

Madrona Fiberarts Winter Retreat (knitting and spinning…sort of)

Neighbor, Laurie Hossley, and I drove up to Tacoma on a Wednesday (Feb 11)  to attend classes on Thursday.  I had purposely only signed up for two classes because I didn’t want to get too “overloaded,” and all the classes that were really compelling seemed to be scheduled on Thursday, so I had to choose.  In truth, I’d taken a version of Sally Melville’s class Making the Most of your Yarn Collection at a Stitches long ago and far away, but I love her teaching style and my “collection” is considerably more substantial than that time long ago, so I signed up again.  Sally started the class saying that she’d resumed teaching it because she had finally felt there was enough changed and I knew I’d made the right decision to take the class. Most of the class was based on information included in Sally Melville’s Styles (not her choice for the title, since it didn’t convey what she wanted to get across – how to use up your stash.) She also included information from The Knitting Experience Book 3: Color and her new book, Mother-Daughter Knits.

There were new takes on previously learned techniques, like the weavers or sheet bend knot.  And new (to me) stitches to use up smaller quantities of yarns to actually make something like a sweater that doesn’t look like something you threw together because you randomly combined yarns. I finally got Sally’s primer on color theory – especially as it pertains to garment creation – something that I didn’t  reading (okay skimming) her books.  The class opened up the possibilities of not being totally dependent on patterns as they are published.

The second class I took was Productive Spindling, taught by Amelia Garripoli, whose class I took at the Oregon Flock and Fiber Festival last September.  Conceptually, I got it last fall and I even practiced and was pretty pleased with my progress, but life happened and I put down the spindle and my fiberly pursuits went to the more familiar. (I didn’t blog about them, but I finally posted projects from the latter part of the 2008 and the start of 2009 on TheHudsons.) I had meant to practice, again, but didn’t before the class so I was not up to the skill level the class required, and I did leave early, a bit out of frustration.  But I did learn some things from Amelia, the kind spindler sitting next to me, and another spindler who was making sock yarn in the common area, so all was not lost.

In between the two classes, I drove up to Seattle to have lunch with my old Adobe pals, Marc Madenwald, Bill McCulloch, Carrie Cooper, Jud Richards and Fred Hale. It was a reunion of sorts since I hadn’t seen Carrie in close to three years and Bill for almost as long.  But it was short.  The good news is I was heading back to the Hotel to Tom, who rode up with Laurie’s husband, Dan.  We had dinner at Over the Moon, which I wrote about two years ago when we were in Tacoma.  It was a fabulous pre-Valentine’s Day dinner of halibut cheeks with pasta in a yummy sauce and duck in a port wine sauce.  If you find yourself in need of sustenance in downtown Tacoma, don’t hesitate!

San Jose (friends and food)

I say “San Jose,” but, in truth, we were in Santa Clara, Cupertino, Scotts Valley, Campbell and San Jose starting Feb. 19.

It’s our annual trip to see our accountant (ooh ick – taxes!) and an excuse to visit with friends. We started with lunch on Thursday with Maria Robinson, where we talked about Adobe days – past and present and relived funny stories. Dinner that night was with Bill Brown, a friend from Patty’s days in Product Management (or was it Marketing?) at Apple.  We can’t remember if it was 1988 or 1989 that Patty and Bill were talking comfort foods and Pineapple Upside Down Cake was brought up, so for Bill’s birthday that was his present.  It became an annual tradition that has continued even with our move up to Oregon.

Next day, lunch was with Chris Bryant, another friend from Apple. We really enjoyed seeing Chris and our meal at Bruno’s Barbeque in Scotts Valley, even though I didn’t actually have barbeque since my preference is east Carolina style.

Dinner with former neighbors, Joe and Connie Cronin included daugher, Anne, and her family.  It was a loud, busy evening, but a lot of fun because it’s always good to see old friends.

We didn’t schedule anything for Saturday lunch, so ate at a favorite place, Gilley’s Coffee Shoppe in Los Gatos.  It was a blast from the past as I had my favorite Joe’s Special – something that can’t be had in Oregon – at least not that I’ve found. Tom’s go-to meal is corned beef hash, which in this case was corned beef with the traditional hash browns being the potatoes.  Yum.

Dinner Saturday was with Jane and Thom Walker.  Tom worked with Thom (and one other Tom) in the sales training group at Apple.  We not only got to catch up with Jane and Thom but hang out with their dogs Nalla and Migo.

Our flight home was Sunday, so we planned one more get together – this time with Margie and Ted Easter.  If you remember eWorld (though with a few exceptions, there probably isn’t any reason you would), and you had cause to contact them, most likely I was the one who responded to your emails.  Margie was my boss, as I contracted back to Apple.

All this talk…where are the pictures? I’ll get them posted to TheHudsons soon…promise.

Sewing and Stichery Expo in Puyallup

On this, my second trip to Tacoma for the month,  Feb 24, I chauffeured my Mom to University Place to visit with a friend from her days living in Sun City West. Barbara had decided that the winter of 2007-08 was her last in SCW, as it turned out was my mom’s so it all worked out.

I stayed in Tacoma and “commuted” three out of four mornings to Puyallup. Wednesday it was “Serger Accessories: the Basics and Beyond” or “Can we sell you some new feet for your serger…or maybe even a new serger?” That said, it was a good class because we were taught probably 15 different techniques using different presser feet.  The keeper for me was serging on zippers and making piping with the cording foot.  So a good four hours spent.

After delivering the ASG Columbia River Sewing “Sew What’s Cooking” cookbooks to the Saf-T-Pockets booth, where Marsha McClintock generously offered to allow the chapter to sell the books, I headed back to my room to warm up (very cold rain that afternoon) before dinner with Mark Shelton.  I’ve blogged about Mark before because every time I’m north we get together.

Thursday, I started with a class on One Skirt Six Ways in which Jacque Goldsmith showed how to take one skirt and change out one or a combination of things  (waist, pocket, length, hem, lining, bottom opening) and make it a different skirt or 20,160 different skirts (according to a mathematician).

In the “small world” category, I recognized the face of the woman standing behind me in line to that first class, and after observing her clothes and hearing she was from the Bay Area, it turned out to be an acquaintance that I met through other cyber friends.  It’s been two years since we visited her in Palo Alto.  And we ended up in two more classes together.  I wonder what the math/odds for that would be?

My second class, Sew With Your Feet presented by Debra Justice was entertaining and enlightening. Debra had lots of tips on using presser feet in the ways they were intended and others.  My notetaking being what it is (or isn’t to be exact), I felt compelled to buy her book so I could retain the good information she imported.

Third for the day was a 2.5 hour class Swivel Our Seams, a method of adjusting sewing patterns to fit taught by Lorraine Henry.  The description said, “Have an ‘AH-HA’ hands-on experience…” and it was true. This method of pattern alteration made the most sense of any method I’ve learned in a class or seen in a book.  Ah-ha!  And it was good enough that I bought a text book on the subject, Fabulous Fit, 2nd Edition by Judith Rasband, as well as Lorrain’s Two Easy Tape Measure.

My fourth, and as it turned out, last for the day, class was Connie Crawford’s Sew Like a Pro.  She was a highly energetic instructor, with great handouts and lots of interesting tips, but I didn’t buy her book.  I would, however, take another class from her.

I was exhausted, so I didn’t go to the last class I’d signed up for, instead opting for a quiet evening in the hotel.  Now I know what my limits are.

Friday was classless – originally I’d intended to go up to Seattle, but the 45 minute trek earlier in the month was enough, so I just laid low.  That evening I’d arranged to have dinner with a “shirt tail” cousin, Larry Glynn.  He’s second cousin to Tom’s cousin, so getting technical, the familial relationship is remote, but he was kind enough to take me around Tacoma – University of Puget Sound, his alma mater and a beautiful campus and the waterfront where we had a drink and dinner.

And we come to Saturday.  I helped Marsha McClintock carry her samples and class materials to room, since I happened to have signed up for Close it Up and got the pick of the seats.  She presented some interesting ideas on different garment closures, but the thing that “got me”  was her new pattern, “Sew Accessorized.”

Sandra Betzina commented that she is always learning and figuring out different ways to do things we’ve been doing for years.  Zippers, Zippers, Zippers covered new ways at inserting invisible zippers, zippers in knits and horizontal zippers.  Uncomfortable in the very hard metal folding chairs and anxious to head home, I decided that it was worth buying her new DVD on the subject, as well as a couple others because I know my retention was going to be pretty bad.

And home I headed. Four hours later that’s where I was. And February is history.

Sep 7

Skirts

When I was in high school (lo! those many years ago!) I preferred dresses over pants because my body was never made to fit junior clothes. And though pants were easier to wear, I’ve always loved skirts.

The first skirt I knit was the Luna Flickering Flames from the Elann.com site in their Luna rayon/cotton yarn.  It was probably the first project where I realized how much I like knitting lace.  And although it was a lot of knitting, I enjoyed making it. I’ve since made SashaElderflower and Indigo Ripples.

I was looking on Ravelry for a new skirt and came upon Wry Punster’s version of the Show-Off Ruffled skirt from Lace Style. I was inspired, so I started the skirt in some stash Elann Luna in red that I’d ordered to make another Flickering Flames skirt (I said I liked knitting it…). Once I got going on the bobbles, I actually enjoyed making them since I got to backward knit and was doing fine till I dropped the stitches that make the “lace.” Luna was not made for the Show Off Ruffle.  I think it is just too fluid.  I didn’t like the look of the “lace” and wasn’t convinced blocking would improve it, so I frogged it and went in search of another pattern.


Indigo Ripples was really a fast and satisfying knit, but I didn’t want to make it again for two reasons: 1) I wanted something different and 2) Evelyn asked me to knit the same skirt for her.  I’m not much for making things multiple times so three just wouldn’t work.  But I did like how Kat Coyle did the shaping, so I did a little math and cast on. I searched several books for lace patterns and settled on “Dainty” from Barbara Walker’s Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns for the main knit panel and “Daintier” for the bottom ruffle. To make it flippy like Indigo Ripples, I used the same cast off, and I have a new red skirt.

It was a pretty fast knit, if you don’t take into consideration how many times I had to redo the lace foundation row, after knitting the second lace pattern row.  There was over 200 sts, so reknitting at least three times was no small feat.  Still it was done in a week, and I wore it yesterday.  It’s a comfortable, “swishy” skirt.  I may have to get more Luna for more skirts.

Shirts

Last year I sewed Tom 25 shirts. The promise was for one a month (I have A LOT of fabric for shirts stashed).  I had hoped to do at least one shirt a month this year, but it just hasn’t happened – only seven so far, with the lastest in July.