Mood:
Topic: Designing
I try to watch trends a bit now that I'm dyeing more. Not because I give a darn about what I wear. But it takes me a long time to get from design to yarn to finished item and I don't always want to be years behind the trends. I watched a Quilting Arts show on PBS while babysitting and the guest talked about being on a national color advisory board that is 3 years out. She showed how colors had evolved over the last few years. Very interesting. Pokey asked her if there were any quick hints for us regular people since she is sworn to secrecy about any details. She said greens and currently purple.
I taught a knitting class at Wild Purls this weekend to people younger than me. I found it very interesting the colors they picked out. Most were some version of pink (and not because it was October either). One in particular color I loved was pink with a bit of lilac. I saw the same color in ads this weekend.
I cut a bunch of ads out of the last couple papers and tried to create color boards from the garments shown on younger woman. Interesting and time consuming. I plan to use them today to come up with at least one new color way for sock blanks I'm dyeing for Wild Purls. Daryl in Great Falls showed me a great way she uses to create color ways. I hope we can have her to Billings to teach the class. It intrigued me for sure. I've decided to limit myself to the color ways from this series of design boards for the new color ways and explore it a couple of ways.
I learned so much designing colorways for MAWS 2010 Signature Yarns and Roving that I feel I must focus on other colorways more intensely rather than flitting here and there. Very hard for me since I'm a natural dabbler. I hope to have some new colorway from this process soon.
I subscribe to Knitting Daily's newsletter. In today's they were discussing Cheryl Oberle's jacket book. For each section of the book they had the title and a related quote from a biggie--all of this spoke to me as I'm designing today. So here are the quotes thanks to Knitting Daily.
Section 1: Explore the Sophistication of Simplicity.
- Leonardo Da Vinci
Section 2: Master the Use of Contrast.
"Every moment of light and dark is a miracle."
- Walt Whitman
Section 3: Discover the Versatility of Texture.
"The path becomes a texture, an ambience to our present."
- Paul Scott, author of the Raj Quarter
Off to the dye kitchen to wash up the mess, so I can start again. Linda
Reversibility! Scarf looks almost the same on both sides although each row is different. I hand-dyed this DK weight wool yarn.
Seed Stripes combines seed and stockinette stitch in a very easy pattern. Both sides of Seed Stripe are attractive, but not the same. This yarn is a DK weight alpaca and feels so good. It matches a hat, I haven't gotten around to photo yet which is another story and another design process to blog about. I knit this is June, but no time to finalize the pattern yet.
A new book Vintage Baby Knits by Kristen Rengren seems to be the answer. This book includes almost everything my daughters discuss and enough cute items to thrill any baby knitter’s heart. Kristen has taken old patterns from books and magazines and reworked them in contemporary yarns with schematics and sometimes charts. Patterns include a shrug, cardigan, hoodies, cape, kimono, socks, bonnet, christening gown, nursing shawl, a baby blanket, 2 soakers, several sacques, several toys, hats and more.
I have started dyeing sock blanks for sale at Wild Purls. I took the first 4 there a few days ago. I have dyed sock blanks off and on for several years since taking a class by Nancy Roberts at SOAR (Spinoff’s Annual Retreat) and even knitted some items with them. I find the machine knitting of the sock blanks was my big stumbling block. But Julia found a nice superwash 90%merino/10% nylon preknitted sock blanks for me to dye. These are very fun to dye and each blank is 384 yards enough for 2 socks, 1 scarf, 1 shawlette, or 2 hats. The blanks come complete with dire
ctions for socks and other items. Each colorway I dye is unique and depends a lot upon my mood that week. They are labor intensive, but oh is it fun to play with color.
You knit directly from the sock blanks and although the blanks look quite intense colors, they always blend a bit more in the knitting. I feel you have to start with intense color or it will be too grayed out.
I LOVE DYEING Linda
. The pattern is dead simple and I have used it before in my circular sampler bag. What caused me the problems was which yarn. Last year I had bought some Baby Twist, a sport weight alpaca from WP at a sale. I didn't have enough of any one color to make a scarf. I decide to make a color block pattern with purple, several greens, and a goldy yellow. I had the scarf half knit and I just didn't like it. At WP a young girl suggested that she liked the green parts. I always knit my patterns twice in 2 different weights of yarn. I came home and cast on some fingering weight yarn semi-solid yarn I dyed in a green blue. This yarn was varied enough that it didn't show the seed stitch stripes. So it turned into a swatch. I finally decided to start over again in the Baby Twist, this time only using green. It worked. Most of the scarf will be one green, but I have 2 other greens at each end also. Yeah I'm happy.
I had shown you my first Reversibility! in a handdyed dk weight yarn. Can I resist little bits of color--no. Pagewood has a very pretty handdyed Yukon sock yarn that is partially bamboo which gives it a sheen. They market leftovers as Sock Bites and I just couldn't resist a package. I started a multicolor version in the sock bites which after fussing with picking out the colors I like. It will lay flat after I wash the finished scarf. The scarf is about half done. I will have it on display after Labor Day at Wild Purls.
The grey is a natural color. The blue was a light grey, but I overdyed it. The black is llama. I dyed it to darken it up a bit more. I also spin the grey and black thinner than the blue 