It's now February 1st and I don't know what happened to January?! I know some of it I spent in CA with my parents. Dad is in a rehab facility recuperating from a car accident back on Thanksgiving and Mom was having eye surgery. Mom got to try spinach souffle (cooked in an 8 cup Pyrex measuring cup no less) as well as home made butternut squash soup. I made Dad a black mouse with teal ears/nose/tail for his room while we sat and talked one visit. We also mailed the pieces of a felt mobile to hang in his room - of course I didn't get any pictures of the pieces, but they were based on the Celestial Mobile by Marianne S. Dubois in "Designer Needle Felting". I hope it brightens it up for him a bit.
I've also taken two cheese making classes with Julie Steil of River Valley Cheese in Snohomish, WA. I'm still working on the aging side of the process - I've lost the rounds of Tomme, Blue Tomme and Camembert I've tried so far. But Julie says that aging is the most difficult part of cheese making so I haven't given up. My goat cheese and goat/alpaca cheese are coming along - my favorite is still the blended goat/balsamic vineagar cheese. Next on the list is to make provolone from my stock pile of goat's milk. I have the culture, now to give it a try and get the aging process going.
We're starting to ramp up for the 2012 market and festival season - we're back at The Redmond Saturday Market and we'll also be doing a Spring show in Duvall in March and probably the Duvall Plant and Garden Art Sale in May. I'm hoping we'll have the llamas and alpacas at some of those venues.
My taxes are calling, as is the scarf I started that needs to be wetted down for felting.
Happy 2012!
Showing posts with label scarf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scarf. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Where Did January Go?!
Labels:
2012,
alpaca,
CA,
cheese,
February,
goat cheese,
market,
mobile,
needle felt,
scarf
Sunday, February 7, 2010
And the momentum continues
I didn't fib - the pile of fiber at the end of my last post went into this lattice scarf.
I ran it in my felting machine for 10 minutes, unrolled it and rolled it in reverse and ran it another 10 minutes to get it to this stage. I laid out a single layer for all the lattices except where they intersected. At those points another "shingle" of fiber was laid down for extra strength.
Once I got it started I put it in my Laundry Alternative spinner:
I thought it made a cool kind of "spin art" (-:
I hand fulled the piece and there was significant shrinkage. The red, dyed huacaya, fulled much more easily than the black, natural black huacaya. It has been a while since I did some hand fulling and watching and feeling it shrink as I worked it was very rewarding.
After this I worked on hand fulling my test suri scarf and now I'm considering needling it for a while. If it responds to that I'm thinknig that a Felt-o-Matic by Dianne Stott to speed that part of it up might be a good investment. Since I'm serious about focusing on suri it could be a good investment.
Finally this is a scarf I started today - started this on the felting machine and this shows the shrinkage from hand fulling with the bubble wrap and the wash board.
Friday, February 5, 2010
finally, back in business
I'm trying to do seasonal scarves this year and this is my first. As you can see it's a bit thin at the edges, but with some hand work ala Lori Flood (I had a fantastic felting workshop with her last August and learned a ton of things, including how to encourage the fiber to migrate to the thin spots).
I made the hearts as prefelts - I needle felted almost a dozen in a variety of colors for the scarves I'm going to work on the rest of the week.
Here's the scarf after doing a few minutes of fulling by hand. You can see how much it's shrunk compared to where I started. And the ends both look nice and solid. My one quibble is that the one end that was on the inside for the last roll on the machine shows the bubble wrap pattern vs the other end.
I was going to throw it a bit to see if I can beat the pattern out, but I'm pretty happy with it as is so I'll probably leave it and start my next one.
My next scarf is going to come from this pile of fiber
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