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Pipeliner Notes
Thank you all for your kind notes about the 6th anniversary of the show!
Mittens for Maine and Eagle Crest Retreat
Nature Notes
Needle Notes
Holyrood by Justyna Lorkowska
PrairiePiper’s Holyrood
Eden Cottage Yarn Harewood 100% Blue Faced Leicester Superwash.
Beads are from Gilding Lillies. They are lovely, high quality beads.
Talisman Shawl by Helen Stewart #1 The Shawl Society
PrairiePiper’s Talisman Shawl
Join The Shawl Society HERE.
Newest design is Amulet Shawl.
Malabrigo Yarn Mechita Jupiter Colorway. Dark Pink, cranberry, single
At Quince & Co all
of our wool yarns are 100% grown, processed, spun, dyed, twisted, and labeled
here in the USA..quinceandco.com. Looking for a fiber for summer knitting? Try
our linen yarns, Sparrow and Kestrel or Willet, Cleaner Cotton. All are found
at www.quinceandco.com
Knitcircus celebrates
fun, a passion for knitting, and the delight of beautiful yarn.
Treat yourself to a gorgeous, hand-dyed, gradient yarn in
saturated colors with smooth color transitions throughout the skein. Our
gradients work up into beautiful and satisfying projects. Visit our booth
at Stitches Midwest. www.knitcircus.com.
Knitcircus Watermelon Panoramic Gradient |
Knitting Pipeline is a Craftsy Affiliate. I enjoy taking
Craftsy classes and have learned so much while taking them at my own pace. If
you visit my blog prior to purchasing a class or supplies I receive credit for
it. Thank you!
You can find me on Ravelry as PrairiePiper and on Instagram
as KnittingPipeline. There are two groups on Ravelry, Knitting Pipeline and
Knitting Pipeline Retreats. Come join us there!
You can also find me here:
Pipeliner Notes
Thank you all for your kind notes about the 6th anniversary of the show!
Mittens for Maine and Eagle Crest Retreat
Prairie Yarn Crawl
July 20-23, 2016
- Klose Knit, Urbana IL
- Le Mouton Rouge, Bloomington IL
- Ewe-nique Yarns, Morton IL
- The Fiber Universe, Peoria IL
Nature Notes
A Tree by Any Other Name
by Guest Contributor, Brenda
When I was in the fifth grade, our teacher, Miss Batjer,
made us memorize a poem by Joyce Kilmer, entitled “Trees.”
Reciting this poem from memory was standard fare for all Miss Batjer’s
classes back in 1958. I doubt that children learn about that poem now, but it
is lodged in my brain somewhere between the Gettysburg Address, and the
Periodic Table. I hadn’t thought about this poem in eons, but a recent podcast
on Knitting Pipeline made me think about the trees that have been special in my
life.
The first tree I remember specifically was a fig tree that
grew between our house and the Caldwell’s, who lived next door. I must have
been 7 or 8—old enough to sneak out of the house while my mother was taking a
much-deserved afternoon nap with my two little sisters. I can still remember
how it felt to be enveloped in the sultry Texas heat as I painstakingly sneaked
out the backdoor, taking care not to make any noise that might wake my mother.
Best of all was the feeling of solitude.
I would crawl up under the fig tree, which was really more a big bush
than a tree. Its limbs spread outward like the frame of an umbrella, and the
big leaves formed a canopy of shade and privacy when I climbed into the base of
it. The air was heavy with the warm, fruity fragrance of ripe figs, and I often
helped myself to more than a few.
Except for an assigned leaf collection in high school
biology, I didn’t think much about trees during my teenage years. The next tree that impressed me grew in the
front yard of our first house we bought after we married. It was a huge pecan tree that provided
wonderful shade and a plentiful supply of tasty pecans. I baked pies and cookies and sent bags of
pecans as Christmas gifts to relatives who didn’t live in Texas. Every fall I still get Texas pecans shipped
to me, and I remember how nice it was when we had our own supply right in the
front yard.
After a few years, my husband’s job moved us to Salt Lake
City, Utah. I had lived my whole life on
the Gulf Coast of Texas, which is green and lush, so moving to a desert climate
was a shock for me. Everywhere I looked
I saw brown and I couldn’t wait to plant some trees on the bare sandy lot of
our brand new house. When I saw the
stunning white bark of the Aspens and Birches—both trees I had never seen
before, I was captivated. The little
coin-like leaves tinkled in the wind and I thought they were so beautiful. The first tree we bought for that new lawn
was a Northern clump birch. We couldn’t
afford a really big one, so it was only about 5 feet tall when we planted
it. I worried over it, and watered it,
and left it with regret when we moved to Southern California after 3 years.
Over two decades later we went back to see our old house,
and that clump birch tree had grown to about 35 feet, and spread. I felt like a proud mother knowing I was
responsible for planting that lovely tree.
In California, I had a love/hate relationship with a huge
jacaranda tree in our front yard. Jacarandas are lovely to look at, but
horrible to live under. They are covered
with fragrant purple blossoms in the spring—both a blessing and a curse. The blossoms fall onto the sidewalk, and
bleed when they get underfoot, staining anything that comes in contact with
them. But, of course, we couldn’t remove that old tree. It was not the tree’s
fault that someone planted it in the wrong place! So it stayed, and we swept and washed and put
out mats. I even missed it when we moved to Washington, the Evergreen State.
In the Pacific Northwest, where we have lived for the last
27 years, I admire the beauty of all the cedars and firs, and the emerald
landscape they create, but dare I say, the evergreen tree can be a bit
boring? (Yikes! it is heresy to even
think such a thing in the PNW!) Let’s
just say the evergreen trees provide a good “backdrop” for showcasing the
deciduous trees I love. My favorite tree
now is a Stewartia pseudocamellia which I planted in our backyard. It is like a dainty lady who dresses every
spring in a pinafore of silky white flowers--usually just in time for Mother’s
Day. In the fall, she changes to flaming
orange, but soon abandons that, revealing her slender winter silhouette and
good bone structure. This tree is framed
in my kitchen window, and I enjoy her delicate moods all year long.
Though I appreciate the beauty of the southwest, with desert
climate and rugged landscape, it is not for me.
I love the sheltering beauty of trees.
I do think Joyce Kilmer (who succeeded as a poet despite being named
Joyce) had it right so many years ago.
Trees by Alfred Joyce Kilmer
I think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.
A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;
A tree that may in summer wear
A nest of robins in her hair;
Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.
Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.
Needle Notes
Holyrood by Justyna Lorkowska
PrairiePiper’s Holyrood
Eden Cottage Yarn Harewood 100% Blue Faced Leicester Superwash.
Beads are from Gilding Lillies. They are lovely, high quality beads.
Talisman Shawl by Helen Stewart #1 The Shawl Society
PrairiePiper’s Talisman Shawl
Join The Shawl Society HERE.
Newest design is Amulet Shawl.
Malabrigo Yarn Mechita Jupiter Colorway. Dark Pink, cranberry, single
The Blethering Room
Purchased Malabrigo at Warm N Fuzzy
Trunk show with Yoth Yarns Periscope.
YOTH trunk show at Warm and Fuzzy |
Susanne’s Needles
Product Notes
Embroidery, quilting, sewing on buttons. Helps thread to
glide through and reduces knots by 90%. I use Aurafil which is a high quality
thread.
In the Piping Circle
Peoria Chiefs Game--Irish Night
It was a little boy's birthday so of course, they wanted photos with the piper and drummer. |
Leading out on the field. |
Playing during first pitch. |
July 23, 2016 at Chatham Community Park, Chatham IL
Have a great week, haste ye back and hold your knitting
close.
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