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Pipeliner Notes
Thanks to everyone who has been in touch with me in the past few weeks. A special thank you and welcome to new Pipeliners who have introduced yourselves in the Welcome Thread.
As always thank you also for the 5 star ratings and reviews on iTunes. Thank you to Babsknits17 for the most recent new review.
From NellyFenwick in Muncie IN
From Fiddlesticks2
From Trustitches (Trudi)
I block with pins only on the first blocking. I don’t have blocking wires. On subsequent blockings I rarely pin them out and they still look like picot but not quite so orderly.
From Cori who is irocknits.
I’ve heard this too and I usually dismiss it. I wanted to think about it for a few weeks before responding. And also do a little research. The Principles of Knitting by June Hemmons Hiatt did not say anything about it that I could find. I believe that if the cake is wound properly without straining the yarn then there is nothing to worry about. I’m not even certain you would have something to worry about if the yarn were wound too tightly. In my experience, wool yarn, tends to want to go back to its natural state. If you have ever tried stretching a sweater or another garment that is knit to proper gauge and keeping it there…you may have found it is not so easy to do. Shawls that are knit at a loose gauge are another story. Let’s give wool credit for its resilience and strength.
Let’s hear what the Pipeliners have to say and thank you, Cori, for the question.
Events
Hannah Fettig of KnitBot
Hannah sent me a Farm Spin Dye Knit T-Shirt and samples of the gorgeous yarn.
I’m so excited to announce that Hannah will be vending and signing books at the Knitting Pipeline Maine Retreat! She will be there on Tuesday afternoon during our vendor fair.
Knitting Pipeline Maine Retreat “Getting to Know you” thread. Please chime in if you are going to the Maine Retreat.
Nature Notes
My husband is the hummingbird whisperer. He takes the feeder in at night to keep it out of the hands of raccoons and then he takes it out in the morning. The hummingbirds come out to him immediately and start feeding while he still has the feeder in his hand. I have to get a video of this! The air is filled with hummers most of the day. I can look out into the trees and see them zipping back and forth. The juveniles are out and on their own now. Soon they will be migrating south for the winter.
We have had a bountiful tomato harvest from our two plants. I highly recommend the heirloom variety Caspian Pink. We have grown it before and it is our favorite tomato. The other plant, Boxcar Willie, is not that distinctive or special. We are planning on sticking with Caspian Pink next year. The tomatoes are HUGE, firm, and delicious. They are great for slicing as there isn’t a lot of liquid in them…unlike Boxcar Willie. One day I noticed a very large tomato hornworm Manduca quinquemaculata on the Caspian Pink and it had obviously been eating tomato leaves. Tomato hornworms are bit fat green caterpillars. They are the larval stage of the sphinx moth also called hummingbird moth. This one was unusual though as it was studded with what looked like grains of white rice. I came inside and looked it up online and found right away that the white “grains” were eggs of the Braconid wasp that will kill the hornworm. It is a good practice to leave both hornworm and the wasp eggs as future wasps will also take care of other garden pests. I showed my husband and we both agreed that we just couldn’t leave that horrible hornworm there and I let him deal with it. Now every morning he patrols the two plants and he has found a few more. I don’t ask what he does with them.
I am going to look around at all the flowers, and look up at the hectic trees. I am going to close my eyes and listen. Anne Lamott.
Needle Notes
At Quince & Co all our wool yarns are 100% grown, processed,
spun, dyed, twisted, and labeled here in the USA. Our natural fibers wool, linen, alpaca, and
mohair are not chemically treated or mixed with petrochemical fibers such as
nylon. Enjoy springy goodness in your knitting with 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. We are
hosting a Pick Your Gradient Shawl KAL through September 2016. www.knitcircus.com.
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 the link in the sidebar prior to purchasing a class or supplies I
receive credit for it. Thank you!
You can also find me here:
Pipeliner Notes
Thanks to everyone who has been in touch with me in the past few weeks. A special thank you and welcome to new Pipeliners who have introduced yourselves in the Welcome Thread.
As always thank you also for the 5 star ratings and reviews on iTunes. Thank you to Babsknits17 for the most recent new review.
From NellyFenwick in Muncie IN
Just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed the video on the
quilted table runner. There wasn’t any thread for it in Ravelry so I thought
I’d send a message.
You always inspire me. The runner seems more ‘wintery’ than ‘Christmasy’.
I think you could easily use it well into January or February. Now if you could
just inspire me to get the weeding done….
You mentioned near the very end that you were getting knots
in your thread when you were hand sewing. I think I may know the answer to that
one. My mother taught me that it is in the twist inherit to the thread and to
always keep the end from nearest to the spool nearest to the needle. Also too,
every 10 stitches or so, roll your needle a bit between your fingers to help take
any other extra twist out that you may be creating in your thread. Any knots
caused by the twist will usually come out easily if you insert the tip of your
needle into the loop of the knot to hold it still while gently pulling the
needle end of the thread.
Thank you again for your inspiration and being so generous
as to share what you are crafting.
From Fiddlesticks2
Hi Paula I just love your podcasts! I am listening from the
beginning, and am on show #7, and I would like to see the show notes, but I
can’t seem to find them that far back. Can you direct me to the url for the
beginning show notes?
Also a little tip if no one has suggested it. I like to put
my patterns in the clear sleeves to be put into notebooks. When I am using the
pattern, I use white board markers to highlight my progress and make notes.
When I am done, this wipes off fairly easy.
Thank you for a great podcast!
From RamonaFireHorse
who wrote a lovely letter…this was just at the end of it.
…I was wondering if you had any future plans for another
Craftsy-along or a Quince-along. I have sooooo many Craftsy classes where I
have not taken the time to make the projects to learn the technique.
Thank you again so much for creating the podcast. I really
appreciate you.
With much gratitude,
Ramona
Ramona
From Trustitches (Trudi)
Picot edging
Good afternoon Paula,
I loved your newest completed shawl from Helen’s Shawl Society. Slowly but surely I’m getting through them.
Could you please explain how you keep the points of the picot edging ‘pointy’? Do you use wire blocking and also pin each picot out?
Thank you so much for all of your inspiration.
Kind regards,
Trudi
I loved your newest completed shawl from Helen’s Shawl Society. Slowly but surely I’m getting through them.
Could you please explain how you keep the points of the picot edging ‘pointy’? Do you use wire blocking and also pin each picot out?
Thank you so much for all of your inspiration.
Kind regards,
Trudi
I block with pins only on the first blocking. I don’t have blocking wires. On subsequent blockings I rarely pin them out and they still look like picot but not quite so orderly.
From Cori who is irocknits.
Hi Paula . . . a question for in depth examination
So I love your podcast and often you will put out a myth for
folks to debunk so here’s my latest query.
Does it really “hurt” your yarn to cake it up for weeks, months or years before actually knitting with it? Years ago, my knitting mentor, and local yarn guru here, used to tell me, “never wrap your yarn balls too tightly, if you drop them from a height of 8-10 inches off the table, they should not bounce.” Makes sense, right? Don’t stretch and pull and wrap your yarn too tightly. HOWEVER, with the advent of yarn swifts and the proliferation of ball winders it seems to me that if you “cake” a skein of yarn up, it certainly hasn’t been given a stress test in it’s journey to a center pull ball and therefore isn’t going to be harmed by a rest on your shelf for say, a year or two. What’s your take? (and your listeners as well). I have heard several podcasters make reference to only caking up yarn immediately prior to knitting, which in my world, completely slows down the process, if I’ve got to stop and go wind yarn in the middle of a project. I’ve even heard of knitters who re-skein yarn from a cake and “no one got no time for that!” LOL A sister in the knitterhood, Cori
Does it really “hurt” your yarn to cake it up for weeks, months or years before actually knitting with it? Years ago, my knitting mentor, and local yarn guru here, used to tell me, “never wrap your yarn balls too tightly, if you drop them from a height of 8-10 inches off the table, they should not bounce.” Makes sense, right? Don’t stretch and pull and wrap your yarn too tightly. HOWEVER, with the advent of yarn swifts and the proliferation of ball winders it seems to me that if you “cake” a skein of yarn up, it certainly hasn’t been given a stress test in it’s journey to a center pull ball and therefore isn’t going to be harmed by a rest on your shelf for say, a year or two. What’s your take? (and your listeners as well). I have heard several podcasters make reference to only caking up yarn immediately prior to knitting, which in my world, completely slows down the process, if I’ve got to stop and go wind yarn in the middle of a project. I’ve even heard of knitters who re-skein yarn from a cake and “no one got no time for that!” LOL A sister in the knitterhood, Cori
I’ve heard this too and I usually dismiss it. I wanted to think about it for a few weeks before responding. And also do a little research. The Principles of Knitting by June Hemmons Hiatt did not say anything about it that I could find. I believe that if the cake is wound properly without straining the yarn then there is nothing to worry about. I’m not even certain you would have something to worry about if the yarn were wound too tightly. In my experience, wool yarn, tends to want to go back to its natural state. If you have ever tried stretching a sweater or another garment that is knit to proper gauge and keeping it there…you may have found it is not so easy to do. Shawls that are knit at a loose gauge are another story. Let’s give wool credit for its resilience and strength.
Let’s hear what the Pipeliners have to say and thank you, Cori, for the question.
Events
Hannah Fettig of KnitBot
Hannah sent me a Farm Spin Dye Knit T-Shirt and samples of the gorgeous yarn.
I’m so excited to announce that Hannah will be vending and signing books at the Knitting Pipeline Maine Retreat! She will be there on Tuesday afternoon during our vendor fair.
Knitting Pipeline Maine Retreat “Getting to Know you” thread. Please chime in if you are going to the Maine Retreat.
Nature Notes
My husband is the hummingbird whisperer. He takes the feeder in at night to keep it out of the hands of raccoons and then he takes it out in the morning. The hummingbirds come out to him immediately and start feeding while he still has the feeder in his hand. I have to get a video of this! The air is filled with hummers most of the day. I can look out into the trees and see them zipping back and forth. The juveniles are out and on their own now. Soon they will be migrating south for the winter.
We have had a bountiful tomato harvest from our two plants. I highly recommend the heirloom variety Caspian Pink. We have grown it before and it is our favorite tomato. The other plant, Boxcar Willie, is not that distinctive or special. We are planning on sticking with Caspian Pink next year. The tomatoes are HUGE, firm, and delicious. They are great for slicing as there isn’t a lot of liquid in them…unlike Boxcar Willie. One day I noticed a very large tomato hornworm Manduca quinquemaculata on the Caspian Pink and it had obviously been eating tomato leaves. Tomato hornworms are bit fat green caterpillars. They are the larval stage of the sphinx moth also called hummingbird moth. This one was unusual though as it was studded with what looked like grains of white rice. I came inside and looked it up online and found right away that the white “grains” were eggs of the Braconid wasp that will kill the hornworm. It is a good practice to leave both hornworm and the wasp eggs as future wasps will also take care of other garden pests. I showed my husband and we both agreed that we just couldn’t leave that horrible hornworm there and I let him deal with it. Now every morning he patrols the two plants and he has found a few more. I don’t ask what he does with them.
I am going to look around at all the flowers, and look up at the hectic trees. I am going to close my eyes and listen. Anne Lamott.
Needle Notes
Mittens using Brown Sheep
Little Leaves
by Alana Dakos
Quince & Co Lark
Madeleine Tosh
The Blethering Room
WIP Wrangling
From Woolyeyes
Instead of actually physically frogging projects, I spent
time this week digitally frogging projects. I had 47 WIPS on Ravelry. 47. Not
counting the vanilla socks I’ve never started project pages for. I went through
the project pages and either marked them as Hibernating (I may want to work on
them one day) or Frogged (I never really started them or I definitely won’t be
finishing them).
Then I put the active projects in project bags and put them
in a basket where I can see them in my living room, ready to be worked on. And
then put a bag in my pocketbook for when I’m having lunch at work or waiting
for my daughter. It’s a small start but at least I only have 25 in my project
pages now!
From Annie97
Great topic!
I still use your old Project Zero plan, Paula! But, about a
year ago I realized that I somehow had 16 WIPs in various stages of
not-quite-done. Then I realized that it wasn’t just WIPs, it was books and
other projects, and it really bothered me - I felt like I had picked up a bad
habit of not finishing what I had started, so I used my blog, and made a page where
I have been tracking all the WIPs to at least have a handle on them.
I’m down to two now from that original Big List (full
disclosure: I actually have four WIPs, but two of them were not on the original
list - I’ve been knitting other things throughout the year or I’d be done by
now :-D). I looked at all of the WIPs and made the Frog/Finish decision. Some
just needed blocking, some were frogged, and the rest I have been plugging away
at over time. I’m really jazzed that I’m down to two WIPs (Quick Sand and Rhiannon Socks).
Quick Sand has my attention at the moment - the Rhiannon Socks will be the last
of the original WIPs from the Big List.
I’m more of a monogamous knitter so I’ve usually chosen one
of the WIPs on my original big list to work on along with whatever current
project I have going. I work on just the selected WIP until it’s done (blocked).
Then I take a victory lap, chose another WIP, and the process starts over :-D
Like you, I generally have what I call train knitting, which is easily portable
and is usually whatever socks I’m working on.
For me, casting on all the things equates to too many
African violets - all of a sudden it’s not fun anymore, and I’ve discovered
that I really do not enjoy having to spend substantial time just trying to
figure out where I was on a WIP project that I let sit - sometimes for years.
Angelus Novus
by East London Knits/Rene Callahan: Hip Hip Hooray for my Rowing Out Progress!
Giveaway!
For Over The Moon Book and Sweet Degrees of Thanks Collection Notecards
Sweet Degrees
of Thanks Collection by KnitBaahPurl
Written and illustrated by M. Paula Survilla
To enter to win a copy leave a comment in the Over The Moon thread on Ravelry (not on the blog or on the episode thread.) Tell us who you
would read this book to.
I am not planning on shipping overseas because the book is an
odd size and somewhat heavy. If you live abroad I will gift you patterns of
your choice on Ravelry. That leads me to a question. My sister’s young grandchildren
have moved to Poland—with their parents of course! She recently went to UPS to
send a care package to them. It weighed 4.8 lb and the price to send it via UPS
was $300. She didn’t send it. If you have any ideas about how she can ship to
Poland please let me know. She is so upset. Any ideas?
In the Piping Circle
Waukesha Games
I met Clair! Congratulations to Clair and her daughter Beth
on their solo competition 1st and to their band Dundee Scottish for
2nd place in Grade V.
Celtic Cross Pipes and Drums in the competition circle at Waukesha |
El Paso Corn Festival Parade on September 10.
9/11 Memorial Walk and Service
Have a great week, haste ye back and hold your knitting
close.
2 comments:
Hi Paula, I have some experience with yarn being wound too tightly, so wanted to add my 2 cents to your discussion with Cori. A couple years ago, I went to an LYS (which is no longer open) and bought a beautiful single skein of yarn to knit mittens for my mother-in-law. The woman in the LYS offered to wind the yarn and I was happy to let her. As I watched her struggle with the swift and ball winder, I had a feeling the yarn was being stretched beyond normal limits, but, as a new knitter, I said nothing. The yarn ball was tight like a basketball and stayed that way even after much of the yardage was knit out of the center.
I knit the mittens but they were floppy and inelastic - more like cotton than wonderful wool! I still gave them to my MIL but quickly followed them up with another pair, knit with yarn that I hand-wound. Since that day, I hand-wind ALL of my yarn, even 800-yard skeins of lace-weight.
I agree that wool is typically forgiving and bounces back but it has limits, too.
Thanks for such a great, informative podcast!
Peg
I was a HIV-AIDS patient and I got it from cheating on my wife. It was sort of a payback but a week later I was told by a friend that the person who I cheated with had the HIV-AIDS virus and did not tell me. I was so stupid by not using a condom I thought since he was an old school friend he was trustworthy. But I was wrong. I cried and cried. Two days later, I got a phone call from my friend and he told me about a person who is known by another friend, who can help me. I could not let my wife know what I was going through. I finally got his email address: oseremenspelltemple@gmail.com and I emailed this man my story and he replied me immediately saying i should be calm and told me that everything will be OK. I could not come to terms with what I was hearing but then I concluded it did not matter because I was so broken I just needed help. I was going out of my mind literally. I was confused with what he was telling me, but I listened. He told me about some materials i need to buy that he needed to cast the spell and I said OK. I bought the materials to him, I sent down my picture to him and my positive result sheet and he replied me that i am going to be negative under 3days. I message Him every 2hours for 2day and I knew he thought that I was crazy but I did care I needed a shoulder. Behold, the third day he messaged me i should go for a test that i will be negative. My marriage could be broken because of a stupid mistake and my life was on the line. I remembered when I was going to get the results of my re-test I called him up again and told him that I was going to get my results today and his reply was “so" and that everything will be as he explained. I knew then that he was getting tired of me calling him, maybe I was wrong. Well I got my results and the first person I called was him - again. As he said hello I started to cry and cry. I could not believe it. I was given a second chance in life.This man is a great spiritual HIV/AIDS healer, his healing spell on aids healing is very powerful .please brothers and sister, contact Dr Ose oseremenspelltemple@gmail.com
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