Author Archives: admin

new swift

My honey found me a beautiful table swift at Camberwell market this morning. Lucky me, I already have a wonderful vertical swift that my lovely friend Amanda gave me and it works perfectly, particularly for unraveling knitting straight into skeins to be washed and reballed because the vertical wheel allows me to sit/stand up straight rather than bending over to work it … the only issue with it is that you can’t adjust the width very much so it isn’t great for really long or short skeins of yarn. This one, however, because of all those holes along the arms, will be able to accommodate almost any length of skein!

Wooden swift

I was so excited that he’d found a real piece of knitting equipment (that’s the kind of thing you read about on other peoples blogs) that I really didn’t notice what a beautiful piece of craftsmanship it was until I got it into the car and took off all the sticky tape.

Hub

Pegs

Ball-bearings on underside of timber crux make the swift turn

My dad, my handy expert on timber and all things old, reckons it’s probably Australian and made of blackwood or cedar but has no idea of it’s likely age. I love the simplicity of this type of swift that sits on a flat surface and spins on ball bearings and this particular one is really beautiful in its lack of ornamentation… those pegs just beg to be touched. It has that look of a well-cared-for, well-used piece of equipment which, after reading this great post about the interrelationship between timber and wool, I am treasuring even more than I usually would. I gave it a test run and it performed beautifully- I’m so happy to have it! How about you- any new (or old) equipment you’re loving?

sarah’s quilt

My sister and I started making a small quilt quite a few years ago, when she returned to Melbourne after many years in East Timor. At the time, she was testing the waters to see whether she wanted to settle here and was finding city life tough, especially the dark and cold of the Melbourne winter… I suggested picking up a craft, something she could do at night or when she was feeling at a loss. So we started a quilt, using some of the many tais that she’d been given during her time in Timor. She had collected some big, beautiful pieces of weaving but she didn’t know what to do with all those thin strips of brightly coloured fabric…

Colours

We cut them into triangles- and then she moved back to Timor! Too hot up there for quilting, she reckoned, so they went into my cupboard. I thought about piecing them together for her wedding but didn’t get around to it… now, in a few weeks, she’s starting chemotherapy to see if there is anything that can be done about a tumour and so I thought it was a good time for those brightly coloured fabrics to come out of the cupboard.

Tablecloth

Some lovely friends helped to bring cohesion to such a riot of colours. It is my first pieced quilt: quite imperfect and a bit crazy, perfect for my sister and I ; )

Reds, oranges and blues

Blues, pinks and yellows

May it bring her strength and light when times are dark.

East Timorese fabrics

laura pattern out

A very exciting thing happened- I managed to navigate the narrow, slippery tunnels under Ravelry HQ to finally release my Laura and the Wolf pattern! Yippee! It now lives here.

Another colourway

I’ve learned so much in the process of publishing this first pattern! It is a slow process but, in the end, I am really pleased with it… if you are interested, leave me a comment- everyone who does so between now and Sunday night will receive a free copy of the pattern on Monday morning! I’d love to be inspired by other versions of the story that I love so much.

And a big thanks to everyone who encouraged me with this one- it was greatly appreciated. xx

introducing my helper

She always sits in my room with me while I work… she is quiet and patient but I can tell she’s itching to have a go on the machine.

Mochi and the Singer

Actually, I think she might be asking me to machine-knit her a blanket for her spot next to my chair (she’s super-smoochy but not into laps). Next week, Moch.

gloves and mitts

I recently went through my box of woollens in search of a particular hat but instead rediscovered quite a few pairs of gloves and mittens hailing from distant places, all beautiful in their own way. Given the chilly winter weather in this part of the world, I thought you might be interested in seeing them…

This pair of mittens was left in my care by my sister, who, living in Darwin, has no need for any kind of glove or woolly garments! They are very precious to her, as she bought them many years ago while living and working in remote Siberia. They were made by an elderly woman living in the nearby village who knitted to supplement whatever income she received from state or family. No doubt, they helped my sister get through the winter with hands frostbite-free, so I have only gratitude for the knitter! They are large, which makes me think that they are designed to be worn over a smaller pair (to have to wear two pairs of mittens is so foreign to me!), and are made of six shades of commercially-spun yarn.

I really love the simple flower motif, as well as the use of single rows of garter stitch to divide the sections of colour and texture and the cuff that expands to cover the sleeves of a coat or jumper.

These are the smaller mittens that my sister wore underneath. Knitted by the same villager, these are made of her handspun yarn- which, according to my sis, was sheepy, rather than the goaty mohair that it looks like. Look at that halo!

Although knitted in a relatively hard, smooth, worsted-style yarn, the mittens feel surprisingly soft (and warm) when I put them on. The beauty of these is definitely in their plainness and creamy lustrousness.

Just for the knitting geeks, it looks like she used a longtail cast-on ; ) I’ve also been wondering what breed of sheep she may have got her fibre from… despite the plethora of info in the fleece and fibre sourcebook, it doesn’t mention any breeds from this part of the world that fit the fibres we see here. Anyone have any idea what it might have come from?

These fingerless gloves I bought in Shetland two years ago. There was simply no way I was going to get out of Shetland without taking  some of their beautiful colourwork with me… and I just fell in love with the vintage colours in these.

Interestingly, the ribbed bands (cast on with a tubular cast-on ) were knitted flat- can you see the seam in the above photo? Initially, I thought they might have been done that way to save time… but, given the Shetland knitters renowned skills in working in the round, that doesn’t make sense to me. I’m wondering if perhaps the bands were knitted on a hand-operated knitting machine and then put on double-pointed needles for the colourwork? Anyone know? When visiting the textile collection at the Bod of Gremista, I heard a bit of tut-tutting from other tourists when the curator began to speak about the use of hand-worked machines by local knitters but I can certainly understand why production knitters all over the world use whatever tools they have, allowing them to spend the bulk of their energy and time on the more intricate parts of a piece. It would be lovely to have everything done in the old way but it is not always possible- and certainly not always viable for the maker. Anyway, as I said, I’m not sure if that is what’s been done here but it is an interesting thought!

And some gloves also made in Shetland but bought in Stromness, Orkney. I bought them for a friend but… in the end, I couldn’t give them away, despite the fact they are a bit big for me. They are surely knit for the tourist market (as I guess most things are) but those colours are insanely rich and beautiful. More than the individual shades, what really gets me with these is the combination of colours; I would never have thought of pairing the hot orange and red with this rich but muted palette but that is what makes them come alive! Fabulous!

And here is a peek of the fingerless mitts that I designed for a class introducing participants to Shetland lace construction methods.

I wanted to show them the amazing ways Shetland knitters started and finished their work to minimize casting on and off and to lend elasticity and stretch to the piece. I’ve written up the pattern to put on Ravelry so won’t go into much detail here but they are knitted in one piece in three distinct sections using Shetland methods. Made using quite a few new techniques if you are new to this tradition (as I am!), these are also very comfortable to wear as there are no tight edges at the wrist or around the fingers.

And, lastly, in my projects-soon-to-be-started knitting basket is a kit for my first pair of traditional colourwork mittens; both pattern and plant-dyed yarn are from a craftswoman whose work I’ve loved pretty much since I started knitting and joined Rav. This ended up in my hands accidentally but I was super happy to hang onto it when it did! I can’t wait to start them…