edinyarnfest

Ah, what a weekend! Such a lovely whirlwind and I’m still recovering… I don’t have enough words (or photos) to describe it but highlights included:

1.  Setting up for and getting through my first ever show (please excuse the dodgy photos!)…

Stall

Stall with the sign that my lovely friend Ella made for me before we headed overseas

Stall

Naturally-dyed yarns to show people what they can learn in my dyeing workshops

Colourwork cowls

Colourwork cowls

Colourwork cowl

Colourwork cowl

Because of the light and my dodgy camera skills, I didn’t manage to get any good photos of the pouches that I made for knitters tool or small projects. Here are a few that I took beforehand instead!

Tool pouches made from worn-out Harris tweed jackets

Tool pouches made from worn-out Harris tweed jackets

Harris tweed pouches

Pouches made from worn-out Harris tweed jackets

2.  Meeting many, many folk of varying fibre persuasion, from newbie spinner and knitting-trip-to-Nepal-organizer to university lecturer to some of my biggest knit crushes… heavenly! But again, sorry but no photos- no time and social inhibitions! Thanks so much to all who made me feel welcome in this new home of mine- it was lovely to see the same, familiar faces over the weekend as we are getting so used to not knowing anyone in Glasgow ; )

3.  Finding myself in a room of 200+ knitters and feeling like I was part of that scene in Roald Dahl’s The Witches-  you know the one where the protagonist gets trapped with a huge roomful of witches who, once the doors are shut, all sigh with relief and pull off their wigs and give in to their inner witch nature? I’ve been around a lot of knitters in my time but this was something else!

4.  Listening to some wonderful sheep and other knit recordings, care of Felix of Knitsonik– she’s wonderful!

6.  Hearing people talk so lovingly about their products, animals, area of expertise or community. So much love in the building.

5.  Having a couple of very quick wanders around the marketplace to enjoy other stallholders wares. I especially enjoyed visiting Helene Magnusson and Susan Crawford and talking to other newbies doing it for the first time…

Helene Magnusson's beautiful colourwork mitten

Helene Magnusson’s beautiful colourwork mitten

Wonderful colourwork from Susan Crawford

Wonderful colourwork from Susan Crawford

Exquisite Stoffoli dolls

Exquisite Steiner dolls and kits from new Edinburgh maker, Stoffoli

5.  And, finally, picking out a few treasures for me! There were so many yarns that I would have loved to try, from local dyer Lilith of Old Maiden Aunt to Baaramewe’s Titus to the Finnish strong yarn Ohut Pirkkalanka…  but I have my limits! Here’s my haul:

Hebridean/ Shetland from Ripples Craft

Hebridean/ Shetland from Ripples Craft

Acadia, given to me by the very lovely TFC owner Daphne to try running through the machine

Acadia, given to me by the very lovely TFC owner Daphne to try running through the machine

Brooks Blend from my yarn crush John Arbon textiles: Polwarth, Alpaca and Zwartbles!

Brooks Blend DK from my yarn crush John Arbon textiles: Polwarth, Alpaca and Zwartbles!

And some heavenly oatmeal laceweight North Ronaldsay, from those seaweed-eating sheep!

And some heavenly oatmeal laceweight from those seaweed-eating North Ronaldsay sheep!

All in all, a brilliant, exhilarating and exhausting weekend! I can’t wait for next year. (Oh, and I’m going to be launching my little online shop next week with some cowls and pouches to follow so keep an eye out if you’re interested!

moss

I’m obsessed with the mosses growing all over everything in Glasgow! I imagine they are most obvious right now because of the cold and moisture of winter but they can found on practically all fixed objects with a vaguely flat surface where moisture can collect and add a huge amount of cheer to the grey-brown winter landscape…

I’m looking forward to learning about the many different species- there are over 900 species of bryophytes (a group that includes not only mosses, but also liverworts and hornworts which are commonly confused with mosses) here in Scotland and, although I come from a relatively lush part of Australia, I’m a complete novice when it comes to bryophyte ID. So I have my work cut out for me.

In the meantime, I’m just enjoying these as-yet-unnamed beauties in all their forms…

Dots

Dots

Mossy dots

Mossy dots

Mossy dots

Mossy dots

Bridge

Bulges

Wall

Wall

Mossy walls

Mossy walls

Steps

Steps

Tree roots

Tree roots

Pompom trees

Pompom trees

Moss pompoms

Moss pompoms

Twig

Twig

Mossy jumper

Mossy balaclava

Branch

Branch

Knot

Knot

Moss on cherry bark

Moss on cherry bark

And, just because it’s so lovely, I’m adding this lichen into the mix. Not sure I’ll be taking on a study in Scottish lichens though- that’s another 1500 species!

Lichen on birch tree

Lichen on birch tree

Happy weekend!

glasgow

Hello from Glasgow! We’ve only been here for two weeks but the craziness of January, what with packing up our house and lives in Melbourne and saying goodbye to so many loved ones, already seems like months ago- I think we are still recovering! We came with work leads but no real plans or commitments and so have been able to take the time to settle in gently. We’ve been spending most of our time wandering the streets and doing a bit of sightseeing too, so the city (or parts of it) is starting to feel like home…

Looking over at Park Circus, the swanky part of town!

Looking over at Park Circus, the swanky part of town!

University of Glasgow

University of Glasgow

Wonderful windows at the University of Glasgow

Wonderful windows at the University of Glasgow

Stained glass

Stained glass

Although we’ve tried to just take it easy, we’re also very keen to start putting down roots and so have been looking at loads of tenement flats and have our fingers crossed that we’ll be accepted for one in particular- so, so lovely! Scotto is in discussions with several acupuncture clinics and I’ve already got some work teaching knitting (more on that tomorrow) and am exploring how to run workshops in natural dyeing too. I’ve also been in contact with coordinators at the Glasgow Botanic Gardens to see how I can get involved there. So there are good plans in the works! Now I’m just looking forward to making some friends here and building a community and routine for myself- after being so busy recently, it’s so strange to have so little in place!

Greenhouse and cold frames, Glasgow Botanic Gardens

Greenhouse and cold frames for starting seedlings in the cold climate, Glasgow Botanic Gardens

Tender plants under glass

Tender plants under glass

Children's gardens

Children’s gardens

The River Kelvin

The River Kelvin

This part of the Kelvin was frozen over when we arrived and much of the vegetation was beautiful shades of brown and grey but, over the past week, the ice has disappeared, birds are more active and there are bulbs and buds appearing everywhere. To me, it feels like spring is around the corner. Or perhaps not? We don’t know the weather patterns yet!

Hornbeam

Hornbeam (Carpinus spp.)

Flowering quince

Flowering quince (Chaenomeles japonica) is a winter flowerer in Melbourne but is appearing now in very early spring here

Viburnum

Viburnum spp.

Spirea

Spirea

Snowdrops!

Snowdrops (Galanthus spp)

Snow

Snowflakes (Leucojum aestivum)

Winter aconites

Winter aconite (Eranthis hyemalis)

Crocuses

Crocus spp.

Chirpy Robin

Chubby, chirpy robin

Squirrel

Chunky squirrel!

I’ll be back with more very soon but, for now, we send our love to all our family and friends! xx

japan

We’ve arrived in Glasgow! More about that very soon but, for now, here are some moments captured on our 4-day stopover in Japan, where we caught up with friends just outside Osaka.

We spent a day in Nara, where sacred deer roam freely through all the temples and parks…

Temple guardian

Temple guardian

Mama and baby deer

Mama and baby deer

scottdeer

Scotto feeding the deer

Yoko and the deer

Yoko and the deer

Baby deer

Baby deer

And visited a number of temples, including Todai-ji, the largest timber structure in the world and home to a beautiful 15m buddha…

Todai-ji

Todai-ji

Daibutsu

Daibutsu (none of my photos turned out as it was so dark in there!)

Butterfly

Temple butterfly

Temple incense

Temple incense

Timberwork

Timberwork

Patterns on the steps up to Nigetsudo

Patterns on the steps up to Nigetsudo

Lantern carved with tomoe symbols

Lantern carved with tomoe symbols

Stairs at Nigetsudo

Stairs at Nigetsudo

Kaisuga Taisha

Kaisuga Taisha

Kaisuga Taisha, a glorious Shinto temple

Kaisuga Taisha, a glorious Shinto temple

And wandered the streets and temples of Kyoto…

Following the leader at the Emperor's residence

Following the leader at the Emperor’s residence

On the way to Kiyomizudera

On the way to Kiyomizudera

Maiko

Maiko

Beautiful paneling and timber

Beautiful paneling and timber

Swan

Swan

Exquisite woodwork

Exquisite woodwork

And I snuck in a bit of plant hunting too!

Winter-flowering sakura or cherry

Winter-flowering sakura or cherry

Wintersweet

Wintersweet

Willow

Beautifully pruned willow

The 800 year-old wisteria at Kaisuga Taisha

The 800 year-old wisteria at Kaisuga Taisha

Mossy tree

Mosses and ferns cohabiting this tree

The ubiquitous Japanese camellia with a chirpy little friend

The ubiquitous Japanese camellia with a chirpy little friend

All in all, a brief but very lovely visit that I’m sure we’ll repeat on the way to or from Australia!

woolful, edinyarnfest and the craft sessions

I’d like to send out a massive thank you to everyone who has left a comment here- and on Instagram, Twitter and, of course, in person!- in support and encouragement of our move overseas… It has meant a huge amount to me and I’ll be carrying you all with me when we head off at the end of January. Gee, the world certainly feels like a small place with the whole SM circus, doesn’t it?!

Just a few updates: if you haven’t already twigged to the joys of Ashley Yousling’s Woolful podcast, you need to check it out. This super smart and resourceful young woman is changing the way many of us see the yarn that we knit with and the fibre craft community that we are part of by opening up fascinating conversations with fibre people; from small scale to commercial, she’s talking to those involved in producing fibre (spinners, dyers, shearers, yarn companies…) and to those who use it (designers, craftspeople, artists…). I think these conversations will continue in yarn shops, at kitchen tables, in colleges and at fibre events around the world…  A new episode is released each Tuesday and I was thrilled and very honoured to talk to Ashley as part of this week’s episode, mostly about natural dyeing and dye plants but our conversation meandered through many areas of fibre love! You can find all the eps over at Wooful. Oh, and Ashley and her family is also building a fibre mill in Idaho- I can’t wait to see what comes out of that place!

I mentioned in my last post that I am building up a stock of colourwork cowls to take with me to Scotland-  well, I’ve signed up for a booth at the Edinburgh Yarn Festival in mid-March! It’ll be my first time selling my work in this kind of setting and I’m excited and a little anxious at the same time… But, at the very least, I’m looking at it as a great chance to meet and connect with the local knitting community. So, as well as packing up the house and catching up with loved ones, I’m going to have a busy 6 weeks of making!

And, lastly, it was bittersweet teaching my very last Melbourne class at Sunspun this week. It was great to finally run Fibre and Yarn 101, which was inspired by years of questions from customers about how to choose the best yarn for a project and why some yarn substitutions just don’t seem to work. I think my students left with a clearer picture of how different natural fibres behave and why different types of processing result in very different yarns and how to anticipate and work with that. But I’m really not sure whether there’ll be much opportunity for teaching in Scotland- perhaps natural dyeing will be the way to go, as teaching knitting there feels like teaching my grandmother to suck eggs! I’ll just have to wait and see and, in the meantime, will be so happy to take lots of classes to soak up as much of the local knowledge and tradition. But I wanted to let you know that I will be returning in September to teach at the Craft Sessions. It’s such a beautiful event that I don’t want to miss it and it also gives me a chance to bring back and share techniques and skills picked up over there. And, of course, to spend time with my family and friends. So it won’t be that long between cups of tea!

So that’s all my news for now. Have a lovely weekend!