KnitWit 66: Belly Rubs

Filed under: podcast — Autumn Breeze at 11:42 am on Saturday, April 28, 2007

News:

  • Thank you for your feedback on last weeks show.
  • MSW is next week. I am looking forward to talking with you. Please come by and say ‘Hey’. I would love to hear which story is your favorite.
  • Tonya (trickel2 at cox dot net) has let me know there is a fiber festival in Bellevue, Nebraska May 11-13. E-mail her for more information.

Story:

I show my affection by rubbing bellies. I have for years. Some people don’t appreciate getting their bellies rubbed. I don’t know why.

Let me know what you think.

website: autumnbreezedesigns.com

email: carry.autumnbreeze@gmail.com

voice-mail: 206 666 5775

Thanks. Carry

approx. 12 minutes

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast [12:24m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (2769)

KnitWit 65: Cotton’s Story

Filed under: podcast — Autumn Breeze at 1:33 pm on Saturday, April 21, 2007

Thank you for all your suggestions on knitting topics. I have started a list and will get to them.

I had a brain storm and thought it would be interesting to look at some of the stories and myths of some of the common fibers we use. I will also talk about spinning the fiber and what makes it different from other fibers. In addition, a short discussion about what the fiber is good for making and what are its pros and cons.

Since it is Summer here (where did Spring go?) in North Carolina, I thought I would start with cotton. I like cotton to wear and to knit with. Cotton is a challenge to spin and I am still working on mastering it.

Here are the wheel and one of the spindles I use for spinning cotton.

The wheel is based on the original spinning wheel designed in India (500 – 1000 AD). It is a hand cranked spindle wheel and is ideal for spinning cotton.

I learned how to spin cotton from the seed around 8 years ago. It is how I imagine cotton was originally spun.

You can see the seed is still in there. This will give you a yarn with more ‘character’ being more uneven.

Cotton has been around forever and ever. Growing wild in the Americas, Asia, and Africa, it was spun for thousands of years. Spinning has been around for over 10,000 years using a spindle. Oldest cotton garment ever found was dated to be over 7,000 years old and was found in a cave in Mexico.

I talk about the history and controversy of cotton in the Americas.

Please let me know what you think.

website: autumnbreezedesigns.com

email: carry.autumnbreeze@gmail.com

voice-mail: 206 666 5775

Thanks. Carry

approx. 24 minutes

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast [24:17m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (2257)

KnitWit 64: Trailer Trials

Filed under: podcast — Autumn Breeze at 10:21 am on Saturday, April 14, 2007

News:

  1. I have written up the directions for dying yarn with Easter Egg Dyes. Please come by and check it out.
  2. KnitWit 14: F@#%ing Guard got dropped from the feed. We have fixed that. So if it was missing it may have just shown up in your playlist. If it did not, you can go out and get it.
  3. Next week is a knitting episode. Do you have a topic, you want to hear my opinion on? Send me an e-mail.
  4. I will be going to Maryland Sheep and Wool. I will be wearing a big flower. If you are there, come by and say ‘Hey’.


Speaking of hay, I need to get some. It is alway an adventure when I go get hay. I talk about the most resent expedition.

Let me know what you think.

website: autumnbreezedesigns.com

email: carry.autumnbreeze@gmail.com

voice-mail: 206 666 5775

Thanks. Carry

approx. 19 minutes

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast [18:49m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (2845)

Easter Egg Dyeing Carry’s Way

Filed under: Knitting — Autumn Breeze at 8:36 pm on Thursday, April 12, 2007

Some people have asked if I could put my recipe for using Easter Egg Dyes for dyeing yarn in writing. I will do my best to cover all the important details. Please let me know if I have left anything out.

Ingredients:

  • Animal fiber of some kind (wool, mohair, alpaca, silk, canine, … )
  • Easter Egg dyes (I like the tablets)
  • Warm tap water
  • Hot water
  • Optional: Mild acid like vinegar, lemon juice, uric acid (the stuff found in wee)

Safety equipment: rubber gloves (unless you don’t mind being caught red (or blue, green, purple, yellow,…) handed)

Steps:

Take a container that you don’t want to use for food ever again. (Just as a precaution). Use glass, or plastic containers. DO NOT USE METAL.

Put the fiber into the container. Make sure that the container is big enough so that the fiber will be completely covered (or not if you can’t find one) and has room to move around. The fiber can be in many different forms roving, raw (cleaned), yarn hank, yarn skeins, or even a yarn ball.

Fill the container with warm tap water to saturate the fiber.

As the fiber is soaking up the water, boil some more water.

When the water is really hot (I don’t necessarily wait for it to boil impatient as I can be) completely cover the fiber with hot water.

Add some glugs of acid (or a smidgen of uric acid power). (I like to use white vinegar. I have had lemon juice mildew some yarn I did not get well rinsed out.) The stronger the acid, the deeper the color will be. If you don’t want a deep rich color, don’t use any acid. If you don’t have any acid, don’t worry it will still dye.

Drop in the Easter Egg dye. I like to use 2 tablets per hank or skein. I prefer to use complimentary colors and not contrasting colors. For example, with red, I would use blue, purple, orange or yellow. I would not use red and green together. Red and green make brown since all the primary colors are present red, blue+yellow=green. Look on a color wheel and pick neighbors at most one place away.

Walk away. Discourage the cat (or other animals) from drinking, or playing with the containers. Try not to do this on the floor in front of the frig, and piss off your significant other who wants a drink or a snack. Try not to trip on said containers trying to get yourself a drink and then have to put the kitchen rug in the washer. Only to discover, the floor is really filthy. I mean it has only been 3 weeks since I last swept. Or is that 3 months? I can’t remember units.

Oh check on fiber. If your containers are a little bit on the small side, turn the fiber over carefully making sure not to spill on the freshly swept floor. (If you have counter space to do such things, I guess you could use them instead of the floor. This is just not a situation I am familiar with.)

Once most of the color is gone from the water or your significant others patience has reached a limit, rinse out the fiber. I do this in the bath tub. Put on your rubber gloves. Rinse until the water runs clear or your back starts hurting from leaning over whichever comes first . I have a problem with green and blue. It does not seem to take as well as the other colors and requires a lot of rinsing. I sometimes let it soak in clean water for 15 minutes to “oh my I forgot that was in there all night”. Once it is rinsed out, then you need to turn your skeins and balls into hanks so that it will dry faster and not mildew. I have a metal swift I use. You can also use a niddy-noddy covered with plastic wrapping. Or if you have one of those make it yourself niddy-noddies out of PVC piping, I am sure that would work great.

Hang to air dry. I also hang my roving. Raw fiber I put on a sweater drier.

Enjoy,Carry.

Result may vary due to the temperature of the water, the type of dye, the type of fiber, acidity level of the solution, humidity level, patients of significant others, cleanliness of your house, cooperation of two or four legged children, number of said children, size of pots, ratio of fiber to dye, ……

KnitWit 63: Stereotypes

Filed under: podcast — Autumn Breeze at 1:32 pm on Sunday, April 8, 2007

I am afraid I ramble on for quite a bit in this three part episode.

Part 1. Update on red sweater. It is going well. I am down to the high hip adding set in pockets.

Part 2. Easter present for you. How I dye with Easter egg dyes.
Dying yarn with Easter Eggs Dye
Come play with color with me.

Part 3. I get so annoyed at knitting stereotypes. I just don’t fit the mold. So many others I know don’t either. Why do people insist on talking about the knitter type.

What do you think?

website: autumnbreezedesigns.com

email: carry.autumnbreeze@gmail.com

voice-mail: 206 666 5775

Thanks. Carry

approx. 28 minutes

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast [28:27m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (2974)