Monday, April 26, 2021

Highlights of 2016 - January - June

 Things started looking up in 2016 - most of the work on my house was finished and I had much more time for my interests.  

Started the year with a silk-scarf dyeing workshop at a friend's home.  We used bits and pieces of silk cut from old silk ties and saris that had outlived their usefulness to dye new white scarves.

Scraps are Laid Out Over Half the Scarf






 
Other Half of Scarf
is Folded Over the Top
 







|


After Rolling and Tying Securely, Scarves are Steamed


 
Left in Sink to Cool Before Rinsing

 
 
 
Drying in the Sun (Mine on Rignt)

 

Closeup of My Scarf

Not my craft, but...   late January, I received this beautiful bowed psaltery in the mail.  Also a critter called a 'flapdragon' that now lives in my loom room and that delights me every time I open the door.  I met Muis Dreamsinger (muggle name Morris Lieberman) at a festival in 2015, and he had a display of the most enchanting harps and psalteries, I couldn't resist ordering one.  

It was a pretty slow time of day and I had the chance to sit and chat with him for a good hour or so about his craft, his cancer, everything, and nothing.  Planned on ordering a door harp at a later date, but sadly, when I got around to looking for him last year, I learned that he succumbed to cancer in 2019.  


February 8-9 Chenille Scarf Weaving with Deborah Jarchow

I've talked before about what a fangirl I am when it comes to fiber artists.   This was my chance to add another fiber celebrity to my scrapbook of memories. Deborah is famous for classes on rigid heddle weaving, among other topics, and for many years had a studio in the Studio Channel Islands Art Studios. As I write this, she's in the process of moving to Arizona.  California's loss.   

A friend from my weaving workshop and I decided to take a weekend mini vacation and head up to Camarillo for one of Deborah's classes.  What a fun class!  Deborah provided portable looms and our choice of chenille, and two solid days of instruction - everything from evaluating the quality of material to various techniques for design and finishing.  She even loaned the looms (we may have paid a small rental fee but I don't remember) so the slower weavers (me) could finish our projects at home.  Of course, I came home with several cones of beautiful chenille and a couple of handmade shuttles.

I highly recommend taking any class with Deborah!

A Small Area of Deborah's Studio

My Finished Scarf
 

 

February 13-15 Lace Workshop with Robyn Spady

Studio 66 organized this three-day workshop, The Beauty of Lace Weaves, taught by Robyn Spady.  Robyn is an expert, thoughtful, and generous teacher, and I left the class understanding much more about the structure of these weaves.  Highly recommend taking any class from her if you have the opportunity.  Another celebrity for this fangirl.  Yes, I do sound like a broken record, but I have been really fortunate to encounter so many excellent teachers.


First Sample in Progress


Finished Samples.  Mine 2nd from Right

March 20 - Saturday Spinners came to my house to play with drum carders.  Some beautiful batts went home.

And here's what I spun from my batt:

 



March 24 - This is the day I officially went down the rabbit hole to the land of quilters.  I got my certification as an APQS long arm quilter. Basically means I know enough to safely use the machines in their store. Doesn't mean that I have any skill at it. 

 


April 10 - Finished a small batch of yarn - Cormo/Polwarth fleece I bought in New York a couple of years ago. Took the easy way out and had it cleaned and combed by Morro Fleeceworks. Hand-dyed a little of the roving, spun, and Navajo-plyed it. Proof positive that I do occasionally actually finish something.


 May 28 - Farther down the rabbit hole.  Started a quilting class about learning to use the Accuquilt cutter and a bunch of different piecing techniques in a sampler.  I started out with the white background the pattern called for and hated it - so substituted different black backgrounds and loved how it made all my colors pop.  I think I'm hooked.

June 1 - The center row is done!


In July, we had a big adventure, so I will stop here and resume in a new post.  See you again soon!





Thursday, April 15, 2021

In which I recap the rest of 2014

So, two years later, I return to the blog.  I really had good intentions the last time I worked on it. I was committed to bringing it up to date and even had a list of things I wanted to talk about. So much for good intentions.  I have had some fun, been busy working, and picked up a couple of new hobbies along the way.  Sorry to anyone who is actually reading this, but my OCD self won't let me just ignore the missing years and start in afresh.  So here goes.

Highlights from 2014 that weren't already mentioned:

May 3-5 - A Spindle Turning Class with Neal Brand in Denton, TX.  

Neal is well known for his Tibetan style spindles.  You can see samples of his work in his etsy shop and if you're really lucky, he may have one or two that haven't been snapped up already.

Went with several aquaintances from the L.A. Spinning Guild to this workshop where we learned techniques to turn several different types of spindles and accessories.  Came home with several new friends and some new skills to practice.

My First Ever Turned Spindle

Two Finished Whorls

A Whorl in Progress

Two Finished Spindles, Various Bits and Pieces


Two More Finished Spindles, Support Bowl, and Whatzit


 

May 27, 2014 - Another Wheel Joins the Menagerie

A fellow guild member sent me to look at this gorgeous but neglected little flax spinning wheel at a local (ok, 20 miles away) antique mall.  The seller had cut the price in half by the time I got there.  A friend in the know tells me it is likely a Tyrolean wheel, either Bavarian or Austrian.  Someone else identified it as an eastern European "Gypsy" wheel, and I've also seen a similar wheel identified as Hungarian but without provenance.  The paint is badly in need of preservation and I think it's too frail to be a functional spinner, but it is just too lovely to let go.

 





 
June 12-15, 2014  AAW Symposium

I made a road trip to Phonix to attend the American Association of Woodturners annual symposium.  3+ days of seminars, classes, shopping, and schmoozing.  In addition to a car full of tools and supplies, I came home with the two bowls below...   Every year, members are asked to donate bowls that are sold at the symposium to raise money for a local nonprofit.  Each bowl costs just $25.  AAW calls this program "Empty Bowls."  This year's proceeds benefited Seeds for Autism.  I couldn't resist the two bowls below - the first because the spalting reminded me of a map, and the second because of the interesting shape and the dark spot that looked like a ray.





November 2, 2014 WEFF

The Southern California Handweavers Guild has an annual event called WEFF, WEaving and Fiber Festival, in Torrance.  My friend Gail used to have a booth to sell her beautiful triangle looms, and in 2014, another friend Eileen and I shared a table in her booth, selling our hand-turned wood items.  I also sold sock blanks.  I'm in total awe of Eileen's talent and her generous spirit - she was one of our group in the spindle-turning class and helped a couple of us with techniques at her home after we returned from Texas.  Loads of friends came to the festival, so we had a fun day visiting and shopping, and I sold enough to make it worth the cost of the table and hauling all my stuff over there.  But probably not enough to be a vendor again.

Some Blanks Before They Became Tools

An Assortment of Tools Waiting to be Purchased
 

And that's enough of 2014.