Thursday, April 22, 2010

Two Fiber Fests, One Weekend!

The weekend of April 9th was a very busy one. Saturday was gorgeous, bright and sunny, and a knitting friend and I took a drive out to Old Oaks Ranch in Wimberly for their Ranch Day Fest. It was their first one and by all accounts it was a success.
This is my friend Lydia Kendrick, of Kendrick Kreations, who was one of the vendors. She also sells her beautiful hand woven shawls and scarves at Old Oaks Ranch year round. You may have read an earlier post by me introducing Lydia and two of her patterns to my website.

Lydia weaves, hand knits, machine knits, crochets, spins, hand dyes yarn as well as sews and quilts. See the clever little purse she's holding here, she made that!
This is some of her lovely hand dyed yarn, I purchased one of the yellow and blue skeins in the middle.
And this is her lovely Turkish Scarf, I sell this pattern on my website.
Even the Sculpture Garden Bears enjoyed Lydia's designs.

My friend and I also had the pleasure of getting a private introduction to weaving by Sandra (above), one of the owners of the Ranch. Though not pictured we also had a private rug hooking lesson. Old Oaks offers weaving, rug hooking, knitting and spinning classes on a regular basis.
And yes, she is spinning angora yarn right off this beautiful angora bunny! We were amazed at how calm this bunny remained throughout it all.
And one of the big events of the day was the Alpaca Shearing! They are lovely animals and I finally learned how to tell the difference between an alpaca and a llama. If you get a chance to go next year, do it.

On Sunday morning at 6am another knitting friend and I got in the car and drove up the Addison for the DFW Fiber Fest 2010. Addison is not to far from Dallas. Sorry no pictures of this event. But we had a great time and visited with yet another knitting friend, Lucy, who lives up that way.

Highlights of this adventure include....meeting Franklin Habit, again, I had met him a couple of years ago at Chicago's Yarn Con. And I got to meet Amy Hendrix of Madelinetosh, again, I met her when she was very first starting out about 3 years ago.

I'm going to re-introduce Madelinetosh yarns to my website. If you're on Ravelry stop by my group, Sandrasingh.com and tell me which of her yarns and colors you absolutely love. And if you're not on Ravelry just reply to this thread!

By Sunday night, after driving home from Addison as you can imagine I was exhausted! But it was an awesome weekend!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Dream In Color Smooshy is 15% Off this week!

Monday, April 19, 2010

Lisa Ellis Designs "Make & Take" Collection

Lisa Ellis Designs' Make and Take Collection is new for Spring/Summer 2010 and will have you ready for all your Get-Aways! The Collection includes three quick to knit projects, the Shorty tam, Spring Gauntlets and Holey Twists on Socks and the entire Collection can be purchased for $10 or each pattern separately for $5.

Holey Twists on Socks are lace socks knit from the cuff down featuring a stitch pattern that is simple to memorize while complimenting your favorite variegated yarn. These socks will knit up beautifully in your favorite fingering weight yarn in a variegated, semi solid or even a solid color.

Size: One Size Fits All - Women
Yarn: 400 yards fingering weight sock yarn
Needles: size US 1 (2.25mm) double points or as needed to achieve gauge
Gauge: 7 sts = 1" (28 sts = 10c

Shorty tam is intended to be worn far back on the head - an excellent hat for those with short hair or those who don't like the look of traditional hats.

Sizes: One size fits all, 21-23" head circumference
Yarn: 400 yards Fingering Sock
Gauge: 5.5 sts =1" 22 sts =10cm
Needles: size US 4 (3.5mm)
Skill Level: Easy

And the Spring Gauntlets are simple to knit fingerless gloves, yet the pattern is intriguing enough to keep you interested. The variegated gauntlets are knit in Crown Mountain Hand Dyed Sock Aphrodite and the hot pink are knit in Cascade Heritage Solids.

Size: One size fits most
Yarn: 200 yards Fingering Sock Weight
Needles: size US 2 (2.75mm) double points
Gauge: 8 sts = 1" (32 sts = 10cm)
Level: Advanced Beginner

All Lisa Ellis Design patterns are sold as PDF downloads that are emailed to you after purchase, with no shipping fees.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Introducing Jane Thornley's: Leaf Lights Evocative Guide

Its a jungle out there! So why not go green, really green, by celebrating with Jane Thornley's new Leaf Lights Evocative Guide! Three designs make up Jane's new book: A Giant Frond wrap, A Blade scarf and the Leaf Lights Kimono.

Leaf Lights Kimono is an airy, spring-like excursion into the tropical undergrowth. The colors ripple in light and shadow like sunlight filtering through a leafy canopy. Three rectangles form the shape – two front panels and one back. A long front band finishes the front openings as well as forms the collar from which the back is picked up and knit.

Or knit a giant frond wrap in organic feather & fan lace. What is organic lace? It’s any project that uses a lace component (stitch sets usually known for the regimented adherence to patterns and charts but here free-flying and not fixed on perfection) mixed liberally with other stitches, various yarn types and a free-range, no-mistake approach. From just such an attitude, emerged the Giant Frond wrap. All soft, silky and lacy, it’s knit with silk/merino liberally mixed with other yarns in three hues of green.

Or, if looking for a smaller project, try knitting a soft, silken blade for around your neck, Jane's A Blade scarf is a fast knit that will have you ready for spring in no time. Knit any one of these designs for Mom or Grandma on Mother's Day.

All of Jane Thornley's patterns are sold as PDF downloads that are emailed to you after purchase, thus no shipping charges.

Visit all her Collections with a single click of your mouse!
Books
Capelets
Cardigans & Jackets
Scarves
Shrugs & Accessories
Tops
Vests
Wraps

Monday, April 12, 2010

Freshstitches Crochet Tutorial: Crocheting Through Back Loops & Through Both Loops

Please welcome Stacey Trock of "Freshstitches," in honor of her new book Cuddly Crochet she has graciously offered to do a crochet tutorial for us!

Hello wonderful SandraSingh.com readers! I’m so excited to be writing a guest post for Sandra, since she’s been doing a lovely job of selling my FreshStitches patterns for over a year!

In this post, I’m going to talk about the difference between crocheting through the back loops and crocheting through both loops. If you’re interested in even more detail on the issue, check out http://www.freshstitches.com/wordpress/?p=573, where you can see photos of what the back of these pieces look like. Since we’re talking about amigurumi… how the back looks isn’t so important today!

In most crochet patterns, you’re instructed to crochet through both loops, resulting in fabric that looks like the photo below.

To accomplish this look, simply insert your crochet hook underneath both of the ‘loops’ when doing your crochet stitch. This looks like the photo below.

My designs are a bit different, because I crochet through the back loop only. I suppose the real reason that I do this is because that’s what my Mom did… but now I’ve grown to like the look! Before I talk about details, let me tell you a couple advantages of crocheting through the back loop.

1. Beginning crocheters (especially those who are tight crocheters) often find it easier to crochet through the back loop only.

2.When you crochet through the back loop, your crocheted fabric has little ridges on it. I happen to love these ridges, but someone on Ravelry recently called these ridges ‘unsightly’. Ouch! Anyway, regardless of how you think these ridges look, they have advantages, as well. First, the ridges make it very easy to count how many rounds you have crocheted… since the ridge (1 per round) stands out fairly clearly. See http://www.freshstitches.com/wordpress/?p=13 for a spelled-out example of how this works. Second, the ridges make it very easy to attach limbs. Since there is a ridge on the fabric, picking up the ridge with your tapestry needle makes attaching limbs a breeze! (stay tuned later in the blog tour when there will be a tutorial on attaching limbs, with photos of how the ridges help)


3. I think that the fabric created by crocheting through the back loop makes stuffing less visible. This means that you don’t need to use a super-tiny crochet hook to make a tight fabric. You can just crochet through the back loop!

Convinced? If you want to give it a try, here’s how to crochet through the back loop. It’s pretty easy, and your fabric will look like the photo, below.

To do this, when you’re crocheting, simply insert the hook only in the back loop of the stitch, as pictured. You’ll notice this is slightly different than crocheting through both loops, because there is only one loop on the hook.


And that’s it! Hope this has been helpful to you!

Thanks so much to Sandra hosting this tour stop! Feel free to follow the whole tour (check my blog: www.freshstitches.com/wordpress for the schedule), and learn lots about crocheting amigurumi!

And Thank You Stacey for taking the time to educate us!

There is still time to enter the Cuddly Crochet autographed book Giveaway, visit the post below this one.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Introducing Stacey Trock of "Freshstitches" New Book: Cuddly Crochet

This Giveaway is officially closed and we have a Winner! She goes by Lert on Ravelry and she's excitted she's won the book. I'm hoping she enjoys it and that we may even get to see a project or two!
Congratulations to Stacey Trock of "Freshstitches," she has just released her first book, Cuddly Crochet: adorable toys, hats and more.
I've had the pleasure of working with Stacey for the last few years, Sandrasingh.com carries the full line of her Amigurumi and other crochet patterns, so when she announced she was publishing a book I was very happy for her. This blog post is part of her "Cuddly Crochet Blog Tour" and features both an interview of Stacey and a Giveaway for an autographed copy of her new book! Details on how to enter are at the end of the post.
But first, Stacey shares this about her book..."I’m pleased to announce my new book: Cuddly Crochet: adorable toys, hats and more from Martingale Publishing. Writing the book has been an amazing experience, and the folks at Martingale have done an excellent job with the final book (especially the photographer: Brent Kane!).

The book includes 10 animals, and each animal has an accompanying project for a little one: either a blankie, hat or bib. Most of the projects in the book are suitable for beginner crocheters, and are designed to be unisex (I’ve noticed a lot of my yarn-store customers fretting about what to make for a baby whose gender isn’t yet known. Problem solved!)."

From the moment I saw Stacey's Amigurumi I fell in love with their personalities, this is why I added her line to my website, and I was always curious how she captured each animal's spirit. So I was excited when she agreed to do this interview with me.

1. Your Amigurumi designs are so whimsical and unique, what led you to designing them in the first place?
Aww, thanks! I started designing them because I was having a ‘quarter-life crisis’, as I like to call it. I finished school, and didn’t want to continue with that line of work… so I needed something to do! I’ve always loved crocheting, so I crocheted a koala and a lion as experiments. In retrospect, I have no idea how the idea came to me, but the samples were cute, and I decided to plunge in!

2. Where are you, or what are you doing most often, when you get inspired for a new design?
I love visiting the zoo and the Natural History Museum for animal inspiration… there are just so many animals! But really, I rarely come up with a design when I’m out looking at animals. I mean, I’ll sketch an animal, but how to convert it into a crochet pattern doesn’t hit me right then. Usually the design comes to me while I’m sitting on my sofa crocheting… I’ll be making an animal, and an idea for a new one just comes to me! I think my brain does a lot of processing without me noticing…

3. Your ability to capture an animal's personality and give it character is charming, did you always love animals or have plans to work with them at some point? (I guess what I'm trying to ask is why animals, have you always loved them?)
Of course, I love animals… I had dogs growing up (my favorite was a big, huggable Rottweiler named Mercedes), and I fostered dogs for a rescue group for a while. Even now that I’m pet-less, I ‘borrow’ my friend’s dog every Thursday, just to have some doggie-time.

What I love about crocheting animals is how creative it is. A cartoon/stuffed animal doesn’t always look like a perfect representation of the actual animal, but we all know what it is supposed to be, anyway. So, you can make a dog with a big nose, or extra-floppy ears, and someone will still look at it and say, ‘oh, it’s a dog!’. I appreciate taking my liberties with how the animals look!

4. What is your creative process when working on a new Amigurumi design, do you doodle, sketch, pick up your hook right away etc?
I go through phases. Designing amigurumi is only part of what I do as a designer (I also design other crocheted items as well as knit patterns), so I’ll have a couple weeks where I just crank out the amigurumi, and then a few weeks where I do other things.

I keep a running list of animals that I want to make. When it’s ‘amigurumi time’, I take a look at the list and pick out some that I feel like making. For example, recently, I went through a phase of making animals whose heads were constructed as part of the same piece as the body (instead of separate). I made a walrus, a snail, a lobster and a crab. That works well for me, because it allows me to really play with certain kinds of shapes and experiment.

Once I’ve selected the animals that I want to make, I look a lot of pictures of the animal- both real pictures and clip-art sketches. Then, I make a mental note of what features are prominent on the animal. Like I said, there is always creativity when making an animal, but there are also ‘musts’. For example, when making my crab, I knew that he needed pinchy claws. After I determine the features that I want, I sketch, then start crocheting. I take notes on the pattern as I crochet, and type the pattern up when I’m done.

5. Who taught you to crochet and how long have you been doing it?
My mom taught me to crochet when I was little… and I guess I’ve been doing it for 21 years! (wow, that’s a long time!). I hit a real ‘crochet fever’ in my early teenage years… I used to spend all summer crocheting things to enter in the county fair. My crocheting tapered off a bit through college… but now it’s back!

6. What is your favorite crochet technique?
For amigurumi, single crocheting through the back loop is my signature. I like the look that it gives to the fabric, and the stuffing isn’t easily seen through once the animal is stuffed. I recently realized why I crochet through the back loop... my mom makes this one afghan where you crochet through the back loop in order to create a certain texture. I learned to crochet from her while she was making the afghans… and I guess I thought that’s how you were supposed to crochet all of the time! So, since I’ve been doing it that way for so long, it’s what’s most comfortable for me.

7. Are there any special techniques used in your new book?
One special technique is what I call the ‘sloppy slip knot’. When you make amigurumi, the standard slip knot leaves a little hole in the center of your work, which allows stuffing to poke out. Using the sloppy slip knot allows you to start without that hole in the center.

I know there are lots of tricks (like magic ring) out there for starting amigurumi without a hole, I think that my technique is fairly easy… and becomes a habit after not too long.

8. Do you have a favorite yarn to work with? What is your favorite brand of crochet hook?
I use Ella Rae Classic and Plymouth Galway for my animals. They are both nice 100% wools, which are easy to work with (not too splitty), hold their shape well, and the yarns come in a wide range of colors. The colors available are really important to me… a lot of yarn lines have a restricted number of colors. There are some lovely materials out there, but sometimes a certain line will only be released in 10 or so colors… and that doesn’t provide a whole lot of animal options!

Hands down, my favorite hook is Susan Bates. I only use ‘in line’ hooks, where the shaft doesn’t narrow too much before the head. That factor alone knocks out a lot of brands. I also like to have a little bit of wiggle room in the hook area, so I don’t like a hook area that is too small (so that the yarn slips out). Since I crochet so much, I want to start trying some hooks that have ergonomic handles… that’s on my to-do list!

9. Any plans for a second book?
Oh, I hope so! I have lots of ideas for more animals, more kiddie items, and I’m pretty passionate about Earth-friendly yarns. So, I’m cooking up a couple of book ideas. Writing a book depends not only on your ideas, but also on how the market is going, and what the publishing company thinks will be popular… so fingers crossed!

To see the full line of Stacey's crochet patterns visit her website Freshstitches.com or my site, Sandrasingh.com. Stacey is an expert in the art of crochet and wants other fiber artists to be successful at it too, if you've been wanting to learn how to crochet or expend you skills she offers a variety of Crochet Video Tutorials. To keep up with Stacey's designing visit her blog, Stacey Trock's Fresh Stitching. And this is the link to purchase a copy of Cuddly Crochet!

To enter the Giveaway for an autographed copy of her new book Cuddly Crochet leave a comment under this blog post with your contact information and to gain an additional entry follow me on Twitter, I'm Sandrasinghcom and Tweet "I entered Freshstitches Cuddly Crochet book giveaway on Knittingwithsandrasingh.blogspot. Your should enter too."


Winner will be announced Friday April 16th.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

March Showers bring April Flowers!

Easter Sunday we went to Verdes in Dripping Springs to do brunch with my brother and the Easter Bunny.
On Saturday April 3th we took a drive out to the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center. If you've never been, and you like flowers, I strongly recommend it. The grounds are lovely and all the rain we had this spring had all the flowers in full bloom
Here I am in a field of Blue Bonnets. One small item, no pets allowed so we didn't get a chance to take a picture of Toffee with the Blue Bonnets, a Texas tradition!
This shot could be at my house, but its not!
I'm loving these yellow daisies.
The Center had some great sculpture too, these giant ants were just a small sample.
And of course where ever you have fresh water in Austin you have turtles!