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Showing posts with the label stash

He's Got Attitude

It's about as serious as things can get right now.  We're hunkered down when we'd prefer to go out, volunteer, and somehow try and save lives and reduce suffering, staying home unless we are essential. Because, we understand, it's the kindest thing we can do for others right now, not to mention for ourselves and our families. So I've been sewing masks for our local health center. And, naturally, I've also turned again to knitting from time to time. Recently when my neighbor Marc and I were chatting over the fence at a respectable 18-foot distance, he said he had a new idea for a hat, and it should say "roll." "Why roll?" he said recently on Instagram. "Because that's what my father would say: roll with the punches. So that's what we need to do now."   If I were this professor's student, I'd get on with it.  And knowing I had some leftover yarn tucked away in my stash, I got to work. Now to me, Marc i...

The Finisher: My Journey in Forensic Knitting

Treasured stitches: I have finished some four dozen hats and scarves, along with several sweaters, completing half-done projects and knitting up a vast stash of high quality yarns and fibers. One day a few months after our mother passed away, my sister and I loaded up my car with a bounty of my mother's uncompleted knitting projects and her abundant stash of luxury fibers. "It's your inheritance!" my sister joked, though we were both heartbroken. She is not a knitter—not yet anyway. I'm the one with the knitting gene, and my Mom always called me "the finisher." Here is a fraction of my Mom's projects and  yarn stash — all of which I brought home. Back home, I unpacked and took a long look at my new UFO's (unfinished objects). The dozens of half-finished and nearly done scarves, hats, and sweaters filling my living room were all gorgeous, all made with quality yarn, and all just a bit overwhelming. "What on earth ...

The Joys of Scrap-Yarn Knitting

Every knitter accumulates leftover yarn from projects.  It would be a shame to waste beautiful, high-quality wool and other fibers.  Over the years, these leftover balls and scraps grow into sizable stashes, especially when you inherit yarn from other knitters. So some knitters like me turn to scrap-yarn knitting. It's a fun, creative, and liberating process. You can let go of the rules and play, using only the most basic of patterns. Here's my first project, a scrap-yarn cardigan, circa 2009. Same sweater different scarf, as shown with my friend Becky. The 1985 book that riveted me. It was in the window of Homespun Boutique on the Ithaca Commons. From the richly textured stitches forming that sweater, I moved on to more color play after learning new techniques from  Kaffe Fassett and Brandon Mably  when they visited Cornell and led a weekend workshop. Kaffe's work caught my eye in the early 1980s, and the story of how this Big Sur, California...