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Showing posts with label cashmere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cashmere. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Extraordinary embellishing

Morley last night and a few hours spent on the embellisher, led to these.

The first four are wool felt background with felted pieces of of old blanket.  The back is as interesting as the front.

 Embellisher and bling postcards 006 Embellisher and bling postcards 008Embellisher and bling postcards 009 Embellisher and bling postcards 010 

Wool blanket, with cashmere cream yarn and black merino wool tops , again front and back.

Embellisher and bling postcards 013 Embellisher and bling postcards 014

Different wool blanket, with merino wool tops form the Handweavers Studio, front and back.  I really like the shadow effect in the other side from where the embellisher needles went in.

Embellisher and bling postcards 015 Embellisher and bling postcards 016

Cotton quilt wadding, with cream cashmere yarn embellished at the right, and folded and embellished to itself on the left.

Embellisher and bling postcards 012

Tuesday, 4 May 2010

What to do when you don't feel like sewing - pick up a bigger needle

I haven't felt like sewing anything major for a few weeks, but did want to do something with my hands. A couple of my neighbours have started knitting, so when I found 8 hanks of this 100% cashmere yarn in a charity shop for an unbelievable £2.00, I had to buy it.

In the eighties ( yes, I am that age) I used to knit a lot, and loved the challenge of the patterns by Patricia Roberts . As I was a student, there was no way I could afford to buy the finished jumpers. I was then a bench scientist, and my experiments needed me to to a very repetitive task every 4 minutes, for up to 4h, so there was lots of time in between to knit. This was before the days of ipods, Nintendo DS, itouch phones and the like, remember. I also loved patterns by Sasha Kagan and Christian de Falbe.


So when I decided to knit this yarn, I wanted a bit of a challenge. I found it in this pattern from Cheryl Niamath in Knitty. I've never done a thumb shaping, although have knitted in the round. Lovely beechwood needles from Mrs Moon set me off on the right track.


I knitted these on 3.5 mm needles as I have quite small hands, and also lengthened the main section to 24 rows, rather than 18, as I wanted these to extend up my wrists. The thumb was certainly a challenge, but good photos on cheryl's blog show helped me to understand how to do this.

These fit beautifully, so I think I'll be running up some more in the indigo and cream yarn that were part of the original bargain. What next - a Hanne Falkenberg mermaid jacket perhaps?