Tuesday 8 April 2014

Florence

When thinking about pattern support or developing a new yarn it is very tempting to focus on all new, all of the time. It was while pondering new commissions though that we kept stumbling over a designer we liked and then a pattern caught our eye that really made us think..... is a relaunch a fun idea?


We contacted said designer and asked the same question, got a few fabulous knitters and bloggers onboard and the result was a unanimous 'YES! Let's relaunch this using Cumulus!' from everyone. 


I think you'll agree the results have been pretty spectacular...


DSC01518
(c) AmandaLynA


Florence
(c) Jan Harvey


So let's fill you in on the details so you can get knitting as soon as possible shall we? This is a FREE pattern, available for direct download on Ravelry courtesy of Karina Westermann. Born in Denmark and currently residing in Scotland, Karina “Karie” Westermann is a creative and multi-talented knitwear designer, knitting and crochet tutor, translator and technical editor. Able to work in multiple roles within the knitting industry, Karie explores her craft with a passion for the tradition and authenticity.


Florence_by_JanHarvey__23__medium2
(c)JanHarvey


This delicate scarf knits up quickly and uses exactly one ball of Fyberspates Cumulus. We particularly liked this aspect as it gives you a chance to test the new yarn out before committing to a larger project. If you really like it though, you can modify the length of the scarf to use slightly less or more depending upon your preferences.


It makes a perfect gift: a scarf which works with an everyday outfit, yet is pretty enough to wear for special occasions. Make one in your favourite colour or even better, make several!


This scarf is designed to be a good introduction to working with fine halo-ey yarns and lacy stitch patterns. More experienced knitters will enjoy having it as an on-the-go project. The revised pattern includes a new chart and written instructions. It also includes optional beading instructions.


Cumulus dark
(c) AmandaLynA


Oh... and the name of this perfect pattern? Florence


Cumulus statue
(c) AmandaLynA


Our test knitters loved working with both the pattern and the new yarn and we're thrilled to have such strong notes to help you get to know our new yarn. You can see more great photos from Jan Harvey as well as her project notes here on Ravelry. We just loved this read on her gorgeous model. 


Florence_by_Jan_Harvey__48__medium2
(c) Jan Harvey


Amanda Anganes did a great job of both blogging about her experiences as well as adding plenty of notes up on Ravelry too. We particularly loved hearing about the reaction Amanda was getting to Cumulus while working with it. "I've been showing it to my friends and family as I've been knitting away and without fail everyone is stunned when they feel it." That's great to hear and even better is that Amanda is now planning on making a sweater with Cumulus too. We can't wait to see that one!


So are you feeling the Cumulus love? Remember this pattern only takes one ball so why not treat yourself to some as currently have some in stock. Our 76% Baby Suri Alpaca, 24% Mulberry Silk yarn has already had such a great response that it's really great to have a 'go-to' pattern that we know works with the yarn. 


It doesn't end there either. We've got a few more relaunches to look forward from tried and tested designs as well as some new material being edited and checked as we speak! 


 



Monday 7 April 2014

Spotlight on Faery Wings

Faery Wings, our 4ply silk and mohair yarn, is the most popular of our hand dyed bases. With 67% Silk, 23% Kid Mohair and 10% Nylon, this is a yarn that just loves to drape and shine. Available in 383 yards (350 metres)per 100g skein, this yarn knits up with a soft silky halo.


L_FaerywingsAqua
Faery Wings in 'Aqua'


Mohair takes dye exceptionally well and is an ethereal, luxury fibre that is surprisingly durable. The great thing about mohair is that it takes the dye differently to the silk, creating wonderful effects on the yarn.


L_FaerywingsMagenta
Faery Wings in 'Magenta'


Patterns that work well with Faery Wings make good use of this luxurious blend, creating fabrics that are soft and airy. Both Silk and Mohair have an ability to be warm in Winter but cool in Summer as they both have moisture wicking properties (ie they'll keep you dry!). We've put together some suggested pattern ideas to make the best of your skeins of Faery Wings. 


 


Boo Knits Dragonfly Wings is a free downloadable pattern on Ravelry that is a versatile, wide, shallow, triangular shawl/wrap that can be worn in a variety of ways. The mixture of stocking stitch with garter stitch ridges really shows both the sheen and the hand dyed quality of Faery Wings. The construction of this top down shawl with lace border creates a shawl with a romantic delicate feel that is the perfect compliment to Faery Wings. KnittingFiona on Ravelry's version demonstrates the perfect mix: simple lace, a wide wingspan for drape, hand dyes and that luxury silk and mohair sheen.  


Boo
(c) KnittingFiona


Another accessory pattern that showcases the wonderful drape of Faery Wings is Song of the Sea by Inspiration Knits. This versatile cowl develops in lovely Art Deco waves and only requires one skein so it's a perfect little taste of luxury. Inspiration Knits has several patterns that work well with Faery Wings as she is quite a fan. Just look at the soft undulating waves of this cowl, there's a designer who knows how to make a luxury hand dyed yarn shine!


Faery
(c) YogicKnitter


For something entirely different, but no less beautiful, try Simple Ziggurat by Asa Tricosa. This sweater begins with a cast-on for back and shoulders and is then knit all in one go from top to bottom with some little zigging and zagging, producing nicely tailored shoulders, a curved neckline, and a slightly fitted body with some little ease. Not only is this a fascinating knit but it's stash frugal too- working the Faery Wings into a lofty fabric means that only 2 skeins are required for the main colour portion of the body. Faery Wings is a yarn that can go the extra mile and it lends itself well to light garments that are warm without the bulk. 


Simple
(c) Asa Tricosa


Faery Wings is also suprisingly good for colourwork too! While most colourwork relies on sharp, crisp yarns without a halo, the Silk content of Faery Wings means that it still has definition enough to carry simple motifs. Take this scarf for example, worked up by StitchNerd (project notes here). The Cloisonne Scarf by Susan Ashcroft is a scarf that makes use of one solid colour to both control and highlight bright shades in variegated yarn. StitchNerd's finished scarf really highlights the way Faery Wings can shine in a colourwork item. 


Cloisone
(c) Stitchnerd


Hopefully this post has inspired some Faery Wings pattern choices for you. If you're still struggling to picture what your Faery Wings skein wants to be when it grows up, remember you can use the Ravelry pattern database by selecting 'Silk AND Mohair' like this. If you'd love to try some Faery Wings, please visit the Fyberspates shop where we currently have some in stock. 



Friday 4 April 2014

Pewter

Fyberspates has made the front cover again!


TKN70.fiona.10604
(c) The Knitter


Issue 70 of The Knitter has a Fiona Morris design on the front cover: a lace cardigan called 'Pewter' knit in Scrumptious High Twist DK in Pewter. The Hourglass Purl Lace pattern worked all over creates a beautiful open work fabric that makes this DK weight cardigan a perfect transitional piece for Spring and Summer. Sizes included in the pattern range from 81cm- 126cm (32-50 inches) and calls for 5-8 skeins of High Twist DK depending on the size you choose. 


 


TKN70.fiona2
(c) The Knitter


Scrumptious High Twist DK is a delicious high twist DK weight yarn that comprises of 50% Superwash Merino, and 50% Silk. Available in 212m/ 230yds per 100gms this hard working yarn is as soft as it is shiny. It's a real bit of luxury to add to your wardrobe. 


ScrumptiousdkHightwistSilver
Scrumptious High Twist DK in Silver


Due to high demand following the success of this pattern, there will be pre order slots available for those wishing to purchase High Twist in the Pewter colourway. Shipping will commence on 15th April 2014 so pop over now to secure your skeins. Remember, due to the nature of hand dyeing, a sweater quantity will need to have skeins alternated every few rows to avoid any obvious colour changes. 


Don't forget to come over to the Ravelry group and share your knitting!



Tuesday 1 April 2014

Spotlight on Felicity Ford

Yesterday on the blog we told you about Felicity's Kickstarter campaign to fund her KNITSONIK Stranded Colourwork Sourcebook. This book shows you how to celebrate your world in stranded colourwork. Taking an enthusiastic approach to shading, colours, and Shetland Wool, it celebrates making deeper connections with everyday life through knitting. 


Legwarmer_beer
(c) KNITSONIK


It's a project that just captured everyone's attention and it's so exciting to see so many backers already who wish to see the finished product as much as we do. Felicity very kindly answered some questions for Jeni to get a further glimpse into the creative world in which she lives. 


 


Jeni: What was your first ever Fair Isle project and how did it turn out?




The first stranded colourwork project I knitted was Selbu Modern by Kate Gagnon Osborn. I had a friend in Reading who was doing some colourwork, and it looked impossible to me! But my friend said - with huge confidence - "it's the easiest thing in the world, just pick up the stitches as though knitting Continental style with one hand, and throw the yarn round the needle in the English style with your other; hold one colour per hand: it's as simple as that". I went home inspired and immediately cast on my Selbu Modern. I made it in two shades of New Lanark - a lovely warm blue and blossomy pink - and it turned out to be beautiful in its construction and tension, but unwearably enormous! I felted it in the washing machine twice to try and make it a sensible size, but it remained ever massive. Sizing issues aside, I was very pleased with how the fabric turned out, I loved the tension I achieved, and - as my friend suggested - I found it surprisingly easy. Selbu Modern is a great starter project because it uses only two colours, and it's really easy to see where you are in the pattern.   




 




Jeni: What would you say to people perhaps who are completely terrified about having a go at Fair Isle because they might mess it up?




Ooh, great question! I saw a slogan once - "if you're not making a mess, you're not making" - which I think is a very good thing to remember! I have loads of practical tips for avoiding practical problems which I'll get to in a moment, but I think that overcoming The Fear of Messing Things Up is also important. With my book I want to to ensure - as much as possible - that creative experiments in stranded colourwork go right for knitters, but I think it's also important to share how useful it can be when things go wrong as they sometimes do!




For instance the massive Selbu Modern taught me some really important things about the changes in my tension when knitting with two colours. I also made a truly hideous hat once out of Alice Starmore's Hebridean 2-ply; the colours I picked out clashed horribly when knitted up together, and I realised then that looking at colours as an artist thinking about making a painting is totally different from looking at colours as a knitter thinking about making a garment. It was an important realisation for me and I learnt loads.


Seaside_sock
(c) KNITSONIK




...All that said, we all know how long it takes to knit things, and how disheartening it can be when something which has taken hours to make goes wrong. Therefore I would always start with a small project when approaching a new knitting technique, because you will learn lots, but won't have lost as much precious time if everything ends in disaster... a hat is a good starting point as it's a relatively small canvas and you only have to make one!




Also, after my own conversion to The Ways of Stranded Knitting, I always tell people who want to have a go to try knitting Continental style (or English style if they already knit Continental) as I find the two handed method especially easy to follow and understand. If you can knit both ways, it's really easy to get started with a two-handed approach to stranded colourwork. I'd also say to try and be as relaxed and loose with the knitting as possible, as too loose is definitely better than too tight. It also helps a lot to knit with something forgiving with a bit of a fuzzy halo like Shetland wool or New Lanark, as these yarns are more forgiving of tension issues than something really smooth and defined like a superwash merino or mercerised cotton which will really emphasise any flaws in your knitting!




Overall, there are many practical tips on how to avoid messing everything up, but in my knitting I love to match these up with a healthy respect and appreciation for all the wonderful things that can be learned When You Make a Mess!




 




Jeni: Personally I think taking everyday objects and things and being able to turn it into something I can knit into a sweater/accessory sounds quite honestly a blimin' brilliant idea.  It would mean  I could create something unique and special, not only for me, but also I think very meaningful personal gifts for loved ones.. by translating things we share into Fair Isle. Have you ever created something using Fair Isle like this? If not already done, can you tell me about a project you would love to create, what things you would translate and why for someone special?




I'm really glad you like the core concept! You've got it - it's about making special things which are also beautiful and wearable, and which contain our own stories. The idea has come about because of my big need to celebrate the ordinary stuff I find around me. I love the everyday... before I got these ideas about stranded colourwork, I was knitting things like tea bags and potatoes. But knitted teabags and potatoes are not as useful as mittens and sweaters! Being able to inscribe everyday things into my clothes celebrates the shape and texture of my life, and I really like that the end results can then return to daily life, and be worn in all those places and situations which inspired their making.


Bricks_photo
(c) KNITSONIK




One of my favourite ideas - which I explore in the book - concerns turning the brickwork of Reading into stranded colourwork, and copying the patterns in the brickwork into knitting charts. The more I do this, the more I appreciate the artistry of the bricklayers who built this town, and the little details they added in here and there; it makes me love the terraced streets more and more to examine them in this way. How fun will it be to walk down roads full of gorgeous Victorian brickwork wearing a hat which celebrates those precise places?! Figuring out ways to make clothes based on these things struck me as being a really rich area to explore, and as you say, gives great scope for gift-giving, too... because I am sure everyone has things like this which they notice in daily life and would love to celebrate in some small way.




Bricks_screeprint_
(c) KNITSONIK



 




In recent years at Christmas, I have created special hats for Mark which refer to aspects of our life together; one year I put bears and weasels on it because we always joke that I am a weasel and he is a bear, and on another year, I commemorated our walks together around Oxfordshire in a design featuring the barley crop growing in our favourite fields and the hares that played there. I also made some socks based on the distinctive flint and stone used in Reading's oldest church - St Mary's Butts - and I think of it every time I go into town. 




My Listening Tunic celebrates all the sound recording work that I do and is embellished with the play/pause/record buttons which I use on my digital recorders, and I love that correlation between form and function. I would like very much to knit something for Mark which is about our wonderful cat in a way which would be a nice secret between us and an elegant thing for him to wear. Mark wouldn't be seen dead in a clownish sweater with comedy felines on it, but if I could find an abstract way to show the soft shapes of Joey's paws and how the light glints red and burgundy on his black fur I think I could make something sophisticated and referential, which he would like to wear and which I would like to design.  




 




Jeni: Personally, knowing me and knowing my customers, I suspect having basic patterns/formats to create small objects/accessories will be the most likely way I would  be tempted into having a go… please, please can you include a basic mitten pattern I can start with, and maybe something else smallish we can get started on to start with?




I agree that having something small and basic to get started with is a really good idea for the book, and there will indeed be one or two patterns which you can plug your own custom colourwork into! My core concept is that making amazing swatches gives you ideas which can be applied to many, many subsequent garments... but I agree that having something right there in the book to get started with is a brilliant way to begin, and how pleasing to be able to swatch, cast on, and then knit something truly unique.  





 





Jeni: You have chosen to use Jamieson & Smith yarn, I do have a lovely selection of colours languishing in my stash ready for your book to come out.. but I wonder if you can tell me why this yarn is so good for Fair Isle.. just incase peeps have never tried it?




I find it a very forgiving yarn for stranded colourwork. As the name suggests, there are strands involved in colourwork - you are always carrying one colour along the back of the knitting - and if you hold this too tight or too loose, you can end up with a puckered fabric which is very displeasing! You need to work out your own tension issues, but the J & S yarn goes a long way to helping you create a smooth fabric! It relaxes in a lovely way when you block it, settling down into an even surface which is surprisingly light and lofty. I also love the palette of the J & S yarns; there is a fantastic range of different shades, and I find it has just the right balance of grip and softness in my hands when I knit with it. 




I also enjoy the lovely halo which the Shetland wool produces; the fuzzy edges of this woolen-spun yarn do a great job of softening the edges of a graphic pattern, and makes it possible to achieve very subtle and delicate shading through a range of colours. 




Also, the traceable nature of J & S yarn makes it very inspiring to work with. Meeting Oliver Henry and hearing about how the wool is gathered from all over Shetland, then spun at Curtis Wool in Yorkshire, I feel I understand transparently how this yarn is produced, and where it's from. I've visited some farms where it grows and met some of the people involved in its journey from sheep to shop, which makes me feel I can really trust it. 




Finally, Ella and Sandra are both amazing knitters with an incredible knowledge of their product, and they know the shades inside and out. I get a lot of confidence from knowing that I can call them up, and that they are totally experienced with the palette. I also feel good knowing that any knitters who want to work with this yarn after reading my book will also benefit from the amazing skill and knowledge at J & S. I think that in making a knitting book, it's important to feel that knitters will get a good experience of working with the yarn you recommend, and I really feel brilliant about recommending J & S on all fronts.




 




Jeni: Finally… do you ever get the urge to knit Raj’s tank tops???


Images
Raj and 'those' sweater vests....





YES! I love Raj's tank tops! He has some great Fair Isle designs in his wardrobe! I must confess though that I often find myself goofing off and wondering if there isn't a way to embed more science theory into those intricate designs? For instance, have you seen the amazing periodic table sweater? 





 




or this?




 





 




I love these examples, because it's exactly what I want to do with the book; embedding something personal and unique in your clothes for fun, for the creative challenge, and as a celebration of what you do and what you are about! So Raj's tank tops always make me think about how awesome if would be if some more of the theory in Big Bang could be inspiring the knitted motifs... but perhaps keeping the same awesome colours that he seems to like to wear! 




 




Thanks so much for the lovely questions and for helping spread the word on my Kickstarter Campaign! 


 


Don't forget to check in and see how Felicity's Kickstarter is going and perhaps even bid to part of the project!