Scholarly & Acquisitive Knitbabble
Aug. 3rd, 2007 01:32 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Covered:
Ergo! If you do not knit, you might not want to have clicked.
Interlocking Foam Mats.
When one knits with natural fibers, one must then take the result, wash it with lovingkindness, s-t-r-e-t-c-h it out to the specified size, and then conspire to keep it that way 'til it dries, typically with some medieval-looking arrangement of pins and wires.
Heretofore, I've been doing this by the simple expedient of nicking all the large towels in the house, then pinning through them and into the carpet and pad below, but
countgeiger is less than fond of the part where he has no towels with which to dry himself after his shower--and I suppose I can't blame him. The Yarn Harlot may--in print!--but I may not, as lo, I like a bit of towelling-off myself.
So, once we determined that knitting is not just a sometime habit in my world, it was time to get some sort of dedicated arrangement together that didn't involve denuding the bathroom.
Speak not to me of your blocking boards, which are unwieldy and unitasking. Instead, the wide world of knitblogging comes, as it does now and again, to the rescue, with the idea of using interlocking foam rubber mats. At 2'x2' (4 ft2/0.37 m2), I can set out as many or as few as I need for a project, although I have to admit, I kinda wince at the fact that to get enough mats to lay out the 74" diameter Cap Shawl whose border nears completion, I'm going to have to get sixteen of the damn things: getting nine, for a square six feet on a side, falls short, and it's not like I can fudge as the damn thing, as a nonagon, is pretty darn round.
Well, at least they come in pretty colors, and at the end of it I can lend them to Greyhaven for lounging areas at parties, or emergency crash space or, um, something.
Research Materials for Our Troth III.
Scholarly Rearch
For the Nordic Knitting Conference in Seattle just after my birthday, I've got multiple motives: one, it's hands-on research for Our Troth III:The Search for Shope Heathen Crafts, and another, hey, I get to scratch scholarly, religious, social, and crafty itches all at once. Who could not love that sort of efficiency, I ask you?
Thus, I have Planning to do, starting with research materials:
At least, that's what shows up on a History--Knitting subject search on good old MELVYL, which means I can whistle them up here at work. Er. As soon as I pay up the overdue fines that accrued from misreading a few due dates. The Bibliography may turn up some more books as a follow-up, but the word is that the History does quite well at being what it says. Of these, only History is in print and available for purchase.
Practical Application
Then, of course, there's the other side: what to do with it once I've got it. As I suspected given the Dís of Knitting (and don't think I won't call her that in the book), the press she founded has several applicable books.
Including a whole Scandinavian Knitting section.
Thus, good little fangirl that I am, in this section I should start with books written by people whose classes I've signed up for at the conference:
- Squooshy foam rubber mats in interlocking tiles for your floor, either to exercise, bounce babies, or...okay, block your knittin'.
- Books for to purchase to do research for OT III--by which I mean, books on knittin'.
Ergo! If you do not knit, you might not want to have clicked.
Interlocking Foam Mats.
When one knits with natural fibers, one must then take the result, wash it with lovingkindness, s-t-r-e-t-c-h it out to the specified size, and then conspire to keep it that way 'til it dries, typically with some medieval-looking arrangement of pins and wires.
Heretofore, I've been doing this by the simple expedient of nicking all the large towels in the house, then pinning through them and into the carpet and pad below, but
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So, once we determined that knitting is not just a sometime habit in my world, it was time to get some sort of dedicated arrangement together that didn't involve denuding the bathroom.
Speak not to me of your blocking boards, which are unwieldy and unitasking. Instead, the wide world of knitblogging comes, as it does now and again, to the rescue, with the idea of using interlocking foam rubber mats. At 2'x2' (4 ft2/0.37 m2), I can set out as many or as few as I need for a project, although I have to admit, I kinda wince at the fact that to get enough mats to lay out the 74" diameter Cap Shawl whose border nears completion, I'm going to have to get sixteen of the damn things: getting nine, for a square six feet on a side, falls short, and it's not like I can fudge as the damn thing, as a nonagon, is pretty darn round.
Well, at least they come in pretty colors, and at the end of it I can lend them to Greyhaven for lounging areas at parties, or emergency crash space or, um, something.
Research Materials for Our Troth III.
Scholarly Rearch
For the Nordic Knitting Conference in Seattle just after my birthday, I've got multiple motives: one, it's hands-on research for Our Troth III:
Thus, I have Planning to do, starting with research materials:
- History of Hand Knitting, A by Richard Rutt.
- Annotated Bibliography on Hand Knitting with an Historical Introduction, An, by Virginia Snodgrass Gifford.
- Sacred History of Knitting, The, by Heinz Edgar Kiewe.
At least, that's what shows up on a History--Knitting subject search on good old MELVYL, which means I can whistle them up here at work. Er. As soon as I pay up the overdue fines that accrued from misreading a few due dates. The Bibliography may turn up some more books as a follow-up, but the word is that the History does quite well at being what it says. Of these, only History is in print and available for purchase.
Practical Application
Then, of course, there's the other side: what to do with it once I've got it. As I suspected given the Dís of Knitting (and don't think I won't call her that in the book), the press she founded has several applicable books.
Including a whole Scandinavian Knitting section.
Thus, good little fangirl that I am, in this section I should start with books written by people whose classes I've signed up for at the conference:
- Annemor Sundbø, teaching "Norwegian Traditional Design". Here's her bio, nicked fresh from her website:
Annemor Sundbø (born 1949) is a textile designer and teacher of weaving. She owns and operates a knitting workshop ”Ose Ullvare” in Setesdal, about 110 km from Kristiansand, Norway.
She ran the last remaining shoddy factory in Norway, Torridal Tweed og Ulldynefabrikk, from 1993 to 2006. The products were made of recycled wool. It all started in 1983 when Annemor wanted some experience in a small scale woollen mill. The owner agreed to train her on one condition … Annemor had to buy the factory first!
She has written thesetwothree books:- Translated by Amy Lightfoot. Everyday Knitting: Treasures from a Ragpile. ISBN 82-994657-1-0.
- This is the results of Annemor's plunge into the rag pile of her "new" factory, so it's going to be a good historical resource as well as source of inspiration for future projects.
- Translated by Carol Huebscher Rhoades. Invisible Threads in Knitting. ISBN 82-994657-3-7.
- Hint: By "Invisible Threads", here, she's not talking about nylon monofilament. More threads of association. Y'know, wyrd. ;) This one apparently connects knitting and folk culture, so I'd jolly well better buy this one too.
- Translated by Amy Lightfoot: Setesdal Sweaters, The History of the Norwegian Lice Pattern. ISBN 82-994657-2-9
- The "lice" pattern (no, not the world's most appealing name) is traditional, Norwegian, and is that one where you have a big field of one color (traditionally black) with occasional single-stitch ticks of a contrasting color (usually white). The two-yarn technique was done to make warmer sweaters, and being endlessly and elaborately decorative was a way to enrich the trousseau. I've yet to do an adult sweater, and this one isn't as directly related to the research angle as the other two; it'll come last.
- Marilyn van Keppel--she doesn't have her own books, but she's translated several, and both the originals and translations are available via Schoolhouse Press, in their lace section. These are:
- Bundanaurriklaedid aka Faroese Knitting Patterns: Knitted Shawls tr Marilyn van Keppel
- Nineteen patterns, in the original Faroese, and an article about the history of the knitted shawl on the Faroe Islands.
- Þríhyrnur og Langsjöl aka Three-Cornered and Long Shawls, by Sigridur Halldórsdóttir, trans Marilyn van Keppel
- Another translation, this one of a "near-legendary" Icelandic book.
Now, this lady designs things I actually enjoy knitting...nom nom nom...
So that's what's entwining itself around my autumn; you?
-- Lorrie
Re: slowly heading towards Spring here but still knitting
Date: 2007-08-09 06:44 am (UTC)The mathematical and technical I think definitely has an appeal, as well as the creative and crafty. There seem to be a fair few men around who knit lace! I figure the more men are visible with such things the less stigmatised it becomes for men to be seen engaged in such projects. I will be embarking on baby knits soon as my sister and brother-in-law have impending offspring due in October.
And as something of an aside, I really appreciate your reflections on knitting as devotional work. It's something I've thought about and that's all so far (I'd say I'm still at 'learning craft' stage and not quite at the point where the craft becomes art as well). Perhaps something on this would be good for the article too, along with the historical and academic detail.
Re: slowly heading towards Spring here but still knitting
Date: 2007-08-09 05:13 pm (UTC)Well, I'm not surprised that that shy, aloof creature known as "He of One Stick and Two Balls" exists--but it is always a pleasant surprise to find another, a little more of a surprise than seeing a knitter in public in the first place.
The gender distribution seems to move closer to parity among younger knitters, or so the Yarn Harlot catalogues on her book tours.
The mathematical and technical I think definitely has an appeal, as well as the creative and crafty. There seem to be a fair few men around who knit lace! I figure the more men are visible with such things the less stigmatised it becomes for men to be seen engaged in such projects.
Well, sure!
And you'd think I'd see more of it here in San Francisco: can't you just imagine a flaming queen* on a bus, clicking his way with full forward momentum through a scarf in Shetland lace?
I will be embarking on baby knits soon as my sister and brother-in-law have impending offspring due in October.
Did I ever post about the great fun it is to knit the Baby Surprise Jacket (http://www.knitting-and.com/wiki/Baby_Surprise_Jacket)? "Look, gang, a moonbat amoeba!" *flip flop hey presto* "I mean baby jacket! The way the paired double decreases make nicely mitered corners is a wonder of engineering. Should you get this pattern through buying The Opinionated Knitter, which is a newsletter anthology, the very next pattern will give you a hood, booties, and blanket, all constructed similarly. As written, it wants about 129 m sportweight and a 3.5 mm needle, or as-needed to achieve 24 st/10 cm. Two hundredish-meter skeins will get you a whole ensemble with a bit left over.
(continued next comment)
-- Lorrie
* - In case the idiom doesn't survive the trans-Pacific crossing: a flamboyant, homosexual man. The flaming queen does not, as a rule, transvest, unlike his near cousin, the drag queen. I work in San Francisco, We Get That a Lot.
Re: idiom
Date: 2007-08-10 06:10 am (UTC)Re: idiom
Date: 2007-08-10 04:24 pm (UTC)-- Lorrie
Re: slowly heading towards Spring here but still knitting
Date: 2007-08-10 06:16 am (UTC)Re: slowly heading towards Spring here but still knitting
Date: 2007-08-10 04:27 pm (UTC)And in this sentiment, you and Elizabeth Zimmerman the Knit-Dís would be in complete accord--she says as much in the original newsletter where she introduces the pattern for the BSJ.
I can wholly recommend, if you can get it and/or afford the shipping, The Opinionated Knitter--several of her first circulated newsletters interspersed with essays about her life.
-- Lorrie
Devotional Knitbabble
Date: 2007-08-09 05:43 pm (UTC)*half-grin* It's not an aside to me...besides, in my own person I'm not one to wear shawls. Making them as devotional projects lets me make them, look at them, and waft them about without having to recoil from the way-too-girlyness to which I might otherwise succumb.
It's something I've thought about and that's all so far (I'd say I'm still at 'learning craft' stage and not quite at the point where the craft becomes art as well).
When trying to broach this to a skeptical crowd, I start by explaining that this isn't wholly unlike advertising.
No, wait, stay with me.
If a devotional object is for a particular wight, that wight will have likes and dislikes and, in some cases, whole lists from which one might pick and choose. Take, for example, Freyja. I could make things that call to mind sunlight-dappled forest paths, dark tangled thickets, golden abundance, war-lust and seið-magic, on and on.
But, of course, most obvious of these would be a falcon-cloak.
For Freyja, I would want to go with a palette reminiscent of many raptors, but when I made that, I had in mind specifically the red-tailed hawk, Buteo jamaicensis (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Buteo_jamaicensis), especially when I found an ombre colorway named red tail hawk.
I found two good colors in DK weight and doubled them while knitting a simple feather-and-fan pattern I nicked out of Folk Shawls because it seemed to me to look like outspread wings: a broadening isoceles triangle.
For a very occasional accent, I would knit a row tripled with an eyelash yarn that was gold with gold metallic.
I knit that shawl all across our Southwest, which is desert of many ways and means. I knit it, and, if not with every stitch certainly with most of them, I thought about Freyja, and falcons, and everything connected with them, and sang little songs, and all of that.
Advertising. I sought out things that reminded me and others of Freyja, and while putting them together I did so mindfully, thinking Freyja thoughts and doing Freyja things, and sure enough I came out with a fairly well-haunted falcon cloak, which I then gave to
(I had knitted it for me, but found out it wasn't for me halfway through. Bah! However, I know what the Freyja shawl I get to keep is, so that is all right.)
That's all it is. Picking projects and materials aforethought, working mindfully, and going on.
Perhaps something on this would be good for the article too, along with the historical and academic detail.
I daresay I will--but nothing too loud, that sort of thing can startle folks. ;)
(As a sidebar, Frigga also has a falcon-cloak, but as her home is on a marsh (Fensalir, "Fen hall"), I would go with an osprey theme instead if making one for her: white, pale cream, and dark brown, with the occasional flicker of pale blue.)
Hm, now, have I overrun my space yet? Let's press the button and find out:
-- Lorrie
Re: Devotional Knitbabble
Date: 2007-08-10 06:24 am (UTC)And a bit of a further aside, it amuses me that some people get twitchy/startled about inclusion of devotional activities in the context of other discussions. It is about religious practice as well as belief and historical/literary criticism isn't it? *best pot-stirring grin*
Re: Devotional Knitbabble
Date: 2007-08-10 04:28 pm (UTC);)
Also?
http://www.shawlministry.com/
-- Lorrie