Forgive the spelling - I couldn't resist. :)
I've got such a backlog of weaving and spinning to photograph - I'm trying to play a little catch-up here!
I've got 2 scarves and a table runner to show you - they've all been finished for awhile, but haven't had their beauty shots until now...
Handwoven Purple Illusion - this is a shadow weave scarf, woven with 10/2 in two different shades of purple:
Handwoven Northern Lights Scarf, woven in a faux-faux-ikat style - the warp is "fairy dust" yarn from Enchanted Knoll Farm, with a lovely subtle sparkle, and the weft is tencel:
Handwoven Overshot Runner, in 10/2 cotton and 5/2 cotton:
And for reading this far, your reward is a sneak peak of the warp I'm winding for the NEXT batch of random rainbow towels:
This is 1/5 of the warp - with a 13 yard warp, I can only fit so many threads (110) on the warping mill before it cries "I'm full, I'm full!" So I chain it off, set it aside, and start a new bout. This warp will be 5 chains, since I need 550 threads for these towels.
Showing posts with label home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home. Show all posts
Friday, November 30, 2012
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Safe and Sound
Hurricane Isaac battered us, but left us with no damage or floodwater in the house, for which we are truly grateful. We had sustained winds of 70 mph for several hours, and the storm hammered us for 2 days - it just.wouldn't.leave. We feared that the 15-20" of rain we received would overwhelm the pumping system and the waters would rise into the house, but we were glad to see them recede just in time. So many others were not so lucky.
Our power went out at 7pm Tuesday night, and wasn't restored until 8pm Friday night. All the contents of our refrigerator/freezer and our upright freezer perished. We don't own a generator - all we could do was open the windows (after the strong winds passed and died down to a "mere" 40-50 mph) and try to sleep in the heat and humidity (no such luck). We heard the "thunk" of small limbs and seed pods from the magnolia trees hitting the roof sporadically, and each time I worried that one would crash through a window, or take off shingles, but they all bounced off harmlessly.
Usually (if there is any "usually" with a force of nature) hurricanes move through fairly quickly, traveling at a good speed - so while they wreak havoc and leave damage in their wake, they LEAVE. This storm moved at a ridiculously slow pace of 6-8 mph - a runner with a good pair of shoes could have outrun it. Because it stuck around, it dumped much more rain, and delivered many more hours of strong winds than expected. Local levees (as opposed to the federal levee system, which is newly strengthened and held very well) overtopped and failed, flooding lower coastal parishes with storm surge. Swelling rivers rose over their banks and overwhelmed dams, sending rapidly rising water onto property and into homes.
Our area is safely inside the federal levees, so we weren't in danger of flash-flooding. The storm was forecast to "only" strengthen to a Category 1 - meaning sustained winds of 74-95 mph. We've historically "sheltered-in-place" for such storms, only leaving for the ones forecast to hit us at Category 2 or above. When we leave, we go to my sister's house in Hammond, which is northwest of here, about an hour's drive under normal circumstances. She lives in the country, on high ground, so there's no danger of flooding, and she has a generator to supply enough electricity to run the refrigerator, fans, and a small window air conditioning unit. That's where we sheltered for Hurricane Katrina (coincidentally EXACTLY 7 years before this storm, to the date).
We opted to stay home this time, and regretted it. We didn't feel that we were in danger of life and limb, and hoped to mitigate any possible flooding damage by being in place with mops and buckets. It's such an inconvenience to evacuate - packing up everything we'll need for ourselves and the cats (and evacuating them is an issue in itself - they are terrified during the journey and frightened in their "prison" at my sister's house). But we underestimated the stress levels we'd all experience from the hours and hours of howling winds with a storm that refused to leave, and the misery of the heat and humidity for such a sustained period of time. Sleep was only possible for minutes at a time. The power company was unable to work on restoration of service until the winds died down below 30 mph, and did I mention that the storm just.wouldn't.leave??? As I write this, much of our area is still without power, and they only expect to have 70% restored by Monday 9/3.
I couldn't spin or knit or weave - the heat and dampness made touching wool or yarn uncomfortable. I did read 3 books on my iPhone Kindle app - I didn't need a flashlight because it's backlit, and the phone was easy to keep charged via the big battery I have for the miniSpinner (since I couldn't use it for spinning).
SO. Lesson learned. From now on, we're leaving for any tropical/hurricane storm that heads our way... and as soon as we can get all our 'ducks in a row' (job sorted, house sold) we'll be leaving permanently for my beloved mountains.
Our power went out at 7pm Tuesday night, and wasn't restored until 8pm Friday night. All the contents of our refrigerator/freezer and our upright freezer perished. We don't own a generator - all we could do was open the windows (after the strong winds passed and died down to a "mere" 40-50 mph) and try to sleep in the heat and humidity (no such luck). We heard the "thunk" of small limbs and seed pods from the magnolia trees hitting the roof sporadically, and each time I worried that one would crash through a window, or take off shingles, but they all bounced off harmlessly.
Usually (if there is any "usually" with a force of nature) hurricanes move through fairly quickly, traveling at a good speed - so while they wreak havoc and leave damage in their wake, they LEAVE. This storm moved at a ridiculously slow pace of 6-8 mph - a runner with a good pair of shoes could have outrun it. Because it stuck around, it dumped much more rain, and delivered many more hours of strong winds than expected. Local levees (as opposed to the federal levee system, which is newly strengthened and held very well) overtopped and failed, flooding lower coastal parishes with storm surge. Swelling rivers rose over their banks and overwhelmed dams, sending rapidly rising water onto property and into homes.
Our area is safely inside the federal levees, so we weren't in danger of flash-flooding. The storm was forecast to "only" strengthen to a Category 1 - meaning sustained winds of 74-95 mph. We've historically "sheltered-in-place" for such storms, only leaving for the ones forecast to hit us at Category 2 or above. When we leave, we go to my sister's house in Hammond, which is northwest of here, about an hour's drive under normal circumstances. She lives in the country, on high ground, so there's no danger of flooding, and she has a generator to supply enough electricity to run the refrigerator, fans, and a small window air conditioning unit. That's where we sheltered for Hurricane Katrina (coincidentally EXACTLY 7 years before this storm, to the date).
We opted to stay home this time, and regretted it. We didn't feel that we were in danger of life and limb, and hoped to mitigate any possible flooding damage by being in place with mops and buckets. It's such an inconvenience to evacuate - packing up everything we'll need for ourselves and the cats (and evacuating them is an issue in itself - they are terrified during the journey and frightened in their "prison" at my sister's house). But we underestimated the stress levels we'd all experience from the hours and hours of howling winds with a storm that refused to leave, and the misery of the heat and humidity for such a sustained period of time. Sleep was only possible for minutes at a time. The power company was unable to work on restoration of service until the winds died down below 30 mph, and did I mention that the storm just.wouldn't.leave??? As I write this, much of our area is still without power, and they only expect to have 70% restored by Monday 9/3.
I couldn't spin or knit or weave - the heat and dampness made touching wool or yarn uncomfortable. I did read 3 books on my iPhone Kindle app - I didn't need a flashlight because it's backlit, and the phone was easy to keep charged via the big battery I have for the miniSpinner (since I couldn't use it for spinning).
SO. Lesson learned. From now on, we're leaving for any tropical/hurricane storm that heads our way... and as soon as we can get all our 'ducks in a row' (job sorted, house sold) we'll be leaving permanently for my beloved mountains.
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Handwoven Napkins - Chocolate Covered Cherries
I've participated in several weaving exchanges with the Jane Stafford Textiles group on Ravelry - we've done towels, placemats, and this spring we did napkins. The group chose lace as the structure, and 8/2 cotton as the yarn. I prefer a finer thread for napkins myself, but as I have plenty of 8/2 in stash, I decided to go with it.
I chose a light brown and a good medium red, and a 4-shaft draft from the Best of Handwoven: Atwater-Bronson Lace ebook. I wound the entire warp at once on my warping mill - I prefer doing that, rather than winding in smaller bouts.
On the loom and ready to go! This is my Macomber loom from the back - you can see my hanging metal harnesses and inserted eye heddles.
The lace blocks alternate with plainweave in an easy-to-remember repeat. I'm not a fan of changing weft colors so often - those little end tails are tiresome to tuck in over and over!
The draft calls for a hem - I decided to hemstitch instead, and leave a 1" fringe. I think it adds a nice touch. Ready for mailing!
They're on their way to Canada, where the coordinator will sort out all the napkins received and send back an assortment. I'm looking forward to seeing the creativity of my fellow exchangers.
I'm planning to weave myself a few sets of napkins - our household is doing our best to move away from using disposable paper towels and napkins, and it's one step closer to my dream of weaving all our home textiles. My next set will be in finer/thinner cotton, and believe me, it won't have so many weft color changes!
I chose a light brown and a good medium red, and a 4-shaft draft from the Best of Handwoven: Atwater-Bronson Lace ebook. I wound the entire warp at once on my warping mill - I prefer doing that, rather than winding in smaller bouts.
On the loom and ready to go! This is my Macomber loom from the back - you can see my hanging metal harnesses and inserted eye heddles.
The lace blocks alternate with plainweave in an easy-to-remember repeat. I'm not a fan of changing weft colors so often - those little end tails are tiresome to tuck in over and over!
The draft calls for a hem - I decided to hemstitch instead, and leave a 1" fringe. I think it adds a nice touch. Ready for mailing!
They're on their way to Canada, where the coordinator will sort out all the napkins received and send back an assortment. I'm looking forward to seeing the creativity of my fellow exchangers.
I'm planning to weave myself a few sets of napkins - our household is doing our best to move away from using disposable paper towels and napkins, and it's one step closer to my dream of weaving all our home textiles. My next set will be in finer/thinner cotton, and believe me, it won't have so many weft color changes!
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