The best laid plans

All the best laid plans sometimes fail: the night before our trip to the Duchess County Sheep and Wool festival at Rhinebeck my daughter got sick with a fever and despite my husband’s ardent arguments for me going alone rather than face a year of pining for the festival, I could not drive for 7 hours by myself, and so, we didn’t go.

A week later, I asked my best friend to rescue me from the dumps with a visit to the local yarn store – JP Knit and Stitch in Boston’s newly hip and quickly gentrifying neighborhood.  I got 3 skeins of ECO + by Cascade yarns for a coat for my daughter and 2 skeins of Weekend DK by Berroco in Cornsilk (which is the color of sunshine).  I had two baby sweaters to make: one for my husband’s colleague and one for a friend’s nanny who is about to become a grandmother.

For the colleague, I followed instructions for the Eyelet Yoke Baby Cardigan, but I made one change: instead of increasing before and after the eyelet rows, I used the eyelet rows as my increases.  It made for an ever so slightly different result, but it saved me lots of time.

Eyelet yoke baby cardigan

Once I had to make the second version of this, of course, I had to follow my modifications.  I also thought that the body on this sweater was a bit too wide, so I omitted the raglan increases after the yoke increases.

Here is the final product (I will post detailed directions at some point soon).

If there is any different in perceived color, it is merely due to the lighting.  These are knit from the same exact yarn and dye lot.

 

Sheep and Wool Festival 2015: Getting ready

It’s that time of year again: the leaves are changing and we begin the eager anticipation for the New York State Sheep and Wool Festival.

This is an anxious time for me, to be sure.  My kids have grown out of every lovingly created knitted garment from last year and while the younger one can inherit some of her sister’s things, the oldest has nothing and if I don’t produce something that she likes, she is more than happy to go to school without a sweater, hat or gloves, even when it’s 40 outside.

Here are some of the rules I’ve set for myself:

  1. I shall not buy undyed merino wool from that awesome Massachusetts based farm (I already have 2 years’ worth of purchases that I have not been knitted).
  2. I shall not buy alpaca or llama, unless they are blended into something, like Good Karma Yarn.
  3. I shall wear a cap and drink lots of water so I do not develop a headache by 2pm
  4. I shall not spend more than $200
  5. I shall carefully enter all of my purchases – with pictures – into my Ravelry stash when I come back.
  6. I shall not buy yarn for a hat for myself, but will use leftover skeins from sweaters.

This festival is our family’s annual yarn and food binge. I go for the yarn, my husband goes for the lamb and my kids go for both.

Here is my list of projects that require yarn:

  • mittens for the girls (inexplicably, we’ve lost the pair my youngest should inherit).  Goal: make 2 pairs for each child, so we always have something to wear.
    • 2 weights – sport and thin cotton
    • Pink for the little one
    • blue? for the older one
  • Light sweater for the older one – similar to the vest I made?
  • Sport weight sweater for me – not sure of the color.  I often wear greys and I find that they match just about anything, so perhaps a few shades of grey.
  • Zipper collar sweater for my husband – it took me two years to knit the last sweater, so I’d better start now before he wears through it
  • Dress coats for the girls
    • Heavy yarn, could be rougher (no merino!)
    • Pink for the little one
    • Blue? for the older one?  Perhaps I can find a combo that fits everyone so we can be matching.
  •  A heavy yarn for a sweater for my FIL.  I made him a sweater two years ago which, sadly, is too small.

My full list for the Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck, NY

I had written a primer on shopping for yarn at the sheep and wool festival in Rhinebeck, NY where I included a partial list of yarns that I am looking to get.  Here is my full list.  Keep in my, my success rate is about 50% so when I come home, I will likely be toting only 1/2 of what I intend to buy.

  1. A sweater for my father in law, worsted weight, in blue color, 8 skeins, probably from Wild Apple Hill Farm, from Hudson, NY. They have an incredible selection of color.  The yarn is tough, but when I accidentally washed a pocket, it became soft and felted beautifully.  I have written this step into the pattern directions I am developing for this sweater.
  2. Socks for my kids, fingering or even better sport weight, 2-3 skeins, bright colors.
  3. Additional yarn for my daughter’s blanket, Brooks Farm, Solana (I bought 3 skeins two years ago, 2 skeins last year which were accidentally the wrong yarn), 3 skeins, matching color. I will bring the blanket to make sure I don’t make a mistake again.
  4. 2 extra skeins of the cream, undyed yarn from the Massachusetts dealer on the top floor of the split barn, for a vest or sweater for myself.
  5. A light sport weight yarn, preferably wool blend, for a spring fall beret for me, in blue color.
  6. Sport or fingering weight wool for gloves for me, two skeins, grey or similar, color
  7. Girls vest made from sparkly yarn
    Vest with a small ruffle at the bottom

    Vest yarn for my daughter, fingering weight, preferably with sparkles, 3 large skeins, purple, pink or blue hues; The last vest I made from Space Cadet Yarns, which has a little bit of sparkle.  They are not coming this year, but I really hope that I can find something similar (or I will have to order online).

  8. Single strand blue/green yarn for a light spring/summer hat and scarf for my daughters, 2-3 skeins
  9. Cotton blend for a dress pattern for my daughters (unlikely to find this at the sheep and wool, but will look); 4.25/inch
  10. Lattice Pie Hat made from Good Kharma Yarn's worsted weight
    Lattice Pie Hat made from Good Kharma Yarn’s worsted weight

    Thin vest yarn for my dad – preferably green colors, sport or thinner. Preferably a wool blend.

  11. 3-5 skeins of Good Karma Yarn, preferably in pink for my Lattice Pie hat and scarf patterns.
  12. Thin hat for the spring or fall for kids called Squared Away
    Thin hat for a child to wear in the spring or fall

    Fingering (8sts/inch) yarn, 2 skeins, solid color, for the Squared Away hat I have been developing.

  13. Fingering weight, 3 skeins, in red and white/cream solid colors, for the Cupcake Hat I have been developing

Getting ready for the Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck, NY

I love the month of October.  Perhaps it rivals only March when the sheep shearing season is in full swing and the area errupts in farm festivals showing off shearing and selling beautiful yarns made from years’ past fleeces.

Fall foliage in the city Fall foliage in the cityWhy do I love October? Beautiful leaves. The anticipation of the cold weather.  You can feel the crisp air taking over in the mornings.   Hot chocolate all of a sudden feels appropriate. But most of all, October means the arrival of the Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck, NY at the Dutchess county fair grounds.

In case you have never been to the Sheep and Wool, here is a primer.

The fair grounds where the festival takes place consist of about 10 barns. About 2 are dedicated to live animals. Sellers and buyers trade, sell and show sheep, llamas, goats, and rabbits.  Then there is a barn or two where vendors are selling fleece (un-brushed) or rowing (brushed and either dyed or not). There is also a large pavilion for food vendors where you will find artisinal cheese, wine, maple candy (a personal favorite), apples, cider and cooking demonstrations.  The sheep to shawl competition also takes place here.

The remainder of the space, or about 7 barns (including one that is actually three barns in one), is dedicated to yarn. Here you will find anything from small or large operations that raise the animals, sheer them and spin and dye the yarn themselves, to commercially produced yarn.  I usually skip the latter and look for the former.  There are also quite a few vendors who buy undyed yarn and then dyeit.  Or buy the fleece and then have it spun in the way they like and then dye it.  There are blends of wool with other fibers like bamboo, tencel, cotton, silk and others.

How to buy yarn at the sheep and wool festival in Rhinebeck, NY

I’ve been going for about 5 years now and the first year I made the newcomer’s mistake.  I looked for bargains, only bought yarn that seemed like a deal and often bought a skein here or there. What I wound up was a few skeins that didn’t match in weight or color, from which I could only make a hat for myself or someone else.  I still have some of the yarn form that year.  Subsequent years I got smarter, started buying projects

Perhaps my biggest mistake the first year was going without a list of projects I wanted to make.  So, this is how you should shop at the sheep and wool festival:

  1. Save yourself the time waiting in line and buy a ticket on the website (http://www.sheepandwool.com/) ahead of time.
  2. Make a budget. To do this, estimate the cost of yarn for each project (you can get estimates from yarn.com). Get a final number and write it on a piece of paper or your phone and every time you make a purchase, subtract from your budget.  This is the best tactic I have found for keeping purchases done by credit card reasonable.  A friend also bring cash and only cash with her, so once you’ve spent it, the buying stops.
  3. Make a list of items you want to make during the next year. Your list will look a bit different from my list below, if this is your first year. I recommend bringing the patterns you like with you.  Ravelry is excellent for researching patterns.
    1. A sweater for my father in law, worsted weight, in blue color, 8 skeins.
    2. Socks for my kids, fingering or even better sport weight, 2 skeins, bright colors.
    3. Additional yarn for my daughter’s blanket, Brooks Farm, Solana (I bought 3 skeins two years ago, 2 skeins last year which were accidentally the wrong yarn), 3 skeins, matching color. I will bring the blanket to make sure I don’t make a mistake again.
    4. 2 extra skeins of the cream, undyed yarn from the Massachusetts dealer on the top floor of the split barn.
    5. A light sport weight yarn, preferably wool blend, for a spring fall beret, in blue color.
  4. Get there early, whether you go on Saturday or Sunday.  By around midday, the isles are packed with people and it’s hard to make out heads or tails.
  5. Start at one of the entrances and work your way around.  Use the map given out at the entrance and mark any stalls you really like.
  6. If you see a yarn you like, ask the seller whether it will fit your project.  Most sellers are honest and helpful to guide you to the right choice.
  7. If you like a yarn that you find and it fits your project, buy it.  If you don’t buy it, by the time you come back, someone else will have bought it.
  8. Don’t buy yarn on an empty stomach: eat lunch.  The festival can become a time warp and before you know it, it’s 2pm and you’re starving.  Don’t do that.  Brave the long line and eat some lunch at 12.
  9. Don’t forget the maple candy and cider for the ride home.

See you at Rhinebeck!