Laura Ricketts Designs

"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands..."

Laura Ricketts Designs is a personal and business website for Laura Ricketts, hand-knitwear designer, author, teacher, crafter, mother and wife.

Cave Point Hat Knit-Along

Today is the starting day for the Cave Point Hat Knit-Along (KAL) from the Midwestern Knits book. I am leading a group of knitters on Ravelry. You can join the group and follow along here, or I will post updates on my blog.

So far, several of us have shared yarn and yarn color choices, swatched and readied our needles. I have a lovely duo of yarns from Sara Gresbach, the creator of the hat pattern. She dyes yarn and sells it through her Etsy portal, Front Porch Fibers.

I chose the colors to go with my new tweed gloves from last year.

This is lace weight yarn -- very thin and quite light.

I wound the contrast color yarn on my nostepinne of a finger...

And, I wound the main color my normal way.

Here they are, ready to go!

Anyone joining me?

Labor Day

We live close to Plymouth, Indiana -- home of the Blueberry Festival over Labor Day weekend. This year was special because my parents were in town for the weekend and able to join us in attending the parade and seeing a special baritone player playing with his unit.

Even in the still that shows up on my computer screen, he is front and center, marching just in front of the closest Sousaphone. Enjoy a slice of my life from this week!

Chewbacca boots

The other crafty thing I have finished this week is a pair of Moonkoosa Boots by Tiny Owl Knits. Stephanie Dosen is the proprietress there, and is a very talented knit wear designer (check out her stuff at the link).

I like to call them my Chewbacca boots.

I like to call them my Chewbacca boots.

I like to call them my Chewbacca boots.

I made a pair of these slipper/boots for my daughter a year and a half ago, and I was eager for a pair for myself. If you have never felted or fulled woolen things before (on purpose), here is a bit of an explanation for you: fulling is the shrinking of a natural fiber cloth with hot water, soap and agitation. It's usually referred to as "felting," but felting is done without water. Have you ever fulled by accident when you washed an all-wool sweater by mistake? You put a nice, adult size pullover into a washing machine and at the end of the cycle out came a child's, thick, stiff sweater? See how easy that is? You can see how such fabric might be appropriate for slippers or a hat, or a nice purse. AND, when you made that teeny sweater you see that you, too, can do it!

Felting knitted fabric works best if the fabric is loose and open. It is also best if the yarn that was used doesn't have multiple, tight plying. This make it easier for the cuticles of the wool strands to grab each other and hold on. For these slippers, I used Brown Sheep Lamb's Pride yarn -- a lovely, single ply, wool/mohair bulky yarn. Knitting for felting is funny, too: the article one knits is always huge and floppy. Slippers are about 5 sizes too large, and hats are like buckets that come down to your shoulders. I always feel like I'm knitting items for a clown. When you stick them in a washing machine (with hot water and soap), be prepared to watch the process carefully, pulling the item out often to check on how quickly the item is shrinking and if it is in the right proportion. If there is still some shrinking to do, pull it into shape and stick it back in, checking on it again soon.

My friend Natalie kindly let me use her non-locking, top loading washing machine and hot water. I went over there for a few minutes with these unfinished boots in a zipped pillowcase. I had previously felted the boot part. Following someone else's recommendation on Ravelry (I'm sorry -- it's been so long; I can't remember who), I had used cotton, non-feltable yarn and a crochet hook and single-crocheted around the leg everywhere I wanted the fringe to be. This kept the hole for insertion open. Then, I felted the boots, removed the cotton yarn, and added the fringe in a latch-hook type knot. The boots needed to be felted for about a half hour to become quite a thick fabric, but the fringe just needed a bit of body to it -- maybe 5 minutes or so of felting.

I came home and combed out the boots. Here they are before and during the combing of the fringe.

Here you can see more clearly how the fringe is attached.

Here you can see more clearly how the fringe is attached.

Then, I stuffed the boots with plastic bags to give them the appropriate shape and allowed them to dry over two days. The finished product is the first picture of the post.

Some people finish the boots off with a sewn-on leather sole. Really, the felted sole is quite sturdy for home wear, or even out and about (sort of like a moccasin). Now, I can look forward to a cool day in which I can comfortably wear these. And, maybe, I will need a Star Wars costume, too.

Sheep Heid

This past week has been a busy one, and emotional. I've started on the road to recovery after a long illness this summer. Besides finishing a small project and mailing it off and going through tech edits on another submission to a book, I decided to knit something I DIDN'T write the pattern for. It is definitely more relaxing!

So, how do I relax, you ask? I pulled out a kit I bought at The Trading Post in Pendleton, Indiana about three years ago of Kate Davies' Sheep Heid Tam. Susan is a wonderful store owner -- very knowledgable about all things fiber, and she has great rovings and yarn. About once a year she imports some incredible teacher and has a weekend spin and knit event. 

Here is the Sheep Heid tam in progress:

It is constructed with a lovely palette of natural Shetland wool colors (Jamieson yarns), and receives its name from the row of sheep around the crown and the rams with curling horns on the top of the hat.

I blocked it over a plate.

That is what makes the typical "tam" shape, instead of a floppy hat. The natural wool is so obliging! It remembers the shape long after it is dry.

I'm pretty glad to add this lovely Scottish hat to my winter accessories!