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.

New Love of Knitting magazine

In other news, I have a pattern in the most recent Love of Knitting magazine (winter 2017). It is a child's sweater with a wrapped stitch pattern.

copyright Interweave Press/F+W

copyright Interweave Press/F+W

It's called the Ruhnu Cropper Pullover, after the Ruhnu island in Estonia. 

It's super nice to have a pattern in a magazine carried in a local store (Kroger)! Here's the cover for this edition.

copyright Interweave Press/F+W

copyright Interweave Press/F+W

Just seeing this in print makes me feel like it's time to get some more submissions out there! Glad it's November. It's always a good month to knit.

Finished Objects

Before I talk to you about my other big teaching event last month, I want to share some of my finished objects with you.

In November, some people are committed to writing their first novel by writing a chunk each day (please see Nanowrimo.org). Others on social media are sharing one thing they are thankful for a day. Me? I have a nasty case of finish-itis.

This house is just packed with projects and piles of good intentions. Too many, too much. It's been getting to me, and as a result, I have been hammering away at the pile and getting some items finished and ready for their greater reward.

Today, I finished a hat and a bobbin lace pillow. The hat was made from handspun, trickily given to me by a nun friend of mine (long story). And the lace pillow was a wonderful project I started just last week with a lace expert friend of mine. 

We started with construction insulation, repurposed advertising foam board, poster board, a saw, bread knife and rasp, wool, flannel, needle and thread. 

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Hmmm. I took a picture of the completed project and it has vanished. I guess I'll have to add it tomorrow. I am so glad to have this piece of equipment, though. A lace pillow is used to make bobbin lace, like what I viewed in Belgium this summer. The pattern is pinned to the center bolster and the bobbins full of fine thread are twisted left and right to make a specialized lace, as outlined by the pattern, or "prickings." 

I have an instructional book and I'm waiting for my bobbins that I ordered. And, of course, the final picture that proves I did this today...

Au revoir, Grand Marais

As we say "until we meet again" to Grand Marais, let's remember some of the beautiful things of the North Shore.

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Great students in a wonderful workspace.

Moose viewing offshoot of Gunflint Trail

Moose viewing offshoot of Gunflint Trail

The trails and nature of the north.

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Sunrises over Lake Superior, and the voyage of discovery that lies just outside your door.

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Lastly, this image is the artist's wall in the main North House building. Last year, they put a call-out for any former teacher to make 6 x 6 inch square depicting a class that an artist has taught there sometime in the last 20 years. Isn't it beautiful?

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Here's to 20 years more!

 

North House, Grand Marais, Minnesota

So, I started up the North Shore and stopped at a couple of places I love in Two Harbors, Minnesota. The first was the silversmith Brad E. Nelson's shop. He built it himself in an old Norwegian style called stabbur -- a kind of Norwegian log cabin. Such a beautiful building! And, inside, he features Scandinavian objects of many kinds. But he makes the silver jewelry and some other types of jewelry, too. And his mom helps out as a saleswoman. This visit, he had glass bottlenecks he had fashioned into earrings and necklace baubles. He said, "everyone says Two Harbors is such a bottleneck. I thought I'd make something out of them!"

The other place I like to visit is the Lake County DAC, or Developmental Achievement Center. It is a workshop for adults with disabilities. Some fabulous people there have put together a paper making workshop and a rug weaving area for the adults to train on and have a job. I love the fact that it is creative. I like to see the work that they have done and have purchased a few rugs from them over the years I have visited (and the paper, too). 

Here is a picture of their cloth wall for the weaving.

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Isn't it fabulous? All this has been donated for the purpose of making rag rugs. If you are in the area and have cloth to donate, contact them first. Then, stop by and see the rugs in production.

Further up the North Shore, past beautiful state parks and lake vistas, is Grand Marais. North House is one of the first things you pass on your way to downtown.

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Grand Marais itself is only 1351 souls, as of the 2010 census, but it is a vibrant community with great restaurants, music, and artistic workshops. This is most likely because it is in such a gorgeous spot and hundreds of people swarm up in every season to take advantage of the beautiful locale.

North House itself is a collection of about six buildings on this beautiful lakeside site. It has been around for 20 years and features artisans teaching the crafts of the north. One can go there to learn how to make a canoe, log-framed building, outdoor pizza oven, case your own sausages, knit, spin, felt, make moccasins, turn green wood... Really, the list is non-exhaustive, as the coordinators are always adding teachers and events.

Sunset over Lake Superior from the North House Folk School beach.

Sunset over Lake Superior from the North House Folk School beach.

panoramic view of North House grounds from their dock, early morning

panoramic view of North House grounds from their dock, early morning

The class I taught was on Skolt Saami mittens. The following are some pictures of my students at work. A wonderful class!

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Fiber people are the best, and I thoroughly enjoyed spending the day with these ladies. Each had such different tales to tell, and all were great needle women.

Cheers to you as you continue on your fiber journey!