Saturday, June 29, 2013

Change is Good

On October 15, 2004 I started this blog.  I had planned to write a blog dedicated to rediscovering knitting, and my triumphs and tragedies.  At that time I worked at a desk job - as a receptionist with a Master's Degree in Theatre History and Design.  You can imagine that the innnertubes, and the knitting blogs out there in the blogosphere sustained me between answering the phone in my mellifluous tone, "Unnamed Penison Company, this is Chela, how may I direct your call? Make it snappy I'm reading Yarn Harlot..."  The amazing community of knitters sustained me through that agony.  Then the "oosband" got a job in Santa Monica.  I was thrilled to move.  Shortly after arriving there I was hired by Studio Daedre as a glitter artist.  Not only was I thrilled to have a fun job, but I made several forever friends there including Daedre and Scott Berryman (owners of the Studio), and JoAnn Stevens-Flores, a remarkable painter and cheeky gal!

While in Santa Monica I worked at the Studio, took continuing classes at Santa Monica College in photography and Photoshop, started working as a professional photographer, and realized that I am an artist at heart.  And then and then and then...  I realize as I am reading this I am boring myself!!!

If I wanted to share my interests blog by blog, I'd have to maintain six or seven blogs.  Suffice to say, I work as a photographer, but I use my photography in my art, I paint with watercolors, but I use my watercolors in fabric design, I sew, I knit, and most importantly I cook.    So we are undergoing a change here at Throw Sticks.  Yes I throw, I don't knit continental, I still throw sticks for my dogs, I still want to throw my knitting across the room on occasion, but maybe the name isn't entirely relevant to the new scope of the blog, however  I promise I will "throw" as much creativity as I can dish.  I do maintain a professional photo blog at NotoPhoto.Blogspot.com, where you can see work that I do with some of my clients.  Throw Sticks is simply my happy place, I plan to post my art work, photography, knitting, cooking, design work, and perhaps even travels.  Don't expect superior photography, I use my IPhone for most of my craft snaps, it is so easy!  And more than anything else I want to share the work of wonderful artists and c
rafts people I meet.

Oh and I still knit, a lot, and I love it.

So I just got the new Vogue Knitting.  I was seriously nonplussed...  I don't know if it is the fact that our weather has just now become hot, or because I object to cropped sweaters.  Please, I am a near 50 year old woman - not in bad shape  - but I want a sweater that covers the important parts.  Call it what it is a "shrug"!  The American Heritage Dictionary defines shrug as " To raise shoulders, esp as a gesture of doubt, disdain or indifference".  That pretty much meshes with my feelings about the shrug as a garment.  Ok I admit the second definition is "A short woman's jacket or sweater open down the front".    And then in the second story there is this:


Stunning.  Lace.  Knit.  And my latest obsession; lace, change, dresses.  I have to start the Noro dress before I start this, and I might even knit it in PINK!!!!

On a final note, I just saw this on my Yahoo news feed.  Quite amazing work.
http://news.yahoo.com/photos/paintings-that-look-like-photos-slideshow/

Change, its good.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Nuts for Noro

I don't know how I have gone these many years without using Noro yarns.  I would see them in knit shops and think "how gaudy", or "too much color for me".   What was I thinking?  Colorwork always seemed so mysterious to me, I have knit one intarsia piece, and thank goodness it was felted because it was one hole after another.  I've done stripes.  But nothing so vibrant as the mosaic knit dress (see my earlier post on swatching for the Noro dress), or as completely engaging as the cropped jacket that I am knitting right now.  I find myself thinking "one more row, I just want to see how the color changes...  just one more row".


Below to the left the fronts are seamed at the shoulders and neck, and a small detail of the wonderful way two Noro colorways change.  I'm smitten!  This is Silk Garden in #252 and #272.



This is the back.  What fun.  Its just stunning.  And so much fun to put together as well.

In other news I have studio envy.  My office is in the attic of our house, the ceilings are at a pretty sharp pitch.  If I am working at my desk I am fine, but if I move too much one way or the other and stand up suddenly its headache city!  My dear friend JoAnn Stevens-Flores over at Doodle Paint Draw built her studio in a little shed in their backyard.  I should clarify, her terrific husband built her the shed, and finished it beautifully.  That got me to thinking, I have a garden shed with a potting bench...  I have been dabbling in watercolors and encaustic painting (which really needs to be done in a ventilated place), I need room where I can be messy and not get paint and goo all over my knitting or my camera equipment...  Welcome to my summer studio!



And finally, this is what knitters do at Thirty Seconds to Mars concerts.  We knit.



Wednesday, May 08, 2013

k2,YO, Rocketship, YO, K3

Another wonderful week in Cheryl Oberle's studio at the Spring 2013 Knitaway.  This year we learned about the Shetland knitters, about open and closed lace, about knitting lace borders on to the body of a shawl, and so much more.  I think my big take away from the Knitaway is that my fellow knitters are the best people I could ever hope to meet.  The women at this Knitwaway were executives, lawyers, social workers, artists, housewives, volunteers, artists, but more than anything people I am thrilled to say I know!!!   And friendships forged here that I hope to have for my life.

Now you may ask about the title of this post...  Our first two days at the Knitaway were about learning technique, learning to knit a triangular shawl, then picking up and adding an inner lace border, and then knitting on an outer border - a very traditional Shetland technique (and please refer to Cheryl's marvelous Folk Shawls to understand more about this incredible tradition).  Let me tell you starting a shawl in the corner and working out is no mean feat, the pattern shifts every row, and so the rhythm  that you get knitting lace in a sqaure is shot.  Anyway we all worked very hard at our small sample shawls and I think Cheryl was happy that we all tried!  But we were all eager to start on Arachne's Bower, the project shawl for the class.

The third evening my mom and I returned to her home and we sat down to knit.  I was repeating in my head,"knit, knit, YO, knit, slip two as if to knit, knit one, pass slipped stitches over, knit, Yo, knit, knit."  Kind of a mouthful and I lost my place several times - too much verbiage....  Then I heard  mom, sitting a few feet away, "dum, dum, YO, rocketship, YO, dum, dum."  She had a rhythm going, and it was marvelous.  It works.  Rocketship is a double decrease "pass two as if to knit, knit one, pass slipped stitches over".  I am now a convert to the rocketship.

The first half of this shawl has a Rocketship decrease, the second half has a different double decrease that looks like a pitchfork, and I know that I will be knitting "dum, dum, YO, pitchfork, YO, dum, dum."  Who says knitting has to sound serious, I am on a knitting rocketship!


This is my first repeat of Arachne's Bower!  I am so proud.


I asked Cheryl about the name of the shawl.  I have always been interested in Greek mythology, and the story of Arachne is one of my favorites.  I will share more about Arachne and my love of her in my next post.  Two of my favorite authors have written about her AS Byatt, and Roberto Calasso!  Can't wait to share.


Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Swatching can be fun...

Yes it truly can be.  

Last summer I purchased Noro's first magazine, and pretty much wanted to knit everything right away. But summer, then autumn, then the holidays, and still nothing from that book.  We went to Stitches West last Friday, and were immediately ready to dive in and knit something completely new.  So I decided to tackle this gorgeous Noro dress.





Off I went to Green Planet Yarns in Willow Glen with a mind to buying exactly the yarns recommended for the project.   This was my first visit to Green Planet's new location, the store is wonderfully bright, but I had to learn where everything now lives.  The staff is of course amazing.  I was looking perplexedly for the Noro Kuyreon yarns, and the owner told me that they don't stock it because it is too scratchy.  I had thought this when I first felt it years ago.  Instead she guided me to Noro Silk Garden, and a comparable sport weight that she thought might create the right gauge for the project.  They have all of their Noro colorways knit into large afghans showing how each color way knits up, which gives you a real sense of how the yarn looks knitted.  Its brilliant.  I found my red right away, Blue Sky Alpaca's baby alpaca Sport Weight, then the real fun was holding that red up to the Noro colorways and choosing...  Then the owner had an even more brilliant idea, find a couple colorways that I liked, and really knit a big swatch to see how it played out.  Ugh, I groaned to myself, swatching is the BANE of my knitting existence (and probably why things are hit of miss as to how they fit me!!!).  But I did....

 I have to say that the act of knitting this pattern is so much fun that I can't stop!  To the left you see the first Noro colorway that I choose, it is Silk Garden 341.  I am pretty sure that I will knit the dress in the other color way (349), but I can't stop swatching.  The yarns are knitting perfectly to gauge, which is fantastic since they aren't the recommended yarns.

After I finish the two swatches I will have a great book bag!

I'll post the other swatch as soon as I get a chunk knit.

Thursday, February 07, 2013

Meet Virginia....

Years ago I had a loaner dress form, whom I nicknamed Dolores (as in "painfully not my size"), since Dolores left me I have longed for another.  Enter Virginia, my new adjustable dress form (model #150 from Singer, and on sale for their 150th!  Yay Singer).

Virginia and I will have many wonderful years together.  She will be my dress form when I sew, but most likely my muse and model when I knit.



"She wears high heels when she exercises"

Train



Monday, February 04, 2013

Sewing and patterns from the past...

The sewing bug has hit hard this past week.  I am at home recovering from a procedure on my Achilles tendon (not full surgery, but I am stuck at home, condemned to high heels - seriously when has a doctor told you that you need to wear high heels!!!), so the heap of fabrics that I bought last year called out to me.  I have a lovely cotton print that I thought would make a great summer dress.  I am always on the look out for good sun dresses, and not the shite you buy at Anthropolgie that costs $200, is short waisted, and falls apart after a season.  Sorry don't mean to slam Anthro, I am mad about their brand, but I rarely ever find anything there that fits, if I try on an 8 the waist is up in my armpits, if I try on a 12 (which hits me in the waist) I am swimming in fabric, just a long backed, long waisted, small boned, tall, Anglo/Franco/German mutt.  Anyway I decided to take matters in my own hands, I decided to make the perfect summer dress.

After searching for a few days I found Vogue pattern V8577.  A very simple shirt dress.  I figured that I could lengthen the waist and create a pretty good fit!  I did have to swallow a bit of my own vanity and make the pattern in a 14 based on my bust and waist.  The divide between home sewn clothing sizes and commercial sizes is getting much larger.  When I was a young woman I routinely wore at 10 or 12 in store bought clothing, and now I wear between a 4 and 8.  I certainly have not changed that much in size, that would require removing ribs!  So vanity aside, I crawled around on my office floor yesterday and cut out V8577, measured the waist length, and added 1" to the top bodice front and back, and today it is mostly put together.  It fits like a dream.  Now I have to practice buttonholes...






So on to this pile of fabric...  One of my favorite local craft stores, Natural Expressions of Los Gatos,  sold off all their fabrics last fall, and hence I ended up with a stock pile of fun stuff.  Most of their fabrics were for quilters, but there were some lovely voile prints and heavier cottons that cried out to be made into blouses, dresses, skirts.  Of course when I was buying up their stock I wasn't really thinking about what I would make.  My recent "hobbling" has me in my office/studio looking at the fabric and wondering what I could make.  I found and bought 5.5 yards of this fabric to the left - yummy!




It took quite a long time to find the dress for that fabric.  To be honest my skill is not so great that I can adjust a pattern on the fly- I can add to the back length, but that is about it.  My mom coached my sewing efforts in grade school and high school, but I've never taken a sewing class.  I have done a lot of costume design (and in college it meant sketching great costumes and then pulling something that looked about right...)  I have worked for two clothing designers, but as a cutter and basic stitcher, couture is well beyond my reach.  I really rely on the pattern to guide me.  Vogue, McCalls, Simplicity only go so far, Past Patterns and Folkwear don't always hit the current notes in fashion (don't get me wrong, I love them both), then I remembered that I used to buy Burda Magazine when I lived in Chile.  I bought an issue of Burda in '85 right before I went to school in Madrid that provided most of my wardrobe for that semester, and I was right in step with the Madruleñas in my asymetric lime green tunic and fly yellow drawstring pants. I still have that issue kicking around (see above)!  As I look through it, the clothing is fun, and with a little modification not so out dated!  I made a pair of wonderful genie pants from another issue several years later, and they were such a hit that I had a sewing party and the next day five of us walked onto campus proudly wearing our creations.  I don't sew very much these days because patterns are just not enticing, and unless you live in LA near the garment district, really lovely fabric is hard to find.  I feel like sewing has fallen into that sad state that knitting fell into between Acrylic and the Art Yarn Movement (when did knitting become sexy again???  I started knitting again in '04).  So I have a small stockpile of fabrics collected over the years that are now calling out to me.  Lacking inspiration from Vogue et al I googled Burda, and what do you know, they are still making some fun patterns!  I am planning to explore their site further.  I am pretty taken by the German home craft movement (is there are more graceful way of putting that), Rebeca is one of my favorite knitting mags.

Once I get the button holes sorted on the Vogue dress I'll post a picture...  (or I might use snaps, the cheater's way out of making button holes).

On to exploring Burda!  Happy sewing and knitting.

PS Any thoughts on Stitches West?  Mom and I are going for the first time in years...



Saturday, January 26, 2013

Crimson Leaves, or My quarterly update

Ok it has almost been a full three months since my last post.  A lot of knitting happened during the holidays, but most of it was stealth knitting, and I didn't want to write about it in the event prying eyes read the blog (yes, mom I mean you!).  But Christmas has come and gone, and the gift has been delivered.

So here is what I was being so secretive about:

This gem is from Cheryl Oberle's Knitted Jackets, the pattern is Ivory Leaves - I call mine Crimson Leaves.  Cheryl is my knitting hero, her patterns are so much fun to knit, and most of them come together without a lot of finishing work.  The sleeves and the collar and knitted onto this shrug, so basically it is block and walk knitting!  This is stash yarn, purchased when I was newly re-aquainted with knitting and didn't keep my labels...  My mom will probably kill me for posting this photo....  This is knit in the smaller size as mom is tiny!  But the color is fantastic with her complexion and hair!  The shawl pin is from Cheryl as well.  I am knitting the same shrug for myself in a lavender baby alpaca (it hibernates right now).




The Sunday before New Year's Eve we were in Campbell, CA at the Farmer's Market (best one in the south bay if you happen to live in Northern CA...  just my opinion), and I noticed that my favorite LYS Green Planet Yarns was MOVING!!!!!   Horrors!  Of course I had to run in and get the scoop.  They are moving to Willow Glenn in San Jose - which for them isn't a big deal, but for me who lives in the Santa Cruz Mountains, its a whole 6 more miles!!!  Ok really it was just a grand excuse to drag my family into one of my favorite yarn shops.

While mother and I were wandering, testing yarns (yes they have needles and samples of lots of their yarns that you can knit a row or twenty) I came across Noro's Shiraito, in this fantastic color way, and knit as this great little shawlette.  They had two hanks of the yarn in this amazing color way - I bought them both, and ran home to download Wingspan from Ravelry.  I knit it over the next few days.  I have been trolling the web trying to find more of this incredible cashmere and angora blend, but it is scarce as hen's teeth.  This is the first Noro yarn that I have ever used.  I LOVE it, I love how the colors created such great blocks.  I did add a flourish of my own to the pattern, I didn't have enough yarn to knit eight triangles in the shawl, but I didn't want to have a tiny bit of this yarn left over, so in keeping with the tiny holes the short row shaping creates in the pattern (which I really like), I added a YO to my cast of edge, it used up my yarn to the last six inches, and makes a great spot for a button closure!  Knit this one, its a keeper!


Cuzco, from Cheryl's Knitted Jackets is making happy progress.  I can't wait to have it as a spring jacket!.




Me and Mom in our wonderful Center Panel Shawls...  Terrible picture (as mom might say, "we look like sick cows") great shawls!  Note how nicely her edges lay on her shawl, she used blocking wires.


And I think I have been knitting under a rock, I just discovered Madelintosh yarns.  Where have I been?  I am knitting a  hat for the hubby in a great DK colorway called Stephen Loves Tosh.  Kinda digging the Reggae groove...

Rediscovered needle felting, felting needles are also a great tool for fixing runs in burbur carpeting...  but that is another story altogether.





Sunday, November 04, 2012

International Quilt Show

Here are photos of some of my favorite quilts from the show.  Next year I will take a more substantial camera than my iPhone.

This beautiful piece is Japanese.  The Japanese quilts are very delicate, this one had more color than most of them.


 The two above are such skilled landscapes I had no words!
 This quilt out of NZ was possibly one of my most favorites.  A train! But the colors and the perspective are amazing.  (Might have something to do with the fact that Orange is one of my favorite colors).

Freakishly photographic kangaroo.  The quilter saw this doe in her yard, snapped the photo...  and created a quilt!

I did not know that quilts don't have to be angular!!!!   

 Another landscape.

 The two above are mapscapes from an English quilter.  One is a daytime view of farm land, the second is a night view of a city.  AMAZING.



 This quilt and the detail represent ecological devastation.  Not only is it a great artists' interpretation of disaster, but the materials used are so varied and interesting; dryer lint, paper, fabric softener sheets...  And if you notice in the larger image, like Pandora's box, there is hope in a small sliver of green.

 I know this dog,  I live with him, but my guy weighs in at 150.

 I laughed out loud when I saw this quilt, it is the "spittin' image of a good friend of mine.

 Can't resist the dog stuff.

 The colors in this quilt spoke to me.


 The detail in this quilt is spectacular.

Is is 2013 yet!!!!  I can't wait to go again!





Endings and Beginnings

The Center Panel Shawl is off the needles!  It was a very fun knit, but languished for a few months during the hottest part of the summer.  The weather got cooler and I got back to knitting.  It is a lovely piece and one that I will enjoy wearing and showing off...  It is not entirely fault free, but I really don't want to anger the goddess of knitting by being perfect!

 Here it is pinned like a butterfly.  I wonder about the wire blocking frames, and if they really work.  I usually block on a towel on this particular rug, but pins make for little scallops along the edges.

Here it is in all its glory.

 Detail of the center panel.
The corner, which is very cleverly constructed, and where all the extra stitches are added.  It was a kind of magic getting it off the circular needles, where it looked like a giant's beret, to lay it out and have the angular corners revealed.


This brings me to other things that happened this summer in my crafty lair.  A dear friend of mine took me to the International Quilt Show at the Santa Clara Convention Center.  To be honest I have never been drawn to quilting.  When I was a little girl my mother made the most magnificent quilt, she stitched the squares while I practiced piano.  She made enough squares to make two quilts.  I look at the quilt today and I see scraps of dresses that she made for both of us, sheets that I used to have on my bed, it really is a great work of art, and all hand stitched.  That was the first and only quilt mom ever made.  And I did not get any better at piano either!  The long and the short of it is that neither mom nor I ever really pursued quilting.  She is a fantastic knitter, and we both love to knit and sew, so quilting just never made it on to my radar.  I had always just assumed that quilting was a stunning but very precise art, and one that I excluded my slap dash approach to creativity.  And then the International Quilt Show turned my head right round.

I had no idea that quilting could be so marvelous.  In fact I will add a post after this one of some of my favorite quilts from the show.

Anyway I was inspired.  I purchased this kit for a wall hanging.  It is called "Window Spots" and is by Overland Originals http://chefab.cherrywoodfabrics.com.  My friend invited me over to help me put this lovely creation together.  This is not the most inspired photo of it, and I haven't finished quilting the swirls.  My sewing machine is not a long arm machine, so sewing circular patterns causes a great deal of bunching.  I will finish this piece, and it will hang in the living room.

  Then I got a little crazy and went off on my own tangent...  I purchased this beautiful piece of grey cotton fabric with black star bursts on it, and two small fat quarters of silk, one red one deep cadmium yellow.  I cut out the centers of the star bursts and appliquéd the silk behind each one.  Then I stitched the star bursts in black thread.  I think I am going to hand quilt it in variegated yellow thread in a squiggle pattern.  (This baby kept my hands busy during the very exciting San Francisco Giants post season....  I almost wish they had come home to win, I might be a bit further along).


And finally, true to my nature and this blog, I cast on for Cheryl Oberle's Cuzco jacket yesterday.  I am an exciting 12 rows in!  Hope to wear it by Christmas.

Other projects are in the works, but this time of year I can't share them because some people might get wind of their holiday fun !


Wednesday, August 08, 2012

Its not all about the knitting....

Sometimes its time to get out the sewing machine...

Several weeks ago a dress shop in town was having a blow out sale, as it turns out it was their swan song as well.  In the window was this gorgeous knit LBD with a carmel colored leather hem.  It was absolutely gorgeous.  This dress shop was known to be very expensive, so I figured it was out of my price range.  Blow out sale meant it was well within my means...  IF I happened to be a petite XS person.  As it is I am a happy Medium!  The dress was so simple, in a smooth black jersey, boat necked, three quarter sleeve.  I got to thinking about it, and my thoughts said to me, you could make that dress yourself.  

I went web hunting and found this beautiful deer skin that is a dark chocolate suede on one side and a slick carmel on the other.  


I dug into my old pattern stash and found this very simple Donna Karan pattern with three views, I can easily use the boat necked dress bodice with the the three quarter sleeve...


Here is my rendering of what the dress will look like when I finally find the right weight jersey.  This is what has me stymied in this process, most fabric stores that I have easy access to happen to be JoAnn Fabrics or quilting fabric stores.  I am probably going to make a special trip up to Britex, which can be very dangerous...


Additionally I am having a very old sofa recovered in a gorgeous dark blue herringbone fabric (supposed to be very dog resistant!!!  Whoot!).  We live in a swamp of mismatched throw pillows, and so while my mother and I were shopping for the sofa fabric we found this bold print at Calico Home.  Of course they offered to make throw pillows, not knowing that I can sew a bit.  


My thought is to center the design in the middle of each pillow, and use big wooden buttons as the closure on the back....  Hunting for the buttons now.

I love this view of a bolt of fabric!


In knitting news, lots of swatches have come off the needles, but as of yet no finished projectss.