When I'm Not Knitting...

Despite the freakish cold snap we've been having (and pulling the winter coats and hats back out), I've been spending a lot of time digging in and planning out the garden. While the knitting around here never stops, I find this time of year very exciting - we go from barren trees and neutral colors to pops of brightness bursting from the ground, buds on trees starting to poke out and the sound of lawn mowers and birds filling the air. IMG_3139

We moved in late November to an area with a better school system, a home that provides both my husband and I with real office space, walking trails through the woods in our backyard, a bigger bedroom for our growing son, and best of all, a huge yard. We've moved a lot over the past 12 years and sometimes we find a place with a tiny patch of grass, perhaps a corner to plant some flowers in, or if we're lucky, enough space to put in a small raised bed. I always hesitated to go all out, knowing that eventually we'd leave that place behind and it was too small to do what I wanted. Now we find ourselves with something we've never had before - room to plan.

Perhaps we jumped the gun by going to Lowe's last weekend, stuffing the car to the gills with dirt and mulch, my son squeezed into his car seat with the seed packets on his lap, fanned out like playing cards with questions about what this plant is and what that plant is, me balancing our sprouted vegetables on my legs with my feet on a bag of dirt, my husband at the wheel with a shovel handle by his shoulder, and all of us with huge grins on our faces, ready to dig in the garden. It's too cold to plant anything yet with this weird cold spell and the seedlings are tucked into the garage where it's warm and dry, but as my Grandma Myrt always said, "Prepare in leisure to use in haste."

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Since our new home had a well-established yard with very little variety (I love azaleas, but I don't love that there are about 50 in the yard with a handful of daffodils and an occasional tulip), we began by digging. This is a space with so much potential and I found myself planning out spacing and color combinations in a very similar fashion to how I plan out color work knitting. Pulling up old plants that have gone unbothered for years is difficult but important work, and while I toiled away in the front yard preparing an empty space for new and exciting flowers, pulling, ripping, tugging and tearing things out, my husband was in the back, clearing a space for raised beds, the kind I always dreamed about but never had the room.

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The thing about raised beds is that they are expensive. Using cheaper wood like pine means that they'll rot out relatively quickly (dependent of course upon your climate/mold/elevation/rain fall) unless you stain (outside the beds only) or paint, treated pine means the wood has had a chemical applied on it and we read conflicting information online about whether or not those chemicals leach into the soil and eventually the vegetables you plan on eating. Cedar or cypress is ideal, but very expensive, the same with the plastic boards. So after having conversations about how we could make this project affordable and practical, my engineer husband disappeared back to Lowe's late that evening while I put our son to bed.

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The internet is an amazing thing. After doing lots of research, my husband found online tutorials about using cedar or pine fencing to make raised beds. Significantly cheaper than using pre-cut boards of cedar or pine, but with the same benefits, he built me 2 huge beds and filled them with good planting soil for less than $30. If we bought pre-made beds online at this size x2, it would have been well over $400 not including soil. The soil was on sale, he did the labor himself, our Lowe's only had pine fencing, so we'll have to paint them eventually, and they'll last for years. We'll grow our own vegetables and herbs, knowing exactly what went into the soil, knowing there are no chemicals on them, and feel good about it. We made it a family affair and got our son in the dirt, too!

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Vegetables are pretty hardy, but it's important to plant in the proper season. Flowers are a bit trickier, since the country is split up into growing zones. I won't plant the same flowers in my garden that someone in say, Arizona or Minnesota might. Making proper planting choices is like getting gauge on your knitting, if you don't do it properly, it won't work.

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Now we just need the weather to warm up so we can get our planting started!

What do YOU do this time of year when you're not knitting?

 

Bye, Bye, Birdie

Check out these amazing handmade crocheted birds! Original article here.

I Make Realistic Crocheted Birds Out Of Wool

by Jose Heroys

I make realistic looking birds using crochet, needle-felting and a bit of embroidery, because I really like birds and couldn’t persuade any real ones to come indoors.

Each bird takes between 1 and 4 weeks to make. I make them out of pure wool yarns and fill them with lamb’s wool – which makes them feel quite alive – and each one is tagged with a year-coded metal leg ring. Sometimes I make them perching on wool-wrapped wire branches, or turn them into 3-D pictures in wooden rings, and mount them on a wall.

I’ve been making them for about 2 years and have mainly focused on British birds so far, but I’ve got plans to try American birds, exotics and even some extinct species this year.

More info: joseheroys.com

Embroidery and... Cookies?

I love baking with my son! While I know a bit about embroidery, I am by no means a master. What do you think would happen if baking and embroidery were combined?  Subscribers won't be able to see the video, so click anywhere on the post to be taken directly to the blog entry. If you have a few minutes, definitely watch the video - it's mesmerizing! Original article here.

Mesmerizing Embroidery-Inspired Cookie Decorating by Mezesmanna

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpKx-4lZEwA

Chef Judit Czinkné Poór is the mastermind behind Hungarian cake decorating shop Mézesmanna, a small studio with a giant social media presence because of the incredible photos and videos they share of their decorative confections. Nearly everything they produce falls into the ‘looks too good to eat’ category, from elaborate illustrations of animals, to intricate patterns inspired by embroidery. Seen here is a quick video of her ‘royal icing’ technique. You can see even more here.

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Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival

"Are you going?" I hear this a lot lately while teaching at my LYS and I instantly know what people are talking about - Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival! Taking place on May 7th and 8th, 2016 at the Howard County Fairgrounds in West Friendship, Maryland, this is a fiber festival not to be missed.

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With animals, family activities, music, demos, food, plants and FIBER, this is a weekend I look forward to all year-long. I was delighted to be asked to teach that weekend - another check on my teaching bucket list made!

An all day Saturday workshop, I'll be teaching my favorite thing - Fair Isle knitting. The class description states, "Have you been wanting to learn to knit with multiple colors? In this Fair Isle Techniques and Design Your Own Cowl Workshop, we’ll cover basic color theory, history and technique of stranded colorwork knitting (English, continental and combination style will all be taught), and learn the differences between intarsia, slip-stitch and stranded knitting. In the afternoon, we’ll put our new skills to work and discuss basic design theory and practice. Each participant will design his/her own cowl, begin to knit it up and see it come to life. Skill level: Intermediate beginner through advanced. Students should bring: 2 Colors highly-contrasting worsted weight wool or superwash wool, US 8 24” circular knitting needles, stitch markers, graph paper, colored pencils."

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Find the direct class link here.

Hope to see you there! I'm honored and excited to not only attend the festival again, but be part of it!