The Schmetz web site has a ton of information on its products. I found this information on needle size helpful for determining which size of the universal type needle to purchase for my projects. I also stumbled across the description of the wing needle while browsing the Schmetz site. Two of my classmates in the pattern fitting class used the wing needle to create subtle but very beautiful lines of embellishment on their shirts. The wing needle creates this embellishment by pushing the fabric's woven threads apart and when you have a woven fabric (without stretch) this opening remains. This stitch would look particularly nice on linen fabric. There are some nice images of wing needle stitching here.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Backlinks
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Local goodness
510 N Market Blvd, Chehalis, WA 98532
360-748-3295
Add this store to my list of local sources of sewing and felting supplies. I was in this shop twice this week to purchase thread for my serger. Claire's preschool teacher asked me to work on a project for the Christmas festivities and I needed some expert advise on rolled hems. The more I sew and the more I shop for sewing supplies, the more I am convinced that you get what you pay for. Living better through local shopping will be my mantra in 2009. I know I can get thread cheaper at JoAnn's but the employees there don't have the time, or sometimes even the knowledge to help with a project's particulars. I can walk into Billie's with a list and tick off item after item and get directed right to the item and get an explanation of its use.
I urge everyone to use their power as consumers to support good local businesses. I can't remember the last time I shopped at Wal-Mart and I feel much better for it.
Saturday, December 13, 2008
little houses
On a topic very far from sewing, I have also watched several episodes of Cracker while sewing during Claire's nap time. Robbie Coltrane (sadly, probably only familiar as "Hagrid" of Harry Potter fame) stars as a criminal psychologist who is addicted to gambling and is also a serious drinker. The series is a lot like Prime Suspect but I think Robbie Coltrane's character, Dr. Eddie "Fitz" Fitzgerald, is a more likable, if not more three-dimensional, protagonist than Helen Mirren's, Jane Tennison.
Anyway, Claire's awake and it's time to fix some supper. I'll have to shelve the little house projects until I have some of my other Christmas projects finished.
Sunday, November 30, 2008
The virtues of mom and pop
I was having some trouble finding all of the fabrics for the quilt and so I carried the bolts of fabric that I had found up to the cutting counter and set them down and asked for some help finding the others. And here is where the virtues of independent fabric stores really shine. The woman at Craft Warehouse was totally rude to me and acted as if I had invaded her personal space by putting down the bolts of fabric on her cutting counter. She reluctantly and impatiently directed me right back to the stacks of fabric I had come from and left me to hunt for nonexistent fabrics. This uncaring attitude would never be found Greenbaums or Sisters. The employees at these stores are always so helpful and they know their store's fabric inventories like the back of their hands.
So, I think that the moral of the story is that I just have to shop at the mom and pop hand-craft supply stores where the people appreciate your business and they are genuinely interested in what you are creating. Along those same lines, I have stopped shopping at Wal-Mart because the employees don't care about service and the experience of shopping there always leaves me frustrated or angry. Why give your money to a store that doesn't care about your experience or its employees? Wal-Mart is certainly convenient and inexpensive but you get what you pay for and I want our money to do more in our local community and the broader community of the Northwest.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Wool Cliffs Notes
Felt is a non-woven cloth that is produced by matting, condensing and pressing fibers. While some types of felt are very soft, some are tough enough to form construction materials. Felt can be of any color, and made into any shape or size. Felt is the oldest form of fabric known to humankind. It predates weaving and knitting, although there is archaeological evidence from the British Museum that the first known thread was made by winding vegetable fibers on the thigh. In Turkey, the remains of felt have been found dating back at least to 6,500 BC. Highly sophisticated felted artifacts were found preserved in permafrost in a tomb in Siberia and dated to 600 AD. Many cultures have legends as to the origins of feltmaking. Sumerian legend claims that the secret of feltmaking was discovered by Urnamman of Lagash. The story of Saint Clement and Saint Christopher relates that while fleeing from persecution, the men packed their sandals with wool to prevent blisters. At the end of their journey, the movement and sweat had turned the wool into felt socks.
Felting differs from fulling in the sense that fulling is done to fabric whereas felting is done to fibers that are not in fabric form.
In needle-felting “the barbs [on the needle] catch the scales on the fiber and push them through the layers of wool tangling them and binding them together much like the wet felting process.”
Nuno felting is a Japanese fabric felting technique. It melds loose fibre, usually wool, into a sheer fabric such as silk gauze.
Wool is the fiber derived from the specialized skin cells, called follicles, of animals in the Caprinae family, principally sheep, but the hair of certain species of other mammals such as goats, llamas, and rabbits may also be called wool. Wool has several qualities that distinguish it from hair or fur: it is crimped; it has a different texture or handle; it is elastic; and it grows in staples (clusters).
The Merino is the most economically influential breed of sheep in the world, prized for its wool. Super fine Merinos are regarded as having the finest and softest wool of any sheep. The term merino is widely used in the textile industries with very varied meanings. Originally it denoted the wool of Merino sheep reared in Spain, but due to the superiority of Australian and New Zealand wools the term now has broader use. In the dress-goods and knitting trades the term "Merino" still implies an article made from the very best soft wool.
Angora wool or Angora fiber refers to the downy coat produced by the Angora rabbit. While their names are similar, Angora fiber is distinct from mohair, which comes from the Angora goat. Angora is known for its softness, low micron count (i.e. thin fibers), and what knitters refer to as a halo (fluffiness). It is also known for its silky texture. Angora rabbits produce coats in a variety of colors, from white to black. Good quality angora fiber is around 12-16 microns in diameter, and can cost around 10 - 16 dollars per ounce. It felts very easily, even on the animal itself if the animal is not groomed frequently. The fiber is normally blended with wool to give the yarn elasticity, as angora fiber is not naturally elastic. The blend decreases the softness and halo as well as the price of the finished object.
The fibers are hollow which gives them their characteristic floating feel.
Mohair usually refers to a silk-like fabric or yarn made from the hair of the Angora goat. The word "mohair" was adopted into English before 1570 from the Arabic mukhayyar, a type of haircloth, literally 'choice', from khayyara, 'he chose'. Mohair fiber is approximately 25-45ยต in diameter. It is one of the oldest textile fibers in use. It is both durable and resilient. It is notable for its high luster and sheen, and is often used in fiber blends to add these qualities to a textile. Mohair also takes dye exceptionally well. Mohair is also warm as it has great insulating properties. It is durable, moisture-wicking, stretch and flame resistant, and crease resistant. Mohair is composed mostly of keratin, a protein found in the hair, wool, horns and skin of all mammals. While it has scales like wool, the scales are not fully developed, merely indicated. Thus, mohair does not felt like wool does.
Recycled Wool Sweaters
1. Purchase way too many sweaters while on business trips and pay too much for them at Oregon thrift stores - for whatever reason Oregonians get rid of the most beautiful sweaters and Goodwill knows it and takes advantage of it.
2. Bring purchases into the house under the cover of dark so husband does not have direct proof of my craziness - but who am I kidding? I know he knows I have no self-control when it comes to wool.
3. Cut all of the sweaters apart - if I can bear it, I also have a number of "felters" that became "keepers". I cut the arms from the body, open up the arm seams, then cut the back from the front of the sweater along the existing seams. Remove all buttons and zippers for later use. Cutting the sweaters into flat single-ply pieces probably helps the wool felt more uniformly.
4. Wash like-colored sweaters together. It would probably be a good idea to wash angora sweaters in a pillowcase as these sweaters tend to pick up the stray lint bits from other sweaters and the lint bits can become permanently felted to the angora sweater pieces. Generally though I just select a low water level so the sweaters don't float, throw in a tennis ball for added friction (though I have read about using a pair of jeans for friction) and drizzle some laundry detergent in there too. I wash the sweater pieces with hot water (cold rinse) on the 10 minute wash cycle. Some sweaters need an addition cycle to felt properly and some never felt which is really disappointing.
5. Dry the sweater pieces in the dryer for about 20 - 30 minutes and then I usually hang them on a drying rack if they are still a little damp.
6. Sort pieces by color or design and try to cram this felted bounty into my workspace in the corner of our bedroom.
SOME NOTES ABOUT WOOL SWEATERS:
- 100% wool sweaters are probably the best bets for felting. A man-made fiber content of up to 20% generally works though (spandex, acrylic, nylon, etc.) if the remaining 80% is made of up the natural fibers angora, or lambswool/wool. I seem to have really good luck with Gap, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Eddie Bauer sweaters, but you pay more for the label.
- I haven't had much luck with merino wool. It just seems too thin and tightly knit and the fibers must not move against one another well enough during the felting process to make a nice felted end product. I have a few of these sweaters in my "to felt" pile so I'll report back on those in a later post.
- Striped or patterned sweaters that have too many different colors/yarn types can give uneven felting results. Some of the yarns may not be wool (check the label) or just felt at a different rate. So you can end up with a band of design that is highly felted or conversely, not felted at all, and the rest of the sweater just the opposite. The worst experience I had with this was a merino wool men's sweater from Scotland with a block pattern. Each differently colored block felted to a different degree and the result was a completely unusable sweater. Live and learn.
- Cable knit patterns don't seem to be good choices for felting. The loosely knit yarn must really have a lot of room for moving against each other and the result is a very densely felted product. Maybe a shorter wash cycle would work, I'll have to investigate that.
- Cashmere won't felt but it does get even softer in the wash and is a real treat to have for a project where the edges will be finished (like in a quilt or stuffed object) so you don't have to worry about it raveling or fraying. Look for cashmere sweaters in with the shirts at Goodwill, they end up there more often than with the sweaters.
- The men's section at thrift stores is another place to look for sweaters. I don't have the best luck with men's sweaters. The color selection usually isn't what I'm interested in but if you can find a good looking sweater it is usually a better deal than the women's sweaters. Men's sweaters tend to be both larger and less expensive.
That is about all I can think of at the moment. I'll post more information as I go though.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
ham anyone?
Wooly Booly
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Linen and things
Friday, November 14, 2008
Mary, Mary quite contrary...
Shop 'til your finger cramps - part 2
I haven't ordered supplies from all of these sites but I intend to at some point - I have an overwhelming wish list.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Shop 'til your finger cramps
- http://www.canvasworks.net/ Canvas Works in Olympia,WA is probably Claire's favorite crafting shop - she calls it the yarn shop. The owners are originally from Iowa too which makes this store especially nice. They also know Claire by name and ask where she is when I go in without her - they really know how to cater to three-year-old button connoisseurs. Canvas Works is a beautiful store with a diverse inventory and I never leave without a purchase or two or three or ...
- http://www.quiltedforest.com/ This is a link to the online store for Greenbuaums Quilted Forest in Salem, OR. Every time I'm in Salem, I stop there to pick up a yard of this or that and to admire all of the beautiful quilts.
- http://www.sistersfabric.com/ The sheer volume of fabric choices in this shop is sensory overload but I love every minute of it. The women that work at this shop are so friendly and helpful and there is a feeling of community in this shop. I love to listen to the conversations that pour out from between the bolts of fabric at this gathering of creative women.
I guess it is time to start my day. I've finished my first cup of coffee and my first list. The next post will be a list composed strictly of online shopping sites - places that exist in the ether.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Shop ‘til you drop
A three year old can only take so much shopping and Claire reached her limit while I was trying to decide on which craft and sewing books to buy. So of course I spent too much money and should have thought about my purchases more carefully. There were also some books that I didn't have time to look for.
The book titled Small Articles Made Out of Wool looked really familiar to me but the projects were so cute and enticing that I purchased it. I have since seen it on Amazon - IN ENGLISH! It looked familiar because last January I saw it at Powell's. Good grief. Shopping with your preschooler is a real exercise in patience and mental acuity. As a testament to my lack of focus and mental acuity, when we got home Saturday night with our booty, I realized that I had only purchased seven new beautiful, shallow soup/pasta bowls at IKEA. Now I ask you, who the hell buys seven bowls? The mother of a three year old, that's who. Sane, rational adults buy eight bowls.
Thinking about my new books now though, in the comfort of our home and while Claire sleeps or plays, I am very pleased with my selections. The book Houses, Houses, Houses! is probably the most beautiful quilting book in my sewing book library. I just love the earth tones that are used in the projects. The projects are part zakka, part Scandinavian charm and a little bit of something that I just can't name yet – sophisticated Holly Hobby I guess (that has to be an oxymoron!). They are really beautiful quilts that are turned into purses and placemats, change pouches, wall hangings and more.
The same degree of intuitiveness is going to be needed to make any of the clothing shown in the Natural Fabric Clothing for Autumn/Winter book. I am currently taking a pattern fitting class through the local community college and I am surprised at how much I still know about garment construction. I have also found some helpful information on the internet on the subject of Japanese sewing patterns.
http://www.antipope.org/feorag/gosurori/gr-patterns.pdf
http://movinghands.wordpress.com/japanese-sewing-and-pattern-terms/
http://label-free.blogspot.com/search/label/How%20To%20-%20Japanese%20Crafting
The Serge Protector