Getting Organized

0 Posted by - September 11, 2012 - Knitting

Every fall the whole shop shifts a little.  I think of it as a little tremor that ripples through our shelves, as we move things from here to there, clean the shelves, inspect the yarn, and find a new home for it.   The summer yarn moves out of the front room and the winter yarn moves in.  The super-bulky takes over a certain space and causes a ripple effect through the rest of the weights from bulky down to laceweight.  The work isn’t done yet, so excuse our chaos for a little while.

As we move things around, I find it interesting that our space allocation reflects the trends in yarns. Certain things are more prominent for a while, then slip a little as another gauge or fiber takes their place in the headlines.  When I first started in this biz, worsted weight and aran yarns were the most popular, then novelty yarns took over the world.  As they faded, super-bulky was the big news, then sock yarns, and for the last few years fingering and laceweight yarns were extremely popular, for shawls and featherweight sweaters.

This season I see several beautiful designs that are using multiple strands of these lightweight yarns to make worsted-weight sweaters.  Can’t wait to explore this a little.  Putting different fibers together to build an entirely new fabric is fun and creative; you are basically designing your own yarn!

Of course, you can also just simply buy the perfect yarn, and Maxima from Manos fills the bill for almost any worsted-weight project. Just look at all the wonderful colors we got in last week:

…and that’s not even all of them.  Each bundle you see contains 10 skeins of luscious hand-dyed extrafine merino.  That bright red-orange in the bottom right corner is going to be made into a Honey Cowl, a free pattern on Ravelry and one I’ve been wanting to make for a while.  I’ll up the needle size and lower the number of stitches to cast on to adjust for worsted weight vs. dk.  Here is a close-up of that beautiful light pink next to it:

Plump, and soft, and just scrumptious!

We also received a shipment from Crystal Palace.  Favorite colors of Panda Silk are back in stock:

Sausalito, a fingering-to-sport weight merino-nylon yarn, is appropriate for socks or sweaters. Two self-striping plies twist around each other to make a tweedy yarn with interesting color transitions:

and Kid Merino, a multi-colored laceweight mohair-wool-nylon blend:

New colors from Frog Tree in Meriboo, their smooth, soft and lustrousmerino-bamboo DK:

I finished knitting my little Emelie cardigan, which is blocking right now.  It needs 9 or 10 buttons and if Donna pops in this week, I’m going to try to talk her into sewing them on for me.   Donna is recovering nicely from her foot surgery and I hope she’ll be back to work for us soon.

Did I show you my Little Sparrow Cowl, made in Paloma?  It’s so soft and lovely and the stitchwork shows off to perfection in this yarn:

It’s a pretty berry (non-fluorescent) shade in real life, and completely reversible, which would make this stitch a good one for a scarf as well.

And this is our Berry Stitch Loop Scarf, made from 1 skein of Cascade Magnum.  It’s a new free pattern in the shop:

Two really beautiful projects to show you:

Marci Frey brought in her finished baby blanket, from 60 Quick Baby Knits.  It’s absolutely beautiful, and she lined it with a darling fabric.  A wonderful job, but she wants to make it perfectly clear that this was not a quick knit!  (She may be thinking of suing for false advertising.)

Deb Schlarb made this lovely shawl from Dream in Color’s Wisp laceweight wool/silk, and is going to use it as a curtain in her new house.  Can’t you just see sunlight streaming through this pretty cloud of lace?

Lovely idea!

That’s it for this week.  See you soon!

Trish