Process Knitting (by Mary Fran Riley)
February 18, 2010 by Ms. Knitterz
Filed under Beginnerz
There are many ways to approach knitting. Making finished objects, making hundreds of swatches to learn various techniques and knitting for the process.
I love a beaut
iful hand knit project as much as the next gal (or guy). I really do! I have three sweaters on needles, a pair of slippers begging to be sewn together and felted, a pattern waiting to be typed and yarn for about ten other specific projects calling my name. I am a process knitter. What’s that? I knit because I love the action of knitting and not for the contentment of completing finished pieces.
When I knit I become part of what I am knitting. It is a movement and a flow. The knitting itself is the point, not the finished product. It is about a connection I get to a project. It’s about the satisfaction I get using my hands to create something. A kind of satisfaction I don’t get from my creative industry job. It is a break from the sterility of computers and the perfection they give.
I have a short attention span and always get bored with a project long before it’s done. Including hats. After I have experienced the best there is about a pattern, I am ready to move on. I usually finish hats when I run out of short circular needles and need them for another project that I so very much need to knit.
I always have my knitting with me and knit every chance I get – air planes, trains and cars are my friends. Long boring meetings and college classes provide great opportunities for me to knit away!
My aversion to getting to the end of a project might be because of my deadline driven professional life. Sometimes it’s just nice to create and not have the pressure hanging over the process. Sometimes I feel I should be creating better goals for myself and try to finish more of my projects. I’m afraid that by doing this I will taint my pure connection to the act of knitting. I will turn knitting into a task that is always looming.
So, I will continue on my path to knit with every type of fiber that I can find followed by an attempt to learn as many techniques and stitches along the way. Maybe, just maybe, all of this will end up in a higher project completion rate for me. Maybe it won’t and I am ok with that too.
I am certain I’m not the only knitter out there who knits for its calming effects. I hope I am not the only person who knits just to knit and not to make a finished work piece.
How a Spinning Wheel Works (video)
December 27, 2009 by Ms. Knitterz
Filed under Spin & Weave
The Naughty Knitterz Spin & Grin topic category is all about spinning fiber into yarn. There are a variety of spinning wheels. If you want to learn about spinning it’s important to understand how a spinning wheel works. This video does a great job of explaining not only how a spinning wheel works but also describes its parts. Having a basic understanding of spinning wheel mechanics will help give you an initial understanding of spinning fiber into yarn.
In this 10 1/2 minute video Sue Macniven shows a saxony wheel, its various parts and how to adjust a scotch tension. In depth look at how to work out the ratios.
Yarn Addiction (by The Woolpack)
August 11, 2009 by Ms. Knitterz
Filed under Yarnz
What’s so addictive about yarn? Everything – With so many choices and uses, it’s the perfect collectible.
Yarns today are being made from so many fibers-natural and synthetic. Natural fibers include sheep, llama, goats, buffalo, alpaca, angora, musk ox, possum, cotton, silk, corn, soy, bamboo, and milk fibers.
Our yarn supply is a truly global economy: Italy, Australia, South America, Turkey, China, USA. Many US distributors work with small cooperatives in developing countries helping regions to become self-sustaining. 
Today’s synthetic fibers like modal, viscose, tencel, courtelle, nylon, and acrylic are spun using high tech spinning equipment to produce yarns far removed from the acrylic yarns of the 50’s and 60’s. Many acrylics feel like natural fibers and are wonderful to knit with.
Hand spinners are turning out artful yarns in small quantities and hand dyers produce rich, deep or delicate colors using many natural fibers as their canvas.
You can knit, crochet, weave, felt, embellish and craft with yarns. You can put them in a basket like a bouquet of flowers and just admire them.
Yarns are spun finer than human hair and as thick as your finger. Yarns can be a single strand or ply and many plies twisted together. Sometime they are even constructed of plies of plies twisted clockwise and counterclockwise (for a Z twist or an S twist). Some are smooth while others are highly textured.
You can make a collection of yarn from a particular designe
r, fiber, color, gauge, or even collect yarns as a souvenir from your travels. You can swap yarn like trading cards, buy on ebay and yard sales or make donations to worthy causes.
People buy yarn who have no earthly idea what they are going to do with it, some don’t even knit or crochet. They are seduced by the color, the feel. It might remind them of a place or a person. The texture might be soothing and calming to the touch. The colors may brighten your spirits. You just know that if you don’t buy this yarn, it may not be there the next visit. That if you don’t buy this yarn, you will think about it for days. That life is full of regrets and this shouldn’t be one of them.


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