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Little Audrey & me

Remember Little Shop of Horrors? Are you a fan of the original 1960 version or the 1986 musical remake with Rick Moranis? (The links are to Youtube videos of the Feed Me scenes.) When the original came out I was only 8, and my middle sister, who I idolized, thrilled in scaring me with Friday Night Fright Night movies. Truth be told, only 3 years older, she was often scared, too

In any case I think you’ll agree that this bud looks pretty scarily like Audrey Jr.

Little Audrey bud

After it opens part of it looks beautifully alien, too.
alien hibiscus stamen

As a whole, the hibiscus is a beautiful plant/small shrub. I planted 3 in the fall, and this burgundy one was the first to open.
hibiscus plant

Staying outside, I’ve seen some cloud formations lately that I found compelling. I got decent shots of two of them, the first one preceding a rain that we desperately need.
storm clouds

The second a shot of the evening sun casting gorgeous light on fluffy, cumulus clouds.
evening clouds & sun

And look – my first melon!
my first melon

On our walk yesterday morning Jack & I startled – and were startled by – a pileated woodpecker who flew from a tree only about 5′ in front of us. And landed for a bit on a tree only about 10′ further. I know the photo isn’t very clear, so I circled where the big bird is on that tree trunk.
pileated woodpecker

Nature is beautiful and amazing, isn’t it?

Next post you’ll get to see and hear about some weaving. 😉

Restocking

My last show was really marvelous. In addition to a few odds and ends, I sold an amazing 9 shawls and 21 scarves. WOW! So now I need to weave more things so I’ll have plenty of stock for my next shows. Fortunately I have until mid-September to prepare. But being a good obsessive-compulsive, I got on a tear and decided to weave up some rayon chenille shawls. I got smart and realized that my life would be much easier if I warped for only 2 shawls, not 3, given the challenges I always have when beaming wide rayon chenille warps.

In the last few days I got 2 shawls on and off the loom and wet finished. I’m calling them Warning for the Jenny Joseph poem. So first I wove Warning with a purple weft.

rayon chenille shawl-Warning purple

I loved it! I was sure I wouldn’t like the burgundy weft nearly as much, but as it turned out, I was wrong.

rayon chenille shawl: Warning-red

I think I like it even more.

Although the colors are more accurate in their individual photos, here’s a comparison of the two.

rayon chenille shawls: Warning comparison

After the saturated colors of these two shawls and the recent At The Lake series, I decided I should do something in more muted earth tones, so warped for 2 more shawls. Here’s the first one one the loom…sorry I managed to cut off the right side of the warp, with a gradient from the coral-y orange to an orange-y brick. But at least the colors are pretty accurate in this photo.
rayon chenille shawl: Earthtones

I ordered black rayon chenille and am going to weave a warp of 2 rainbow shawls when these earthy ones come off the loom. I don’t think I’ve woven any for at least 2 years, maybe more. Then I’m going to be done with rayon chenille shawls. At least I think so… 😉

Outside interest

Despite the summer’s remarkable heat and drought in the northeast, I still spend quite a bit of time outside. Mostly early in the morning on my walks. One of the places I walk most days is down this shady path. It’s so pleasant.
shady walking path

Not so pleasant, when I left the house the other morning I saw this:
back at the hole

Someone’s re-opened the hole in my front garden. I didn’t have a tool with me, so I just sort of pushed dirt back in with the toe of my sneaker, and it has stayed the way I put it for several days now. I have absolutely no idea what any of this means.

Two days ago I saw this very cool looking beetle on the fence post.

unknown bug 1

To give you some idea of perspective, how big that bug is…
unknown bug 2

If anyone has a clue what this beetle is, I’m interested. UPDATE: Theresa clued me in…this is an Ailantus webworm moth. This link has better photos, but there’s more info here.

So back to my walk, for several days in a row, the roof of this house was covered in pigeons. No pigeons on any nearby houses. No pigeons in the nearby trees. Only on the roof of this one house. Weird.
pigeons on roof

At the Roycroft Summer Festival I reverted to an audience participation weaving, a community weaving project. It didn’t work exactly as I’d planned, nor was it as lovely as the first one I did with tulle a few years ago. I think the narrowness of the warp was a definite creativity inhibitor. I had to do some filling in after I got home; I don’t know how long it’ll stay hanging on the arbor in my yard, but it’s there now.
RALA community weaving hung

To close this post with something marvelous that’s not in my yard or on my walk…a week or so ago I went kayaking on Irondequoit Creek with my son, daughter, and grandson. We were in 2 two-person kayaks. At two different points we came across a pair of swans and their cygnets. The first family had 3 babies, and I thought it remarkable that we got within around 30 feet of them. (CORRECTION: they had 4 babies. See comments.) Then we came across this family.

swan family

Five babies, and we got very close, probably within around 12-14 feet. You can see a bit of our kayak in the photo. Amazing!

Dyed scarves, cotton & silk

Time gets away from me. I thought I’d show you the finished ombre-dyed scarves on the 2nd or 3rd, and here it is the 7th. No matter; it’s not like you were hanging by a thread (pun intended) waiting.

So even after ‘curing’ on the heating pad overnight, both the blue and the red scarf took LOTS of rinsing for the water to come clean. Online research tells me that RIT and similar dyes are not as colorfast as the more serious dyes that I use in the classes. Hope they wear well. Here’s the blue one.
blue ombre done

I’m happy with it. The colors are fine, the ombre worked, and the undulating twill is stable. (I’ll have to remember this draft for future undulations.)

And the red scarf.

red ombre scarf done

I’m not as happy with this one for two reasons. First there’s not as much difference between the lightest part and the darkest part as I’d like. Guess even my quick first dip was too long. Second – totally my fault and I should have known better. When I re-threaded for the huck lace, I again sett the threads at 10 EPI, same as for the undulating twill. As I started weaving I had to beat hard to get the look I wanted. I should have unwoven and rethreaded the reed at 9 or even 8 EPI, and thought about it, but I didn’t feel like it. So the lace is really only textural, not lace-like. That’d be okay, but scarf is much stiffer than I’d like as a result of too-close threads. Sigh. Why didn’t I listen to myself?!

Anyway, at the June show I sold 2 of the 3 handpainted silk in the gold/orange/red colorway. I had another warp in a similar colorway and wanted to weave it to bring to my show this weekend, if I could. (Yes, Virginia, I am obsessive-compulsive.)

beaming hand painted silk

So I beamed the warp and threaded for twill blocks. I wove the first scarf with a burgundy silk-cashmere blend.

hand painted silk scarf with burgundy stripes

I wasn’t as happy with the threading as I might have been, and it made getting good selvedges difficult, so I rethreaded. I liked this threading much better, and the weaving moved along well. I did the first scarf, which is by far my favorite so you’ll see it last, and then struggled to find a weft I liked for the last. I ended up with a sort of smoky-slatey blue. (Color isn’t as bright as it looks in the photo.) It reminds me of a sunset with storm clouds moving in.

Hand painted silk scarf-stormy sunset

This last scarf – I just LOVE it! I am rarely called to name my woven pieces, but this one will get a name – summer sorbet. Woven with a medium orange weft, it brings out all of the hand painted colors beautifully. Wish I’d had enough of it to do more.

hand painted silk scarf-summer sorbet

I’ll be really surprised if this scarf doesn’t sell this weekend. Now I’m off to pick up the rental van.

Trying dyeing

WARNING: A long post with lots of photos. Leave now while you’ve got the chance. 😉

I need to start by showing you two wildflowers/weeds near my house. I’m hoping someone can identify at least one of them for me. The first is really sweet and small. You can see a portion of my foot in the photo for scale. The little flower is a nice orange. I don’t recall ever seeing this plant before.  I’m thinking it’s a garden escapee?

orange mystery wildflower

Then there’s the big weed that’s taken over the side yard of an abandoned house near me.  When it was small I thought it was milkweed.  It’s clearly not.  I feel like I should know this one, and that it’s bad, but I can’t place it.  I should probably get out my wildflower book.  The stalks are quite red, and probably 3′ tall.

mystery weed whiteSo other than looking at weeds/wildflowers, what else have I been doing?  Well, at the show last weekend it was clear to me that I should weave more bookmarks.  I decided I wanted to do some monk’s belt, a weave structure I think I’ve only previously done in classes.  I thought I’d wound a warp long enough to make 16 bookmarks, but I only got 13 out of it.  That’s ok.

monk's belt bookmarks
Then I really wanted to try doing some ombre dyeing with Rit dyes at home.  I had picked up 3 cones of a really nice pima cotton at a local resale store.  It’s quite thick, 790 ypp, very soft, and I figured it would weave up quickly and take dye well, plus I wasn’t out much money if it didn’t work.  So I wound a warp for two scarves, and wove the first one with an undulating twill.

undulating pima on the loom

After that, remembering my recent undulating twill disaster (different draft), I re-threaded for huck lace, but forgot to take a photo on the loom.  I got both scarves woven, then spent a bunch of time online looking at websites and blogs about ombre dyeing.  I have to say, there was quite a bit of inconsistency in process and time needed, so I figured I’d have to go with my gut.  I got the scarves washed and rinsed, then brought the needed tools outside.

dye tools ready

I mixed up a bottle of Rit dye with a cup of salt in about a gallon of water – maybe a little more.

blue dye mixed

Then I started dipping.  Since the yarn was unbleached and quite creamy colored, I didn’t think it would look good with the center having no dye at all, so dipped the entire scarf quickly.

blue dye in processThen I proceeded to lower and raise the scarf (note that it’s folded in half here), since I didn’t want distinct color lines.  I dipped the middle section about 30 times.  I wanted the bottom quite dark, and dipped it about 120 times.  Then I hung it on my arbor (another story for another time).  I went in the house to get the second scarf and the next bottle of dye.  While I was gone the wind kicked up and blew the scarf against my neighbor’s fence.

dye uh-ohThat wasn’t a big deal, but the splatters on my neighbor’s garage were.

garage splatters

I ran back into the house and got paper towels and dish soap.  Should have had those tools outside with me to begin with.  I moved the scarf to the front of the arbor and started on the next scarf, mixing up a batch of red dye.

red dye mixed

It was too red for me, so I mixed in a bunch of the blue.

red with blue dyeI wish the store had had more than 5 colors for me to choose from – these 2, plus black, brown, and dark green.  Anyway, I followed the same process with the red dye.  Here are both scarves hanging and dripping from the arbor.

hanging and dripping

You’d think I would have learned from the experience with my neighbor’s garage, and taken more care when I dumped out the blue dye in the weeds behind my own garage, but no.

coloring my garageThere was so much of it that it didn’t really wipe off.  I decided since it’s behind the garage I didn’t really care.  So I headed to the other side of the yard and started the clean up.  Fewer tools needed.

dye cleanup tools

Interestingly, the red dye really stained the dishpan and the blue washed out almost completely.  I would have expected the opposite, since in my experience red dye runs A LOT.

dye residueWhile the scarves were hanging outside dripping, I picked a mess of peas, went inside and shelled, steamed, quick-chilled, and froze a bag of them.

freezing peasAfter a while I went back outside and brought in the scarves.  I laid out a long piece of plastic wrap on the kitchen floor and laid a scarf on it.

blue scarf spread to rollI covered it with another layer of plastic and rolled it up.  Then I did the same thing with the red scarf.

red scarf spread to rollAfter they were all rolled up I put them on my heating pad, set on low, where it will sit overnight, hopefully setting that dye.

rolled and heatingTomorrow I’ll rinse the scarves and press them.  I won’t know until then how well it worked.  I’m actually hoping that some of the dye rinses out since both scarves are a bit darker than I had in mind.

I’ll share the results with you!