Filmed on Sunday, November 3, 2019
NY Sheep & Wool 2019 Recap
- Thursday
- Drove up to Saugerties to help Once Upon a Corgi set up for Indie Untangled
- Went to Bread Alone for lunch in Rhinebeck to wait for check in at our rental
- Chill day waiting for folks to get in from other places and had dinner at the house
- Friday
- Went separate ways for Friday events and met back at the house for dinner from Smoky Rock BBQ
- Needles Up – Mom and I went to Needles Up to catch up with Amanda of Classy Squid Fiber Co and Sue and Chelsea of Legacy Fiber Artz.
- Potions Classroom Rolags
- Velaris Rolags
- Ate lunch at Gabby’s Cafe, which is a great Mexican food place
- Went back into Rhinebeck to see what was up with the Yarn Bazaar event, but the line was way too long
- Poked around the Yarn Garage
- Wandered around downtown and checked out antique stores and got apple cider like true New Englanders
- Saturday
- Got into the festival and did our Might Be Gone shopping
- Lana Plantae – 3 skeins cochineal dyed fingering weight Rambouillet
- Ravelry/Podcaster Meet Up
- Got to meet a couple of viewers, so hello people I met!
- Hugged a bunch of folks and even managed to introduce myself to some podcasters that I hadn’t or had barely met in person before!
- If have the chance to get a GGMadeIt hug, do it. She is a professional hugger.
- Meandered through the barns and then the buildings later after the crowds for our first walk through to note places we wanted to check out on Sunday
- Dinner at Aroi, excellent Thai place
- Got into the festival and did our Might Be Gone shopping
- Sunday
- Back to the festival for shopping
- Neighborhood Fiber Co – 3 skeins fingering weight – Studio Sock “Upton”
- Loop Fiber Studios – 2 bumps to go with a previous spinning project
- Little witch mouse
- Started raining in the afternoon, so we said goodbyes and drove home
- Back to the festival for shopping
NEFF 2019 Recap
- Went to New England Fiber Festival, ran some errands for Gabby/Once Upon a Corgi who was vending
- Walked through about half and started making purchases
- Done Roving Yarns – 3 skeins Yakkety-Yak in Prussian Blue to go with 2 skeins of A Hundred Ravens Yaksha bought last year
- Stitched by Jessa Lu – Sweater sized Halloween bag
- Met up with friends and chatted/had lunch
- Finished walking through and made more purchases
- My Daughter’s Recipe lotion and soap
- Falling Star Farm – Adele Romney roving
FOs
- Granny Stripe Blanket by Lucy/Attic24 – US G/4.25mm hook marling Knit Picks Stroll Fingering in Black with a magic ball of Legacy Fiber Artz minis
- Noodlehead Maker’s Tote – for Electric Eel Nano and drop spindling supplies
WIPs
- Palmer Ribbed Socks v3 – improv pattern – Palmer Family Farm CVM local wool, US 3/3.25 mm Cubics needles
- Redford by Julie Hoover Machine Knit – Green Mountain Spinnery Lana in “Gris”
- Rice Fields by Elzbieta Torenc – US 3/3.25mm needles – Berroco Ultra Alpaca Light for Black and Legacy Fiber Artz Hocus Pocus colorways
- 501st fluffs – Electric Eel Nano wheel – 2 ply
- House Organa – Electric Eel Nano wheel – 2 ply
- Classy Squid Fiber Co “Quoth” batts, each 2 oz – Ashford Kiwi 2 – 2 ply
Other Stuff
Stuff I’m Listening To:
- The Raven Cycle by Maggie Stiefvater narr by Will Patton
- The Raven Boys
- Dream Thieves
- Blue Lily, Lily Blue
- Raven King
- Brisingr by Christopher Paolini narr by Gerard Doyle
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Transcript:

The Winter Wall quilt was made adapting a pattern of the same name from The Weekend Quilter: Fabulous Quilts to Make in a Weekend by Rosemary Wilkinson. The original pattern is for a twin sized bed, but my big 2018 purchase was a full sized bed. This quilt is likely more of a queen size, but I prefer my quilts to drape off the edges of the bed. It covers up the rumpled sheets that I tried to smooth out at 5 am, you know?
always happy about going from a typical quilting cotton to a thick denim, especially when sewing the rows together, but I’m please with the result. The border on this quilt is made from an old fitted sheet from my twin bed. The back is a considerable amount of black cotton fabric that an Instagram/podcast-follower volunteered to send to me for the price of postage while clearing out some old stash from her craft room.
While I’m pleased with all the quilts I finished in 2018, this one holds a special place for me. Because it’s almost entirely made from recovered fabrics and destash, it’s seems to me like this is the closest to the spirit of historical quilting. There’s something very satisfying about that. I haven’t examined that too closely, but I think part of my aim in 2019 will be to work through stash. Instead of supplementing my stash with too many impulse fabric buys, I think I’d rather prefer recovering fabric from damaged/unmendable clothing as my main source of quilt materials. I don’t think I’ll ever be a capital-Q Quilter, but I think using quilting as a way to use recovered fabrics will be really satisfying.
considerable hand pain. The simple shapes, the simple lines to sew and assemble, and the experimenting in machine quilting was a balm to my unhappy brain chemicals over many months in 2018. It was so important to me that I hosted an HST QAL in the Ravelry group for my podcast folks. A few people joined, which I’m grateful for, but it wasn’t very popular amongst my knitting viewers. I mean, I know it’s not for everyone, but I felt really encouraged when a couple of folks joined me.


This quilt top was sitting around in my collection of quilt tops and I was reorganizing my fabrics at the same time, which happily resulted in finding that Halloween plaid backing fabric. I had originally purchased it to make a button down shirt, but I know myself better than I did and I’m not comfortable wearing shirts in full bright colors like that. Halloween plaid is perfect, however, for quilt backing fabric and within a few days, I had this quilt sandwich under the needle of my machine. It was done with freeform quilting – lots of experimenting and motif exploration – and I’m pretty pleased with how it turned out.