Tag Archives: crochet

Adventures at StitchesEast….

Going to StitchesEast was like diving into a box of chocolates. Not that everything suited my taste, but, boy, I sure relished what did.1006SE06

Delicious would be a word I’d use for some of the new and favorite yarns I brought home.  Continue reading

UFOs!

I’m sorry, but aren’t I supposed to blog about my stuff? My ideas, theories, thoughts, wanderings, and pasttimes? Yes, of course I am.

This has nothing to do with my post.

Gracie running. This has nothing to do with my post.

Except I came across this blog that…well….it’s far more deserving of a post than anything I can think of right now. Continue reading

New Hampshire Sheep & Wool…Had a blast…

09NH Sheep Wool - 193Saturday morning the skies threatened to open up. I donned rain gear, boots, a hat. I packed two cameras and notebooks and some dollars for food. For yarn, I slipped my checkbook into my bag. Nothing would deter me from the New Hampshire Sheep & Wool Festival. My friend Chris and I left for the fair at 9 a.m., just as splats of wet pounded from the skies. Sigh. Yet by the time we reached the fairgrounds an hour away, the sun had pushed the clouds aside. We cheered. Continue reading

Maryland Sheep and Wool 2009….

Five SheepWish you’d gone to the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival?

Here’s a whole bunch of photos taken at the mother of all fiber festivals. Enjoy!

For Those Who Serve…

This piece is from Lion Brand Yarn:

Knitting for Soldiers 
By: Michelle Edwards
 
“From every hearth, parlor, log cabin, and farmhouse, whether in the North or in the South, women sent socks to protect and warm their soldiers. With every stitch, they knitted in their courage, tears, prayers and hopes.” 
- Karin Timour, Piecework magazine 2009

An article about Civil War soldiers’ socks started me thinking about knitting for soldiers. Something I have never done. Then an email from my friend, Anne, whose son Darren is serving in Iraq, nudged me even further. All weekend, she wrote me, they waited tensely to hear from him. Worrying the big worries until they finally did. “Would he like a hat?” I offered, embarrassed that I had overlooked knitting for him, and for others.

In every war, American knitters have been called upon to fill the gap in what the country was able to provide. Socks, wristlets, vests, helmet liners. Warmth for the troops. What kinds of needs were there now? Looking for answers to share with those of you, who like me, have never knit our bit, but might like to start, I googled “knitting for soldiers.” That’s where I found The Ships Project and The Handmade Afghan Project.

In October 2001, Ellen Harpin’s letter to “Any Sailor” mentioned her love of knitting. The sailor who answered mentioned her very cold feet, and joked “maybe Ellen could send her a pair of knit slippers. She did. After the first pair, and the snowball effect of the demand it created, Ellen launched the Ships Project. In eight years, with the help of over 1,000 volunteers, 284,000 hand-made slippers/socks, hats, neck gaiters and other items have been sent to soldiers on the land, at sea, and to those wounded and injured. The troops have nicknamed their gifts “hugs”.

To read the rest of the story and for more links, go here…