Summer Activities: Knitting, Dyeing, and More Fun

knitting Muqarnas top body section

It is high time for a catching up post about our summer activities. There will be some content about my knitting, reading, yarn dyeing, and a few other odds and ends.

Knitting

First, let’s get right to the knitting content. I am working exclusively on the Muqarnas top. In my last post, I showed you the finished sleeves and the ribbing for the body section. At this point I have knit 4 of the lace repeats on the body section. The intended length of the body before joining it with the arms, is 14 inches. I have almost 9 inches right now. According to my measurements, I need to knit about 3 more lace repeats to reach that goal.

knitting Muqarnas top body section

I am looking forward to that milestone. It will slow down the progress even more at first. The addition of the sleeve stitches makes the rounds longer, after all. The momentum of the decreases makes the progress much faster at that point. I can’t wait to see how the finished top looks! I love how lace changes after blocking. It is worth the wait!

Yarn Dyeing and other Business Stuff

The first half of the festival season came to its conclusion for us in early June. Our last spring show was Hoosier Hills Fiber Festival in Franklin, IN. It was another fantastic year and I am so pleased to be a witness to the growth of this festival over the years. I began with the show in 2008, and it is one of my favorites now. I’ll share a few pics from this year.

Upon returning to Nashville, we went straight into yarn dyeing time. I spent about a week with dyeing preparations. This involves lots of math and spreadsheet work, dye stock mixing and final color mixing. Then more math and spreadsheet work to make work order plans. Then finally, get all the yarn prepped. For me, that means bundling and soaking for the dye pots.

Other preparations were also some much needed upgrades to our “dye and finishing studio”. This area is in our daylight basement which opens out onto the covered patio area we built 5 years ago. I have been relying on clip on shop lights on the floor joists and portable fans in hot weather. We decided to install a large fan that is suspended from the joists. Even more exciting, to me anyway, are the ceiling shop lighting. We got 4 of these and they sure do make a huge difference! I love how much better I can see. This is particularly important when measuring stock to mix colors. Notice in the above right picture, that was before we installed the new lighting.

We accomplished all the dyeing of the yarn in three sessions over one weekend. It was hot and mostly dry that week. That is a bit of a con for the dyers, but a pro for getting the yarn dry.

The following week, we got all the labeling and storing done. Now we are all set for the fall festivals. I have extra yarn in the event that we need to dye anything that runs low. The only catch will be time to do it.

In other product news, the wood shop has been in full operation all spring also. We have been adding a lot of Shawl/Hair Sticks to the inventory. Lately, that has been some Walnut, Mahogany, and Maple.

shawl and hair sticks

Currently, we are working on some more Darning Eggs. These were hot sellers around Christmas time and for a few months after that, so the inventory got a bit low in some woods. We are out on a few also, but more will be in stock soon! I will be back out at festivals in early August, and we should have plenty more by then.

Reading

Let’s switch topics to a bit of book chat. First, I would love to hear what you’re reading lately if you want to share in the comments.

I am making my way through my TBR but I am also a bit of a mood reader, so there have been many diversions. They were good ones though, and that’s the important thing.

My most exciting report is that I finished my re-read of War and Peace. I am so glad that I took my time with it. It took me 6 months, but it was time well spent. I definitely have a fuller understanding and appreciation for what Tolstoy was doing with this work than I did after my first read 13 years ago. If you haven’t tried it, I encourage you to have a go at it. The chapters are pretty small so even if you only set a goal of a chapter a day, you can read it slowly through over a year. Anna Karenina is a bit more engaging, character wise, but War and Peace is just so magnificent!

Other books that I have read in June are:

  • Never Flinch – Stephen King (*** okay but not one my favorites)
  • Cold Mountain – Charles Frazier (**** a re-read sparked by reading The Trackers; really liked it!)
  • The Wedding People – Alison Espach (**** first read of this author due to a BookTube recommendation; liked it)
  • A Month in the Country – J.L. Carr (**** same as above; very good short summer read)

Currently reading:

  • Sense and Sensibility – Jane Austen (reading for Jane Austen July)
  • Memorial Days – Geraldine Brooks (first read of this author, reading to fulfill a Kindle Challenge, borrowed in Libby)
  • Complete Stories of Eudora Welty (about halfway through this book which is actually 5 published collections in one volume)

Closing

As always, thank you for reading and hanging in there when I let the grass get too high. I will attempt to post before another month goes by. Blessings!

11 thoughts on “Summer Activities: Knitting, Dyeing, and More Fun

  1. I LOVE reading about your dying process! It’s so magical to me, I feel like I’m getting a peek behind the curtain!!!
    Your dying studio looks so much more inviting wit hall the lighting you installed, I’ll bet you had more fun down there than you have in ages!!! As always, I just love your drying day pictures, all the beautiful colors and all that yarn <3

    1. Thanks 😊! Yes! The lights really did make a big improvement and so does the fan. 🫠

  2. What a huge job, getting all that yarn dyed and dried! It all looks so beautiful.

    1. Yes, it is, but it is satisfying when it’s all done. Thank you 😊.

  3. I love Charles Frazier. Have you read Thirteen Moons? One of my favorites.

    1. No, not yet. I think I own the Kindle, though. I am glad you liked it. I may get to that one this year also. I also have Nightwoods. Have you read that one?

      1. I haven’t! I will have to get it.

  4. Oh my goodness, your Mugarnas is gorgeous!! Thanks for the link. The yarn is perfect. Glad to hear you had a good spring festival season and I hope the fall continues to go well. I will definitely see you at Wool Gathering. Another of the YOP bloggers hopes to meet up with me at the festival adding to my fun. WOW what a huge difference the lighting makes!!

    1. Thank you 😊! I do hope to see you in September. I also hope to have this knit finished by then. 😁

  5. Wow so much amazing all packed into this post! First off I love the stitch in your knitting it looks beautiful. And I am also partial to that colour. I can’t wait to see it finished. I can only imagine how much work that is. I seem to have more patience for colourwork than I do for cables and lace.
    I love the pictures of your yarn dying all drying outside. Such a satisfying thing to see. I don’t know if it is all the pretty rows of colours or my own enjoyment of hanging laundry outside but its lovely.
    Also such a cute tree frog!

    1. Thank you for your compliments ☺️. I really enjoy knitting lace most, cables next, and color work occasionally.

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