Thursday 28 April 2022

Still more Shenanigans - Andean-Inspired


Tiny khaitu, and equally tiny project... 

I decided for the Andean-Inspired challenge that I wanted to flex my memory a bit, and work from the remembered photograph, and related discussion, in Abby Franquemont's Discord.

But first, I needed yarn. I decided I would try to make it work, in miniature - because that's just how I roll.

First khaitu - I do NOT recommend putting in this much plying twist on the micro-pushka...
...but now I know what happened when I tried.



Tiny skein, in all its sea-urchin glory. Probably enough twist... just.


I had to 'properly' fill this spindle, at least once. 

      
I also added plying twist to a handspun stash yarn of similar size, so I would have 3 colours for my warp.

Setting up the warp, I used my smallest warping board, resting on the floor, so the pegs faced me, a bit above knee level.

My very first Andean-style warp with my handspun. 3-pairs

This was my actual waste from the green and yellow - I had EXACTLY enough.
The burgundy is my mini, I put everything left after warping into it.

I already had my pattern figured out.

There was a textile that someone received, that looked like it was made up of a 2-pair motif, rather than the 3 pairs we started learning on. Abby Assured us that there ARE no 2-pair patterns in traditional Andean weaving, and dropped a couple of hints as to how the construction worked on 3-pairs... I wanted to make THAT, with the added challenge of not even going back to look at the picture in the Discord thread.

...just like I would have to do if I lived in the Andes, and saw a pattern I wanted to make... 

Of course, Abby ALSO hinted that this pattern worked better on wider fabric, IIRC - because part of how it works is a combination of tension, and the way high-twist yarns behave...

The false 2-pair 'puntas' didn't behave when I started weaving - it very clearly showed all 3 threads, rather than hiding one, so I did a few repeats of another pattern I hadn't done yet: 'ocho-ocho'... and let the pattern yarns accumulate a little slack...

After a false start, I chose a different pattern I hadn't woven, to try...
'ocho-ocho'


...then transitioned into my 'false 2-pair puntas' pattern.
You can clearly see the 3 threads when I start.

THEN it worked - after I tweaked my weft tension a little, to help 'squash' the extra thread into hiding.

Success! Tiny mountains.

Proof of twist... Probably enough... I think.

Still More Shenanigans - We all Need a Shrink

 Pocket 'paca, and going TRULY batty...

I'll admit - I LOVE the challenge of working at a small scale... so this is my favourite category. It's nice to find uses for my standard yarns, other than knitting lace.

The added challenge this time, was I wanted to use my smallest tools, as well - so I pulled out the cross-arm spindles a friend had 3D printed as holiday ornaments, and put one into service as a working tool.

At 1.8g, it's _not_ the best at maintaining momentum, but it DOES work. The micro-pushka is a better option, though.


The Pocket 'Paca is my official entry... because I'm probably not batty enough to finish the other project in time for the reveal.

25 yards of alpaca - spun on the purple cross-arm, but no photos.
Micro-pushka and tiny ball of khaitu are for another entry.


My smallest cross-arm, and a TurtleMade Femto - which I used when I plied the alpaca.

itty-bitty 'paca butt... (giggle)

FiberTrends Alpaca pattern, writ smol. Those are 1mm needles


Still needs some sewing, fulling, and stuffing... but pretty close to the size I was hoping for!


And then, we get to the TRULY batty project.

In honour of our Fearless Shenanigator, Captain Caiman, I want to make an even _smaller_ bat... on even smaller needles. But for that, first I needed even smaller yarn.

I forgot to photograph this spindle the FIRST time I filled it, so of course I had to start another project...
Merino/Cashmere mill ends from a SpinTogether prize.


Not stupid fine, in part because the mill-ends are in sorta-cloud bits, and I didn't bother to re-process them, but this will do for my intended project attempt. 

The finished 30-yard skein, spun and plied on this spindle. Because FU, that's why.

I found some fairly inexpensive beading needles when browsing the Evil Empire - so they followed another order home... They could use a bit of blunting, which I'm sure I'll remember to do SOMEDAY... lol... but work pretty well.

This is 18sts, after knitting the first 5 rounds... 
...and yes, my needles have eyes - they're .64 mm beading needles, IIRC.

But that's as far as I got.

Still more Shenanigans - Team Slow Lane

 Once again, there's a Slow Lane challenge - which is an opportunity to revisit incomplete homework, or in my case, an early Shenanigan... I haven't touched the handspun, handwoven tape in the year+ since the first Shenanigans... making it my OLDEST unfinished FU project.

I was... ambitious... when I warped this - there's a LOT of yardage waiting for me to get to it...

So how did I do? 
Progress was made! I added about half again what there was originally - the thread marker is the point where I stopped after the first Shenanigans.

Obligatory last-possible-second bedspread shot...
The thread marker is where I stopped after the first Shenanigans, December 2020.


I really like how this yarn behaves when I'm working with it - there's just something about handspun that FEELS so much better, and more lively, than millspun... and there's enough twist that I'm having no issues with clearing the shed, or any of the other problems that can occur when working with commercial weaving yarns.

This is staying in my active projects until I finish it - I have ideas about where it needs to go, and it's a nice, easy pattern to take anywhere... it's a simple 5-thread alternating S/Z 'knot' or 'skein', done in Baltic-style pickup, on a floating rigid heddle.

I debated changing the pattern, and adding an extra twist to the motif, but I think I like it as-is. That's a modification I'll probably do in the future.

Still more Shenanigans... Earth Day challenge

Another Shenanigans has arrived in Franquemont University, with some recurring themes, and some new ones. In typical 'me' fashion, it's going to be a bit of a jumble - hopefully, I can sort it out by hammering the words into something coherent.

First up, the challenge I hadn't planned on doing - the one that I started last, and so far, the only completed item.

We were tasked with finding a way to work the usual '3 Rs', Reduce, Re-use, Re-cycle, into a project. I had _no_ idea where that would lead - so I skipped it... and then came the phone call...

Someone had contacted my Guild, searching for a repair on a much-loved baby blanket. The person who made it had passed away before they could give it in-person to their grandchild - who is now 6... making it extremely special.

The child has been sleeping with it EVERY night, for their whole life, and it's showing some signs of 'becoming Real'... It's been literally loved to tatters, and the wee owner is inconsolable without it.

It could not be replaced - because it wouldn't be 'the one from grandma'... It could not be binned, because the child isn't SLEEPING properly without it... It had to be repaired.

To add to the adventure, some of the loose threads had been cut, by a well-meaning parent, in an attempt to halt the progression of the damage. 
(this was not, in fact, helpful... we think that's the cause of the larger hole)

*slight* signs of damage...

...The 'fun' begins here, because I am _not_, and have never claimed to be, a crocheter. I generally dislike the drape, and don't care for how much more yarn it takes to cover a given area... I *have* used a crochet hook for knitting repairs, and have even occasionally added a bit of embellishment to things - like the spines on knitted toy dragons, or shell edging on a knitted item.

I'm not a 'hooker' - and don't play one on TV...

...but this is a very real child, in crisis over a beloved comfort object - and the 2 people I would recommend to attempt this repair... either don't do more complicated work, or have _never_ repaired their crochet. (I may have made some interesting faces when I learned THAT one!)

That meant it fell to me - because I could not simply say 'no' in this situation.

First, I had to figure out how to 'zipper' the ravelled row back together. It took a bit of trial and error, because it works more like Tunisian/Afghan stitch... you need live loops, so you can pull them through the base of the row above.

...I ended up doing the first bit slightly wrong - but my instructions were to get it to a point where it could be used again - not to get it perfect... They didn't even care if it was never square again - it hopefully only needs to survive another year or two at the current level of use... 

...I wanted to do better than THAT.


First tentative steps, figuring out how to patch the pattern so it was relatively similar to the original.

I got into the swing of things, and reached the area where the original yarn was missing. I'd been given a similar yarn, in a different colour, that also belonged to that grandmother's stash. It worked up tighter, but part of that is the degree of wear on the blanket - it may well be the same yarn, but 6 years of heavy use later, the blanket seems close to one size finer.

Nearly done with the BIG hole.

Still square! I declare tentative win... 

Then came the part I was really concerned about. That center hole was so worn-through that the yarn couldn't easily be picked... and I was hoping to preserve as much of the original yarn as I could... That meant doing another thing I had NEVER done.

I had to make a granny square. (nope, never did that, EVER - and I foolishly decided to simply leap in, and fudge it) With no pattern, I grabbed my replacement yarn, and fiddled a bit - I have a pretty good idea HOW they work, I've just never wanted to make one.

First try - other than not climbing out in the right spot, not bad...

With that hurdle out of the way, I needed to turn it into a STURDY center, that kept all the original yarns, to the best of my ability.

The best course I could come up with was to put my square underneath, as a support, and chain the remaining tatters of yarn more-or-less where they should be. It's very thick, and doesn't drape like the rest of the blanket - but visually, it was the best I could do... and the chain stitch set me up for the next phase of repairs.

Not a hole! Success! (but THICC)

There were several areas that were worn to the point that they'd need support, or there will be holes within a wash or two... Shoring those up was next.

I grabbed my trusty thrift-store Q-snap, and FINALLY used it for the first time...

Center finished, preparing for the first chain-stitch add-on.

I tried to keep the worst area relatively square, but it pulled in a bit...

Then I added some zigzag squiggles on the thinnest spots. The culprits were the columns of holes - where a single exposed stitch was subject to more wear. The zigzags were fairly easy to do - and they don't get too much in the way of the drape or hand of the fabric.

I fixed the most-worn areas, but finally decided I had reached the stopping point. The goal was NOT, after all, a complete reconstruction - and at this point, I declared it repaired, to the best of my ability.

Final result, same orientation as original photo.


Closer view of the repaired areas.



close-up shot of the center - I left a few stray tails, because clipping them seemed wrong, and they can't really go anywhere.

Back view

I delivered the completed blanket to the person who contacted me, and am looking forward to hearing what the tiny owner thinks when it arrives back in their hands.