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Mary Jane Mucklestone

Hand Knitting Blog & Knitting Patterns

Mary Jane

New Skills from Peru

June 15, 2010 by Mary Jane 16 Comments

I’ve been practicing my newly learned skills. On the left is the beginnings of a intarsia colorwork hat made with a corded join. We’re viewing it from the public side. It is actually made by purling from the inside. There are practical reasons for this, working from the “wrong side”  it is easier to control all the little bobbins, and make sure they are properly twisted when encountering a new color. It is also easier to wrap every stitch if you’re obsessed enough to desire this elegant interior. I vacillate between making everything super tidy and amazing with every stitch twisted, to the slightly quicker stranding, which is pretty in its own way.

On the right we see a some grutas, or lumps….like you’d find in your oatmeal…only these will be soon be found adorning a sweet and cheerful baby hat.  I’m making strands of grutas, a fairly new development in gruta technique. What at first seems tedious, quickly becomes habit forming. Practice at your niece’s soccer game, and you’ll be surprised how quickly your ribbons of grutas grow!

…now that I wrote that, maybe they were called grumitas, which I have written in my chicken-scratch notes in another place. When I look up in Google translator, I find bultitos for little lumps…any one out there know? In Quechua or Spanish?

Update!

reader Trudy says:

“I just looked up in my big Spanish dictionary – gruta is a “cavern or grotto”, grumo is translated as “lump” – as in a lump in sauce, or a clot 9(of blood), or cluster or bunch (of grapes). So I think it might be grumo – and the diminutive would be grumito(s)”

So you Spanish speakers and Andean textile experts can have a laugh on me…taking about making stranded grottos…which sounds kind of nice, really, like the hotsprings outside of San Miguel de Allende, that are linked pools from deep and cold following streams to warmer, all the way up to the final hot pool that is ….yes!…in a grotto. La Gruta…that must have been the source of my mistake.

Extra! I found I noted down “kurpa” when Phetra from Pitumarca was teaching me the knitted in variety…

Extra! Extra! Cindy found the translation for “kurpa”

Runasimi (Quechua) – English
kurpa
adj. crisp
[Sikllalla Runasimi]

s. a flat clod of earth; clump; clump of earth; sphere; bullet; ball; clod of dirt; dirt clod
[Sikllalla Runasimi, Qosqo]

ta da!

I’m test-driving a workshop in these techniques this week in Boston.

I’ll also be informally demonstrating grutas at the Maine Fiber Arts booth at the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens at this weekends Garden Fair: The Maine Gardeners and Artisan’s Festival. The festival will feature garden luminaries Eliot Coleman and Barbara Damrosch, woo hoo! I’ll be there Saturday and Sunday afternoon.

Costal Maine Botanical Gardens
132 Botanical Garden Drive, Boothbay, Maine
GARDEN FAIR     Friday-Sunday • June 18, 19 & 20 • 9-5

Filed Under: Knitting Tagged With: Andean, bobbles, colorwork, corded join, grutas, Peru, technique

Maine Spring

June 13, 2010 by Mary Jane 4 Comments

Filed Under: Knitting

I Love New York

June 4, 2010 by Mary Jane 2 Comments

Filed Under: Knitting

Our Art

May 28, 2010 by Mary Jane 5 Comments

They belong to us, and we keep them in the National Gallery. Have a lovely Memorial Day!

Filed Under: Knitting

Super Soul Pattern – Available Today!

May 18, 2010 by Mary Jane 8 Comments

In the shop! One of the nice things about working with Veronik Avery is the great deal she offers designers. Our designs are featured in her wonderfully produced mini-magazine St. Denis, Super Soul Cardigan was featured in the Premier Issue, and then, after 6 months we get to have them for ourselves.

Super Soul is a favorite of mine, I can’t wait to get the actual garment back because I know it will be like an old friend. When I was in high school, I had a big bulky sweater I bought in the central market in Guadalajara Mexico. I loved that sweater and wore it like a coat, day in and day out for a couple of years. I remember one of the mean girls who smoked on “the stairs” shouted “you must really like that sweater, you never take it off”. I was still wearing it when I went to school in London for a year, the kids at my home-stay  called it my “Starsky Sweater” since was the same genre of sweater as in the hit TV series, Starsky’s signature fashion item. Marylin Monroe also famously wore one, and nothing else!

Super Soul is a toned down version of my beloved wrap sweater, less bulky, more slimming with a simple collar suitable for indoors as well as out.  I chose a beautiful dark brown called Espresso, since I’ll wear it a lot and it won’t show the grime of obsessive use. But it would look nice in other colors and St Denis Yarns have a wonderful color palette, how about Chalk Blue with  Blue Eggshell? Or look at juliusdbunny’s version on Ravelry, gorgeous in natural tones. Since Nordique gives such a crisp texture, I choose “spot stitch” for the background, which is a lively and fun stitch to knit. Be sure to notice the super secret pockets, hidden behind the color work, which was itself inspired by Turkish embroidery. The turquoise color was chosen for protection, and because it is scrumptious combined with the rich brown. I’ve got to finish the knitted belt which I put aside when it was clear it wouldn’t make the original deadline, belts do take a long time I’m afraid! But come to think of it, I’ve got a sweet woven belt I got in Peru which might just be the ticket.

All proceeds from Super Soul Cardigan will go to Beth Collins of Unique One, throughout May & June see below.

Filed Under: Knitting

Benefit for Beth

May 6, 2010 by Mary Jane 6 Comments

Beth

Please plan on attending after the Maine Fiber Frolic

Benefit Dinner & Auction for Beth Collins
Saturday June 5 2010
5:00pm-9:00pm

Appleton Village School

Beth is my dear chum, owner of the beloved Unique One in Camden, the oldest local yarn shop in my area.  Out of the blue, at the end of April, Beth suffered a stroke. A shocking thing for one so young. I can’t even begin to express who she is– I’m in such disbelief –I wanted to write something eloquent but I can’t get beyond MEND Beth MEND!!!! Hopefully shouting prayers helps double. She is currently at a rehabilitation center in Peabody, Massachusetts. This event will help with some of her medical expenses. Dinner is from 5-7 and an Auction will start at 7:00pm.

To make donations for the dinner or auction please contact
Susan Heal: (207)763-3586 or (207)542-801
email: sue_heal@fivetowns(dot)net
Benefit for Beth Facebook Page
Meanwhile…Shop Shop Shop!!!!!!

Unique One Sweaters and Yarns
2 Bayview Street
Camden , ME 04843
207-236-8717

The Shop is being staffed by volunteers, hours are:

Mon-Sat 12-6

Sunday  12 – 4

Filed Under: Knitting

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