And I Have Circumnavigated the Lindblad Year

by Sarah Lake Upton


On September 16, 2013 I boarded a plane for the west coast.  On September 18, 2013, after a mad whirl through the Seattle office to sort out paperwork and uniforms and a last minute US Coast Guard required drug test, I woke up in a hotel room in Clarkston, Washington, looked out my window, and saw the National Geographic Sea Lion in person for the first time.  One year later we are back on the Columbia River (we spent a little longer in Alaska this year) and I have officially completed a year with the Sea Lion.  Back in the day when a sailor circumnavigated the globe they tattooed a rope and knot around their waists (this is part of a separate rant, once upon a time sailor tattoos had actually meaning, so that you could read a sailor’s career by their tattoos).  I haven’t circumnavigated by any stretch, but my year with Lindblad has taken me from Clarkston, Washington to Colon, Panama to Glacier Bay Alaska, now back to Clarkston, which should be worth something.


My first view of the National Geographic Sea Lion, seen from my hotel room in Clarkston, Washington.  

My first view of the National Geographic Sea Lion, seen from my hotel room in Clarkston, Washington.  


I took lots of photos of water

I took lots of photos of water

In dry-dock. Not her most flattering angle.

In dry-dock. Not her most flattering angle.

The view from Terminal Island, California.

The view from Terminal Island, California.

Panama Canal

Panama Canal

I saw bats with striped faces who make their own tents. 

I saw bats with striped faces who make their own tents. 

And pepper - a spice that arguably changed the world.

And pepper - a spice that arguably changed the world.

Hermit crab

Hermit crab


on a beach in Panama

on a beach in Panama

trying to pretend it was just a shell

trying to pretend it was just a shell

before it scampered away

before it scampered away


There are lagoons in Baja, Mexico, where gray whales go to have their calves.  They were hunted there until 1966, and yet now, for reasons no one understands, some mother and calf pairs will come right up to small boats and the baby will play w…

There are lagoons in Baja, Mexico, where gray whales go to have their calves.  They were hunted there until 1966, and yet now, for reasons no one understands, some mother and calf pairs will come right up to small boats and the baby will play with the boats and the humans inside.  This is the first calf to approach us.  (I am in the red bandana.  The company arranged for a boat so the crew could go pat baby gray whales too.  And I have patted a baby gray whale, because the baby gray whale was interested in me.  Several of the crew kissed the baby gray whale, but that seemed a bit forward). 

And up to Alaska:

South Sawyer Glacier

South Sawyer Glacier

A humpback whale skeleton, Bartlett Cove, Alaska (she was hit by a cruise ship - a cause of death for many humpbacks, though still not as big of a problem as fishing gear).

A humpback whale skeleton, Bartlett Cove, Alaska (she was hit by a cruise ship - a cause of death for many humpbacks, though still not as big of a problem as fishing gear).

Steller Sea Lions

Steller Sea Lions

Heading south again:

A memorial post from Sgang Gwaii depicting a supernatural being that is a combination of killer whale and a wolf.  After a year of being cared for by a shaman, the skeleton of a high status person was put in a cedar box at the top of a memorial…

A memorial post from Sgang Gwaii depicting a supernatural being that is a combination of killer whale and a wolf.  After a year of being cared for by a shaman, the skeleton of a high status person was put in a cedar box at the top of a memorial pole.  Most Haida villages were surrounded by memorial poles,  with ancestors keeping watch.  


The same hotel I stayed in last year, this time photographed from the upper deck of the National Geographic Sea Lion.

The same hotel I stayed in last year, this time photographed from the upper deck of the National Geographic Sea Lion.

The Sea Lion has become a second home.  The various crews have become my boat family (as they say here).

 

I am incredibly lucky in my day job.  Thank you for a great year.

 

 


Scenes from Two Days of Travel

by Sarah Lake Upton


I am roughly here at the moment, here being somewhere north of Sitka, Alaska.

June 17 morning.jpg


I am huddling on the upper deck in the companionway between a couple of cabins because it is the only outdoor space that is currently dry enough for me to have a computer out.  We are anchored in a small bay, and when I look up I see a small spit of tree covered land, mostly lost in fog.  I can hear a bald eagle or two out there somewhere.  The fog is making our satellite internet connection unhappy, so by the time I post this, we will probably be elsewhere.


Many years ago I came across a proverb in a book about traveling in Afghanistan: “the soul can only move as fast as a camel walks”.  I have no idea what culture the proverb properly belongs to, but the sentiment fits my understanding of travel, and that weird numb feeling that comes from too much time on airplanes.


I left from Fort Meyers on Friday (we were on a family vacation).


Ft Meyers to Atlanda gate.jpg

 

And took a flight from there to Atlanta,

The inevitable sprint through the Atlanta airport due to a late arrival meant that I missed the chance for a photograph.


Then to Seattle

Seattle to Juneau.jpg


Then Juneau

Coming into Juneau.jpg

Then finally into Sitka (by then is was actually mostly dark – we’re still far enough south and early enough in June that that the sun does set, but the glow never leaves the horizon) and the boat.  I meant to get a lovely photo of the boat alongside the dock, but was in enough of a rush here that I only got a photo of the fuel dock from the boat instead. 


Juneau to sitka.jpg
Sitka fuel dock.jpg

This is really a more accurate view of my life aboard anyway.  I am trying to be better about it, but I very rarely leave the boat during my time working on it, so I actually very rarely get to see what she looks like from land. 


Leaving Sitka

sitka rainbow.jpg


And finally, last night.  We spotted a small pod of whales, and spent a lovely evening bobbing slowly about the bay trying to get a better view of them, but really just enjoying the view.  My soul, confused by the fast pace of the travel from Florida to Alaska, is slowly catching up now that we are moving at a more civilized ten knots, interspersed with long afternoons at anchor while the guests kayak.

snow capped mountains






Fiber Trek

by upton in


I have always been a fairly solitary person, and a fairly solitary knitter, so one of my favorite things about this whole “starting a yarn business” adventure is discovering the wider community of knitters, and the myriad of ways they engage with their craft. Sarah Hunt, in addition to starting and hosting a yarn retreat (at which I will be vending and perhaps even teaching this fall) is filming a travel show about the larger fiber community, showcasing every aspect of fiber production and use, from farmers to owners of small spinning mills to designers and knitters.  At the moment she is focusing on the fiber scene in Maine, though I suspect as her project grows she will branch out to other states (though the Maine fiber scene is large and varied, so it may take a while).  Check out her buzzreal here, and her blog here.  I am very much looking forward to getting back to the land of fast internet so that I can catch up on her latest posts!


The Knitting Museum

by upton in


Marsha White of the Knitting Museum has listed Upton Yarns as a resource! My yarn is sharing the same page as un-spun Icelandic from Schoolhouse Press! Seriously, for a knitting geek in love with traditional and obscure forms of knitting, there is no higher honor.  I am giddy!  Marsha also put together a really nice page about my yarn. The Knitting Museum is a wonderful website devoted to traditional knitting in all its forms, including links to museum collections, designers, teachers, and others in the traditional knitting world.  If you have a few hours to spare (or days) it is very much worth poking around.  Marsha is doing a really great service for the traditional knitting world!


Yarn! Lots of New Yarn (and now I am back on a boat).

by upton in , ,


My time at home was lovely and cold and way too short.  It was also very productive (on the yarn front, though not on the blogging front…). I returned home to find the fleeces I sent off to the mill in the fall returned to me in the form of lovely yarn on cones.  A storm of dyeing ensued.  Yarn took over every available surface in the house, the bathtub was pressed into service for drip-drying, and a giant drying rack took up the prime space in front of the woodstove (much to Nell’s annoyance).

I experimented with new colors and dyed new lots of older colors (which sometimes resulted in new colors).

Pinks and Reds

Sky Blue, Medium Blue, and Indigo

 

Tans

Above, “Light Butternut”, “Rosewood”, and “70% Cacao”.   70% Cacao is actually a fleece from one of Liberty Wool Farm’s Romney rams (he is or will be responsible for the “Romney” portion of the “Cotswold x Romney” yarn).  I had his fleece spun to the same weight as my other 3-Ply fingering weight yarn.

This is “Aspen”, a lovely, lively green, but not quite the “Cress” that I was aiming for. (Natural Dyeing is not an exact science).

Aspen

I am back at my “day job” on the boat.  Last night we finished our transit of the Panama Canal and currently we are bound for Isla Iguana for a bit of snorkeling.  As my very slow internet connection allows I will be updating the “yarn” section of this site to reflect the work of the last few weeks.  In the meantime, if you would like to order any yarn, please email me at uptonyarns (at) gmail.com.  My internet connection is sometimes a bit spotty on the boat, but I can usually check it at least once a day.  Yarn is being shipped out in my absence.


Scenes from life aboard.

by upton in , ,


Christmas and New Years were working holidays for the crew of the Sea Lion.   Some of the stews tried to make things a little more festive around the crew spaces by making and hanging traditional Christmas decorations.  I wanted to hug them all for it, especially for the gem they hung outside the door to the engine room. A pefect metaphore for Christmas

Just in case it isn't quite clear, they used paper from the office recycling bin to make paper snowflakes.  I think this is the perfect metaphor for our Christmas.

Not quite two weeks later we are just beginning our second round trip from Colón, Panama to Herradura, Costa Rica and return.  This is beginning to feel oddly similar to the ferries in Maine, with no cars and a strangely long run.

Two days ago we docked at a container dock in Colón.  Between Colón and the Port of LA where we spent our annual yard period I feel like I am becoming more acquainted with industrial marine infrastructure than I ever expected to be.

CCT container dock

But it has not all been work.  Most mornings I have managed to spend a little time up on the sundeck with my first cup of coffee and my tahkli, much to the fascination/consternation of guests and crew.  I spend most of my free time immersed in the world of fiber arts/crafts, and I forget that the rest of the world does not do the same.

Tahkli on a boat


Eventually I arrived...

by upton in ,


After a complicated series of connecting flights, and nearly getting lost in the Orlando Airport, I eventually arrived in Panama City, and a bit longer after that, at the boat I work on, which was docked in Colon. Our trip so far has taken us through the Panama Canal, and up the Pacific coast bound for Costa Rica.

I woke to find us here this morning. Day 4 Ciobas National Maritime Park

 

The day before yesterday we were in the Panama Canal:

canal - SL and a freighter

 

In between we were a useful platform from which boobies hunted fish.

a flock of boobies on our bow


Shearing.

by upton in


It is a truth, universally acknowledged, that I am terrible at writing up event in a reasonable time frame.

Several Fridays ago (more Fridays than I am comfortable admitting- or even able to name without resorting to the weekly planner that now rules my life) the weather and the schedules of all concerned parties converged, and the sheep of Buckwheat Blossom Farm were shorn of their winter growth.

While Jeff sheared Amy, Amy's friend Jackie, and I skirted fleeces and plotted which would be bought by whom and turned into what. My workroom is now filled with gorgeous fleece and in between stints away working on assorted ferries (I have spent more of April working on the Vinalhaven, Islesboro and Swans Island ferries than I have at home) I find myself losing hours pondering which will be combined with which and spun how, and then, content that I have worked it all out and will send the fleeces out for spinning after my next hitch, return to find that I have changed my mind. The potential represented by those lovely, lovely fleeces is a bit overwhelming and I am terrible at making decisions. I am planning to have some of it spun up as gansey yarn, and some as sanquhar yarn (also suitable for socks) and a bit done up as a three ply sport weight. The question is which fleeces will work best as what, and, as they are colored fleeces, which are best grouped together. I go up to my work space for an entirely unrelated reason and find myself instead moving individual fleeces around the room grouping them together in different ways, patting them and studying individual locks, all the while muttering to myself. I suspect that I sound a bit too much like Gollum for comfort in these instances (no my precious, I shall not put you with that fleece, I shall put you with this fleece and make gansey yarn of you my precious...). I need to send them out to be spun, if only to get a bit of my sanity back.

 

On a related note, Sam and I had our own opportunity to shear last weekend during a class in beginning sheep shearing held through the University of Maine Cooperative Extension Program at North Star Farm. Lessons learned: Jeff makes shearing sheep look easy, but it really really isn't.

After a bit of instruction about the shears themselves, we divided into smaller groups to work more closely with individual shearers. Jeff happened to be one of the instructors and so Sam and I found ourselves naturally in his group as he sheared a sheep very slowly, talking us through the bits we needed to be extra careful with and showing us the shearing pattern. And then it was our turn. Somehow, and I'm still not sure how this happened as generally I ascribe to the stand-at-the-back-until-enough-people-have-tried-something-that-the-novelty-has-worn-off-and-the-group-is-no-longer-paying-attention school of thought regarding activities that involve and audience, I ended up going first. North Star Farm raises Hampshires, which, from some brief googling should apparently weigh 200 pounds (the rams should weigh 275 pounds).  On the one hand, they were great beginning shearing sheep as their fleece is not particularly valuable, so if a bunch of utter novices butchered the shearing (which we did) we were not causing any real harm. On the other hand, shearing is awkward enough without also having to wrestle what Sam described as "the biggest g*d d*** sheep I ever saw".

The theory of shearing makes perfect sense: shear in a specific order, keeping the tips of the shears against the skin of the sheep, following the sheep's contours and doing your best not to cut a few very anatomically important bits. I went into the stall, grabbed the closest sheep, brought it to the cutting floor ( a large piece of plywood) wrestled it down so that it was sitting on its haunches on my feet, and then realized that the rest was far more complicated than I had suspected.

 

Confronted with an actual sheep with four inches of fleece I realized that I couldn't remember any part of the shearing pattern and I couldn't find its skin, let alone follow the contour of its body. I am generally very comfortable using a wide variety of hand and power tools, but the clippers were enormous and awkward in my hand (much like an angle grinder in terms of size and ease of handling) and the sheep was not entirely on board with the proceedings. Also, Jeff is very very tall (6'4"? 6'5'?) and I am not (5'5" when I am remembering to maintain good posture) so there were many instances in which Jeff comfortably straddled the sheep to cut a specific area and I found myself riding the sheep when trying to do the same. But in the end (much, much, later) I prevailed, and even managed to get a feel for when the clippers were following the curve of the sheep's body and when they were haring off too far into the fleece. While Jeff encouraged the sheep to stand and return to the stall, I stood up straight and focused on breathing, with what I suspect was a very dazed expression on my face. As the day progressed it became easy to tell who had sheared, and who was still waiting for a turn by the slightly loopy glazed look of those who had sheared, a mix of shock and exhaustion and triumph.

A bit later it was Sam's turn, and I managed to get photos.

 

 


Ganseys! or, reasons why they are even better than you think.

by upton in ,


For many years I worked on traditionally rigged schooners (mostly the schooners used for experiential education programs, though I've also done tall ship festivals and dock tours) boats which, except for a few differences (electricity, refrigeration, engines, student crews) were constructed, rigged, and operated exactly as they would have been a hundred years ago.  Actually, several of the boats I worked on were build over a hundred years ago, and while they move students and passengers these days rather than fish and sand, the sailing is the same.  I started knitting my gansey (the second gansey I knit, the first was for my husband, knit years before I was to find boats) while living aboard the Ship Wavertree (built in 1885, now docked in the East River at what used to be Pier 15) and working aboard the Schooner Pioneer (also build in 1885, and now taking passengers on two hour sails around New York Harbor – look her up if you find yourself with a spare summer evening in NYC).  I continued to knit my gansey while working on Highlander Sea, ex Pilot (built in 1924 for the Boston Pilots Association) tearing out and re-knitting sleeves now a bit too tight, and I finally finished it while sailing north from Belize on the Harvey Gamage, three months into a four month semester at sea program for high school students.

I have since worn that gansey while doing a thousand things that would be utterly familiar to most men who wore them back in the day, furling sails, hauling lines, flaking out anchor chain, climbing aloft far too early in the morning (swearing all the while) to unfrig a fouled topsail sheet, scraping sanding and painting some bit of the boat for the nth time, carrying heavy things onto the boat, carrying heavy things off of the boat, standing at the helm at two in the morning steering by a star, fixing a bilge pump worn out from overuse for the nth time, and curled up in my bunk fully dressed and soaking wet.  At times schooner life is impossibly, romantically amazing, but more often it is cold and wet and kind of gross.

I am one of what I suspect is a small number of people currently alive who have extensively worn a gansey knit from gansey yarn in the work environment for which they were created (except for the fishing bit) and I have reached a few conclusions that I have not seen mentioned elsewhere.

Firstly, the armpit gusset really is genius: they really do give a lovely freedom of movement.  I can work with my arms above my head (a frequent occurrence on boats, especially given that I am not tall) without my gansey rutching up.  And the gussets also have a practical effect on the longevity of the gansey: every other sweater that I have worn for work ultimately tears at the underarm.  When I reach above my head most of the weight of the sweater rests on the seam where the front and back of the sweater meet the sleeve, and those few stitches will inevitably give way.  A gansey, being constructed in one piece, distributes the weight of itself far more evenly across a far greater number of stitches, and the gusset removed the weak point at the underarm entirely.

Secondly, one of the things that I have seen commonly written about ganseys, that they are “knit so tightly as to be wind and water proof” is just silly.  I knit incredibly tightly, even when I am trying to do the opposite, and my gansey is neither wind nor waterproof, even after I have dipped it in a solution of wool fat, but being wind and waterproof is not all that important: wind and waterproofness is the purview of foully jackets, these day usually coated vinyl (oilskins back in the day) but what they do do is far more important: ganseys hold their shape when wet (which on a boat is most of the time).  They neither sag, nor bag, or impede movement; wearing a sopping wet gansey is not that different from wearing a dry gansey.  Before you dismiss this, think of your favorite sweater or sweatshirt. Now think about how it bags and hangs and sticks to you weirdly and snags on everything once it gets wet. Now imagine climbing a very narrow ladder that is moving erratically, and at the top wriggling yourself through an opening barely larger than yourself, and all this just to get to the place you need to be so you can start your real work (which is generally much scarier than the climb itself).  Even modern fleece is unpleasant in this situation (actually, I’m biased, I dislike modern fleece in any situation) but I’ve done something very similar in my gansey on many occasions, and have never had cause to note that my gansey was in any way making the situation more difficult – which may seem like faint praise, but it really really isn’t.

And finally, knitting the sleeves from the top down is brilliant.  Not only does is prevent the heartbreaking moment when you realize that because of gauge differences the shoulder on your sleeve does not match the shoulder on the body of the sweater, but when the cuffs wear through, which they will, it make the repairs the work of a lazy evening.  I have re-knit the last few inches of both sleeve several times with no fuss or annoyance.

 


In Which Winter Came and Went and Many Things Happened

by upton in


Or: I didn't get around to blogging this winter, and now I must sum up because spring is here and shearing is around the corner (possibly even this Friday!) and like the Icelandic Sagas, I feel that blogs should be kept in relatively chronological order.

 

 

Yarnish things happened:  I began another gansey (this one for myself) to be blogged about more fully in the future, and I knit these whimsically awesome mittens for my sister-in-law (and business buddy - for those of you trying to navigate the world of baby equipment who may be looking for gear that one can actually live with, check how her blog at citybabyliving.com).

 

 

I also did something I have been meaning to do for well over a year now and joined Maine Fiberarts, a group which promotes fiberarts in their many, many forms.  Not incidentally, it was at their Fiber Friday last year that I first told someone other than my husband about my hopes to start a yarn business focusing on local, small flock, single breed fibers, and the encouragement I received from that group of knitters made me think that maybe I could actually do this.  As one might expect from such a group, they take Fiberarts seriously, and though it pains me to admit it as a good feminist well versed in the many ways that traditional women's skills are undervalued, the idea that someone might take needlepoint or knitting seriously enough to put on gallery shows devoted to either craft was completely unexpected.   I am incredibly grateful for their existence.

 

 


Victory! and Patterns Posted!

by upton in


Dumb persistence has paid off! Thumbnails link to pages like they should, thus enabling this whole enterprise to look a little more grown-up, and now that I"ve crossed most web site improvements off of my list, allowing me to stop blogging about the behind the scenes nonsense and move on to the bits that are actually of interest, like: I have finally posted my two mittlet patterns!  They are both fun and simple to knit, designed for use with my 3-Ply Coopworth, and depending on your color choice, the Basic Ribbed Mittlets make you look like you might be a super hero in your spare time. Which in my opinion helps to combat late winter blahs.  Patterns are free with yarn purchase.

 

 

 


Wordpress 57, Sarah 2

by upton in


Apologies for the ever changing mess that is currently my website.  In celebration of the attendance of my first craft fair, and my ads currently running on Ravelry, I thought that it might be time to take my website through a second draft.  I am finding that all the little things that I skipped doing on the first run-through, I skipped for a reason, i.e. that I couldn't figure out how to do them then, and after a month I still don't know how to do them.  This is Nell.

After the fifty-seventh iteration of me trying and failing to make thumbnails on one page link to products on another, she bumped me in the leg very firmly with her nose.  This translates roughly as, "Baboon, it is time to take me for a walk", when she is feeling polite, or more often  in the imperative, "Baboon! Walk!".  And as usual she was right.  Nell is of a herding breed, and absent sheep she has become quite adept at ordering my life.

So Nell and I took our usual evening walk, and then, still unable to face the computer, I stacked the half cord of wood that has been sitting, unstacked, in the middle of the walkway for the last month, and now we have what looks like a little wood fort in front of the driveway. This makes me happy, though not as happy as I would be if those thumbnails would link to products on another page.


A Problem with Language

by upton in


As I struggle through the process of listing my yarn for sale in various places (Ravelry at the moment) I find that I am stumbling when it comes to describing what exactly it is that I do.   Most dyers buy their yarn pre-spun in bulk from somewhere, generally larger spinneries, though there are several yarn wholesalers who sell yarn ready for dying in various blends and weights.  They essentially buy commodity yarn, and their artistry is in the creation of color.  This is all well and good, but in addition to dyeing my yarn, I also source the fleeces, which is an essential part of what I am trying to do with Upton Yarns.  Most people who start with individual fleeces seem to be hand spinners, which, while I do hand spin small batches to experiment with the fleece, I am not doing on any sort of scale, and the yarn I have for sale is not hand spun, though it is spun in very small spinneries.  The yarn is spun to my specifications, so I could say that it was "designed by me" but I am also a firm believer that the people who operate the machines and make the thousands of tiny well informed decisions are the ones who actually created the yarn.   The stages of making yarn can be broken down in A)choose fleece, B)spin fleece, C)dye fleece.  Most dyers do C, leaving A and B up to others.  Spinners do A and B, and sometimes C though not in any quantity.  I do A and C and  pay someone to do B to my specifications, what is the word for this? Seriously, what do I call myself? And how do I sum it up in 10 words or less?


The Big Chill

by upton in


The Big Chill was lovely!  The Mayo Street Art Center  is a lovey venue, Audrey did a fantastic job organizing it all, and the other vendors could not have been nicer. On the downside, while well attended, most of the attendees were not knitters.  Such is life.  I had more interest in my knit samples then in my yarn. "No, those mittlets are not for sale, but the pattern is free with yarn purchase, and then you can make your own, and how much cooler is that?" The fun part is the knitting, people!  (No, I did not actually say that, though I really wanted to.)

Still, it was wonderful to bring my yarn out into the world, and to see it all displayed together.  I've been dyeing it in batches, and storing it in batches, and photographing it in batches, so I haven't really ever looked at in all together at one time.  The effect is pretty cool.

 

I also could not be more grateful for the help of my friends and family in this whole endeavor.  My awesome friend Shelly painted the above sign, by hand, because, as mentioned, she is awesome, and very good at stuff like that.  My sister baked me cookies, and kept me company, and watched the booth so I could go check out the other vendors.  And Sam put together a thousand yarns tags, and helped me set up and break down the booth, and rented a table for me, and patiently put up with a thousand moments of "does it look better this way? or this way? or, wait, what if we try this?" until a saner man would have broken and told me that he really didn't care that much about yarn, because no sane person does.

Patterns will be posted later this week.

 

 


Off to the Big Chill Craft Fair in Portland

by upton in


As the title says, my yarn and I will be at The Big Chill tomorrow in Portland (Maine).  I am putting the finishing touches on my booth, and feeling a sort of nervous excitement about the whole thing.  My awesome friend Shelly has even made me a sign (and done a far better job promoting the fair on her Facebook account then I have).   Audrey has been doing a great job introducing the vendors through her blog, and I am honestly really excited to see their work in person. In honor of my first craft fair I have put together two fairly simple mittlet patterns.  They will be available free with a yarn purchase at my booth, and next week I will be putting them up on this site (knock on wood - or whatever one does to appease the spirits of Wordpress).

These are the Dyer Neck Mittlets (in honor of the river down the hill from my house).

And these are my Basic Mittlets.

If you will be in the Portland Maine area tomorrow, stop by, and see the yarn in person.

And if you're not in Portland, wish me luck!

Sarah.


New Colors! (and more to come)

by upton in


This, frankly seasonable, weather has gotten me back into dyeing with madder (orange to red) and weld (bright bright yellow) in the hopes that their brightness will lift me out of the blahs. And so, here we are: two new colors that I love.

New colors make me ponder the issue of naming. Like many folk, I often mock the color names in clothing catalogues.  For this winter for example, JCrew (always a font of mockable color names) is offering a sweater in "retro orange" and "roasted cider", leading one to ponder which shade of orange is "retro" and how on earth one can "roast cider" (this is more evocative of a cooking accident then a color).   But now that I am on the other side, I find myself feeling a bit more sympathetic to whichever poor person came up with "spiced chartreuse" (again with the cooking accidents).   On the one hand, I could avoid the whole thing by just giving my colors numbers, which I was thinking may become an organizational nightmare due to my poor organizational skills, but if I assign each color a number, and then give each variation I end up with a second number, than it actually won't be that complicated.  On the other hand, it is much harder to get excited about "3-01" than "retro orange", which isn't all that far off from my new orange, which I think I'm going to call "tiger lily" even though the tiger lilies that grow outside my window have a slightly pinker cast than my yarn.

Mock away.

As for my new red color, I'm going basic, and calling it "vermillion", because it is.

 


Thank yous,The Big Chill, Wovember, and more (a bit of a round-up)

by upton in


Firstly;  This site "went live" last week, and people amazing about forwarding it along to friends and family and facebook pages, and have just been generally amazing and supportive about the whole endeavor.  I have been remiss in thanking everyone for that, for which I apologize.  Thank you, thank you, thank you. Secondly, exciting news:  My yarn and I will be heading down to Portland Maine on December 3 to take part in The Big Chill craft fair at the Mayo Street Arts Center!  I am incredibly excited about this, both for the opportunity to sell my yarn, and to get a chance meet the other vendors, all of whom seem amazing.   I am also incredibly honored that Upton Yarns was featured on the Big Chill blog yesterday in a really lovely article.  The whole thing is just charming.  So, if anyone reading this happens to be in Portland Maine on December 3, please come by and have a look.

Thirdly, the ever awesome Kate Davies apparently shares one of my pet peeves, the problem of clothing companies marketing items as "wool" when in fact they contain very little to none, and has written about it far more eloquently then I ever could here.  Even better, she has created a web site devoted to encouraging a more honest use of the term "wool", including a petition and a wall of shame for those of us who need to vent our frustration at the egregious mis-use of terminology.  And, as a follow up to the debate about whether "wool" can also be used to refer to the fiber from alpaca and such, she did a bit of research on the history of the term "wool" and wrote a fascinating, here.

Fourthly: My first pattern is in the works.  I am hoping to have a couple of knitting patterns for the Big Chill.  Having a dead line is just the kick I need to actually sit down and write out the patterns.  I have found that designing and knitting is the fun part, and that actually writing the thing down is something on par with web site design in terms of my interests.  But, I do really love this hat, and the pattern for it really will be available by December third.

- Sarah