Hibiscus – February Tiger Club Reveal

This has been the winter of my discontent. Well, ok, not really. But it has droned on and on and on. Color to the rescue! Enter a favorite flashy flower of mine, the Hibiscus.

Hibiscus rosa-sinensis

I love the way the yellow goes into the orange and then the pink, hovering in shades of coral. To make this happen in wool, I needed for my dye colors to ‘break’. This happens when you blend a couple colors of dye, but they attach to the fiber at different times, so you get a lot of variation where one color stuck more in one spot, and more of the other over there. The best candidate for this is always Superwash, as the conditions don’t need to be as extreme to make breaking happen.

Hibiscus - February Tiger Club - Superwash Corriedale Wool Combed Top

Our wool is Superwash Corriedale, which I surprised myself by liking a lot (I have a love-hate relationship with Superwash Merino. Corrie is much easier to handle).  Anyway, I decided to dye this in a gradient, which is my favorite for designing a yarn, as you can do so many things. Spin it straight and chain (or split and ply), make a fractal, pull it all to bits and grab them randomly, use it to load your blending board for striped rolags….seriously, there is so much you can do, and I’m excited to see what you club members come up with!

Hibiscus - February Tiger Club - Tiger Twist II Sock Yarn

The yarn is Tiger Twist II, and I went back to a dyeing technique that I haven’t used for a fair while, and is frankly a lot of fun. These are dipped in the round, which gives me really great transitions between the colors. The yarn will make a mini-stripe spiral up around a sock, or you could try your hand at planned-pooling in the round.

Are you missing the fun? Join us for March, the color’s fine!

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As Time Goes By – January Tiger Club Reveal

You must remember this….

As Time Goes By - Bengal Sock Yarn - January 2014 Tiger Club

A kiss is still a kiss….A sigh is still a sigh….

As Time Goes By - Mixed BFL Wool Combed Top - January 2014 Tiger Club

 

The fundamental things apply, As time goes by.

Feeling romantic and nostalgic, I cooked up this sentimental colorway…..imagine opening a box in the attic filled with yellowing love letters and dried roses.  Both yarn and fiber were dyed in a fashion I call ‘controlled chaos’, which results in shorter color bursts that appear semi-randomly.  The yarn is Bengal, a nice smooth BFL sock yarn.  The wool is mixed BFL, about 75% white and 25% natural brown.  Those chocolate ribbons add a special depth to the colors.

February Tiger Club is open through the 15th, we would love to have you join us.  It is pay-as-you-go, so you are welcome to try it for as little as one month, or stay as long as you like.  Details are on the Tiger Club page of the shop.

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Shop Update – Masham and new Striped Sock Yarn

The cold weather seems to have slowed everything down, so I apologize for being tardy with the shop update.  I think you will find it worth the wait!

First I’d like to share a wonderful fiber.  I introduced this to Tiger Club last year, and it was a big hit.  Masham (pronounced Mass – am) is a lovely pale grey-brown color which makes any dyes just pop with depth.  It’s not a skin-close wool, but it is fairly soft and versatile.  I’d perhaps compare it to Shetland.  Snap up these colors, I predict they’ll go fast!
Iris Masham
Lily Pads Masham
Black Tulip Masham
Alpine Masham

I also have a couple of new striping sock yarns for you. New to the shop are Mississipi Mud on Journey, and Iris on Safari. I am pleased as punch with them.

Mississippi Mud Journey
Iris Safari

I’ve also restocked Koi Pond and Autumn Splendor on Journey.

Koi Pond - Journey
Autumn Splendor - Journey

I’m on a mission to dye up all the odds and ends in the supply closet instead of hoarding them for petting :). It’s sort of a debt snowball program for fiber artists! Masham was the first, and this MBT (Merino Bamboo Tussah) was the next to emerge. I had enough for two lovely colors, Hibiscus and Water Lilies. Spin this soft blend from the fold for best results.

Hibiscus MBT
Water Lilies MBT

I had just enough time to finish up the bump of Mixed BFL (which was the January Club fiber, I’ll have reveal for that tomorrow). Enough for three favorite colors: Cascade, Verdigris, and Purple Passion. I love how the ribbons of natural brown BFL add depth and interest to the colors.

Cascade Mixed BFL
Verdigris Mixed BFL
Purple Passion Mixed BFL

AND, I restocked two popular colors on New England Wool. Out of the Deep, and Water Lilies.
Out of the Deep NE Wool
Water Lilies NE Wool

Whew! Easily find all of these new items by looking in our NEW section!

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The Year of the Turtle

This is the week I dye for club (which is quite pretty, BTW), so I don’t have anything new for the shop; although I didn’t blog about last Friday’s update of sock yarn…..plenty of self striping rainbows and Grand Old Flag is back in stock….just in time knit some socks to root on our athletes during the Olympic Games.

Grand Old Flag Self Striping Patriotic Yarn

What I really came to talk about is my theme for the year. As the title says, the Year of the Turtle. Why?

racing turtle
(Yes, it’s a tortoise. Shush.)

First, I’ve just been bogged down with the thought pattern that I must have some large block of time to be able to accomplish anything on my project(s). Know that feeling? Ever say to yourself that by the time you set everything up and get going your time will be over? Or that you’ll surely be interrupted soon, so why bother?

My plan? Set up areas or projects that can be picked up for even a short period of time.

Exhibit A: Forest Fractal Shawl-
Forest Fractal Shawl

Well, ok, so this perhaps is not the best example, but it was the inspiration behind the Turtle idea. I’m a little further than this picture shows, but the cake of remaining yarn is quite large. I’m over 200 stitches per row, now, so I need a somewhat good chunk of time to even do one row. And good lighting (is it time for bifocals? Eek!). Anyway, this project sits near my chair in the living room to remind me to peck away at it.

Exhibit B: Forest Doubleweave Blanket
Forest Blanket

Now this is more like it.  (And no comments about my apparent color rut, please!) I have spent the last month chipping away at this project. I did wind the warp and put it in the raddle all on the same day, and beaming (and rebeaming…don’t ask) was quick the next day. But since then, it has been threading maybe 40-80 ends a day, and then I sleyed the reed and tied on over a couple of days. Now I’m up to the weaving, which is the ultimate hit and run project…with only 4 treadles in the pattern, I can knock out a tiny bit every time I walk by the loom, which usually turns into at least 5 repeats.

It was great yesterday while I dyed yarn for club. There is a fair amount of waiting involved for each step to set, and it was handy to just pop over to the studio and weave for those 5 minutes. I have probably a third of this warp finished, and I’m planning to tie another warp onto the ends of this one to get a nice two-fer out of all that threading work.  Overall, much more restful than clicking through something on the computer, and I’ll have something useful at the end of it all.

The turtle and the matchbox
Maybe if I just stretch my neck out a little, I’ll get ahead?

And now we come to the harder, second part of the Year of the Turtle….new projects. It is so easy to see something beautiful someone made, or the coolest new project, or even the fact that most of my socks are developing holes…and suddenly I have a mental list of a zillion projects that I want to do and are all weighing me down. I should not be stressed by my hobby.

I haven’t quite worked out how to conquer this magpie temptation, but I think what I shall do is continue to use ways to document ideas (notebook, Pinterest, Ravelry), and then let them slide from memory, as the ideas are safe and can be retrieved. I shall focus on a few carefully selected projects and complete them. *Sigh* I hope, anyway!

So, the mantra for this year is:

Slow and steady finishes more projects.

 

turtle race
Ready? Set. Go!!

Want to join me? Or have ideas? Weave your comment below!

I’ll leave you with a bit of wildlife from our neck of the woods. It’s been too cold to see much lately, but on nicer days we had this falcon:

Visitor

and this deer. She was part of a group of four does, protected by a nice sized buck. They like to eat our Vinca (please, eat it all!), so were nearly on our patio in the back.
Deer

Stay warm, my fibery friends, and keep on a goin’ on those projects!

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Fiber Friday, Inventory Edition

It was that wonderful time of year last week….the time when I pull all the fiber and yarn, dyed and undyed, out of the studio and weigh and count it all.  In the process, I found these lovely yarn and fiber goodies! Stop by and check them out, and if you haven’t been to the shop in a while, admire our new homepage!

Woodland Wildflowers - Self Patterning Safari Sock Yarn

Woodland Wildflowers - Falkland - April 2013 Tiger Club

Villa Nove Superwash Corriedale Combed Top

Villa Nove Self Striping Safari Sock Yarn

Tuscany - BFL Wool

Ice Pops Acala Cotton

That’s ‘easy to spin’ Acala cotton sliver ^^^^ , specially prepared for hand spinners.

Finally, I have a selection of Mawata Silk Hankie sets.

Northern Lights Silk Hankies

Mineral Ore Silk Hankies

Spanish Moss Silk Hankies

Ancient Tomes Silk Hankies

Thanks for stopping by The Painted Tiger! Have a fantastic fibery weekend!

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Salted Caramel Mochaccino – December Tiger Club

I hope you all had a nice break, ours has been extended two days due to the severe cold.  On such a freezy day, it is nice to snuggle up with nice cuppa.  Hence the theme of our December Tiger Club, based around a gradient of Salted Caramel Mochaccino.

My Five Shades of Mochachino ! ;)

Tongue in cheek, this idea came from our fiber this month, which is a soft-as-kittens blend of Baby Camel, Silk, and Merino.  I wanted to showcase the lovely pale tan of the natural color of the blend, yet make it into something decadent.   Hence, Salted Camel Mochaccino!  (Yeah, yeah, I’m so clever, ha!)  There are five shades from natural to caramel to browns to deep espresso.

Salted Camel Mochaccino - Tiger Club Dec 2013

Our sock yarn is MCN – Merino Cashmere Nylon, a lovely soft blend. It is nice for socks, but I decided to break from tradition and dye it for not-socks. There is one gradient on the skein, 9 even and long stripes from natural cream to caramel and through the ever darkening browns. Make a shawl or scarf or maybe do colorwork with it. Or as warp or weft for a weaving project. I really can’t wait to see what you come up with!Salted Cashmere Mochaccino - Tiger Club Dec 2013

 

As a side note, you may have noticed the lack of color on the tags, and the weird green tone of the inspiration picture on your note.  I’ve been having trouble with the pink ink on my printer for months, and it finally gave up.  I tried ‘fixing’ it during break….and, well, broke it completely.  That figures, right?  So, now I’m the proud owner of a new printer, and you’ll be seeing full color in the future (knock on wood!).  It even was discounted within the price difference refund window, so if I had to break a printer, it worked out ok in the end.

Tiger Club is open for new subscriptions through January 15th, I hope you’ll consider joining us.   We’ll have a great line up of yarn and fiber in 2014, and plenty of beautiful colors!

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Tiger Club Reveal, plus New England Wool Top

Time to post about November’s Tiger Club!  This month I was inspired by a yarn I had made several years ago.  At the time, I just made one of a kind colors, no recipes or repeats.  I also was using a different dye brand.  I still loved the color (pictured below, and titled ‘Electric Slide’), so I decided to see what I could do to make something similar in the new dyes.  And as always, we need some picture inspiration…….

Electric Slide - Bengal Twist Hand Dyed Sock Yarn

A Flickr search for Black, Green, and Blue turned up this (and some other amazing photos).  So the new colorway is dubbed ‘Northern Lights’.  During my sampling, I achieved some amazing intense colors, and although it is perhaps beyond the natural inspiration, I loved the play of the bright lime green to teal to blue play against the black.

Blue Green

Our yarn is Tiger Twist II, which lived up to the intense colors.

Northern Lights Tiger Twist 2

Our wool is a new one, New England Wool Top, which I will talk about in a minute, because I have more colors for you! A few ladies on the Ravelry board are thinking of a mitten SAL/KAL with this wool, so you are welcome to join in. I plan to!

Northern Lights NE Wool

New England Wool Top is a nice general wool, representing the wool pool of sheep in the Eastern United States. I love buying American whenever possible. The wool is a little denser, with about 28-29 microns, and it has a staple of 2.5-3.5 inches. Perfect for easy bulkier spinning (mine will be thick singles), or felting. It takes color beautifully, and I enjoyed pulling out recipes to try on this new wool. You can find all of these in our brand new New England Wool section.

Fairy Toadstool NE Wool

Out of the Deep NE Wool

Iris NE Wool

Dove NE Wool

Darner Dragonfly NE Wool

American Beauty NE Wool

Water Lilies NE Wool

Thanks for stopping by! We do have openings in the Tiger Sock Yarn and Tiger Fiber Clubs, if you missed out last month, and subscriptions make great gifts for your wool loving friends and family!

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New – Batts!

For the first time I am offering batts! There are some art batts with sparkle, and some smooth spinning batts with BFL and Silk. Hope you enjoy them!

PurpleGreyStripeBatts
Purple Rain is layered shades of purple and grey from pale to dark, and good dose of sparkle!

PurpleBlackStripeBatts

Grape stripe contains pinkish purple shades from light to dark, and a racing stripe of black.

OhBabyBatts

Oh Baby is stripes of yellow, pink, and blue carded with just enough firestar for sparkle without being overbearing.

NavyPinkBatt

Bright magenta pink, Navy blue, and white with some mohair and sparkles. Applied randomly for a fun mottled art batt look for your felting or spinning pleasure.

MixedPurpleBlackBatts

Blended Grape Stripe is the same colors as Grape Stripe, but the layers are added more randomly so your resulting yarn will be marled even in the single.

KelpBatt

Kelp is a mottled blend of seafoam greens, teal, and navy blue. Layered for a marled single.

FruityBatts

Fruity are striped art batts of yellow, orange, and pink.

SilverLiningBatts

Silver Lining is a layered batt, from dark grey to pale dove, with plenty of firestar sparkle.

SeafoamBatts

Seafoam batts are soft seafoam green with subtle streaks of lighter and darker shades.

I also have three sets (of six each) smooth batts made of hand dyed BFL wool (long, soft, strong, silky!) and tussah silk. These have had three passes through the drum carder for a lovely smooth spin, but still subtle variation in the colors. Here are Apricot, Blue Skies, and Mahogany:

ApricotBFLSilkBatts

BlueSkiesBFLSilkBatts

MahoganyBFLSilkBatts

You can find all the batts in our new Batt Section. Grab them now, and tune in next week (same batt time, same batt channel….sorry, couldn’t resist) for what is Fresh from the Dyepot.

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No Fuss Fractal Loving Forest Shawl

Yes, my friends, I actually cast on for a knitting project.  Don’t panic.

But let me back up…..

Spinning Challenge

Forest Targhee - 1/31/13

I finished spinning my Forest Targhee, which I used a fractal technique for (the link is to prior blog article about spinning a fractal yarn), in addition to dyeing it specifically for a triangular shawl. I then plied it, which was a great project for our vacation in Colorado this summer….set the Hansen miniSpinner and zoom, while watching my children play in the Big Thompson River right behind our cabin. (Yes, we wonder how the property fared in the flood.)

Forest Fractal Yarn
Forest Fractal Yarn

I had to get a preview of how my stripes might turn out, so I did careful winding on my swift.  I ended up with 1464 yards of 2 ply.  It’s fairly comparable to Zephyr in weight.  I, um, did not plan to make myself quite so much knitting!

Forest Targhee Fractal Hand Spun Yarn
Forest Targhee Fractal Hand Spun Yarn

After a good wash, I caked it up, and cast on. This is the No Fuss Shade-Loving Shawl by Susan Ashcroft, it’s a free pattern on Ravelry.

Forest Fractal Yarn
Forest Fractal Yarn

I’m about a month in, and the rows are getting long enough I don’t want to do the whole ten row repeat in one sitting. It is fun seeing the colors change, and it keeps me going one more row.

Forest Fractal Shawl

Forest Fractal Shawl

By the way, we are still running the Fractal SAL/KAL….until I finish my shawl, which at the rate I knit could be a loooooooong time! If you’d like to join us, check out the thread on Ravelry that is linked earlier in this paragraph. There are some lovely shawls posted there already, I’d love to see yours.

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Mineral Ore – October 2013 Tiger Club Reveal

Chalcopyrite

In the picture inspiration thread on Ravelry, a couple of people had posted pictures featuring copper. Since we’ve had bright orange recently in the club, I decided to go a little ‘earthier’ with the copper idea, and went back to ore.

Mineral Ore - October Tiger Club - Bengal Tweed Sock Yarn

Our yarn this month is a brand new special, likely to be exclusive to club (although it is lovely!). Bengal Tweed is BFL (Blue Faced Leicester), which is a great long wearing wool, and spun right is are brown and black bits of Donegal, which make it tweed. I gasped when it came out of the box from my supplier….I love it!

Mineral Ore - October Tiger Club

So to make this great yarn even better (yes, I felt like gilding the lily, here!) I added our copper ore colors of cobalt blue, green, russety orange, and two shades of brown. The colors were applied completely randomly, so you’ll have random tweed and random colors. It makes for a very busy project, so I’d suggest choosing something really simple.

Mineral Ore - October Tiger Club - BFL Silk Combed Top

Our fiber is a blend of Mixed (white and black) BFL and Tussah Silk. I didn’t want to cover up the lovely natural color of this blend, so again I applied the color randomly and judiciously. You’ll get some great marling if you ply it to itself, or make an intentional single…great for a super soft hat or cowl.

Tiger Club membership is open for November until the 15th. If you’d like to join us, please stop by the site and take a look, I’d love to be dyeing for you!

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