Now Is the Month of Maying…

May 2nd, 2012

… and a not-so-young designer’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of spring fiber shows. Yours truly is vending at a bunch of them. Yours truly is pretty psyched. In fact, at certain points in the past few months yours truly may or may not actually have been heard to squee in a regally ladylike manner… between hyperventilations.

(I should really be telling you about Stringtopia first, shouldn’t I. I got back from that Monday night, and of course it was epic, and I won’t tell you how early and utterly I crashed out on arrival at home, for fear of destroying Vampire Girl’s reputation. But I can’t really talk much about that, not so much because What Happens At Stringtopia Stays At Stringtopia, but because really I have barely begun to absorb it all. Be warned, though. I took classes not only with Abby but with Sara Lamb. I wove. I dyed. It’s a little scary.)

SPRING SHOW RUNDOWN

Hard to say at this point how things are going to play out later in the month, but we’re going in with carloads of goodies.

We’re bringing all the titles we had at Rhinebeck, and we’re re-introducing Seven Chakras and The Abbey, both showing off stunning new colors in Tsilk Tstocking. Limited number of spin-your-own kits for both - there will be more of these later on. We’ll have skeins of Delphinium, as well as a few one-of-a-kind skeins. (You know the drill - the occasional happy surprises of the dye studio. If we can repeat them they become colorways; if not they’re Limited Editions.)

Also under our capacious roof (thanks to new fire regulations, the new tent is named BigTentIsBig), I’m happy to say we will have:

We’ve been Printing All the Things, Skeining and Dyeing All the Things, Assembling and Organizing All the Things - and tomorrow we Pack All the Things, and Friday we set forth on the first stage of our month-long adventure. I’ve never been to the Maryland show before, not even as a civilian (!!!!!!) - but dudes, it’s MARYLAND. I’ve done the New Hampshire festival several times, but they’re moving to a new location this year, so in a sense it’s unfamiliar territory for all. The Long Island festival at Hallockville is our young local show here; this is its third year, and I’ve been part of it in previous years but not as a vendor until now - it’s great fun, though. And then there’s my dear MAS&W at Cummington; I don’t know yet where we’re setting up BigTentIsBig, but wherever it is will be home.

Four weekends; four shows.

And we are really looking forward to seeing you at any and all of them. :)

Nay, I Can Gleek Upon Occasion

April 10th, 2012

Well, the incubus Muse won that round, as is only right. Even if your medium is something as apparently inconsequential (to normal people, I mean) as sock design, it never pays to disregard the promptings of the Muse. Do that enough times and the Muse will abandon you altogether, and then you may as well start pushing paper for a living. Whereas when the Muse wins, nobody loses.

Whose note full many a man doth mark,
And dares not answer nay.

It was an epic battle, though. As I said in my last, I’ve had this tsock in mind for a long time, and I was so sure I knew how I was going to do it that I had knitted most of it, and was already more than half-way through writing it and discussing it with the test knitter when the No-No-You-Have-To-Do-It-THIS-Way Thunderbolt hit me. Giving that up was hard. HARD.

And to make you suffer with me, I’m going to take you through it more or less in excruciating chronological sequence. (As before, if you can’t stand the pain you can always scroll down. But you might miss something. You never know.)

Gentles, perchance you wonder at this show;
But wonder on, till truth make all things plain.

This tsock, then - Tsock #2 of the 2012 Art for your Feet Tsock Club - is “Bottom’s Dream,” the second and final part of the Midsummer Night’s Dream miNIZZeries. Think of it as the low-comedy obverse of the ethereal fairy business that is “Love in Idleness.” They do say the pun is the lowest form of wit, yes? And so I give you Shakespeare, channeling his inner naughty twelve-year-old in just that form, by having Puck put the head of an Ass on the shoulders of a character named Bottom.

(The OED, incidentally, claims that there is no such pun here; that in Shakespeare’s time “ass” was not used to mean the same thing as “Bottom.” Sorry, OED dear, but on this one you are just plain WRONG. The theme of the transformation of man into ass owes something to Apuleius and very possibly also something to Ovid, but Nick Bottom the weaver is Shakespeare’s own - I think we do know the sweet Roman hand - and there is just no way his name is a coincidence.)

You may recall that in the first episode of this miNIZZeries we saw Oberon plotting to sprinkle the juice of Love-in-Idleness on Titania’s sleeping eyelids so that on waking she would immediately dote on the next creature she saw. Meanwhile, in another part of the forest, the Rude Mechanicals are rehearsing their ludicrous version of Pyramus and Thisbe; Puck, discovering them, seizes the opportunity to clap an ass’s head on the greatest oaf among them, and places him where Titania can’t help but see him when she awakens. Puck then scampers back to Oberon and announces “My mistress with a monster is in love” - and sure enough she spends the better part of the night murmuring sweet nothings in the huge hairy ears of Bottom the Ass, and sending her fairies hither and yon to bring him delicacies; while Oberon, as planned, takes advantage of her distraction to steal away her changeling page.

Well, I had the whole thing figured out ages ago. I was going to build a tsock out of all the best bits of the Hempen Homespuns and their silly play-within-the-play. I was going to approach the construction as it were the yang to the previous episode’s yin; a warm earthy colorway where the other was cool and mysterious; themes expressed in chewy textures where the other was all delicate lace. I was going to use Wall (”O sweet and lovely Wall”) as the background and Lion (”well roared, Lion”) and Moon (”this lanthorn doth the hornèd moon present”) as motifs, with maybe a little bit of Cobweb and Moth here and there. I was going to make Bottom in his Ass’s Head the high-instep focal point on this one, as Titania was on its predecessor. (Thus putting Bottom on Top… but I digress.)

Sketches

I sent Betty links to a bunch of Brueghel’s “peasant” paintings, the various wedding dances and such…

Brueghel Wedding Dance

…and as requested she made me a wonderfully rich, subtly variegated colorway from those characteristically earthy reds with touches of brown. I amused myself by dubbing it “Fustian” - and while waiting for the final version of it I started swatching textured motifs.

I made a Wall.

Wall

I made a Moon.

Moon

(This is an early unfinished swatch in a different yarn, but you get the gist.)

I toyed with Moth.

Moth

I made Lion.

Lion

I made the Ass’s Head.

Ass's Head

I loved them. Everyone on the Team loved them, too.

By this point I had the real yarn, so I made a seed stitch toe, and I built a Wall on top of it, and I put the Ass’s Head on the instep, and I wrote and charted these things and sent them off to the test knitter, and she knitted them, and everybody was happy. (Not to mention comfortably ahead of schedule.) And then…

ZOT!!!!!!

… then came the Thunderbolt. And what the Thunderbolt told me was that the WHOLE APPROACH WAS ALL WRONG. It showed me a foot and it showed me an Ass’s head and it dinned incessantly in my ear that the resemblance between them, like Nick Bottom’s name, was no coincidence, and that to ignore it would be to fly in the face of providence, indeed to look a gift Ass in the mouth.

And at last it broke me down.

Cursing a blue streak, I brought the design/testing process to a screeching halt, went straight back to the drawing board, and within minutes had… this:

Big Ass

More cursing and fulmination, more struggles and attempts at denial, but still I cast on to try it out right away, and as I knitted I knew. I knew. I knew. There was no help for it. The Tsock IS the Ass. The Ass IS the Tsock. All that other little cute stuff is just other little cute stuff. The little lion and the little ass won’t go to waste, but they will just have to live on the back burner for a while, because THIS is Bottom’s Dream.

Bottom's Dream

See what I mean?

Bottom's Dream Cover

Go Big Ass Or Go Home.

Actually, once I stopped resisting, the whole thing flowed smoothly, and the original texture-and-outline idiom lent itself beautifully to the new form.

The muzzle is worked in seed stitch, with stockinette nostrils outlined in twisted stitches…

Nostril

… while the increase lines at the sides of the toe naturally form the mouth. The face is mostly stockinette, with ridges defined by reverse stockinette. Then the Eyes, like the Nostrils, are outlined in twisted stitches, with the whites done in seed stitch and the eyeball in reverse stockinette.

Left Eye

Between the Eyes the widening of the brow ridge produces additional ease for the rise of the instep; above the brow ridge, of course, is the Forelock…

Forelock

Methinks I am marvellous hairy about the face; and I am such a tender ass, if my hair do but tickle me, I must scratch.

Forelock

… worked, incidentally, in what I flatter myself is an entirely new version of Loop stitch, much more stable than any I’ve ever run across.

Loop Stitch

Above the Forelock and the skull rises the mad glory of the three-dimensional Ears.

Ear

These stand out from the sides of the ankle in an anatomically-plausible fashion; they are worked in-line and are lined in a woven stitch - alums of The Boid will recognize their old friend Plaited Basket, here rechristened Tabby Weave in tribute to Bottom’s profession.

Between them a glimpse of the aforementioned Wall, its “crannied chink” formed by the gap in the short-rowed welt that gives volume to its stones…

Wall

… and above that the Hornèd Moon appears on the cuff:

Horned Moon

As for the heel? Why, a Peasant Heel, of course. What else would you use for this group of clods? I’ll spare you the rant about the difference between a Peasant Heel and an Afterthought Heel (it’s all there in the pattern, though), and merely point out that in this particular case the shaping is done by means of semi-randomly staggered decreases…

Heel

… to enhance the curve of the Ass’s Cheek - because Shakespeare doesn’t have a monopoly on childish humor, and sometimes I too am twelve.

And if you think that’s the end of the story, think again. Because after the prototype was finished and the pattern written and charted and in the final stages of testing, I looked at the eyes and decided they were too slitty. I blocked them and stretched them and they were still too slitty. So I frogged the heel (”and it shall be called Bottom’s Dream, because it hath no bottom”), and then I performed major surgery on the sock, snipping a stitch in the middle of the heel setup round, pulling out the strand a stitch at a time, and delicately dismantling the whole thing, splitting it in two.

Bisected

Bad phone pictures, I’m afraid, but at least they do give you some idea of the extent of the carnage…

Bisected

… not to mention the slittiness of the eyes, pre-surgery.

Frogged back to the beginning of the eyes and reworked them, wider awake and less demonic this time, and then grafted the whole thing back together and recreated the heel.

With the help of a surgeon he might yet recover, and prove an ass.

Bottom's Dream

And NOW truly methought I was enamour’d of an ass.

Bottom's Dream

“Bottom’s Dream” went into the mail today (well… Monday, I mean), and should start landing on knitters’ doorsteps by Wednesday.

As for me - after all these struggles and thunderbolts I have an exposition of sleep come upon me.

… Sing me now asleep;
Then to your offices and let me rest.

Hookey

March 18th, 2012

The life of a designer is not without its frustrations. You know how every once in a while you’re trundling cheerfully along with a pattern and suddenly the incubus muse comes whomping down on your head and insists that you have to go off in a totally different direction? No? Let me tell you, it is not for the faint of stomach. You can argue until you’re blue in the face that it’s too late, that the thing is nearly done, that you’re already getting feedback from the test knitter… but the muse is an imperious and intransigent creature, and woe betide you if you try to disregard its promptings. They may or may not turn out to be right, but you have no choice about exploring them.

(The ludicrous aspect of applying this level of artistic intensity to socks, of all things, is not lost on me. But what can you do? I didn’t choose the medium any more than I chose the vocation. Some are born crazy, some achieve insanity, and some have madness thrust upon them. TSOCK doth sway my life.)

I’ve been ridden by one of these maddening whiplash experiences for several days now, and yesterday I woke up to find it had been haunting my dreams as well as my waking hours. So obviously there was only ONE thing to do.

I took the day off.

I had planned to take some time out anyway, because St. Patrick’s Day is Pea-Planting Day in these parts, as eny fule kno. If I hadn’t owed the muse a good kick in the butt I might not have made a whole day of it… as it is, I did and I’m not sorry.

First, a satisfactory tour of inspection. Preliminary spring denizens present and accounted for:

Dwarf Irises

Crocuses

Squills

Montana Rubens

Better yet, last week’s planting…

First Planting

… is already producing results:

Radish Seedlings

(This incredibly crappy picture brought to you by my excitement over the first two radishes-in-progress.)

Now for some wholesome labor; digging and turning soil, clearing weeds, and finally some planting. This is where the peas go:

Pea Bed

(That’s before. I’d show you after, but just how many pictures of plastic knives sticking out of mounds of dirt do you really want to see on a putative knitting blog? Yeah, that’s what I thought. Take my word for it, OK? - the peas are planted.)

Next week there will be seedlings to start indoors, so I gave myself the pleasure of screening a bucketful of finished compost to add to the starter mix. Until I started it up again last year, the pile had been neglected for several years, so this is from the 2002/2003 season.

Compost

Ahhhhh…. black gold. An excellent year.

That and some pruning done, and all the tools put away, it was time for another ritual tour of inspection. Beach walk; first of the season, and about time, too.

Beach

A mild winter; not much beach erosion at all.

You want some flotsam? I gotsam.

Flotsam

You want some jetsam? I can getsam.

Jetsam

Misalliance:

Misalliance

I’m not the only one conducting an inspection; there’s a whole world of smells to investigate.

Beach

Luke and Horseshoe

Mostly, though, it’s just about meandering and breathing it all in - recharging the batteries with a much-needed dose of sea air.

Me and my shadow, and my shadow’s shadow…

Me and my Shadow

Shaggy dog is shaggy…

Shaggy Dog

Pensive dog is pensive…

Pensive Dog

I should not be able to do this at this time of year…

Cold Feet

We have left our mark here, I see, but someone else was here before us…

Footsteps

Time to retrace our steps…

Beach

Today, back to the salt mines.

Take THAT, tsock muse!

Cookie

February 21st, 2012

“100 Men and a Girl” - Toscanini Tour, 1950

Aboard the Toscanini Special

Typing

Sorting Mail

In the Dining Car

Toscanini Special

 
Sun Valley


Little Girl

With Walter

In the Pool

Sun Valley

 
 

Forty Years On


Amiable Sluts Making Pudding
Making Spotted Dog, Babylon, 1997; photo by Allan Janus.
 

 
Anne Chotzinoff Grossman
February 21, 1930 - November 5, 2002

2007
2008
2009
2010
2011

The Course of True Love

February 16th, 2012

Tap… tap… tap… is this thing on?

It’s probably best if for once we just skip the whole routine about how long it’s been since my last post, right? and just cut to the chase?

(Incidentally, though, I really do still believe it is possible to get back on the blogging horse and stay there, even though I don’t seem to have done that yet. Might be different if I didn’t happen to love blogging - but I do. I remind myself that I also love knitting - and yet just before Tsarina-hood swept me off my feet there was a long, lo-o-o-o-o-ong period when I didn’t knit. At all. For years. And I’m back on that horse, glued in the saddle, right? Right. So where was I? Oh yes, cutting to the chase.)

The chase: Yesterday and the day before I Mailed All the Things. Tsock #1 for the 2012 Art for your Feet Tsock Club, winging its way at last.

That “at last,” for anyone who hasn’t been following this saga on Ravelry, is the final dreg of a bitter pill we refer to around here as The Great Bead Crisis of 2012 - if it hadn’t been for which I could have been making this post a month ago, and a lot of people could have been a lot less frazzled. But I’m getting ahead of myself here, just a bit. Yes, some of you have waited a long time (and with remarkable patience, may I say) to see what’s coming up in a few long-winded paragraphs or so, and speaking of cutting to the chase there’s no real reason for you to wait any longer if you don’t want to; you can just scroll down until you get to the actual tsock itself. Me - I have to mark some of the way-stations, so I’m going to begin by telling you a little of what I was going to post two months ago, and then a month ago, and then a couple of weeks ago.

I’ve been wanting to show you a few glimpses of what goes on behind the scenes in the Tsarskoe Tsocko of the New Empire, and I think this is a good place to start:

Color Wheel

That is one of Betty’s working tools, the live color wheel, in progress. It’s actually grown quite a lot since this shot was taken (enough so that I need to start splitting it into families and putting them on separate rings), but this is enough to give you an idea. There are two of these - Betty has one and I have the other - and they are the foundation of our working palette and our communication for color development. Those are sample mini-skeins of Tsilk Tstocking. Every sample is labeled, every label keyed to a particular formula and depth of shade… and every result reproducible.

Besides - who doesn’t love a spectrum of pretty colors to play with?

That picture was taken in November, and as I said the palette has expanded greatly since I failed to blog about it. Actually, the picture was taken very shortly after an even more spectacular display of Blog Fail - wherein I managed not to get around to telling you about our adventures at NEFF where we acquired ROBO-SKEINER. (There are some bad pictures somewhere. I may or may not have felt absolutely obligated to buy a fleece - you know, for padding, to protect Robo-Skeiner on the way home. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.)

Robo-Skeiner is our new hero, in these parts. How we got through Rhinebeck without him, how we ever lived without him at all, I’m really not sure. He is a motorized 6-skein Multi-Skeiner from Ball & Skein, and Betty and I have jointly adopted him… but actually I think everyone on the team wants to marry him. Look at how handsome he is!

Skeining Party

That’s Robo-Skeiner in action, on the right, with Liz running his smaller older sibling, the manual 3-skein version, on the left. And this is the Skeining Party for Tsock #1.

Skeining Party

Please to notice, in these pictures, the seasonal telltale. See all those little bits of Christmas tree here and there? Yes, this skeining party took place in December. And by the end of the day we had all the yarn for Tsock #1 ready to dye.

Skeining Party

All of it.

Skeining Party

And then some.

Skeining Party

Please to notice, also, how sane and organized this process was. We had checklists! We had spreadsheets! We had people actually checking the checklists and studying the spreadsheets!

Skeining Party

Also present and accounted for - sample mini-skeins (in duplicate, of course) for final adjustments to the colorway.

Skeining Party

At this stage of the proceedings we were so ready it was almost ridiculous. Dye-days scheduled. Prototypes designed and re-designed. Pattern mostly written. Charts mostly charted. Tweaks being tweaked. Test-knitter standing by.

And then. And then came the beads. No, what am I saying? What I really mean is… then DIDN’T come the beads.

You wouldn’t think it would be that difficult to round up a half-kilo or so of silver-lined purple beads. It isn’t as though the bead in question was particularly esoteric; granted it took more hunting and sampling than I expected at the audition stage, but when at last I did find the right one I congratulated myself loudly on having chosen a standard item from a major manufacturer, something easy to source in bulk.

I passed the spec and the numbers off to my bead-wallah. She ordered beads. Everybody was happy.

Then the beads arrived. They were even the right beads. The size was right. The color was right. The only thing that wasn’t right… was the quantity. It was about one-third of what we needed. One-third of what we had ordered. One-third of what we had paid for. One-third of what we had been led to expect.

The other two-thirds? Suddenly and mysteriously unavailable. And this is when things started getting silly, because we called around to every supplier we knew and we got a different polite runaround from every one of them. The upshot was that while one supplier clung to the hope of being re-supplied in about a month, a second one told us the bead in question (standard! silver-lined! purple! non-weird!) had been discontinued. Another was sure that it hadn’t actually been discontinued but that the manufacturer was re-numbering its entire line and that for some reason this particular bead happened to be untraceable as a result. To this day I am not sure which of these stories (if any) was true; I only know I felt as if I gone out to buy a ream of paper, only to be told that paper had gone out of style, so nobody was selling it any more.

Frustration. Frenzy. Fulminations and gnashing of teeth.

We snapped up the last few small lots remaining on eBay - that brought us up to nearly half. Then the bead-hunt went nationwide. Everyone we knew was co-opted to seek and suggest - a mighty volunteer army (including a number of helpful club members) pounded pavements all over the country for us, checking out their local bead stores. I can’t even count how many bead suppliers we talked to. (Or tried to talk to - who takes a vacation and closes a shop at the end of January? Why, the one supplier who probably has what you need.) Some of them had suggestions, or thought they might have the right thing or at least something comparable. (Some of them didn’t even know for sure which bead they had, because many distributors make up their own item numbers and don’t specify which beads come from which manufacturers.) But what none of them could supply was the audition turnaround time we had already budgeted and used. I mean… you know the drill - monitors vary, and what you see ain’t necessarily what you get. You can’t just look at a digital picture on-line and know whether the color is going to be right. There is a REASON I do such extensive sampling and testing months ahead of time. (Not unconnected to the REASON that as of a couple of months ago I own more than a dozen different types of purple bead, most of which I will probably never use.)

And meanwhile all the poor Flock members checking in on Ravelry day after day with their half-wistful-half-hopeful posts of “NAO?” or “Tsoon?” or “BEEEEEEEEEDZ?????”

I’m still not convinced that the original bead (purple! silver-lined! beautiful! totally non-weird!) is not out there somewhere; I believe that one of these days the supply will start flowing again, and when it does we will be there to fill our coffers. But we couldn’t keep waiting around for that, so at last a week or so ago we called it and we cast the understudy. It may not have been my first choice but it’s also a very lovely bead - silver-lined dark amethyst - and it’s in plentiful supply, and it may be going out a chorus girl but I firmly believe it’s coming back a star.

So - about half the club will be getting the bead pictured here (your monitor may vary!), and the other half will see something in a darker and warmer shade when they open those packages… starting tomorrow. (Tomorrow!!!!!)

Before I show you the actual tsock, one more thing: I owe an apology to one clever club member who accurately guessed the theme based on only a couple of meagre hints. I did not tell her she was wrong - because that would have been, you know, a lie - but I fear it was a little disingenuous to put her off the scent with “now THERE is a cool idea for a tsock.” Q.E.D. - I think it is a cool idea, have long thought so and long wanted to do it - and I hope that for love of the theme itself, if nothing else, she will forgive me for wilfully misleading her.

Without further ado, then, here it is. The first in a two-part miniseries (or miNIZZeries, as my dear friend Dennis Flanagan used to day) based on “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”

Love in Idleness

Love-In-Idleness (better known today as Viola Cornuta, Miniature Pansy, or Johnny Jump-Up) is the flower accidentally struck by Cupid’s arrow, “before milk-white, now purple with love’s wound” - whose juice “on sleeping eyelids laid / Will make or man or woman madly dote / Upon the first live creature that it sees.”

Love in Idleness

It is the pivotal plot device - to the extent, at any rate, that the play can be said to have such a thing at all. A plot, I mean. Define it as you like it, it is what you will: a comedy of errors that winds up being much ado about nothing; the main point being that love’s labour’s lost and all’s well that ends well. But what can you expect? Once interfering fairies start latching mortals’ (not to mention each other’s) eyes with love-juice, you have to assume that the course of true love never will run smooth. And so it does not, for a full midsummer night during which everyone wanders through the woods desperately trying to make sense of an incomprehensible situation: Right woman falling in love with wrong man, right man falling out of love with right woman, wrong man falling in love with wrong woman, wrong fairy falling in love with wrong ass… oh, wait, that’s a story for another time.

Cupid All Arm'd

Suffice it to say that Oberon, king of the fairies, uses the juice of this flower on his sleeping queen Titania for nefarious purposes of his own; along the way, despite the best of intentions, he also manages to turn a set of overlapping human love triangles into a highly irregular inverted tetragon in which nobody is happy and everyone is at daggers drawn. At last he resolves the whole mess by means of yet another mystical plant (as Oberon says when conducting repairs with the antidote, “Dian’s bud o’er Cupid’s flower/Hath such force and blessed power” - and Dian’s bud in translation turns out to be none other than wormwood, the subject of quite another tsock), which just goes to show that fairies are about as incapable of learning from their errors as the rest of us. Or, as Puck might put it - Lord, what fools these fairies be.

It is, in short, some of the loveliest and most inspired nonsense imaginable - all shadowy woods and pale moonlight and fairies and flowers and fantasy, entirely insubstantial. (Well… almost entirely. But that too is a story for another time.)

The tsock is worked toe-up from a toe-tip cast-on; foot and ankle are covered all over in lacy leaf mesh.

Leaf Mesh

A deceptively simple start, designed to lull you into a false sense of security. But beware: When you reach the rise of the instep… that is when I pounce on you with my latest obsession. Yes, I have been playing with Estonian-inspired lace stitches, and this depiction of the fairy queen Titania is the result:

Titania

See? She has beaded wings, and a beaded crown, and what I really love about her is that the unbalanced decrease/increase combinations between her wings supply ease for the heel turn.

(I wish I could do justice to this colorway, “Midsummer Night.” Your monitor may vary. Trust me, the real thing, as rendered in Tsilk Tstocking, far surpasses the best I can do with color-balanced digital photography.)

On the back of the short-row heel I have placed the most optional device imaginable - really I can’t possibly stress enough how utterly optional it is.

Heel Flower

If (and ONLY if) you are dead-sure-100%-positive that this sock will never see the inside of a closed-heel shoe… well, then, in that case why NOT put a beaded lace flower on it?

If you can’t be sure of that, however, all is not lost; you’ll have plenty of further opportunities to work the same Estonian-inspired pattern, as it makes up the entirety of the lace overlay. Yes, I said “lace overlay.”

Overlay

This is where Cupid’s Flower comes into its own as an allover pattern; it’s a highly stylized flower shape worked in a fine pale silver laceweight, purple beads denoting “love’s wound” on each petal, covering almost the entire ankle.

Overlay Flower

The lace overlay is joined inline to the top of the sock, lace stitches passed over sock stitches in a maneuver a little like a three-needle bind-off - except that nothing is bound off. The cuff ends in a leafy edging that is worked as a continuation of the sock, not a perpendicular addition;

Sock Edging

a similar edging is added at the bottom of the overlay, its beaded leaf tips hanging just above the head of the fairy queen.

Overlay Edging

           Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
           With sweet musk-roses and with eglantine:
           There sleeps Titania sometime of the night,
           Lull’d in these flowers with dances and delight.

Love-in-Idleness

No Place Like It

November 1st, 2011

Rhinebeck.

But wait! FIRST…! Breaking Tsocky News.

  1. We have… a few spots left for the 2012 ART for your FEET TSOCK CLUB, and we are now throwing those open to the public. First come, first served - you know the drill! A year-long subscription; six wild and crazy designs that run the gamut of colors and techniques and themes and styles; plus assorted surprise goodies tailored to your tastes and participation in a cozy free-for-all knit-along group on Ravelry. If you want in, go here and clicky on the buttons. It’s OK, I’ll wait.
  2. We have… YARN! Just delivered last week, 500+ beautiful pounds of Tsilk Tstocking, just waiting to be skeined and dyed into wonderful rich colorways.

    Tsocks in Utero

  3. We have… OK, we don’t have yet, but we soon will have… Robo-Skeiner! Betty and I are going to NEFF this weekend (as civilians, for once) and we’ll pick up our new little monster from Judy while there. So next week look for us to be skeining fools, getting into serious production.
  4. We have… some inventory. Not much, yet - just what’s left from Rhinebeck - but if you’re looking to order Kitri, or Poseidon, or Oktoberfest, or Vintage, you may be in luck. (No Imbas - that baby sold out, as usual. But there’ll be more soon.) Still working on getting the new web site set up, so for now you’ll need to contact me via e-mail (info AT tsocktsarina DOT com) to arrange things. But I must say, it’s nice to have kits in stock! Next up in the Coming-Soon Queue: Seven Chakras, The Nine Tailors, and Golden West.

Now, where was I?

Rhinebeck.

I do have some pictures, but almost all of them are of the booth. Which is appropriate, really, because I hardly got out of the booth all weekend. We were that busy. Busy surpassing my wildest expectations, some of which were pretty wild. (It wasn’t just us, either. In the brief opportunities I had to talk to other vendors they reported much the same thing. This was an EPIC Rhinebeck.) A great beginning for the New Empire.

In one sense, of course, this wasn’t my first Rhinebeck, by any means - the Tsarina saga began at Rhinebeck in 2006, and has continued there ever since. In that sense it always has been home to me - no place like it. But in another sense it was very much my first Rhinebeck - if you put the emphasis on MY. First time out on my own, first time as the Vendor of Record.

On my own, but totally not on my own. Because - well, that’s a story, and this is the place to tell it. Because almost a year ago, when it became clear to me that before long I was going to be out paddling my own solitary canoe, in a no-infrastructure zone, with no really cogent idea what the hell I was going to do with myself and my designs and my plans, I had a small epiphany:

There’s no place like home.

So I clicked my heels together three times and I betook me to my usual Sunday knitting/spinning group, and I took a long close look at them from a whole new angle. I’ve been getting together with these people for nigh on four years now. Every week we take over the local Panera and make a spectator sport of ourselves with the laughing and the talking and the fiber arts; we’ve come to know each other pretty well, and I was already convinced in a general sort of way that there wasn’t much this crowd couldn’t do - or wouldn’t do for each other. But I hadn’t ever had occasion before to break that down into categories and take massive advantage of it. And sure enough, on closer examination it turned out that I had wildly underestimated the richest resource an absolute monarch could hope for.

You already know about Betty, and you’ve seen something of what she can do with color (though actually… you ain’t seen nothin’ yet). I already knew about her too, and she was the first person I talked to about making this thing happen. Because, you know - no dyed yarnz, no tsocks.

After that - OK, I’m still not going to spell out the full dramatis personae yet, because if I start doing that we’ll be here all night. I’m heroically sticking to the overview stage for now, and we’ll get into individual profiles later. Suffice it to say that the New Empire comprises not only designers and dye artists and beading ditto; it also has skilled professionals in marketing, retail, graphics, fulfilment, and logistics. It has editors; it has typographers; it has test knitters; it has many hands making cheerfully light work of the more boring menial tasks. More to the point, or at any rate equally so, these people are my posse, my crew, my support group AND my support staff, they’re my rock, they’re my peeps, they’re my friends… and they are the reason that there is a New Empire at all. So really, not MY Rhinebeck after all. OUR Rhinebeck.

I don’t have pictures of all of them (and as it is I’m indebted to Liz for most of the pictures I do have), but if you look at how this

Booth in Progress

and this

Booth in Progress

evolved into this

Booth in Progress

there’s a pretty fair representative sampling along the way.

Crack-brained plan for gridwall assembly begins to make some sense:

Booth in Progress

That’s Kelly and Amy pulling the pieces together, and incidentally…?

Don't Mess with Kelly

…you do NOT want to mess with Kelly.

Gridwall? WHAT Gridwall?

Booth in Progress

It’s still there, actually, but it’s now backed by a huge swath of black Duvetyn - I wish I had video of the deployment of same, because that was an adventure in itself. (There IS video, though, of the disembodied hand demanding gaffer’s tape as the banner is being jury-rigged into place; Kelly and Jenn in foreground, Amy and Claire (I, um… I think) doing their ninja thing behind the masking.)

These should look familiar:

Booth in Progress

Booth in Progress

And so should these, as wielded by Claire,

Booth in Progress

who hasn’t got a leg to stand on.

What Betty is so happy about…

Booth in Progress

… I don’t remember, unless it is that gradually the walls are being stocked and the displays pulled together.

Booth in Progress
Amy, Claire, Jenn, me, and a little bit of Dan at far right

We’re just about done at this point, except for some last-minute assembly and the inevitable stashing-away of vast quantities of stuff, so we adjourn to the Holidome for some serious strategizing, with a little work thrown in here and there.

This is us, totally rocking the strategizing:

Holidome
Claire and Amy sporting Official Headgear

Holidome
Amy, Claire, and Rena, with the Headgear reshuffled

Actual Work Content: You ever need any collating done, this is the team. That’s Amy, Kelly, and Claire, working so fast that the job was literally finished before I could even ask “Weren’t you guys going to collate those patterns?”

Other than that… well, it’s mostly a blur, really. Here’s the booth Saturday morning before the mob scene began:

Booth in Progress

(That’s Betty and Ryan making a few minor adjustments to the display of Betty’s Moose Manor wares. BTW… have you perhaps noticed that it is a BIIIIIIIIIIIG booth? Yes, we noticed that too. We didn’t exactly overfill it, this time out, though there was certainly enough stuff to start with, and besides it was plenty full of people having a good time, which always delights me. But there is lots of room to grow, which is good, because grow is exactly what we are planning to do.)

We had Tsock Tsightings in the wild - always a happy thing:

Firebird (AKA the Barbecued Chicken, I was told) at the Holidome:

Firebird

Seven Chakras in the booth:

Seven Chakras

Green Fairy in the booth:

Green Fairy

To my utter embarrassment, I haven’t yet come up with a workable system for keeping track of who’s who when I take these pictures - especially in the craziness of Rhinebeck, it just didn’t happen. I’m sorry! If this was you, give me a shout in the comments and I will totally come back and edit; meanwhile, I trust you know that I was totally happy to see you even if the details did kind of get swept along by the tide.

We had a Special Guest honoring the Fronkenshteek display:

Frankenstein Monster

He’s standing in for the Angry Mob Action Figures Playset, which alas is the one really important display prop I forgot to bring with me (and they were Angry fer realz when I got back, believe me). Note that he is wearing his Miniature Baby Surprise Jacket, as devised by Kate Atherley and knitted by our own Liz. Kate (whom I kept introducing, with good reason, as the Most Patient Tech Editor on the Planet) is just one of the many many imaginary friends who come to to brief and vibrant life on these occasions; friends whom I saw and hugged… but totally failed to drink with and also neglected to photograph. I plead Rhinebeck fumes.

Here’s Betty and me in the booth at some point…

In the Booth

… and do please note which of us is doing the Actual Work and which of us is goofing off and schmoozing with the customers.

Other than that, most of the pictures I took looked similar to this:

Receipt

(and I have to pause here to sing the delighted praises of Square, truly a vendor’s dream for smooth transaction processing)

So it’s a good thing that Liz was more camera-conscious than I; check out the rest of her Rhinebeck photoset on Flickr for a more complete picture of the, well, bigness of things.

I doubt I’ll ever be able to get the whole Team together in one place for one shot, but here’s a few of us:

Group Shot

From right, that’s Kelly, Liz and Jenn; from left, me and Betty. And in the middle, not part of the Tsarina Team but a friend and fellow-first-time-vendor in her own right, is Tina Martinez of Bittersweet Woolery, whom you last saw in these pages way way way back when - back when she was a spinner and I still wasn’t, and she taunted me with cookies and Cormo. She’s doing some great things with color and fiber and yarn, and there wasn’t much left in her booth by the time this picture was taken on Sunday.

I seem to have barely skimmed the surface of the real story here - there’s all this rich detail floating around the back of my head. Images of the people I saw and played and chatted and ate and drank with; vignettes from Kelly’s birthday party at the Holidome; the recurring theme of the vanishing staples; Amy and Claire doing the Official Happy Dance over the contents of the cash box on Saturday night; drive-by greeting and swaggering with Abby (she was teaching just on the other side of the wall - she threatened to drill holes through the back of my displays; I threatened to drum on the wall during her classes); seeing Jess and Casey and meeting Rav-baby Eloise; some of my not-so-imaginary friends meeting each other for the first time; the bittersweet awareness of all the friends there wouldn’t even be time to say hello to; the usual dizzying arrays of colors and textures and scents; as always the overwhelming cumulative effect of hugs upon hugs.

In other words, Rhinebeck. There’s no place like it.

But speaking of no place like it, there’s a moral to this story, and you already know what it is…

…it’s that - if I ever go looking for my heart’s desire again, I won’t look any further than my own back yard. Because if it isn’t there, I never really lost it to begin with! Is that right?

Yeah, it’s right, all right. It’s very right.

We’re home. Home! And this is my room, and you’re all here. And I’m not gonna leave here ever, ever again, because I love you all, and - oh, Auntie Em - there’s no place like home!