Showing posts with label Shanghai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shanghai. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2016

A textured yarn

I finished spinning the Gotland and plied it. This is only the combed part. There is a lot of combing waste - shorter fibers - that I plan to card and make another yarn. What I did with this one is to ply it with the beaded thread that I showed you earlier. Wow! I have a lot of yarn. I am not sure what I'm going to do with it yet. I was trying to emulate the curl of the Gotland locks so I did a spiral ply where the thicker yarn spirals around the finer beaded thread.

I ended up with 3 bobbins full of singles. At this point, I've plied 1 but left the other two so you can see how full they were. The Tina II bobbins are small.
Part way through plying.

A close-up of the yarn so you can see it better against a dark background. It varies in thickness but most of it is a fingering weight.
This is the beaded thread on its bobbin. I have a lot of it. I bought out everything they had when I went on that yarn crawl in Shanghai. It didn't unwind very easily. I had to pull it with a lot of tension and periodically, the beads would get caught on each other. Then I had to go and jiggle the thread to get it unhooked. It was impossible to see how it was actually caught.

And these are the two final bobbins. 2 of the singles bobbins are plied onto the bobbin with the larger quantity and the one remaining bobbin of singles is on the second, smaller bobbin.


Finally, a closeup of the yarn with a bead visible in the middle near where the 2 strands cross. 

I am not sure what I'm going to do with this yeat. I am not sure how it will knit up. It might work better in weaving. Also, the featured breed at Rhinebeck next year is Gotland so maybe I should plan on submitting a skein and a finished object from the yarn in their contests. Let's see. I will wind it off and finish it and I will sample a bit in knitting. The advantage of having so much yardage is that I have plenty to play with.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Blocked and wore shawls at Rhinebeck

In my Rhinebeck excitement, I forgot to talk about the blocking of the 2 completed shawls. Those of you on Ravelry would have seen the finished results.

I got tired of waiting for my blocking pins and wires so went out and bought the cheapest pins I could find - and yes, they are awful but they worked.

I wasn't about to go buy new blocking wires so I had to pin it out without their help.



 Here's the pink shawl I made from Miss Babs BFL. I don't even remember if I showed you the fiber and the beads. I was able to find beads from the Shanghai yarn/notions crawl that matched. They are very subtle as they are an almost perfect match for the yarn.

I pinned out the top curve first and ran out of room. That is a door to my deck in the back. Unpinned and started over. Then I just roughly pulled out the points and pinned them. They are not very even but it doesn't show when the shawl is worn - the ultimate test of success.

Yarn and beads, pre-knitting. I had about 330 yds per my calculations but I only used 2/3-3/4 based on the written pattern. No mods.


Here are the two shawls blocking. The rainbow shawl ended up under the bookcase. I started with the top edge but realized that due to the curve, I had to start at the bottom edge so I unpinned and restarted and planned badly. See all the room below the shawl! I could have used that instead of trying to pin under the bookcase. That doesn't work, by the way, for future reference.

Glamour shot of pink shawl. I knew that one end of the fiber had a lighter color as there was more white in the braid there. I decided to start there and then the rest was pretty random. There are darker and lighter spots but the finished effect looks like a gradient. I am very happy with the result. The yarn is a 3-ply that I plied rather tightly thinking I would make socks, but it was not to be.
Lastly, the l-o-n-g rainbow shawl. I am very happy with the result although it is very long. I ended up with it wrapped twice around my neck and then pinned in the front to show the left hand side down the front. It is very warm and soft and I think it is going to get a lot of use. The teal cashmere/mink is perfect as the contrast to break up the rainbow and make it not look like a clown collar. I am also happy with the mods although I should have started them earlier. 

I wore the rainbow one on Saturday without a coat as it was warmer. It did suddenly get cold so I put on my Large Lace Collar for a bit but ended up taking it off less than an hour later when the sun came up. On Sunday, which was much colder and windier, I wore the Rose Lace Collar Bohus and the pink shawl. I was inside most of the day so it worked. When I walked back to my car, I was chilled by the wind and didn't warm up till I got home!

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Loot!

I still have to put things away but I photographed the loot from the Shanghai meet-up. Jane has also blogged about the weekend in her blog, so you can get additional photos and perspective from her.

First of all yarn....

These are the 2 cones I got at MIC MIC. The left hand side is 100% silk and the right hand grey one is cashmere and something else. Both are 600 gms each - so a lot of yardage.

This is the mink/cashmere blend that I am using in the Nymphalidae shawl. I bought 3 skeins because I didn't want to run out before the handspun did. Extra can be turned into a scarf or cowl or mitts.

Lovely cashmere from one of the Ruijin 2nd street shops. This was a steal as Jane found out. It is priced higher on Taobao and is a lovely fine yarn.

Stuff for spinning art yarns: the top photo contains the 5 cones of glittery fine thread from MIC MIC. All synthetic and I picked ones that weren't too scratchy; the bottom left is the beaded thread that I showed you in the show room; the bottom right is sequins from the bead shop at the wholesale notions market. Each of those is about 1/3 of the bag. Jessica, Dawn and I shared them.

Next up beads! From the top: the 10 bags we split 5 ways, the glass beads I picked up on the street on the second trip to the wholesale market and the non-glass ones - plastic from the weight. I want to make some earrings and necklaces from the bottom ones.

The elastic buttonhole strip. I want to make magic buttonhole placement devices from this. A strip of say, 20 buttonholes, would be one device. Let's say you want 8 buttonholes. You pin the top of the strip to the top of the center front, and stretch the elastic so the 16th buttonhole is at the bottom of the center front. Mark every other buttohole on your front (left or right) and then when you make your button band, you put the 8 buttonholes where the pins are. You want 10? Pin the 20th buttonhole to the bottom and mark every other one. Child's garment? Use every button hole in the elastic instead of every other one. Genius!

This is more jewelry making supplies. The top photo is colored strips of leather on which I can put pendants or intertwine with the bottom chains for a mixed media necklace. My vision is to put a loop of fishing line at the end of each of the chains. We got some jump rings and clasps also. I can take the chains I want and use the loops to put them on the jump rings which will go on the clasp. I can twist them or use them stacked or intertwine some ribbing or the leather ties or....

...use Chinese knotting cord braided or twined in the necklace. Ta da!

The left bag has the findings - clasps and jump rings. But Jane and I also split a 100 (I think) split key rings to make stitch markers. The right side bag is our gift from MIC MIC - locking plastic stitch markers and a tool to fix snags in knits.

These are the buttons I picked up from the street vendor. Each bag was 1 yuan. They are mostly wood with painting on them. A couple are metal with fabric, one is a holey button on which I can wind yarn to match a sweater, one is plastic with knitted sts on it. Each bag has 6 buttons. I got two of a couple of them.

I will never lack for stitch markers again! This is my share of the 1000 markers Jane and I bought together.

DH came with us the second time and got bored while we were shopping for chain and leather strips. He found a shop with tools and I bought these two snips. Jane got a cooler looking one but this one is more comfortable.

I had been eyeing (and trying on) this necklace at the pearl market. I finally caved and bought it. I love looking at it.

Cate of Infinite Twist had some very fine micron merino she had sourced from China and dyed. She had just a little bit and a few of us split up what she had. She calls it sheepmere as it is like cashmere but from sheep.

It is my spinning souvenir from Shanghai. The one and only.

And last, but not least, the gorgeous silk project bag that Dawn brought for each of us. I picked red as it is a traditional Chinese symbol of good luck. Plus, what is not to like about a red silk bag?

On my return, I have come to a very sad conclusion. I am a costume jewelry addict. I cleaned out my jewelry drawer but there is no way I can get all the jewelry I have acquired in the past 2 years in there with what I already had. I used jewelry as a souvenir wherever I went. So I have necklaces from Johannesburg, Australia, Korea, China, as well as what I took from here - from the US and India. Add to this the stuff I make or improvise - from scarves and the chains and leather and ribbon and other stuff.

I have been googling jewelry organizers. The.end.

How do you like the open floodgate of posts! It is so much easier to post when you can link the pictures faster and not have to worry about VPNs to access the blogging platform.

We will be returning to travelogues after this. I may add in a bit of fiber status but will mostly be trying to catch up on the travel diaries while I still remember the details.

 

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Fiber and Fun in Shanghai!

As I mentioned in my last post, the apartment in Shanghai looked a bit desolate and bare towards the end. But shortly before that, there was much merriment and mess. And if you think that the alliteration is accidental, be very afraid. I am in a very alliterative frame of mind.

Our last 3 weekends were fully booked. First we went to the Painter's Street in Shanghai with friends and then we went to Guilin, a very scenic place in China. More on that later. The last weekend in Shanghai was devoted to friends, fiber and fun.

Even before I got to Shanghai, I joined China Knitters - a group on Ravelry consisting of people in China and of Chinese origin. In my time in China, I met a few of them in person but we really got to know each other online more than in person. 1-2 had already left China by the time I left, one will be leaving shortly, and others are just coming in. Our fearless leader, Jane, announced that she was going to visit Shanghai and thus the meet-up was born. Since Guilin involved travel, which in China means that you have your passport, we had to do this the last weekend I was there. In retrospect, we could have done it earlier as my passport came back from the customs clearance in time. But the shipping company wouldn't guarantee that, and we didn't want to take the risk of not being able to go to Guilin or trying to go without a passport. Therefore, the meet-up was scheduled for my last weekend in Shanghai and fortunately, the other Ravelers could make it.

There was a rotating cast of 5. Lynn was able to come on Sat and Jessica could only make Sunday. The rest of us (4 in all) made both days.

We started by visiting a Taobao store. Taobao is like ebay. It is a site where individual small businesses can host their shops and sell. It is a great place to shop for all sorts of things and is much cheaper than buying in a brick and mortar store. Chinese knitters purchase yarn from Taobao where you can get imported, export quality as well as Chinese only yarn. I had never explored Taobao as it is all in Mandarin and the payment options are limited. You have to pay via Alipay which is like PayPal. Apparently you can link your Alipay account to your bank account, or set up a prepaid account and top it up via vending machines and the post office, or link it to a credit/debit card. But lots of the other expats have trouble with this - mostly because of the language. Since I had no patience for this, I decided that I would only purchase if I could get someone to do the buying and I would pay them. At one point, I thought I'd have to use it to buy a yogurt maker but I was able to get a better price at a local online store that delivered and collected cash on delivery.

But that is a tangent. One of us had done a lot of yarn purchasing from a store called MIC MIC and they had a brick and mortar location in Shanghai. So that is where we went. It took us a while to get there as it is pretty far outside the city and not easy to find. But we persevered - well the owner of the car and the driver persevered, the rest of us sat in the back and chatted and knitted.

MIC MIC turned out to be a baby clone of Colourmart. They stock mill ends from Italian and other mills and wind off quantities which they sell. It is in a little courtyard with a show room and winding room on one side and a room containing bins of yarn on another. In a corner, there is a slightly bigger warehouse containing the rest of the inventory. This one is not lit or cooled so we just peeked in looking for larger quantities of one of the yarns.

It was around lunch time by the time we got there so we got to hang out in the showroom till the couple that owned the place came back. The showroom had samples of the yarns and threads and other supplies they carry.

 

Yes, those are bags of hundreds of locking stitch markers

Cones of yarns galore. We all bought a LOT. I just got 2 cones of yarn - 3 strands of silk wound together and 1 of a cashmere and something blend.

I got a bunch of these for spinning. I think I can just add it in while plying to add some glitz and shine.

These were fascinating. They are beads plied onto string so they stay in one place. I bought the gold and the black (the smaller bobbins in the back) for adding to spun yarn while plying.

 

These are crochet hooks and buttons and some metal circulars.

GIANT cones! Some of us bought a cone that held a kilogram of yarn!

There was even a basket of swatches. Some crocheted, some knitted. All beautifully blocked!

Hundreds of straight needles!

I think these are garments made from the yarns. The labels were cut off.

Once the owners came back, the photography stopped for a while. We went into the warehouse space and were lost in the black hole of browsing.

The yarn fumes eventually wore off as I had to deal with two words - WEIGHT and VOLUME. I had 4 suitcases that I could bring back to the US, which needed to include our clothes for the next 6 weeks, my precious Bohus sweaters, dishes and stuff we needed to live in the apartment for a week, my Hansen espinner, bobbins and flyers, and all the prescription medicines we had in Shanghai. Each suitcase could weigh no more than 23 kg. Remember that my shipment had already left by the time we got here!

The others were not so restricted so they got more stuff.

 

Each carton had one or more cones of yarn. The labels were in Chinese or non-existent but the owners were vary patient with us. And the fact that we had 3 Mandarin speakers among us definitely helped. It really made me understand how different my China experience would have been if I had been fluent in Mandarin.

Once we decided what we wanted and how much, the cones went to the winding-off room. For example, my 3 stranded cone started off as 3 cones. I told them I wanted 600 gms total. So a cardboard center was placed on the top of the winding machine, 3 cones of the single stranded silk were placed on the bottom on scales and the machine was turned on after the fiber was threaded through the machine. And they run while the womin in the room monitor the weights.

 

There is also a giant skeiner in the room. Hi Jane!

After all the discussion and agonizing about selection and the winding was done, the owner gets down to tallying up the bills. We went out for a very late lunch while the winding was going on.

Each item was carefully packed in plastic bags and taped into packages. This is our loot in the trunk of the minivan.

The very patient owners of MIC MIC.

And the nerve center for their Taobao store. This is where the orders are received, weighed and packaged up for delivery.

We were exhausted by the time this was over and we had to drive back into Shanghai. So ended day 1 of our 2 day bender.

The next morning, we met up at the Yuyuan Garden subway station and went to the wholesale notions market. This is a 4 story building where you can get just about anything to do with crafts. There is trim with or without bobbles and fringe, zippers, beads, buttons, chain, fur trimmings, plastic glitz of every kind from blingy plastic 'fabric' for making cell phone covers and the like to rhinestones and fake baubles to attach to clothing. Cord, thread, pins, scissors, measuring tape and so on and on and on.

We were in the market for knotting cord and buttons and beads. But Jane and I got sidetracked by chain and spent a lot of time buying chain to make necklaces. Dawn got caught up in the spirit and got embellishments for a crocheted corset. We found embellished pins that looked like kilt pins but nothing in stock wowed us.

On that day, I subscribed to a bit of the knotting cord that Jessica bought. Then we went on a bead hunt. We checked out the place where I had bought beads a few months ago, before heading out to check out a bead store that was on a street outside. Sadly, that was closed. But on the way back, we got sidetracked by streetside button vendors. We squatted down in the heat and bought wooden and plastic buttons for 1 yuan for a bag of 6 buttons. Approx. 6.1 yuan = 1 USD Yup. 1/6 of a USD for 6 wooden painted buttons. I don't know if they will last but they are cute and cheap.

Eventually we worked our way back to the bead shop and bought 10 bags of beads wholesale. The vendor was nice enough to divide each one into 5 bags - one for each of us. I think the big bags were 500 gms each and we each got 10 colors. These are glass beads - not very consistent in quality but very cheap. So you just use the ones that are good and toss the mis-shapen and irregular ones. I think we paid 130 yuan for the 10 bags in total. A little over $20.

On the way out, I saw elastic with buttonholes. These are used for kids clothes so they can be adjusted for fit as the child grows. But I saw a buttonhole placement device. I couldn't buy a meter or two of it. I had to buy the entire lot for 5 yuan. So I did. I split it with another of our party but I have enough buttonhole placement devices for a lifetime. More on that later.

We then went to the yarn stores on Ruijin (2nd) Road. These are regular yarn stores and we mostly browsed, except I got some mink/cashmere to go with my Tour de Fleece yarn. Some others bought that too and then some of us also got a good deal on some lovey cashmere. I will do a post on all my loot and talk about that more there.

Lastly we headed out to meet Cate of Infinite Twist. She has a business in Shanghai where she imports Australian merino, hand dyes it and then has it spun by local hand spinners. She was getting it done in Qinghai near Tibet but more recently is using a group in Shanghai. She mostly sells outside China but she had advertised on our Ravelry group so we found her.

Dawn had had the foresight to preorder dyed fiber. The rest of us were not so thoughtful so we wandered around her studio and petted and oohed and aahed. I also took the opportunity to divide up some sequins that Jessican and I had bought to share - to add to spun yarn.

Cate's rather dim studio. It was rather dreary outside so the inside was not too bright. It is a very creative place with color and texture and fiber all around. We pawed through Cate's kits.

There's Cate in her lovely studio. Yes, that is a Crazy Monkey electric skein winder in the back. And boxes of dyed and undyed fiber and yarn.

Cate's father makes these lovely wheels in Maine. We drooled over them, but wiped the drool off carefully.

Then we rushed back to my apartment where we finished dividing up our spoils and paying each other for the various bits and bobs we had shared. Jessica had to rush off to catch her train and that broke up the group. I was exhausted but elated and exhilirated. What a lovely set of people that I hope to keep in touch with for many years!

Jane and I did a mini-meetup a couple of days later and went back to the notions market. I got some cheap beads (yes, even cheaper) for necklaces and other crafty things she has turned me on to. We bought more chain and also some leather strips for necklaces in various colors. The beads were plastic and wood mostly, although some glass and were smaller than those for knitting. I have some visions of DIY necklaces, stitch markers, and these were for those endeavours.

I also bought some more knotting cord for myself as I realized that the amount I had from Jessica was good for playing with but not for the ideas I had in the interim. Jane and I split 1000 stitch markers - the kind that Hiyahiya sells, which look like safety pins with a circular end.

It was a challenge to get everything into the suitcases without their becoming overweight. Fortunately I was able to shed most of the Indian groceries I had - between some of the Ravelers and a colleague at work. But our suitcases were 22+ kg each except for one which was a shade over 23 kg. Our carryon bags were also heavy - weighing around 15 kg each. I made the mistake of keeping a full bobbin on the Hansen. I should have wound off the single and sent it with the shipment but I didn't.

Anyway, I successfully got all my purchases home. The yarn is in the freezer for one of many freezing/thawing cycles to ensure a complete destruction of moth eggs and then it will still probably stay sealed till it is time to use it.

I have stuffed the rest of the items into a suitcase to deal with after I have the household set up and running. Hence the lack of loot pictures. But they will come.