Columbus Recap

If you're like me and you're a lover of architecture, you must go visit Columbus, Indiana. I was thrilled to teach my first solo travel workshop and was hosted by the wonderful Nyra Miller at Knitters Nook. Indiana is so different from DC. I've been living in cities for so long, I forget what it's like to drive everywhere, to live near people you grew up with and to know everyone. I don't even know my neighbors (which is pretty typical for city living)!

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The wonderful customers and students of Knitters Nook made me feel like a knitting rock star and were so warm and welcoming that I'm hoping I'll get to visit them again soon. I taught them knitted lace (lace on both sides), slipped stitches, beading and knitting, cabling, turned picot hems and chart reading. As always, when you get a bunch of knitters together, there's a special feeling of camaraderie and sharing of tips and tricks that firms up my belief that knitting is one of the best things in the world. I enjoyed getting to know them all over the weekend and left feeling like a member of the family. They truly embraced me and the weekend was even better than I anticipated.

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And the architecture!!!!  Columbus is a city known for its architecture and that is a title well deserved. J. Irwin Miller, 2nd CEO and a nephew of a Co-Founder of Cummins Inc., the Columbus-headquartered diesel engine manufacturer, instituted a program in which the Cummins company paid the architects' fee, provided the client selected a firm from a list compiled by Miller. The plan was initiated with public schools and was so successful that Miller decided to defray the design costs of fire stations, public housing, and other community structures. The high number of notable public buildings and sculptures in the Columbus area, designed by such individuals as Eero Saarinen, I.M. Pei, Robert Venturi, Cesar Pelli, and Richard Meier have led to Columbus earning the nickname "Athens of the Prairie." Six buildings, built between 1942 and 1965, are National Historic Landmarks, and approximately 60 other buildings sustain the Bartholomew County seat's reputation as a showcase of modern architecture. National Geographic Magazine once devoted an entire article to the town's architecture. I wish I had more time to explore, but here are a few highlights from my camera...

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Thank you, Nyra and Columbus! I had so much fun knitting with you, teaching, learning about your city and immersing myself in your beautiful architecture! Hope to see you soon.

No Longer A Chrysalis

There's a really interesting window at the Museum of Natural History. We're frequent guests there, roaming around the dinosaur bones, the giant (fake) Wooly Mammoth, the artifacts, bugs and (a favorite of my son's) the huge, creepy octopus. I prefer the room with all the sparkly gems, with the guard who nervously watches the small children running around the Hope Diamond.

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The window I'm talking about is the butterfly window. Tucked in a corner behind the bug exhibit, this small area has butterflies in various states of their life cycle. Eggs, caterpillars, pupas (or chrysalis) and finally butterflies. Butterflies are a big deal in our house… Ever read "A Very Hunger Caterpillar" by Eric Carle? We always shout out "a beautiful butterfly!" when we get to the last page (I could recite that book for you, dear readers, we've read it so many times). We also have a butterfly bush in the backyard, whose big, purl flowers attract butterflies of all colors. Sometimes there are so many on the branches that it seems to vibrate.

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I recently got my hands on a hank of The Knitting Boutique's Sassafras Worsted, a lovely blend of bamboo and merino, and a hank of Shibui's Silk Cloud, a mohair and silk blend. Held together, you get a beautiful luxury combination of sheen with a slight halo. Yes, please.

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Inspired by this stunning yarn combination and the butterflies in our backyard and at the museum, I designed the No Longer A Chrysalis Cowl. With one hank of each yarn held together, the background of reverse stockinette truly makes those butterflies pop. A fun knit with wrapped stitches, pulled up stitches, increases and decreases makes this a great knit for anyone who loves butterflies.

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Download the No Longer A Chrysalis Cowl pattern here.

 

Come Away With Me...

I'm pretty excited to announce my first travel workshop! 7a895877c324ef039b29d58e86f1c9da

If you find yourself in the Indiana/Ohio area, I hope you'll come join me at The Knitter's Nook in Columbus, Indiana!

They say…"July 19th & 20th, 2014 We would like to invite you to attend our Architecture Knitting Retreat. We are excited to welcome designer Tanis Gray and her books Knitting Architecture and Capitol Knits to our shop and Columbus, Indiana. This retreat features classes taught by Tanis, a retreat-exclusive pattern inspired by Columbus, two guided tours (Columbus, Indiana Architecture and the Miller House and Gardens), an amazing dinner party with book signings and more. This inspirational weekend will be “unexpected and unforgettable!”

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I'll be teaching the E Pluribus Unum Cowl from Capitol Knits, Featherbelle and my Bird's Nest Shrug from Knitting Architecture.

What I'm most excited about this workshop is the marriage between knitting and architecture, two things I am very passionate about. Columbus is a HUGE treasure trove of architectural gems! Did you know that  the American Institute of Architects rank Columbus 6th in the nation in architectural innovation and design? How inspiring is that?!

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My brain is already overflowing with inspiration just looking at images from this beautiful city!

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Oh, Fair Isle inspiration!

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Stop by The Knitter's Nook to sign up at 3623 25th Street, Columbus, IN 47203, call 812-657-7669 or visit their website here.

Inspire….Learn…. Create…. Knitters Nook in Columbus, Indiana is the place to be! Hope to see you there!

 

 

My Grandmother's Sewing Box

I'm not sentimental about a lot of things. Sure, I have that cool rock I found in Florida when I went there on a particularly great trip, pictures of my son cover the walls in my office, a drawing made by his tiny hands is on my door and a few trinkets scatter my house that someone special gave me. I know some people like to hold onto everything and that's ok. I get it. I've just never been that person.

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Perhaps it comes from years of packing and moving, from knowing that when it comes to crafting, yes, I have a lot of yarn, a lot of fabric, a lot of notions, so I don't keep a lot of other stuff. When you're a freelance designer, you tend to not make a lot of things for yourself. When I find myself with "free crafting time" I make things for family and friends. For me, the look of joy when they open it and seeing them wear what I made for them is infinitely better than knitting something for myself and tucking it away in my drawer. The idea of "here, I made this for you and you can wear it whenever you're cold, whenever you need to know I'm thinking about you, whenever I can't be there and you need a hug, wrap yourself in this and know that I love you and I care about you, no matter what," makes me forever grateful that crafting runs deeply through the branches of my family tree.

Crafting spans generations. We make things with love, we wrap them up and give them to someone. If you take care of things, they can last years and years and knowing that the sweater I just made for my son may someday be worn by his child? There's something pretty darn special about that.

I've written about my grandmothers on my blog before. They were both crafty women who lived through a difficult time. I was lucky enough to have one until I was 12 and the other until I was 16, but I still regret not knowing them as I am now - an adult, a mother and a crafter. How I wish I could talk to them, learn from them, have them show me a better way to do _____. I think about them often, especially when I'm sewing or crocheting.

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I've gotten heavily into quilting lately. Summer is a time for fun, for new things, for adventure. I made my son a bright quilt covered in Dr. Seuss (which he chose) fabric from our trip to Lancaster. He loves it and I have visions of him dragging it to college with him someday (my husband says I'm crazy). I have a little sewing box I've been using that's nothing special - just a boring box that holds my sewing notions. When my grandma Myrt passed away, my dad had the foresight to save her sewing box for me. It sat in the attic for years, waiting patiently to be filled once more with the tools of our trade. It sat there while I finished high school, while I attended RISD, while I moved to New York and began a life for myself.

A few years back my dad gave me that sewing box. It's just as I remember and so her. Pale pink shot through with gold thread, spacious inside, a plastic tray for bits and bobs. For years I kept it in my office, knowing it was there but feeling like it was still hers - that I wouldn't, couldn't, shouldn't fill it with my stuff. I continued to use my crappy little sewing box, knowing that her box was there, just waiting for me.

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Earlier this week I glanced at her sewing box and knew it was time. I waited until today, after I dropped my son off at his little preschool morning camp, my husband was at work, the dog was asleep and the house was silent. I took my time, I cleaned up her box, emptied out my old one and began the transition of filling hers up. There were a few things of hers still in there… the afghan pattern she was "famous" for, covered in her notes, the pattern so worn it was held together with tape, some embroidery floss, some rusted out embroidery hoops and a pack of needles. It was an incredibly emotional experience, knowing that her hands were the last ones that had touched the box, tucked needle packs into the little pouch, put the bobbins in the little plastic tray and latched the lid shut. Such promise fills this box… The promise of future projects, thoughts of projects past, ideas forming in  the crafting part of my brain, memories of a grandmother and granddaughter.

Myrt raised 3 boys, my dad being the youngest. She was a talented crocheter and sewer with a brilliant mind and a kind heart. It took me so many years to realize that she would have wanted me to use her sewing box, to make it my own, even though it will always be hers. I have so few things of hers and it makes me think… Is this all that will be left of me when I'm gone? Some knitting needles and an impressive yarn stash? Will someday I have a granddaughter who will happily inherit my "stuff" and continue on the tradition of creating and making? Will she sit on her floor as I did this morning, tears running down her face as she places her sewing things in this very box and think of the time we had together, knowing it was not enough?

Myrt has been on my mind a lot lately, as I sit at my sewing machine at night when the rest of the house is asleep. I like to think she's sitting at the table across from me, sharing advice on how to raise boys, how to be a better crocheter and how best to organize her sewing box. My dad says I'm a lot like her and I think of her, as I stitch away.

Thank you for your sewing box, Grandma. I promise to pass it down to the next crafter in our family.