There was wool, wool and more wool - glorious colours, heady scents, irresistible textures but I resisted. I am strong. I am invincible. I am ... oh sorry...channelling Helen Reddy there.
There was felt
and then there were the sheepies. [ also alpacas and goats but they were on the far side and our feet wore out and time ran out before we reached them ] We also skipped the fashion parade for the same reason.
This is Baaaala
At this point we'd been there about an hour and a half and had managed to move about a hundred metres from the entrance.
and I have no idea what
One thing that was really noticable was the sea of grey and white heads at all of the various Guild Exhibits : the Spinners and Weavers, the Handknitters, the CWA ladies - no wonder that stereotype still lingers. Where were all the funky young knitters and spinners and so forth that I know are out there? Well most of them were manning [ womaning? ] the stalls in the commercial area.
Speaking of which Jeanette and Maz decided that I didn't have enough sheep so they bought me two [toy] rams!! That would be them with the horns in the middle of this
What else? Well, we met up with the lovely Barbara from Yarn Magazine, Maz had a great time talking vintage knitting gauges with The Button Lady and scored a limited edition carved bone one from Nepal, I had a long and involved pow-wow with the rep for Oertoel Electric wheels. All good stuff in fact but sadly undocumented with photos.
The only fly in the ointment was a lady from the Spinners and Weavers Guild stall who overcharged Maz and I $5 for the same magazine. We both bought that copy of Spin Off that has the Estonian lamb puppet on the cover and only realised once we got home that she'd charged us the original price of $15, not the $10 it was marked at :[
Maybe I should make sure I get my money's worth and knit a southern cousin for Ms Lulu.
Also on my wish list were a niddy noddy
hand carders
and this
There were a 'few' other 'small' purchases but this post is picture heavy enough for one day so that's your lot.
9 comments:
Those hand cards are just beautiful! I have some rather plain Strauch ones. Servicable...but not so pretty.
The whole event (overcharging aside) sounds just wonderful! Thanks for the tour. Loved those sheepie little faces!
Well done for resisting buying more wool. Similarly, I MUST NOT buy more paper.
Loved the little goat.
actually she was a lamb :] but close!!
What a wonderful day, it sounds like you had. I get such a kick out of events like this, and it takes all my will-power not to buy everything I see !!
Thanks for sharing.
Take care, Meow
God, my life is so BORING! I don't have any of this kind of fun! I must move there!
You all have the most interesting shows! When we (east coast US) have a knitting and fiber show, there are not usually animals to look at and the connection to where the wool is coming from is lost. How cool to drive down the road and see sheeps! We see cows and occasionally horses but never sheep.
there are a few cows round here but mainly sheep and alpacas ...
Wow, that looks like a wonderful day out! Regarding knitting a cousin to Ms Lulu - firstly, make sure she's not a naughty lamb, you just don't need that kind of stress.
Secondly, make sure when finishing at the nose that you arrange the stitches on the 3 DPNs in such a way that the 3 lines of decreases will make a Y shape, following the shape of the nose and mouth (which you'll embroider on after). I did it wrong, and so Lulu has a bit of a funny nose, with an upside down Y of decreases... maybe that's what turned her so bad??
There is an errata note in the latest issue of Spin Off, regarding the ears, so when you get to that bit, drop me an email and I'll send you what they wrote. I suppose the errata might be on the Spin Off web site too (I haven't looked).
yes it was, Jejeune. Thanks.
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