I have a grand-niece. Of course, that means my sister is a GRANDMOTHER. My younger sister. Well, both of my sisters are younger, and I have no children, so I’ll just be a grand-aunt. Great-aunt? Well I am a great aunt, just ask my nieces and nephews.
So, since winter is over, and I wanted a break from hats and gloves, and I can’t take my loom with me, I decided to knit Haylee a teddy bear. I searched Ravelry, on of my favorite time-suckers, and found a great traditional looking bear. I matched it up with some handspun, not mine, some from the stash that I bought way before I learned to spin. Of course, I had to then order new needles. I do have a pair of walnut Brittany needles. Since I bought them, I have evolved to realize I prefer circular needles, Addi turbos to straight needles, even when I am not knitting in the round.
So I started with the Brittanys, and ordered my Addi’s which I got 2 days later from Paradise Fibers (just a fan, no affiliation).
So, I am sure you are thinking this post is not happening in the right season, and you would be correct. I started the draft for this post and….and I don’t know what. Probably sat down to knit and promptly forgot about it. So I will finish it now.
Did I mention I knitted the bear, which is knitted in parts, then stuffed and assembled. I knitted a head, body, 2 arms and 2 chubby legs. Then I stuffed them, and the stuffing showed through….boo! Hiss! So I very carefully disassembled the bear, and ripped out the knitting, all of it (sniffle!). That is called “frogging” in knitting-talk, rip-it. Get it?
I went back to the beginning with smaller needles. Yes, I did knit a sample swatch the first time, and it seemed fine, but I didn’t stretch it as it would be when stuffed. So this time I knitted my sample swatch and then stuffed it and the white stuffing did NOT show through the brown bear. YAY! I finished knitting the bear, I guess it was actually my second bear, assembled it, embroidered the eyes, nose and mouth, and was quite delighted with the results.
Haylee’s bear is done and heading for California tomorrow. I hope she likes it!

Now I can get back to the loom and do some hand weaving. I have yarns picked out for several projects: tea towels, scarves and hand spun yarn to make yardage for a bog jacket.
As for the rug loom, a project to help use up the 11 yards of warp still waiting to be woven: basket weaving on a loom. Saw this demonstrated at Francis Irwin Handweavers http://www.francesirwinhandweavers.org/ in September and I know it will be fun. The basket is actually woven flat and then some of the warp threads are pulled tight to make 2-D into 3-D.