Friday 12 November 2010

La danse des oursins, Pt. 2


A second group of bears are being assembled to go off to Amy at Mother Bear.


Meet the new group.


Arnie by Debbi

Blue Barry, by Osnat




Doolia, The Shomer Bear, by Rebel





Josh & Dylz, the twins by Rebel



Tun-O-Fun by Rebel



Toto by Joyce (Martha's Mum)



Fuzzy Bear by Cindy (Thx Wooly!)



D.D. by Rebel


Amanda by Marilyn



Bubbie Bear by Rebel




Zofia pictured above with her creator, Geoff



Recently, Zofia asked her Great Uncle Walter to join her on the journey to Africa. So, Geoff spent much of the holidays getting his brother-in-law 'organized' and has successfully secured a teddy passport for Walter (see above). Thank you, Geoff!



COMING SOON: A Third Shipment


Thank you to Atsuko (and art director Nomi) for the first 2 in the next shipment

Rudolph & Ed Bimley by Atsuko




Wednesday 22 September 2010

The Chang School Bears are off to get their Hearts

Take One: Barb Sarah Melissa Rosanne Shashela Mena & Dean Fearon (absent: Martha & Vrenia)

Take Two: Barb Sarah Shashela Rosanne Mena Vrenia & Dean Fearon (absent: Martha & Melissa)



Thom with Thom

Dean Fearon with Zoe Stanley & Evan

Sarah & Baby Bear


Barb & Olivia

Mena with Primo & Secondo


Shashela with Alex

Vrenia & Stanley

Melissa with J.C. Benjamin






And, finally... Canadian Bear with Martha
* * * * * *
These first 12 bears, by the hands of the Chang School Knitters, will be off to Amy at Mother Bear by weeks' end to have their hearts sewn on, before they are shipped to the welcoming arms of loving children. Thank you to all of you who participated, and to those who still want to, we are aiming for another end-of-year / holiday time shipment.

Saturday 7 August 2010

The Ivy Dress is done & A Discussion about Social Yarn Etiquette

This is the story of a Rebel Knitter who saw a 'to die for' dress in a book and who swore to not venture away from the pattern for once. It is also the story of how she ended up relying on her knitting sense instead of digging her heels into the ground in sheer frustration.

Let's start at the very beginning... a very good place to start. The story begins with a fabulous gift from Marilyn of the book sensual knits: luxurious yarns/alluring designs by yahaira ferreira. G-O-R-G-E-O-U-S designs. Yummy, in fact! And, what a coincidence, I just happened to have bought 2000 metres of brown Butterfly DK Cotton (on sale at Romni) which would work great with the ivy dress - designed by Sauniell N. Connally.

You need to start with the ivy waist band. Okay. Totally up for it. Problem is: the chart is frought with errors. I frogged it back about 5 or 6 times until I finally got the brilliant idea to Google "Sensual Knits Errata". Wow. It wasn't just the Ivy Dress that had issues -- I printed off a 7 page pdf of oopsies. Yikes. Do not proceed with ANY pattern in this book before referring to this link > > http://www.pureknits.com/media/Sensual_Knits_Errata.pdf

I stayed focused, completed the waist band and then the bodice. I then cast on for the skirt and realized two things. #1 The lacy ivy strip going vertically down the front would show all sorts of stuff, but mainly my underwear.... um... no .... not good. #2 I look terrible in straight skirts. So there... that's when it happened. That's when I changed my mind. I would have to be the Rebel Knitter that I am. Hence, the finished product has an A-Line and, hey, what's not to love about a little lace hem, no? Well. It wasn't as bad as it could have been. I think I stayed a little faithful (in a sort of, almost, kind of way).

Now on to the very important issue of

SYE (Social Yarn Etiquette)

Okay. I just made that term up. But this is serious. My friend and colleague got on the TTC the other day, and when she got to the office she related the following cautionary tale:

Barb found a seat on the train, sat down, pulled out her crochet project and began to work away. All of a sudden, POKE in her shoulder. Huh? 'Must be my imagination,' she thought. Then again, POKE. Okay. Not the imagination. This was intentional. She turned around to the semi-apologetic (but not really) crafter staring her down to hear the 'what are you working on?' question. Now, just before Barb had gotten her seat, she did note to herself that the woman seated behind her was knitting. Yes, this too has happened to me. I too have sat down and noticed the knitter across the aisle. I have rubbernecked at other people's pattern choices. I too have secretly sized-up and appraised the skills, yarn and needle choices of others. Most times, if I am TTC-knitting, I find that the other knitter and I end up sharing a mutual "yarn-a-holic" smile (similar to the 'V' finger-sign that Corvette drivers used to flash each other in the 70s) and oft times engage in a friendly conversation. But this was not Barb's experience. Nope. No. No. No. No. No. Not the way to go about things, my friends. Let's be nice. We are evolved artistes. You work with yarn. You must liken yourself to Arachne or Athena/Minerva - goddesses of not just spinning, weaving and household crafts, but of wisdom and strength. Okay, so Minerva was also the Goddess of War. But stop spearing your fellow crafters. Even Minerva would say 'I don't think so, lady.' Lucky for the pokey-bioche, not only does Barb look like a Bond Girl, she is REALLY NICE and SUPER PATIENT; especially with knitters lacking the necessary social yarn etiquette that one needs in the big city.

Thursday 15 July 2010

The Next Project: Mother Bear

You may have already heard of it. My next collective project (and I'm going to get you involved in it too!) is The Mother Bear Project. It is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing comfort and hope to children affected by HIV/AIDS in emerging nations by giving the gift of a hand-knit or crocheted bear. Visit the project website: http://www.motherbearproject.org/
In the Fall, I plan to get the kids & parents at the school involved, but in the meanwhile I have gotten quite a few of the Chang School Staff at Ryerson University knitting & crocheting...
Here are some of the bears:
Meet Zoe Bear


And her little brother Evan Bear (aka Soccer Bear)


Bumgy Bear


And the tallest teddy on the block... complete with chinos and business casual blue shirt meet: Tall Thom the Teddy Bear




Mama Mena with her two bambinos Primo & Secondo Bears






Check out Melissa's very dapper J.C. Benjamin


The Delightful Alex by Shashela


This is Martha's Awesome Canadian Bear

















Vrenia's oh so hugable Stanley






Sarah's cuddly Baby Bear....

And Barbara's Blingy Olivia Bear


There are number of bears in progress thanks to the brilliant hands of my Chang School Colleagues.
Too cute, no? And every single one of them will be absolutely and completely adored, regardless of flaws.
Pretty irresistible. So, nu? What are you waiting for.... let me know when you want to get started!



But, don't worry Channah & Morgan, I'm still hard at work on the IDF hats, see....



I will be mailing off a bunch soon.

And it should come as no surprise to any, then, that I am nowhere near finished my sweet cotton DK summer dress.... ah - yes... hopefully it will look just as sweet with a turtleneck and tights underneath, because it looks like that's when it will be finished by.....

Monday 28 June 2010

Double Mitzvah


I am so pleased to tell you all about what has happened with our little school Lorax project. It grew, and it grew, and then it grew some more until it became something much more than it was originally intended to be.

What began as a creative, environmental endeavor turned into a fabulous double mitzvah.

First, some marvelous child and adult knitters and crocheters came together and collectively assembled a magical array of texture, colour and pattern; joyfully displaying their phenomenal creativity.

Then, a school came together and collectively planted a massive grove of trees to honour their principal. Thank you to all who contributed to the recent fundraiser. As a community we more than doubled the reserve. We raised over $1,000 for the JNF!

Janet was speechless when I told her what we had done. I don't know if any of you have ever seen Janet speechless (I certainly hadn't), but she was. When I told her that the quilt was hers, she simply welled up with tears.

I went up to the JNF offices to present them with the monies last week, and they are truly impressed and thankful.



Thank you everyone on a collective job well done.

Saturday 22 May 2010

And on the 22nd day, she rested...

...At Last....

...She is Done...
With five minutes to spare before the beginning of shabbat on the 21st of May 2010, the Lorax Project was completed with bamboo dowel and tabs all measured and in place.
This collective project was born out of our school's eco-minded sensibilities. Using both traditional and alternative environmentally friendly yarns, members of the PPDJDS community have contributed knitted and crocheted pieces of various colours, patterns and textures.

Thank you to Moreh Seth for planting the idea of a school knitting project in my head last spring, and to all our talented fibre artists for their many hours of enthusiastic creativity and labour. Also thank you to Marilyn & Jonothan of Romni for guiding many of the knitters through the aisles to find the ethical yarns for which they were searching. The result is a rich and stunning collection that truly reflects our fabulously eclectic community.


Fibres used: Alpaca Wool, Bamboo, Banana Silk Fibre, Cotton, Hemp, Milk Fibre, Organic Cotton, Pima Cotton, Recycled Cotton, Recycled Silk, Recycled Wool, Sea Cell / Seaweed Fibre, Silk, Soy silk, Sugarcane Fibre, Tea-dyed Cotton, Tencel, Wool.

Fibre Artists: Ali, Debbi, Yafa, Rosanne, Zoe, Cindy, Jennifer, Meredith, Tanya, Liora, Cydel, Micah, Janet, Aviva, Jeremy, Dena, Caren, Shira, Elana, Rona, Jodi & Osnat