Monday, August 14, 2006

Alas, the knitting, it would not felt

I finished my knitting off last night and today I tried to felt it to no avail. I shall have a go using the washing machine and tumble drier, but the thought has occurred to me that perhaps the wool was treated to prevent felting?

In any case, I'll give it a go and if it doesn't work, I'll just use my knitting as knitting (instead of felt).

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Sunday, August 13, 2006

Internet language resources for the win!

I've been thinking about trying to learn another language for a while now. I'd really like to learn Japanese or Welsh, but I think that I'm going to start with French. As in all things, I think that the best way to go about picking up a new skill is probably to start with something I'm familiar with and two years of French at primary school have made me much more familiar with it than Katherine Kerr's books have done for my knowledge of Welsh; my anime habit has done for Japanese; or a few years of lessons at high-school did for Indonesian.

After a little bit of searching, I found the 'French for Beginners' podcast from the French Ecole. I'll post a review after I've listened to a few episodes.

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Internet cookbooks for the win!

Rather than buy a few cookbooks, or a guide to leather-work or knitting, I usually hit the 'Net. For some reason, though, I often have difficulty finding recipes for really basic things. All too often, All Recipes won't have a simple no-frills recipe or, more often, will have dozens and dozens of variations.

This is where sites like the Wikibooks Cookbook and Cooking for Engineers can come in handy. Concise, clearly written instructions based on personal experience (although wikibooks, like all things wiki, can be a mess of contradictory information) with all the constraints so implied — they are simple, realistic and provide few, if any, endless variations on a particular theme.

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Friday, August 11, 2006

Working with wool

This is the first of what will be a series of posts over the next few days. Each of them will cover a topic from my work at uni that I found interesting. This post, as the title may have hinted, will be about my work with wool in Curriculum and Method Studies: Technology Education 1B.

We started the semester with felting — take some wool fibre, apply warm soapy water, rub vigourously and hey presto! It's felt! All I've got so far is a beanie that I don't feel too bad about done and a number of bits and pieces of felt in a few colours that I don't have any plans for as yet. As our felt work is to be handed up at the end of next week, I've been thinking about what else I want to submit.

The goal of the assignment is to develop our skills through making a example pieces we can use as a teaching resource when we're out in schools teaching felting. As such, our submission is supposed to demonstrate a range of techniques. My beanie shows the use of a template (a piece of plastic slipped into the middle gives the beanie its basic shape and size) and felting several pieces together to get a pattern.

I'm planning on using another technique whereby the wool is bonded to a light fabric ("you need to be able to blow through it" according to the lecturer) during the felting process. This can result in interesting textures, colour effects, etc., especially if you use something like a lace or fishnet material. I can't see this being anything more than a sample, though one of the other students has made some rather interesting gloves using this technique.

If I can figure out how to roll them properly, I'll make a felt ball or two for fun — and because my few attempts today failed — and I imagine I'll wind up making some baby's booties out of the pieces I have on hand following the pattern we were given in class.

My last piece, if I can get it finished, will use knitted and embroidered wool in an attempt to add a design to a felt product in a more satisfactory way than by felting two pieces, then trimming them to shape and felting them together. I plan on knitting panels in my base colour and then embroidering them with other colours before felting the whole lot. If I can manage to knit enough, I'm also going to try to make a genuinely nice pair of baby's booties, rather than some made out of odds and ends, with little pom-poms and everything (I was just reminded of the technique for making pom-poms — the Patons web site is a great source of information on knitting and the like).

When everything is finished, I'll post a few pictures.

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A paucity of posts

I've been neglecting this blog quite badly. I had intended to post semi-regularly about my studies toward a Bachelor of Teaching but I've dropped the ball fairly thoroughly. As an attempt at redressing the balance, I'll post several entries over the next few days.

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