Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Houston, we have felting…

The felting experiment went…erm..swimingly :)  See I decided to circumvent the standing at the sink thing which would have meant uncomfortable things for my back and legs.  So, on Sunday, I took the bag into the bathtub with me!

Initially I was a little alarmed at the extent to which the thing grew once it had gotten well and thoroughly soaked and all the little ridges where the entrelac blocks connected with each other had relaxed.  Fortunately I had read about this at least once and so wasn’t entirely unprepared for it.  So I sloshed and rubbed, pushed and pulled and generally abused the shazbott out of it and when my arms got tired, I threw it to the end of the tub and mashed it against the side with my feet.

This was one hairy yarn and man did it shed!  I pulled enough fiber out of the water to make wigs for the gerbils.  Hmmm…  Nah - finding little wig caps that would work gracefully around their little ears would be well nigh impossible…  Fortunately I was able to keep most of it from going down the drain although Myria did remark on the sizeable hunk of stuff in the wastebasket :)

Felted purse front



The finished dimensions are 11” x 11” so it shrank a little more over the height than along the width.  I could probably (almost certainly) have gotten it to condense a little more than that but the fabric seemed very solid, most of the stitch definition had disappeared and the size was more than acceptable.  So I left it at that…

Felted purse back



Besides, my arms were tired :)

I was enchanted by what happened with the seams.  They’re still there and fairly obvious, but the edges kind of melted together, inside…

Felted purse inside seam



...and out.

Felted purse outside seam



The front flap is a bit askew asymmetrical but I’m going to consider it panache and not worry about it.

The only thing remaining is the strap and decorative cord.  I have begun to suspect that I’m not going to have enough yarn left to make the strap out of I-cord - especially if I felt it, and I can’t see not felting it if I was going to go this way because it would be so much stronger and less elastic.  But not enough yarn would be a bummer and I am not investing another penny in this particular fiber.  So there’s purchased cord which is a real possibility, or I could forgo the decorative elements (entrelac is decorative enough on its own) and just concentrate on straps.  Or I could purchase leather straps, I suppose…

Still mulling that one over.

Oh yeah…

Decorative element



I found this yesterday in the supermarket.  It’s a robin (ahem…) and it even sings if you squeeze it gently :)  I know, I know - what can I tell you?  I was definitely in the mood to be amused yesterday and this guy did the trick.  I believe I’m going to permanently attach him to the bag via whatever I decide to do about the straps.

In the end, I guess I have to admit that the Patons SWS does felt extremely easily and well and if this is your end goal, perhaps the price, the rough feel and the extremely knotty balls are worth dealing with.  Me, I’m just grateful I lucked into something productive I could do with the stuff.  While the felting process was interesting - even fun - it’s not something I’m ever going to have any real affinity for.  My immediate reaction to the thought of intentionally shrinking my knitting is - Over my cold, dead needles! - and only my sincere and profound dislike of this yarn kept me from being too disconcerted about it.

I have picked up the circular shawl again to work on a bit at a time and the cowl needs only another couple of repeats to be good to go.  More on those things next time!

Babbled by Robbyn on 11/12 at 08:23 AM
(10) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink
 
trackback URL for this entry: Trackbacks are disabled for this entry
 
Trackbacks

No trackbacks yet.

Comments
  1. It looks great!!! I didn’t even notice the “assymetry” of the flap until you pointed it out. Congratulations on a very successful salvaging of an unfortunate yarn experience.

    Posted by Annabel  on  11/12  at  08:50 AM
    Location : Alabama

  2. Annabel - Thanks :)  Can I just tell you what a somewhat-guilty pleasure it was to mangle that thing into something actually useable?  Who’d have thought?  Heheh…

    Posted by Robbyn  on  11/12  at  08:53 AM
    Location : RIght here - under my hair!

  3. Great job creating something useful and beautiful out of a bad yarn experience.

    Posted by Jane  on  11/12  at  10:22 AM
    Location : Seattle

  4. Jane - My family has alwyas belonged to the use-it-up-or-do-without school of thought and if I hadn’t found some way to use this stuff, they would have revoked my Kenyon-card :)

    Posted by Robbyn  on  11/12  at  10:44 AM
    Location : RIght here - under my hair!

  5. That came out so well! It’s just stunning! And I giggled a bit picturing you swimming in the bath with your knitting. Hee!

    Posted by Opal  on  11/12  at  11:38 AM
    Location : Honolulu, HI

  6. Opal - I have to admit it made me giggle a bit too :)  But hey, it worked like a charm and gave me something to play with in the tub besides!

    Win win :)

    Posted by Robbyn  on  11/12  at  12:16 PM
    Location : RIght here - under my hair!

  7. Love it! It turned out very well indeed.

    Posted by Ev  on  11/12  at  04:19 PM
    Location : Kelowna... way out west :)

  8. Ev - Thanks :)  Now for the strap(s)!

    Posted by Robbyn  on  11/12  at  05:17 PM
    Location : RIght here - under my hair!

  9. The bag looks fabulous and the little robin is so cute.

    Posted by Lynne  on  11/15  at  12:58 PM
    Location : Sydney, Australia

  10. Lynne - Thanks about the bag - I’m looking forward to using it :)  And I love the robin too - just one of those coincidental, fortuitous finds that sometimes happens!

    Posted by Robbyn  on  11/15  at  02:11 PM
    Location : RIght here - under my hair!

Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License.