Last weekend, The Knitting Guild Association hosted their first immersion weekend. The topic was shawls and the teacher was Tonia Lyons . The event consisted of four virtual classes, two on Friday and two on Saturday. If you wanted to ask Tonia questions, you needed to be at class when it was live on Zoom. But the classes are also recorded, making it possible to watch later if you had other things on your weekend schedule or if you want to work through the swatches at a more leisurely pace. The cost was only $25 to TKGA members, which is a fantastic bargain! During the class, a couple of us in the chat were wondering about shawl shapes and how to wear them. Which shapes lend themselves to wearing without a pin? Which ones tend to stay on your shoulders and which ones tend to embrace the siren call of gravity? I am a big fan of leaving neck space on a shawl. Having a gap allows the shawl to sit on your shoulders without a lot of fabric bunching at your neck...
Part of my mother's stash came back to me. It was no small project in 2023 to clean out the room with embroidery stash. There was a lot of give away. There were some things I kept and finished. But there were many things I abandoned. A few months ago, I got an e-mail from the person in Pennsylvania who helped me donate my mother's stash to the Thimble and Thread chapter of Embroiderers' Guild of America . She had some boxes. Could I please take them? It turned out it was only three boxes, a lamp, a frame stand, and a kitchen garbage-sized bag of metallic threads. In other words, it only took up half my car not my whole car. Not too bad. I went through that stash, organized it, and donated most of it to Southeast Fiber Arts Alliance . Their thrift shop is a fantastic place to acquire materials. You never know what you are going to find, so it is a good idea to make a habit of visiting. In fact, I did not leave empty-handed. I decided to work a ...