Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Meet Mat
Monday, August 10, 2009
Oh the humanity!
A few words about Kauni yarn...
I'd bought 3 balls of Kauni yarn in Denmark last year. We'd never seen it before and thought it was a Danish brand. We'd since looked at their website and learned that it is in fact an Estonian yarn. When we arrived in Tallinn, we went to The Old City Wall knitting market and even from a distance you could immediately spot the space dyed color changes.
They had hats and scarves and stockings like this that were clearly Kauni and I kept asking about "Kauni" and they kept saying "No, it is made here in Estonia." Then we literally stumbled upon some in a souvenir tourist trap. It was just on the shelf wound in unlabeled and unmarked balls. I didn't buy any just then and we went into the Jolleri Wool and Craftchamber near Town Hall Square and saw the same yarn in a skein.
There was no website on the label but I found a website to navigate but most of the English links appear to be dead. Mom bought a few skeins of several colorways and there are pictures on their site. From what we can tell, it is made in Estonia and sold in these odd lots. In this case, this skein weighed 244 grams and cost 171EEK. They were all in random weights that were handwritten on the labels, but no dye lots. The skeins match each other exactly though and it matches the packaged and wound ball I bought last year in another country. So from what I can see, it is one and the same and Kauni is just a brand name for the repackaged and wound yarn. We've done searches for "Kauni yarn" and there are only a few people who import it and the way they describe it, it comes in these odd skeins and we still got it for less than half the going rate. So there again, sometimes it is easier for us to go to Europe to shop for yarn! ;) It would be worth contacting them to see if they would ship overseas, but I have plenty to keep me busy for a while! :D
Sunday, August 09, 2009
Fiber Field Trip!
We spent another day at the open air museum and toured around the various buildings and visited with some of the demonstrators. I couldn't believe how many working antique wheels and looms we saw as well as flax brakes, swingle knives, and hatchels for processing flax into linen. Until then I'd only seen pictures of them and I kept expecting Tasha Tudor to walk into the room.
I loved how the buildings had all kinds of furniture pieces and tools and items just sitting out in the rooms. I especially liked these stockings hanging over the fireplace. They are flammegarn or Flame Yarn which is basically a peasant tie dye process where the yarn is wrapped in birch bark strips and it creates a mottled effect when knit up. I'd read about them in Nancy Bush's book "Folk Socks" but had never actually seen any. These must have been well worn because they have patches sewn onto the heels and soles.
We traveled on to St. Petersburg, Russia by train where we were met at the station by Sergei and Vladimir, our guide and driver respectively. We were accompanied for a few hours each day to tour the city, tour The Hermitage, and travel just outside of town to Tsarskoe Selo Palace. The rest of the time was spent frantically trying to see as much as we could which left no time to look for yarn. We'd found a few yarn shops mentioned in blogs, but the addresses we had were in the Latin alphabet and of course the signs were in Cyrillic. Navigating was a bit nerve wracking at first too because it is the closest you'll ever feel to being illiterate when you can't recognize the characters of what you're trying to read. There is no place to start, no root words, you can't discern suffixes or prefixes let alone see patterns in them, etc. I experienced this years ago in Greece too and it is the strangest feeling, almost alarming. This photo of a statue of Lenin is one of my favorite photos from the trip, even if it has a streetpole in the middle of it. Vladimir was an excellent driver but he was aggressive and kept up with the traffic which means we were literally being thrown around in the backseat at times. I feel lucky that we got the shot that we did! ;) We braved the Metro alone and were the only tourists riding the trains and bought blinis from a street vendor! We also visited The Ethnographic Museum and saw all the national/folk dress/costumes from the entire and absolute expanse of the Soviet Realm and you have to stop and think of the huge area that entails. That place is a national treasure and it's a good thing they didn't have a guide book in English or I'd have paid any price and then carried it even if it weighed 50 pounds. We took pictures of almost every display in there. I was reminded of the costumes from the newer treatment of Dr. Zhivago by some of the regions.
We could not come to Russia and not look for any Orenburg Lace. You can get lace shawls from the markets, but they are not the real Orenburg. I was reading before we left that they use the word "sherst" to describe any fiber content. Sherst literally means "fiber" and sometimes they are made from wool and mohair blends and sometimes even dog hair blends. The knit shawls we saw on the street were soft and pretty and I wouldn't have cared if they were in fact made from dog hair, but the point they were trying to make is that there is no such thing as a $10 Orenburg Lace shawl. Mom found Nevsky Souvenirs online and sure enough they had the real stuff in the back and we had to ask about them. I bought a square gray shawl and Mom bought a white lace stole for my sister in law and white square shawls for my sister and herself.
We also saw what appeared to be space dyed pencil roving made by the same factory as the Kauni. I could not believe all the felted items we saw for sale, both wet and dry. I looked at this but didn't buy any because it was so thin that I don't know how you'd spin it because it would just pull apart and it was too delicate to knit with, or so it seemed to me. I saw some wet felted panels and wallhangings that appeared to have strands of this felted onto the surface.
Pikk #15 housed what appeared to be multiple handcraft guilds. The main showroom had bead knit wrist warmers, braided trims, what I would call "bunad shoes" or shoes for their national costumes, sweaters, jewelery, beautiful and ornate knit stockings or almost hose, and actual woven yardage of their national costumes. It appeared to be 60" wide or so, but it was almost 80USD/meter. I didn't feel comfortable taking pictures in there because it didn't seem too browser friendly. It was what I'd call the closest thing to a Husfliden that we saw on this trip. Through their back hallway was a felt workshop called Vildikoda with wet and dry felted items like elf-ish slippers and hats, animals, and objects, pallets of wool roving, more Kauni yarn in variegated and solids in fingering and sport weight, and more pencil roving.
I bought some flax for spinning and some linen yarn in odd lots. I am so impressed with the flax and linen processing and history that we've seen. When spun and woven or knit, flax is known as linen. It lightens and softens with each washing and old pieces are quite valuable. I was reminded of the expression "flax colored hair" and it makes sense when you see raw flax. I have flaxen hair ;) We visited Estonia's open air museum and were very impressed with the buildings and the spinning and the weaving and the knitting and the history and the people. We rode the city bus through the city and saw the evidence of Communism in the buildings and the rows of apartments. We climbed up into the Old Wall and walked the ramparts and climbed the Nun's Tower which was the view from our hotel window. Utterly enjoyable.
I did buy myself a machine knit lace linen sweater from a vendor next to The Old Wall for about 55USD which is an absolute steal. This picture does the garment absolutely no justice because it is just stunning. Mom bought a linen stole knit in the same pattern.
I also bought some handknits from the vendors along the Old City Wall. The lace socks and the patterned mittens are hand knit and cost around 15USD. The colored Kauni stockings were machine knit and also cost around 15USD. The lace mittens were purchased in a shop and were about 21USD and are absolutely gorgeous.
One of my other favorite photos from the trip was this statue of a peasant girl. She was just standing in a clearing on the way to The Museum of Occupation. She looks like a Soviet propaganda poster and was so pretty.
We had such a good trip and I bought a lot of yarn! I still don't quite know how I got it all home, but thank heavens for space bags, that's all I can say! In Finland, everyone spoke Swedish or English and we got along just fine. In Russia and Estonia not all museums or not entire museum collections had English descriptions, but lots of people spoke English. We were able to communicate by pointing and counting on our fingers and we learned to say "thank you" in their language which makes such a difference. Once or twice we used the Visual Translator and of course we had our frustrating moments, but for the most part we were just fine.
I am so lucky to have my own Travel Agent/Travel Buddy in my mother! She planned another great trip. Once again she was the brains and I was the brawn!