Confessions of a knitter

I have a confession.  One of the worst kinds of admission you can make, as a maker.

I bought something I could have made myself, from a store.

It’s a sweater.  It already appeared in a previous post, and I glossed over the details of it like a champ.  I found it when I was looking for a few new items I can wear for my new job.  Having worked on a farm for the past seven years, what you might call my ‘wardrobe’ is severely lacking in clothing that fits me and doesn’t have holes.  My new job came with the dress code, “wear whatever’s comfortable”.  In a way this is an amazing opportunity, because for the first time ever I have the chance to think about what I wear.  I’m in the unique (for me, anyway) position of being able to really plan what clothes I want to keep, what I want to have, what I want to make.  However, while all this great wardrobe planning is in the works, I don’t have a whole lot of options on hand for what I can wear out of the house.

BosAngora
The sweater, wearing a spindle project in-progress.

Enter the sweater.  I saw it, loved it, knew at a glance I could make it – and bought it anyway.  I’ve been wearing it, a lot, since it’s perfect for air-conditioning (it’s a laceweight mohair blend knit in open brioche stitch – clever, that!).  Still, every time I pick it up, my maker self recognizes that, in buying it, I took the shortcut of all shortcuts.  I chose instant gratification over time and effort and creating.  Consequently, I now seem to be having a philosophical debate with myself over the ethics of being a creative person.  What does it say about you as a creator, if you chose not to create?  Despite all the many other things I am in the process of making at this very moment, I worry that little nagging voice that whispers, “cheater…” is right.

If I had bought the sweater directly from the person who made it, I would probably feel differently.   Supporting fellow makers, whose work you like and admire, is part of the code.  Buying from a store though, removes that personal touch and makes it little more than a cold retail transaction.  Somebody, somewhere, put a lot of work into bringing this sweater to life.  More likely, it was an entire team: designing garment, designing yarn, swatching, re-designing, making a prototype, scaling it all up for production, sourcing materials, marketing, styling, photographing.  Also, looking at how it’s made, the finished product wasn’t created entirely without being touched by human hands.  At the very least, somebody had to sew the machine-knit pieces of the sweater together, by hand.  It’s not much of a connection, but it’s something.

I’ve never had this kind of buyer’s remorse over shirts, or jeans, or pants – I don’t know how to make those myself, I don’t know anyone who does, and it’s not something I’m interested in, at present.  All this flak over a sweater is only because I could have made it; that makes the difference.  Rationally, I know that it would take me months to find, or make, yarn, work up a pattern, and knit a similar sweater.  I also know that I needed something tangible to wear sooner than that time frame allowed.  And I know that as soon as I get the chance to add it to the project roster, I’ll be clicking away on one of my very own.  And, still…

What do you think, as a fellow maker of things:  where do you draw the line between buying and doing it yourself?

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The sweater that my conscious will not let me forget that I did not make.

Everything new

In my life outside my creative life, today I began a new job.  I am uprooted, thrown into the deep end of the pool, swimming with all the skill and strength I have, and shouting, “WOOHOO!” as I shred (as my surfing friends say) down the other side of the waves.

As with so many things in life, the shedding of one skin has set free a thousand un-needed scales, and I have the chance to begin anew, in many ways.

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Southern Cross Fiber “Closer to Home”, Luxury February Club 2016

Meanwhile in my creative life, I am working on many, many ideas, and just a few projects.  One spinning project that I started just before getting the initial phone call about the new job, is a colorway called “Closer to Home”, that originated from a dye-er halfway across the world.  This fiber has been calling to me since I pulled it out of the mailer bag in March, and at the very end of April I finally gave in to the siren call.  Appropriate timing on all accounts, as it now seems.  From where I’m sitting, the dye-er of this fiber appears to have a serious talent for packing karma into his work.  The location of my new job will cut an entire hour’s driving time, and 40 miles, out of my commute – every day.  Closer to home, indeed!  I’ve got the first half of this batch spun into singles, and it will be yarn before the month is out (she says…).

I have also plied up, on one of my brand new MD S&W Bosworth spindles, a tiny bit of angora singles I spun over the winter – which I photographed on top of a mystery knit sweater I want to reverse engineer, ‘someday’.

BosAngora
Chocolate angora rabbit plied on Kauri Bosworth Midi, photographed on top of store bought sweater

And then there’s the cowl I started during the Maryland Sheep and Wool festival.  It’s coming along slowly, with all the recent excitement, but surely.  And I’m knitting it with my brand new, happy-new-job-to-me knitting needles!  As I told my friend the night of the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival, as we were sitting in her living room, surrounded by looms and fleece and yarn, each of us drinking wine and knitting one of these wonderful cowls (Iodine, by Ann Weaver), “I am so excited about everything that is going on in my hands right now!”.

TQcowl
Neighborhood Fiber Co. Loft and Chromium yarns on Signature knitting needles