Markets!

My business model focuses on teaching. But I also like to do a few markets during the year. It helps me to connect with people in a different way than teaching does. (Plus it helps me reduce my inventory a bit!)

Coming up this year I’m planning to be at the Thread & Press Marketplace at Mill No. 5 in Lowell, the Strawberry Festival in Westford, and the New England Alpaca Owners & Breeders Association (NEAOBA) at the 4H Fairgrounds in Westford. I’m also planning to enter items at the Weavers’ Guild of Boston Annual Sale in Weston in the fall.

Saturday, June 29, 2024, 10:00-4:00 Middlesex County Fairgrounds 55 South Chelmsford Rd, Westford, MA
WGB Annual Sale Nov 1-2, 2024 Weston Art and Innovation Center, Weston MA

This year I have wool bump rugs, dish towels, scarves and some new baby blankets. I love visiting with shoppers, so if you’re local, come visit! If you’re not local, you can see a sampling of my products in my shop. If you’re looking for something in particular, please contact me before ordering.

Updates from my studio

Life is good!

As demonstrated in the past year, I am not a great blogger. However, I can be found on Instagram, where I post about my fiber arts activities and important things in life, most of which circle back to fiber arts in one way or another. Here are a few highlights.

Elise wrapped in her blanket

The single outstanding highlight of my year was that I became a granny! Friends have told me how life-changing this is. Now I know. Of course, I wove a blanket. Preparing for a Guild workshop on lace, I spent many hours playing with designs and sampling. In the end, I decided on a lace name draft in organic cotton. The number of lace blocks is the letter’s place in the alphabet: E had 5 blocks, L had 12, I had 9, S had 19, and then back to 5 for E. It was mirrored and then woven as drawn in. Of course Baby Elise is getting plenty of fiber exposure already!

ELISE lace name draft

On our trip to Scotland last fall, we visited The Weaver’s Cottage in Kilbarchan, and I had the pleasure of meeting two weaving friends. I had pre-arranged to visit Cally Booker in her studio in Dundee – we had tea and talked (of course) about weaving! Plus, in a totally random encounter, I bumped into tapestry weaver Louise Abbott (who lives two towns away from me!) on the street in Edinburgh – such an unexpected highlight of our trip!

Loom in a weaver’s cottage museum in Kilbarchan, Scotland. It is recessed into the floor.

On a roadtrip to my dad’s house in Colorado, I hemmed a bunch of towels I’d woven in the spring. Plus, I found several textiles that I had woven over the years and gave to my dad. I think it’s so awesome that my parents still keep things that I make for them! While there, we stumbled into a gallery exhibit that was a knitted life-size replica of the room in the children’s book “Goodnight, Moon”. To help with the scale, the rocking chair is big enough for a human to sit in!

Life-size replica of the “goodnight, Moon” room. The entire set is knit!

Extra Large wool blanket woven for an 18th c. reenactor. I wove it in 2 panels on my 110 cm Glimåkra loom and then sewed them together before wet finishing.
On a field trip to Harrisville Yarns with my weavers’ guild, I spotted a picking machine made by C.G. Sargent, which operated right here in Westford (in Graniteville.)
My son received (from me, of course) a pot holder loom for his 29th birthday. He loved playing with the color & weave effects. (His is the green log cabin one in the middle.) After our trip to Harrisville, my study group got into making pot holders in all kinds of patterns!
Since no post would be complete without a funny animal photo… Here’s Fergus thinking that my loom is a jungle gym and climbing under my gebrochene warp. The 8-shaft gebrochene warp was a real challenge, even without Fergus’ help.

A Moment of Fame

A couple weeks ago, I got a suspicious contact through my website, someone wanting to come interview me about weaving and take some videos in my studio to be used on a morning television show. In today’s world (and maybe because I watch too many crime shows), we have to be careful about things like this, right? But I checked it out anyway.

It turns out that Levan Reid is a real person, and he really does collect “happy news” stories for WBZ Boston (a CBS affiliate). My first impression of him was his radio announcer’s voice! He told me what he was looking for and about the process. It sounded like a unique opportunity for me, so we got the ball rolling.

The next week, he came to my house with a cameraman, Richie Lourenco, and we spent 45 minutes up in my studio talking about weaving, looking at my looms, and chatting. Levan was so professional and so friendly. He made the whole experience seem easy.

Since he had put the idea of “happy news” in my head, my thoughts went immediately to one of my current projects. The Weavers’ Guild of Boston’s challenge this year is to weave something for a child that is inspired by a book. The products (a pillow, blanket or bag, for example) will be given to children afterward. I had gone to The Silver Unicorn in Acton MA and found a cute book by Jory John called “The Sour Grape”. Besides having an appropriate life lesson moral, I loved the colors used by illustrator Pete Oswald!

I decided on some 8/2 Valley Cotton yarn and a warp long enough to make several projects. First off (after sampling, of course!) was a book bag for my 21-month old nephew Sebastian, which was sent along with a copy of the book. In addition to another book bag that will be submitted for the WGB challenge, there will be some dish towels in these very fun colors.

I think in this photo he is trying to make a face like the Sour Grape. Hehe! Photo by Kendra Leonardi

Back to the WBZ news story. The video was featured several times through the day on Friday 20 January 2023. They had decided to run it as a break in the snowstorm coverage that was otherwise dominating the day’s news. I was so pleased with how Levan and his team condensed the whole story to just 2 minutes. They captured the vibe of my studio, my “happy place”. To me, my engineering career seems like a different lifetime (ending 22 years ago!) but looking at this I recognize what an impact in had on current thinking.

Stash Pillows!

4 pillows on a couch

What better way to enjoy heavier handwovens than as throw pillows?! These two were added to my spaces this winter. Here are their stories.

A fiber artist’s couch pillow collection

The Irish Wool Seat Cushion

A long time ago (probably 2018, before Covid anyway), my daughter took a trip to Ireland. Knowing I love fiber, she brought me some lovely Irish wool yarn as a gift. It was heavier and coarser than yarns I usually work with, so it entered my stash pile to wait for inspiration.

Fast forward to the fall of 2020 when my local weavers’ guild announced a challenge to make something with something from our stash. To facilitate the process, the first meeting of the year was devoted to brainstorming ideas for our projects and inspiring each other. Everyone had uploaded photos of their yarn to a common folder so we could look at them during a Guild meeting on Zoom. We each provided as much information as we could on our yarns, and then opened it up to ideas from the floor.

So many inspiring ideas came out of this meeting! Many were the usual things like a scarves and towels, but people also suggest creative weave structures and finishing techniques that would be appropriate for the specific yarns. I remember being very impressed by our conglomerate creativity!

For my yarn, among the suggestions was a seat cushion. I had never thought of that – what an idea! So that’s what I ran with. I found an interesting 8-shaft pattern on handweaving.net that I thought would be fun to weave on my 8S LeClerc floor loom. I found another contrasting but similar weight yarn in my stash (double points there!) to use in the warp. Having so little of this precious Irish yarn though, I needed to sample. The most important information would come after washing and fulling the sample. So I simplified the structure and wove a small sample on a 4-shaft loom. The shrinkage was much less than I had anticipated, which was really good news. My 775 yards of pink wool would be enough for the weft for 2 pillows! I used every last yard of the Irish wool and the darker burgundy wool warp.

8-shaft braided twill with pink Irish wool weft and burgundy stash yarn warp

During the spring of 2021, I finished weaving the 8S fabric and fulled it in time for our annual end-of-year supper (alas not “pot luck” this year), which we gleefully held outdoors in person! The weather was threatening, but we were eager to see each other and share our projects, and the outdoor gathering was a success.

Then the fabric sat for awhile longer, waiting for another burst of inspiration on how to make the seat cushion. The original plan had been complex, comprising a trapezoidal shape with 1-2″ side panels and high density cushion foam inside. But that was intimidating, so it was put off. Then I ran across a blog post on Gist Yarn’s website on how to make an envelope pillow using handwoven fabric. Looking around my studio, I saw no fewer than 3 pillow forms sitting unused. So the plan was hatched.

Office seat cushion with Irish wool

With the size defined, the pillows came together with a pretty multi-colored cording around the edges made from mercerized cotton (also from my stash!) One was stuffed with a feather pillow and is on my chair now. The other became an 18″ couch pillow that I’m thinking of giving to my daughter, who was kind enough to purchase the yarn in the first place. What goes around, comes around.

Twisted cotton cording

Honeycomb for my Honey

In 2021, my husband and I became beekeepers. We love our bees! (The queen is named “Bee 39.” Hehe!) It was my idea really, but I was more than pleasantly surprised when Dan took the lead with them. He spent hours watching YouTube videos and reading books and just going out to the garden to observe our industrious hive of black and yellow honeybees. So, most of his Christmas gifts this year had a bee theme. (Men are so hard to shop for. It pleases me to no end when I can give him something he’s not expecting and he loves it!)

True confessions: We usually eat dinner sitting on the couch watching Jeopardy! Hubby Dan props his plate conveniently on an old couch pillow that is dedicated to this function. However, dedicated or not, the old one was getting pretty ratty looking. He didn’t know it, but he needed a new “dining pillow.”

Dan’s new honeycomb dining pillow

Last fall I was playing with crackle. One of the variations was to treadle it as honeycomb. As I looked at the structure, the wheels were turning, and I knew that his new dining pillow was going to be a honeycomb structure. Back to my stash I went. I found some pale yellow and taupe Tencel and some novelty yarn that would work perfectly for little honeycomb cells outlined in black. I decided to keep it very traditional, with 8-end/8-pick cells for the entire width, as evenly structured as the comb in our hive.

I jumped right in with a 20″ wide warp with enough length to sample some weft colors and wash it to make sure that the cells would behave as expected. I’m glad I did that because I was debating about single or double stranding the black outline yarn. Although I was leaning toward the double, the single ply looked best. In the end, that was a really good choice, as I would have run out of the doubled yarn.

Honeycomb Closeup – Ecru Tencel warp and weft with black cotton novelty yarn

The pillow wasn’t finished in time for Christmas, but that was OK, because the loom attachment he was building for me in his workshop wasn’t done either. We’re a good pair!

One of the holdups was waiting for a 6-treadle retrofit for my little Harrisville floor loom. After treadling the crackle sampler with a 4-treadle direct tie-up, I knew I didn’t want to weave a whole length of honeycomb fabric dancing on 1, 2 and 3 treadles through the whole thing. So it was worth the wait for the convenience. It wove up quickly, finishing off one cone of the Tencel and all the novelty yarn.

The fabric done and vigorously washed and dried, I decided to use the same envelope pillow cover structure for this one. I added a black and yellow twisted cording on the edges and stuffed it with the pillow form from Dan’s now-retired dining pillow. Since the honeycomb structure is so elastic, the cover did require a couple snaps on the back.

Envelope closer with added snaps; Taupe Tencel weft on the back side

If anyone walked into my studio today, they wouldn’t notice that I am down several cones of yarn and some pillow forms, but I know, and that makes me happy.

Apprentice Rating

a color wheel
handwoven items arranged on a table
All the items submitted for my WGB Apprenticeship rating

The Weavers’ Guild of Boston has a rating system for those who are interested in formalizing their ability. There are four levels- Apprentice, Journeyman, Master Weaver and Master Plus. It’s a juried process, with very specific requirements for each level.

several towels and a table runner on a table
Red & green table runner, diaper weave towel, waffle weave towel and two linen twill towels

For several years, I had thought about this and collected various pieces I had woven, planning to submit for the first level. The requirements are complex, and the process is intimidating, so I was admittedly slow to act on it and stalled mid-stream at one point. But in 2019, I decided to take the leap, overcome my anxieties and dig into it. I inventoried what I had already done and what I still needed to accomplish. I had several pieces that needed to be woven or rewoven, and much documentation to complete.

black and white handwoven wallhanging
Color and weave gamp

The submission in total comprises 6 finished pieces, 2 gamps, a color wheel and several written requirements. For each item, there needs to be complete documentation. They vary in complexity, but all the items for the Apprentice submission need to demonstrate good knowledge of the weaves, sound technique, project planning and record keeping.

On 11 March 2020, I submitted my materials. In normal times, the anonymous judging takes several weeks and the final decisions are announced by early May. But 2020 was different. Distribution of submissions to the judges was delayed, and the decisions anticlimactically came down in mid-August. I had passed. I was able to pick up my submission in September. Dan photographed everything for me. Other than an announcement at the Guild’s Zoom meeting and an article in the Guild’s December newsletter, there was little fanfare, but I have the experience of the process and the comments from the judges to guide me forward.

a blue and white pillow and blanket draped on a chair
Plaid wool blanket and boutonne pillow

Since I have plenty to keep me busy, I’m not sure if I’ll pursue the Journeyman rating in the future, but I do feel accomplished having reached this rung on the ladder. Thank you to my weaving friends who provided inspiration and constructive criticism along the way, and to the Ratings people in the WGB.

a color wheel
Colorwheel, ink and watercolor, Zentangle-inspired

Ironically, my favorite piece in the submission is this colorwheel, which is not even woven. Perhaps the fact that this piece guided me out of my box into another medium is what appeals to me. Perhaps my soul is simply benefitting from the completion of the circle.

Weaving Shorts

What’s new? I’ve been teaching classes on Zoom and have recently joined the ranks of YouTubers!

It’s so nice to be back to teaching after these months of separation. I’ve really missed it! I’ve been teaching beginning and advanced beginning weaving classes as well as some specialized topics. The beginning and advanced beginning classes are 5 sessions, 2 hours each. We cover a different step of the weaving process in each session, and students complete that step as homework. Project planning, drafting, tips & tricks, weaving equipment and finishing techniques are also covered, at the appropriate level.

Teaching on Zoom has its own challenges, but that’s part of the fun. Teaching from my own studio means I have all my own tools right at hand. I do the exercises along with my students using a mix of live demos, videos, show & tell and lecture based instruction. Connecting my phone as well as my computer camera to the Zoom session enables me to show different views to focus on the action.

My students also often connect their phones so they can show me their looms and what they are doing. Sometimes it gets pretty funny trying to describe what I want them to do. “Pick up that thread, the one to the left of your index finger. No, the other thread…”

That’s where some of the video shorts come in handy. These “weaving shorts” demonstrate some of the small steps in the weaving process, and students can go back and watch them after class as many times as they need to.

My YouTube channel is https://www.youtube.com/PennyLacroix for those who want to delve deeper. The videos are simple, but hopefully helpful. I’ve been adding them as I recognize the need in my classes and intend to keep adding more. Suggestions for future videos are welcome!

In addition to some standard classes through The Fiber Loft, I recently taught a morning workshop for the Weavers’ Guild of Boston on how to create a doubleweave V-shaped shawl with no sewing. I mixed videos, interactive worksheets and live instruction to keep participants engaged.

It was alot of work to put together, but the folks I worked with in the Guild were extremely helpful, and we were able to present a high quality workshop on Zoom. A year ago, who would have thought this would be our normal now? So many new challenges and new opportunities. I’m loving it!

The Wool Bump Rugs

This is just a quick post to share some photos.

Earlier in the pandemic, I dyed a bunch of core spun wool bumps that had been waiting in a bin in my studio. Over the past few weeks, I wove it all into rugs on my Glimakra loom. The warp is 8/4 linen sett at 6 epi. One of the rugs (second photo) has some other corespun that I got from my friend Laura. It was processed at a different mill and was much denser than mine. As a result, the rug has stripes of texture. The last rug is made of cotton loopers. It’s the only one that’s truly washable.

Wool-bump rug with magenta zig zag 35.5″ x 40″
Textured striped wool bump rug, 36″ x 42″
Wool bump rug with rectangular theme – 35.5″ x 56″
Wool bump rug with magenta and green stripes 35.5″ x 50″
Red and green loopers rug 36″ x 26″

Wool Bump Dyeing Adventures

A few years ago, I acquired several dirty fleeces. After sorting, I sent the best of the fiber to Mad River Mill in Waitsfield, Vermont. Owner Susan Snider efficiently turned my fiber into “wool bumps”. She also allowed me to visit and take videos of the process, which I turned into a multimedia presentation. The presentation, documenting from fleece acquisition through finished rugs is available to guilds and other organizations. After that initial project, I still had 6 of the 13 wool bumps left. Last summer at NEWS, I purchased a sampler dye kit from ProChem, conveniently with 6 different colors. Now they come together.

First each bump was made into a huge skein to facilitate absorbing the dye even through all the fiber. Each skein is about 100 yds, wrapped as wide as my arms could reach, so about 10 feet around.

Then I soaked each skein individually in solution of Synthropol and water overnight. This prepares the fibers for accepting the dye.

After mixing the dyebath – the dissolved dye powder, Synthropol, salt, citric acid (or vinegar) and tap water – I added the skeined wool and started heating over my large propane burner in the garage.

brown wool simmering in the dyepot

It took up to an hour to bring it up to a boil, depending on the air temp each day. Then it had to simmer for about an hour. It required frequent rearranging of the fiber, so I stayed close and read a magazine or spun on my Turkish spindle between stirrings. I was reading PLY magazine, the summer 2019 issue on suspended spindles, which was what led to the Turkish spindle play.

Penny sitting in a chair watching the dye pot

If needed, I added a bit of vinegar to the dypot to help the fiber soak up the last of the dye. When the dye ran fairly clear, I let the fiber cool in the dyepot overnight. By morning, all the dyebaths were clear. I rinsed the skeins in slightly warm water in the bathtub. (Clara was fascinated by this part of the process!)

a black cat looking into a blue bathtub with brown yarn in it
Clara was very helpful, as always.

I squeezed out as much water as I could and then draped the skein on a clothes rack or the ladder. I tried to keep the process cycling, doing one dyepot a day. Saturday I did 2, so the whole process took 5 days.

One skein hanging (back by the ladder,) one drying, one in pre-soak, one in the dye pot, and two waiting in the wings

The colors from ProChem are Clay, Mahogany, Brown, Chestnut, Evergreen and Tan. I had 10g of each dye powder, which for the 19-23 oz of fiber in each bump equated to a medium to dark saturation. In some lights, the Clay and Tan have more of a green tint. I’m happy with all except the Mahogany. It turned out more of a magenta than the deep earthy color I had expected. Despite all the stirring and turning in the dyepot, I still got some darker spots on the fiber. It will add some interest to the final products.

The plan is to use the dyed corespun wool to weave some area rugs on my Glimakra countermarche loom. Each rug will be at least 3′ x 5′ with a linen rug warp. Here’s looking forward to the next step of this extended project!

Pandemic Projects

This time at home with fewer distractions has actually been good for me! I’ve been working on several different projects, rotating around so I don’t get bored. Although lots of yarn shops are open for mail order, I’ve taken the isolation as a challenge to finish some projects that have been hanging around too long and to use up some of my stash yarns.

Woolen basket

Status: Completed

Basket made from fulled wool fabric with a cotton lining

This was made from a small piece of wool fabric woven from the left over warp for the Plimouth Plantation blanket. I sewed it into the rectangular basket shape, finished the top edge, and fulled it in a sink full of hot water and peppermint soap. I shocked it in cold water a couple times as well. The finished size is 10″ x 7.5″ at the top and 4″ tall.

Then I built a “basket block” exactly the right size out of Lego blocks that live in my attic. With the basket upside down on the Legos, I used my steam iron on the wool setting to further shape and full it. (Yes, I had pre-tested the Legos to make sure they could withstand steaming.)

Like a hat block, only for a basket, and made from Legos!

It was good and thick, but I was worried that it might start to sag over time. So I lined it with some cotton fabric lined with a medium weight Pellon. Not sure what I’m going to use it for yet. Maybe some Legos.

Bouclé shawl

Status: Completed

Boucle shawl with beaded braided fringe

I wove this shawl last fall. It has an Icelandic wool warp that I hand dyed with my favorite colors and a purple mohair bouclé weft. The pandemic project part of it was the fringe braiding. I threaded 3 beads on one strand of each braid and spaced them randomly on the braids. It was washed afterward, and then I trimmed the braids. This project was part of this year’s challenge for the Nashoba Valley Weavers Guild. It’s still TBD whether we’ll be able to get together in person at the end of June to show off our products.

Triangle shawl

Status: Completed

Tidying my studio one day, I ran across some silk/cotton yarn that was waiting for inspiration. I realized it was similar to some yarn I had used for a project last year, which I had some leftovers from. So I took the skeins of stash yarn and combined them with the smaller amounts of more colorful leftovers to make this shawl on my triangle loom.

Shawl made on a triangle loom out of different silk and silk/cotton yarns

The thing about weaving on a triangle loom is that the warp and weft build as you weave. There’s no loom waste, so you can predict exactly how much yarn you’ll need. It takes about 10 hours to weave a fullsize shawl like this one, depending on the complexity of the color pattern and the texture of the yarns. However, I came up with a sample sized loom that has the same sett as the fullsize one, but it takes me only 20 minutes to weave up a sample. (I teach a 2-hour class on this for those who are interested.)

Tablecloth

Status: In progress

Here’s a project that has been sitting around for too long! Years ago I wove some yardage on an 8-shaft Macomber loom that I no longer own. It was about 20′ of material, a striped warp of primary and secondary brights, with black weft. After washing, the yardage was just over 16″ wide. My thought had always been to somehow sew it into a tablecloth, but it had somehow never materialized.

The brown paper pattern pieces laid out for a 60″ x 60″ tablecloth

After measuring my tables and playing around with some panel ideas on paper, I wasn’t inspired. Wandering out of the box, I started playing with some diagonal panel ideas. Calling on some high school math, I determined that there was enough material for a 60″ x 60″ tablecloth and worked up a pattern for laying out the pieces.

Clara helping to lay out the pattern pieces on the cloth

Coincidentally that night, a package arrived from Chewy.com that was padded with a very long length of 30″ wide brown paper. Perfect for making a fullsize pattern. That was the confidence I needed to cut into my precious handwoven cloth!

The project is still in progress, but I’ve sewn about half of the 237 inches of seams so far. I’m using a fagoting stitch to butt the selvedges against each other and avoid lumpy seams on my table. Once the seams are done, I’ll hand sew a rolled hem all around.

The fagoting makes the seam flat and nearly invisible.

Sprang sample

Status: Complete

Last summer at the New England Weavers’ Seminar, I took a class with Carol James on Sprang. She’s an excellent teacher, and my fascination with historic textiles and textile techniques made this a great match for me!

Sprang samples using two different double stitch patterns

Sprang is an ancient method of producing cloth. It uses threads stretched parallel to each other on a frame or a backstrap. The threads are twisted methodically to produce various patterns, often resembling lace. Two rows of cloth are produced simultaneously, mirroring each other. Carol’s website can give you lots of visuals if you’re interested.

I circled back to this technique over the past couple weeks and reconnected with Carol by email. She sent me a couple new patterns for a Double Stitch, which I had to try out. Here’s my sample still on the sprang loom. I tied some cords on the sides to pull it out so the pattern can be seen. It’s not perfect, but I did manage to learn the new stitch.

Fiber friends rug hooking

Status: In progress

A cute rug hooking picture, perfect for fiber fanatics

Yet another years old project recovered from the depths of a closet. I had purchased it from Windfall Farm, a vendor at a NH Sheep &Wool Festival. When it saw the light of day a couple weeks ago, 3 of the animals and some grass were hooked. I’ve been working on it gradually in the evenings when we settle on the couch. It’s showing promise!

Chevron scarf

Status: Fiber spun into 3-ply yarn; scarf >2/3 knit

Chevron-shaped scarf with handspun yarn

This project was partially completed when we landed in this pandemic. It’s knit from handspun yarn. The fiber had been dyed with 3 colors by Spunky Eclectic before I came into possession of it through the Boston Area Spinners & Dyers annual challenge. It’s 80/20 merino/silk in a colorway called “Mahogany”. I separated the fiber into 3 piles, roughly corresponding to the 3 dye colors. After some sampling, I decided to chain ply the singles into a 3 ply yarn, which would result in less color blending than a 2-ply.

The pattern is inspired by a shawl pattern by Andrea Rangel in Taproot magazine, issue 35. It was easy to memorize after a couple repeats, so I don’t have to concentrate too much while I’m knitting it. The overall pattern is K2 P2, and one stitch is added in center every 4 rows. The spinning is all done now, so just the remaining knitting is left to finish.

I used the colors in sequence, so the grays at the bottom, browns in the middle and purples at the top add another dimension to the piece.

Unfortunately, BASD probably won’t get to meet again before the summer, so I probably have extra time to finish it. Actually, I have a little time now!

What’s next?

A new sprang project with baby alpaca

I’ve got plenty of other fiber projects both in progress and formulating in my mind. However, with inspiration from the sprang sample, I decided to use another hand dyed warp to make a scarf. The yarn is 100% baby alpaca from Hampden Hills Alpacas. This is absolutely amazing yarn, but I’m learning that soft, airy yarns like this are not easy to weave with sprang! It took me hours to get the 2 1/2 yard warp on the sprang loom, and the stickiness of the yarn makes each row take extra long, but I think the lace pattern is going to be beautiful when it’s done!

Depending on how long the pandemic restrictions last here in Massachusetts, hopefully these projects will be completed and I’ll be on to more! Stay well, everyone!