New #8 Braid Colors

News, stories and inspiration featuring your favorite fibers
Have you been keeping up with the reports out of New York and
London's Fashion Week runway shows? The motifs, colors, styles and
trends seen there will trickle their way through the retail landscape
like a branching river, making their way to low, medium and high end
stores. As it has for hundreds of years, embroidery is still trendy for
embellishments. While many of us can't afford Alexander McQueen couture,
we can add spots of stitching to our outfits and be right on trend.
Start with these new needlepoint bracelets from Cheryl Schaeffer and
Annie Lee Designs. While needlepointed jewelry cuffs aren't new, Cheryl
and Annie's designs and silver bangle style are refreshing. We spotted
these at the TNNA tradeshow in January, and knew they'd be a hit: quick
to stitch, easy finishing, and you get the bangle when you buy the
painted canvas. Just add threads—with a spice or two of Kreinik
metallics, of course. The designs would make great gifts for yourself or
a friend.
Take a look at the photos here to see a few of the design options.
Ask your favorite needlepoint store to order them for you from Cheryl
Schaeffer and Annie Lee Designs, http://www.cherylschaeffer.
When an email comes in asking for Bent Weaver's Needles for making
horse saddle cinch makers, you can't help but do a double-take. We get a
lot of needlework enquiries, but not often from the horse industry.
Then you find out the business owner in interested in Kreinik threads
for making dressings for horse riders, and you definitely want to know
more. We interviewed business owner, Charlotte Sharkey, and she shared
some fabulous photos. Settle in; it's an extensive chat, but pretty
interesting. The lesson here: no matter what you make with needle and
thread, it can be creative, useful and beautiful.
Q: How did you get started in the horse business (making mohair, cinches, belts, etc)?
A: I guess first we’d have to go back to how I got started with
fiber. I designed and taught jewelry techniques for 20 years as a hobby,
including making glass beads over a torch—that’s where I experimented
with color, which has served me well. About 13 years ago I moved from
San Francisco to a 13-acre farm in the New York area known as the Finger
Lakes. I’m only 10 miles from Cornell University, but 4.5 hours away
from NYC. My new home is where the ice cream sundae was invented, and
the Moog Synthesizer. We even have a farm raising buffalo. It’s a
pretty grass roots community.
Since I moved to a farm I figured it should BE a farm. Didn’t want to
raise meat, didn’t want to milk every day, so I turned to fiber. I
started with Angora rabbits, joined the local hand-spinners guild and
learned all about fiber from shearing to cleaning to spinning. Then
dyeing, felting, weaving, crochet…it all followed. As did the alpaca
boys and the Shetland sheep. And the ducks & chickens.
Then I got my horse, Sweetie. Being a “maker,” I wanted control over
creating some her tack. Somehow, while I was doing my research online I
discovered a site that was all about weaving horse tack with mohair.
Now, mohair is one of my favorite fibers. It’s considered the “diamond
of fibers.” So I ordered a loom and a lot of mohair cinch cord. This
is a special yarn made specifically for horse tack. Very difficult to
acquire here in the U.S.. Nearly all mohair is milled in South Africa,
the world’s largest producer of mohair. The color range I was able to
get was interesting, but limited. The next thing I knew I was importing
the mohair cord myself…and buying dyes, and pot to dye in, and all the
other things ones needs.
Q: How do you use Bent Weaver's Needles?
A: The instructional video I learned how to weave the cinches from
illustrated how to weave in the mohair ends—using forceps! I still
cannot understand why. I already had some Bent-tip Weaver needles
carried by Kreinik and instantly knew this was a MUCH better method. Why
is this type of needle preferred to a straight needle? Because the
cinches are woven very tightly. You want to know exactly where your
needle is and where it’s going to come out. The Bent tip allows this.
Plus, the fact that it’s stainless steel means you can actually grab it
with a pair of needle-nose pliers & pull it through without the
pliers nicking the needle shaft, causing rough spots, as would happen
with an aluminum bent-tip needle. This is critical in order to smoothly
weave in the mohair ends. Not to mention that I’ve had an aluminum
needle head break while trying to pull it through with pliers—something
the stainless steel needles won’t ever do.
Perky up these winter days with Cupid's Kiss Shoelaces, a cheerful
red/pink blend made from Kreinik threads. Robin's Egg Blue Shoelaces
will get you marching into spring with their baby blue shades. Both are
new colors in the C.A.K.S. line of shoelaces created by Kreinik.
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