Rinsing some worsted weight, superwash merino in Island Night http://ift.tt/2d45YfN
Last night, my husband, Bob, agreed to help nudge me out of my “all things tropical colors” rut. We pulled out all of the mixed dyes, plus a few powders. He picked colors randomly, and I had to figure out how to put them on the yarn in a visually appealing & dye friendly way. Below are some pics from our experiments. Iris garden is an old favorite that has been updated with a new set of greens.
The picture of lots of minis has a mix of my tropical blues & greens for comparison.
In other good news, I was able to recreate tiger lily! Sadly, I wasn’t able to get a good picture of the layered reds, oranges, pinks & browns. I’ll try again later when the light changes.
On a side note: Bob really likes orange. Given his preference, all yarns would have orange. Lots of orange. And possibly no other color than orange!
His birthday is coming, so I’m planning a yarn of all the different oranges. It should make a perfect “Don’t shoot me while I am hiking” hat.
Here is the yarn inspired by the Iron Druid Series. It’s not done yet. I’d like some copper colors in there, and perhaps tweak the blue. Getting close though!
I don’t know why I should be so happy that handpainting works well in a solar oven. Anything that works in a slow heat oven, should work in the solar oven. I was worried the slower cook time might lead to more color drift & muddy colors.
I presoaked the skeins in water at 3.5 pH. Then painted the skeins and let them sit for an hour. It was fairly damp/slightly drippy. I wrapped each skein in plastic, but I am going to skip this step next time. Instead, I’ll just cover the whole pan set up with a dark plastic bag to make a multilevel steamer.
After painting and wrapping, I put the first skein in a black covered pan, put a smaller pan with another painted skein on it on top. The pans fit so that there is a gap between the two. I covered the top pan with plastic and left the whole setup in the center of the oven to cook for 3 hours in afternoon sun. It was about 75F and mostly sunny.
More on this yarn as I work on the colors. I am also looking at making roving. The big question is what to call it. For now, I’m calling it Kevin’s yarn in my head. I promise I’ll have a proper name for it soon.

I’m working on a yarn inspired by the wonderful Iron Druid Series by Kevin Hearne.
https://www.facebook.com/authorkevin/
I’ll get to the yarn in a bit, but first the books!
The books are frequently categorized as Urban Fantasy- which they are. But they stand out from a genre that is being flooded by the Urban Fantasy Romance (which is ready for its own genre now!).
The central story focuses on Atticus, the last of the Druids, who is at a crossroads. Does he continue to hide from an angry god and live a diminished life under the radar, or does he confront the god, re-establish wider contact with others like him, and re-enter the non-mortal community?
For me, writing breaks down into characterization, plot, theme, voice, world building and word choice- in no particular order. In this case, the order doesn’t matter because Hearne hits every single one one.
Characterization: Kevin Hearne builds strong, interesting characters drawn from folklore & mythology. His take on mythology is fresh without ignoring the roots. That’s a big plus! He doesn’t assume that we are going to like his characters because they are the heroes & heroines. His characters earn the reader’s affection and sympathy.
Plot: How can anyone resist a tweak the nose of a god/ protect humanity plot line? more on this below. The story moves briskly with a nice balance of action and reflection. A strong collection of subplots build a strong world with good character interaction. The subplots come together to support a larger story line without making a muddle of the forward motion of the overall book.
The story doesn’t take itself too seriously. It’s fun without crossing the line into brain candy! Nothing wrong with brain candy, but who rereads those books? You will reread the Iron Druid books. And most likely will stalk the author’s page waiting for book updates with the rest of us Hearne fans!
Theme: Underlying the action is a continual theme of a do I step forth and *be*- or- do I take the familiar path? Do my past actions define me, or do I have the power & ability to do something differently?
World Building: Perfection! It’s seamless and believable without being tame or predictable. While reading, you know it is the only possible version of reality. Then you can step away from the book and realize he just pulled a rabbit, a dove and the Chrysler building out of that hat- & it totally worked!
Word choice: Hearne isn’t afraid of mixing a casual tone with a wide range of vocabulary. Reading his prose makes me happy!
Here’s the link to Kevin Hearne’s Good Reads page:
The story opens with Atticus, the last of the druids, living in hiding from an angry Celtic god, Aenghus Óg who wants to reclaim the enchanted sword stolen from him centuries before. The deity discovers Atticus pretending to be a 21 year old hippie running an occult bookshop in Arizona. With the help of a seductive goddess of death, his vampire and werewolf team of attorneys, a bartender possessed by a Hindu witch, a wolfhound and some good old-fashioned luck of the Irish – Atticus must prevent the god from gaining the sword’s power without unbalancing the detente between the different factions of Fae & Gods.
There are many perks to living for twenty-one centuries, and foremost among them is bearing witness to the rare birth of genius. It invariably goes like this: Someone shrugs off the weight of his cultural traditions, ignores the baleful stares of authority, and does something his countrymen think to be completely batshit insane. Of those, Galileo was my personal favorite. Van Gogh comes in second, but he really was batshit insane.
Thank the Goddess I don’t look like a guy who met Galileo—or who saw Shakespeare’s plays when they first debuted or rode with the hordes of Genghis Khan. When people ask how old I am, I just tell them twenty-one, and if they assume I mean years instead of decades or centuries, then that can’t be my fault, can it? I still get carded, in fact, which any senior citizen will tell you is immensely flattering.
The young-Irish-lad façade does not stand me in good stead when I’m trying to appear scholarly at my place of business—I run an occult bookshop with an apothecary’s counter squeezed in the corner—but it has one outstanding advantage. When I go to the grocery store, for example, and people see my curly red hair, fair skin, and long goatee, they suspect that I play soccer and drink lots of Guinness. If I’m going sleeveless and they see the tattoos all up and down my right arm, they assume I’m in a rock band and smoke lots of weed. It never enters their mind for a moment that I could be an ancient Druid—and that’s the main reason why I like this look. If I grew a white beard and got myself a pointy hat, oozed dignity and sagacity and glowed with beatitude, people might start to get the wrong—or the right—idea.
Sometimes I forget what I look like and I do something out of character, such as sing shepherd tunes in Aramaic while I’m waiting in line at Starbucks, but the nice bit about living in urban America is that people tend to either ignore eccentrics or move to the suburbs to escape them.
Next post is about the yarn 🙂
Until then, read Hounded!
It started so simply. A few mason jars, filled with warm water, some dye and put out in the sun. Then I added a dark metal pan for the base. And stacked up some paving stones to make a wind shelter. And aluminum foil for a collector & solar oven v.1 was born.
When it was warm & sunny, the set up gave good results.


But when the wind picked up or the temps dropped, it didn’t. (sorry- no picture of the sad yarn. I threw more dye on it & put it on the stove right away)
Solar Oven v.2 was a black plastic storage bin, foil and a dry cleaner bag for a seal to trap the heat. The wind took it apart before it ever had a chance. Also, it seemed like the outside box was nice & hot, but the inside stayed cold. Not enough light collection into the center.
Which led to some websites on designs for solar ovens. I decided simple & durable were my main project guidelines. Cheap would be nice too 🙂
Here are the pics of Solar Oven v.3 in progress. It’s made out of basic pressure treated lumber & assembled using a circular saw, drill with bits & a screw driver attachment.

The lid is a simple piece of plexiglass that was precut to 30 x 36″ and supported by some 1 x 2 strips. It sits inside the box on rails to make a nice tight fit.

The day I got the wonderful idea to build a solar over, it was 68F and sunny. The day we started building, it was 41F & raining. Below are my not-approved for work gloves that I threw on when things got ridiculously cold!

We’re ready for spray painting things black, but we need the temps to climb first.
There may be too much space inside the oven for it to heat well. If so, I’ve got the start of a wonderful garden box!
More updates shortly.
This is supposed to be a blog about stories as well as yarn, and I’ve been slacking on the book reviews and lists. So- ta-da! Here is the beginning of my “I love these authors” list. Why authors instead of titles? Because the people on this list are so good at what they do that I can’t pick just one title or even one series. I’ll start reviews by picking books/series from this list.
(yes- sci fi. The old fashioned abbreviation. I’m old, and I break out in hives when I see it written as SYFY)
Urban / Paranormal Fantasy
Before you say- wait- What about Benford, Bear, Gibson, Robinson, Scott Card, Modesitt, and all of the authors I love?! How could this list not include Tolkien! What about Asimov and Bradbury & Heinlein?! Alan Dean Foster, Robert Asprin, Piers Anthony.
Peace! I love these authors too. I’ve read most of their work. But for a bunch of capricious reasons. they aren’t on the list. Most people on the list are actively publishing. Not all. Some are important to me for personal reasons. It’s the joy of having my own list. And in case there is any doubt: Terry Pratchett will always be at the top any fantasy list I write.
This isn’t to say that more authors won’t be added along the way. Maybe I’ll add lists based on the publishing time period.

More handpainted garden yarn. Spring is dragging it’s feet around here, and I’m doing what I can to throw color around.

The two skeins above have the same four dyes blended in different ways. They look similar, but they will be quite different knitted up.
The top one has pink and green blending together which add a brown/earthy color to the yarn. The repeats are shorter- 2-6″ long- so that the colors will be more random in the finished piece.
The lower one has pink blending into yellow which adds a pink/orange color. The lower one has longer repeats that are dominated by the pink. This will be fabulous in a shawl because the long repeats will show as color lines rather than dots.