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4/8/2004 9:19:35 AM
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Guest
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The answer may be something like "I only wish I knew..." but do you have any idea how soon there might be more copies of Effectiveness By Design FCB001 - Socks for the Family available? Thanks! Marion
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4/8/2004 10:01:01 AM
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acb Posts 1440
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You read my mind, Marion - I`ll check with Michelle again today!
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5/18/2004 4:50:00 AM
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Guest
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When the Micro Color is available on Thursday, will you have one of those neat lists of exactly with which colors of the regular Micro they coordinate? Hope so!
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5/18/2004 6:20:15 AM
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acb Posts 1440
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Yes! And here it is:
Micro Color Coordinates with the following Micro solid colors: 12 Bronzed Pewter - 004 Silver Cloud 28 Mango Melange - 027 Pumpkin 35 Magnolia Blooms - 034 Cyclamen 36 Hot Tamale - 051 Royal Blue 37 Alpine Meadow - 051 Royal Blue 38 Primrose Garden - 052 Blue Marlin 40 Heather N Thistle - 031 Crimson and 046 Grape 58 Nassau Beach - 053 Brilliant Blue 70 Confetti - 073 Spring Green, 031 Crimson 80 Phoenix - 021 Lemon Ice, 027 Pumpkin, and 030 Geranium 82 Mediterranean - 067 Turquoise 83 Evening Shadows - no direct matches 84 Chameleon - 065 Mint Cream and 072 Deep Olive 86 Martinique - no direct matches 88 Rock Candy - 034 Cyclamen and 053 Brilliant Blue 90 Tutti Frutti - 034 Cyclamen and 067 Turquoise 95 Stormy Sky - 001 White 96 Lily Pond - 052 Blue Marlin and 072 Deep Olive.
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5/18/2004 6:52:13 AM
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Guest
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Thank you Ann!!!
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5/18/2004 8:53:31 AM
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ScullyKnits Posts 2451
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Thank you Ann. I was guessing Heather & Thistle would go with the dusky plum. Nice to know in advance it is the Grape.
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5/18/2004 11:27:04 AM
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benne Posts 19258
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Okay Christina,
Now I know we should shop for each other. I had already picked out those colors before I saw your post. This is too funny. What do you have in mind for your colors? I`m thinking of Marion`s vest for this yarn. It could be worn as a vest or a summer top and the pattern is just so striking and as Shui said, playful. Benne
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5/19/2004 7:25:24 AM
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ScullyKnits Posts 2451
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I had no plan, other than add to my purple-together-with-green yarn collection. Now that I know it is the bright purple with red, I think I`ll just get a few skeins to make a MacChick-like top for DD. I was really enjoying making the vine top, though now it`s been 3 weeks and DD had a huge growth spurt so I think I need to frog and make it bigger. Purple and red is my other favorite combo, but I can`t `see` anything for me right now in it. Marion`s vest is a good idea..... I`ve been very interested in a light tunic for me. There is a nice one in the Summer Vogue, other nice sets at www.vermontfiberdesigns.com So many choices so little knitting time..... I need to loose my job and knit up my stash.....
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10/17/2004 4:27:17 PM
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Libby Posts 7209
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Ann,
A couple of weeks ago now I sent in some photos of my knitting and I have not seen them on the website. I`m wondering if the file was too big and I need to resize (of course I`ll have to figure out how to do that!) or if you didnt get it.
Libby
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10/17/2004 5:46:59 PM
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acb Posts 1440
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Hi Libby, Sorry, but I received nothing. Could you try sending them again? After you click the "Submit" button, you should receive one of two messages: if the file is too large, you`ll get a message to that effect, and if it is accepted, you should get a message to say that your photo will be reviewed and posted within 48 hours.
I`m glad you asked!
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1/13/2005 11:22:10 AM
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ecasey Posts 2668
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Nothing important - just being nosy, LOL!
Do you do the sample knits (for the Peruvian yarns in particular) that your daughter is shown modelling???
Eileen.
-- "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the STARS!" (Oscar Wilde)
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1/13/2005 12:44:31 PM
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acb Posts 1440
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I wish I could say yes, Eileen. I rarely have time to knit, though I did do the two quick-knit Cuzco pieces.
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1/13/2005 2:54:23 PM
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LisaB Posts 547
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Eileen - not too surprising? I`m pretty impressed that Ann knit the Cuzco, considering!
My Mom called me from California, was very enthusiastic about her Christmas-present scarf. Also very surprised how long it took me to knit even in the superchunky gauge. She thought maybe I had a new career in the making. Those I know who do knit on spec or to sell at craft fairs, really make a very paltry amount if you figure "by the hour". Now maybe those of you with knitting machines could make a go of it, but it is, in a way, too bad that you really have to love knitting - in my case, I feel like it has real therapeutic benefits - because it`s just not particularly time or cost efficient. (Well, maybe for Lily Chin. I hear she`s REALLY fast. ;-)
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1/13/2005 3:27:17 PM
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benne Posts 19258
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Hi Lisa,
Eileen is well versed in knitting for some pretty famous folk in the knitting world and is very fast. She and Lily are the ones who might make some big bucks. :-} For the rest of us plodders, no, you probably cannot make a living at it, but if you find the right outlet for your work, you can make some money if you meet the market needs. Several knitters here supplement their income by selling their knitting but I think they all also love knitting. Knitting has lots of benefits, both theraputic and if you`re lucky enough to be as good at it as Eileen and some other ladies here, monetary. Now, if I could just convince DH that I am not going to make enough money knitting for him to retire. HA! Benne
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1/13/2005 5:17:55 PM
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Jamie Posts 3462
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To Lisa and Benne and others, I sell a fair amount of knitting. Do I make much money? No. But I figure that I love to knit, enjoy making things, and selling and making a little is still fun. I will have to report my sales this year on the income tax, which means I earned more than $600 US. I knit pretty simple things and am not too slow (but not as fast as many). Happy knitting, Jamie
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1/13/2005 6:47:10 PM
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benne Posts 19258
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Jamie,
I think it`s great that you can earn money doing something you enjoy so much and create something wonderful in the process. After all, when someone buys your knitting, you know they really like it, want it and will use it. I sell things occasionally, mostly by request, but I have not earned the yarn money you have. That`s a lot of yarn money. :-} I don`t think fast is the key, after all, that`s the charm of handknitted items, time and care are taken with them by two hands creating something beautiful one stitch at a time. :-} And not only do you get the fun of knitting, someone either the buyer or the person they gift it to, gets the joy of wearing or using something handknit of good quality.
BTW, I`m finishing a Cuzco wrap tonight, it made me think of you. Sure wish you could have an alpaca blankie. :-} Benne
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1/13/2005 7:00:10 PM
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LisaB Posts 547
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Hi Lisa,
>Eileen is well versed in knitting for some pretty >famous folk in the knitting world and is very fast.
wow! I`ve read some stories in Knitter`s Magazine and elsewhere of people who have since made it big in the knitting world, who started out knitting up garments for designers and so on, but also got the impression from these stories that as contract work goes, it requires high skills without commanding anything like commensurate rates. Here in Memphis, I know a few very talented ladies who knit to sell or as contract work for the shops, and the love of knitting definitely outweighs the material rewards, for them, anyway. (But, as with a lot of vocations, such as teaching - it isn`t about the money, but gifted people choosing their passion over the biggest paycheck.)
Understand perfectly about DH! Lots of bemusement from my own. We were discussing this over dinner - he pointed to a lovely fairisle in heathered multi hues of shetland weight yarn at the next table in the deli, asked could I learn to do that - and I replied that it would take *me* forever to make, considerable time for a really talented knitter...but *that* one over there probably cost $50 from The Gap. <sigh> I wish that we could all live to age 900 and not require sleep; I know that a lot of the knitting I admire, I simply shall not likely get to do, in this lifetime. (But yes, I do value and enjoy what I *can* do. There`s a certain grace to plodding, when performed with enthusiasm! We have a lady in my Guild who only learned the craft 3 years ago at age 90, and while she does struggle at times, she rocks.)
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1/14/2005 3:33:09 AM
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ecasey Posts 2668
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Och away with you, B - when it comes to knitting, I have 2 speeds: dead slow and stop.
LOL
THis is a phrase used a lot at home, not just for knitting, but to throw at someone when they`re being a slowcoach for any reason.
THANK YOU for the compliment, though - you`re a wee dote (and I`ll pay you later...)
Eileen.
-- "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the STARS!" (Oscar Wilde)
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1/14/2005 7:58:14 AM
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benne Posts 19258
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Awww, E, you know you`re the bomb!!! And you`re not fooling me for one second with that modest routine you`ve got going on. ;-} I`ll take my payment in knitting lessons the next time we`re together. Or maybe I could just lock you in a room with a pile of yarn and make you knit nonstop. HA! B2 Bolderella
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1/14/2005 10:24:36 AM
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Alice Trueman Posts 1784
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If you knit a fair isle in HW, it would go quite quickly. I`m working on one, off and on, in the Harris Tweed that elann had a while ago. 6 stitches to an inch goes much, much faster than 8 stitches. AND it looks more custom made - the very fine yarn fair isle, knitted by an expert, could be confused with machine knitting. I`m going to address the payment for knitting post in a separate message.
Alice Salt Spring Island
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