I'm now on my way to the US for TNNA summer show, and despite all the extra stress and mayhem, the 6th Playful Woolly Toppers design has gone live!

 

 

This is Mercury. I'm afraid I didn't quite win my battle with time before I left and haven't got the webpage for this one finished, but it is live on Ravelry and is now part of the PWT eBook pre-order, as well as available as a single pattern.

 

 

The design uses stranded colourwork techniques to create the vertical stripes. The brim is started with a provisional cast-on and is worked in both colours. The joining round requires a little care, and after that, the stranded pattern is plain sailing. Also included is a choice of crown options - 3 or 4 point versions.

4 sizes are included in the pattern, ranging from 16in/40.75cm to 23in/58.5cm. The recommended yarn is Brown Sheep Nature Spun Sport, which knits comfortably at a 4ply/fingering gauge, creating a cosy as well as striking Hat. The other great thing about this yarn is that it comes in the most amazing range of colours, and if you're in the UK, try Magpielly for custom orders - she can get any colour to you.

I do hope you like the new design!

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Now that I'm on my way to TNNA the email auto-reply is on and I'll be out of email reach for most of the week. There'll be wifi in the hotel room but by the end of the day I'll be bushed and doubt I'll do myself any favours trying to answer emails then. If you've any queries that can't wait then you could try posting in the Ravelry group.

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And thanks for all your support on my last post :) Things are settling down in my head and being away from home for a bit will help with that.. besides, TNNA is so all consuming that there's little space to think about anything else. Once I'm back and the jetlag has passed, I'll get my brain in gear about fundraisers. Not just to help raise money (which we do need!) but also 'cos focusing on something useful and productive is how I'll survive this whole mess.  We'll try our best not to let bureaucracy win, and I'll be damned sure not to let the black dog.

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AuthorWoolly Wormhead

Finally *finally* today I finished all of the photo editing for Playful Woolly Toppers (though I do need to take a few more quick shots tomorrow) which left me free to start a few sewing jobs that my TNNA display requires.

Last year one of the biggest expenses (travel, accommodation & booth rental aside) was the hire of a table and other booth fittings. I'm all for hiring as it saves a lot of wastage, although the costs were a little too high for my budget. And seeing as I'm slowly collecting my own suitcase-friendly display materials, we hunted around for a suitable alternative. 

 

 

Last summer we found this kiddy - a super lightweight aluminium camping table in Tesco, for £22. It sits at standard table height, with a top measuring 70cm x 70cm (27.5in x 27.5in). It weighs a mere 3.3kg (7.25lb), comes in it's own handy bag and fits very nicely in my suitcase.

Within a few minutes it becomes this...

 

 

It's a lot sturdier than you'd think for it's light weight, and it's virtually identical to all the pro tables that market traders and the like use, albeit smaller. Naturally it needed a cover, and this was the perfect job for my favourite circle devoure fabric.

 

 

Despite what our grass would have you think, the table skirt does sit nicely on the floor. I never managed to find any more of this fabric so the cover needed a bit of clever thinking to make the fabric go as far as possible. The top of the cover is a classic white cotton table cloth that I picked up in the 2nd hand shop for next to nothing, which was then cut to size and overlocked. The fabric was cut in half lengthways, overlocked, and stitched to the top with vents at the back for ease of fitting.

This sewing job was this afternoon's task and I'm pretty chuffed with it. The cover weighs 380g, so we've a table+cover at 3.7kg for less than £23. Sweet. That's less than a fifth of the hire cost of the table etc last year, and I get to use this over and over again.

There's a few other display bits and pieces that I've been working on, too..

 

 

Last year I took a whole bunch of circles for display, including 3 circular acrylic mirrors. This year I decided to opt out of taking the Hats-stretched-on-circles pieces, as I wasn't so happy with how they looked overall, but did want to make a bigger feature of the circular mirrors.

 

 

We totally lucked out when looking for raw materials this year. The existing circular mirrors were fixed to a lightweight but very dense, and therefore thin, foam (sandwich) board, which prevents them from distorting. The Hats were stretched over a different board that weighed the same but was twice the thickness, making them much bulkier. One of the local copy shops had one sheet of the compact thin stuff left, which was a tad scuffed as it had been sat at the back of the store for an age, and so we got it at less than half price. (We've been looking for this compact thin board for a couple of years to no avail, and we'd pretty much given up on finding any again) This sheet allowed us to have a further 6 mirrors, giving us 9 in all. My OCD self would have liked 10, but hey.

 

 

The acrylic mirrors themselves aren't that cheap (£13 a piece at this size); glass would be a bit cheaper but naturally that's heavier and you'd be a bit daft to want to stuff this much glass into a suitcase that's destined to cross the Atlantic. I ordered the new ones from the same company I'd got them from previously, where they cut to size and do a nice job of it (acrylic mirror is no fun to cut yerself, believe me) and given how they will travel and not shatter, I figured the cost was worth it. 

Choosing the yarns for the cuffs was challenging; the aim was to keep them all tonal, and in a similar weight yarn AND to knit them all from oddments/leftovers. They do look really cool side by side.

Each mirror weighs in at 235g each, giving a grand total of just under 2.2kg (4.85lb). The circles measure 29cm (11.5in) across, with a mirror diameter of 25cm. It's a pretty nice size, and I've a few (wall) display options planned for them.

The wee stand that's holding up the mirror on the table is a great bit of kit!

 

 

Previously I've used plate stands of the hinged variety but they look a bit... naff. And neither do they stand up especially well given their relative bulk. I found these kiddies on eBay and bought one pack to try them out, and quickly bought several more!

They fold flat and take up little space, which is guaranteed to please. And when in plate-holding position, they have a perfectly flat base, which is half the length of the gadget, making them as stable as it gets. Certainly a lot more stable than the hinged and frilly variety. Not just useful for standing mirrors, they'll also hold books or stacks of postcards or anything else of a similar nature. They weigh in at 4g each (!) and think they cost about £3.70 for a two-pack. My OCD self is pleased to have 10 in my case.

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It's all coming together pretty well, and the savings on the budget make up for the extra spent on the wee Hat stands. Tom should have the second display shelf finished in a few days and then I can try it all out together in the suitcases. I'm pretty excited about this particular exhibit; can't wait to put it all up for real!

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ETA/ I guess some folks will find it a little odd that I've gone into some detail about cost and the like, but I reckon it's pretty useful to discuss these sorts of thing, and see how quickly everything adds up. Transparency is a useful tool, and I've a detailed post about the hidden costs of pattern design/development, as well as other areas of this business, planned. I read way too much fiction about how much folk think designers in this industry earn, and a dose of reality wouldn't go amiss.

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AuthorWoolly Wormhead

For the last week we've had a film crew on site, making a documentary about how we live and how our small community functions. We get a lot of people coming here to film or take photographs, yet this crew have been different, because they are looking beyond the surface of the artwork or strange looking homes. And they're making a documentary in support of us, and for that reason we've been happy to co-operate.

In my usual fashion I tried my damnedest to hide from the cameras, until I was caught out early one morning taking my washing up to the communal washing machine, wearing a tatty old dressing gown and my wellies. Having been caught at my worst I figured I'd little left to lose and granted permission for an interview and for a photoshoot to be filmed.

It got a tad crowded in my caravan, with the camera guy and the sound guy and the director giving the interview, however Tom did manage to grab a few behind the scenes shots from the photoshoot; recording the film crew recording me recording Silvia. 

Gotta say, I found it difficult trying to work with anything up to 3 cameras on us at any given point! And it made me feel like a bit of an amateur, as we weren't having the greatest of luck with lighting and composition (i.e. it was way too sunny to get the angles I wanted). My body language in these photos isn't great - hunching to concentrate on the camera as you do, but methinks there's a hint of "leave me alone..." going on there, too.

That said, we did get some good shots. I haven't finished looking through them all yet, let alone editing, but here's a couple from that shoot..

Yup, that's Silvia modelling Playful Woolly Toppers Hats. I realised with Bambeanies that it's seen purely as a kids Hats book, even though I included adult sizes, because of the way I presented the book and photographed the Hats... so with this book I want to highlight the fact that big people can have fun with these Hats, too. And Silvia is the perfect grown up to show them off! She carries the offbeat and quirky so well.

It's been a tad strange to say the least, though. Having cameras everywhere can get intrusive pretty quickly. Thankfully they've been a friendly and understanding crew. The film will preview at the local film festival in July and when they put the film up for public viewing online I'll be sure to let you know.

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Whenever I read reports about TNNA, it's always either about the yarns, the various angles of business (inc. how to be professional), the practicalities of exhibiting or the social side of the show. I haven't found yet a blog post or report about the down side of TNNA. Seeing as we like to keep things real around here, it seems only fitting to approach TNNA from this hidden angle.

Now, don't get me wrong - I did have a great time. I got to catch up with previous TNNA friends like Kate Oates of Tot Toppers and Heather Dixon of Army of Knitters. I got to spend more time with people I only met briefly last year, like Mercedes T Clark and Miriam Felton; folks that I hope I can call new friends. I also got to connect with some great yarn companies, including. Lornas Laces, The Wool Dispensary and Baah Yarns. I did have a brilliant time and I'd do it again without hesitation. But I can't lie and pretend that it was all smiles and happiness, and that there weren't any difficulties.

Finances
One of the biggest issues is cost. It's not cheap for anyone to go to the show, unless they happen to live around the corner. It's not cheap for anyone to exhibit, either. And all of these costs are multiplied when you have to come from the other side of the world. 

Travel: the travel alone cost a small fortune. All in all, including everything from bus tickets to excess luggage and flights, my total travel expenses came to £995. That's roughly $1492. And we booked 6 months in advance to get it that cheap.

Accommodation/general living expenses was one the cheapest aspects of the show, running in at £340 or $510.

Exhibiting was costly. Not just the booth hire and the hire of all the equipment from the conference centre, but also the building of the display and all the other peripherals. Tom doesn't work for free for me; if he puts hours into making something unique then his time has a value too, and he quite rightly gets paid for that. So let's break the costs of exhibiting into two categories: hire and tangible costs.

Booth hire, including all the extras such as tables, drapes and so on came to £525 or $785. I did this carefully, too, so if you're thinking about exhibiting you might want to budget for more.

The display materials, everything that came home with me, from the printed banners to the custom built shelves, doubled that total and then some - a further £725 or $1090. Thankfully this is all stuff I can re-use so I don't feel like it's cash totally lost, but it's still cash spent none the less.

And then you have the marketing and promotional costs - business cards and the like. They came to roughly £150 or $225. That's a lot less than many spend, but you already know I'm cheap.

That brings the monetary value of my 7 day round trip to £2735 or $4102. That doesn't include the months of worrying, thinking and planning beforehand, or the cost of a week off afterwards due to jet lag.

Now, you'll always hear folks saying that in business you gotta spend money to make money. Which is all well and good when you have money in the first place. And that's where that flippancy starts to piss me off, as TNNA this year cost me more than we spent on the double decker bus that we call home. It cost the equivalent of keeping my family fed, watered and sheltered for 4 months. Put into perspective like that, you can see why the outlay of this year's show is still stinging. I remain optimistic that it'll have been worth it, even if I don't see an immediate return. But I think it's worth noting just how much of an investment it's been, even if to some the fiscal cost is on the slim side. 

Emotions
This one is a much harder cost to quantify.  

If you've ever exhibited before, you'll hopefully appreciate how difficult it can be to put yourself on show. As much as you're exhibiting your work, and that is what folks come to see, in essence it's you that you're exhibiting. Your creativity. Your planning. Your thoughts and ideas and skills. I both love it and hate it. I was taught well - with a good art college degree behind me I know how the game works yet I still loathe it. It's an emotional projection, and afterwards the come down can be pretty severe. Sure this is a business show - a trade show - and it should be treated like such, and I'm pretty sure many exhibitors may feel differently. But I wasn't exhibiting tangible goods or inanimate objects. And nor am I player in the wannabe corporate world. I'm a small time designer who put her ideas on show, even if the buyers were seeing something very different.

Last year was my first year at TNNA and I found the culture shock pretty hard to deal with. Mostly, I'm withdrawn, I rarely come out of my cave; we can thank the black dog for that. If I need to interact or be sociable I tend to adopt a more outgoing stance and alcohol is usually involved, as I've not yet found another way of coping. And it's exhausting. The life we lead couldn't be further from the world of business and trade - we hate waste, we recycle and reuse, we consider every action and reaction. We live simply and frugally. We're down to earth and take people as they come and expect folks to take us as they find us. We live pretty quietly, all told, and the idea of being at such a *huge* show, where everyone is there to sell something in the game known as big business, is pretty intimidating.

The one aspect that troubles me the most is the 'face' of business, for want of a better description. Everyone smiles and greets and is outwardly polite, which is all well and good when it's genuine, but when it's not it's a veneer. And I blogged before about how myself and veneers don't really get along. I can't trust people if I don't see a hint of human. If there isn't a sign of real life somehow, like a discreet cursing or an imperfection of some kind then I get paranoid. It wouldn't be an understatement to say that TNNA on the whole makes me paranoid, until I see a real, likeable side of someone, something you can connect with, and then I can let out a huge sigh of relief. I'm aware that a lot of this is down to being a Brit who's very European delving into the alien world of American business, because we really do do things very differently. But part of it is also my personality, I'm just not a business minded sort; I know how it works but it doesn't suit me very well. 

Having braved it once I was better prepared, and the damage from the general meet and greet was limited, yet couple that with the exhibition fallout and you're left with a bit of a mess in this corner. The whole trip was a real whirlwind, so much going on and so far to travel in such a short space of time. And probably not surprisingly, given that I do live with the black dog, I'm still dealing with the emotional fallout from it all. My moods are all over the place; once a week I'm having to talk myself off the ledge, and I'm waking in the middle of the night with panic attacks.

You might be wondering why I bother with it if this is what it really costs, and to that I would say that it's something I need to do if I want to grow my business and continue supporting my family. It's as simple as that. I'm the breadwinner in our bushold and I gotta keep the pennies coming in. Or at least, for now I feel the benefits outweight the costs. That, and that I love to catch up with friends and stay in touch with the industry. As I said before, it's far from being all bad. It's a bittersweet thing, and this is a side which rarely gets acknowledged yet is so important to bear in mind.

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You've no doubt read various reviews of this years' show and which yarns will be hitting the shops this coming season. For me, TNNA is a bit different in the yarn aspect. As much as I'm keeping my eyes open to see what's new, I'm also sourcing yarns for forthcoming projects and talking to yarn companies about future possibilities. I go with my ideas, talk to yarn companies about the possibility of sponsorship, which yarns might suit which projects better, and take it from there.

More often than not, if the yarn company has the right yarn with them, I'll come home with it, as it's not worth their while shipping a single skein. Or if it's a yarn company I'll be working with on a greater scale, then naturally that'll need a follow up after the show and may involve larger parcels! I'm mindful, though, not to take yarns I won't use or to over commit - I don't have space for surplus yarns and I don't want to be greedy (and believe me, it takes some self restraint!). And so, the yarns I'm going to share today are not the only yarns I petted during the show, and are not the only yarns I'll be working with throughout the year.

 

These hand dyed DK beauties are from Baah Yarns, a company I've not worked with before. The folks who run the company were very friendly, and that always bodes well with me. I have a particular design in mind for these colours, something for Playful Woolly Toppers, and I enjoyed sorting through their colours, seeing which worked well with which for the design I had in mind. 

 

This gorgeous skein came from the Wool Dispensary and those greens are even better in real life. Y'know how sometimes you meet someone and straight away you know they're your kind of person? That. Sam had the most amazing tattoos, and she'd just had a fresh one inked that morning, which was pretty rock n'roll. This skein is begging to be a single design, and I'm pretty certain I know what it wants to be.

 

Kollage Yarns were one of the sponsors of the Yarn Thing Designer Dinner, and they're also hosting a Design competition. I'm not sure if I'll be entering the competition as there's already enough on my plate, but I do like this yarn and can see it working well with a design from the book planned for *after* Playful Woolly Toppers (yeah, I know...) This is their 'Toasty' yarn, a 100% wool single play, which is my kinda thing. It'll knit up pretty quick, and at the right gauge, be firm and woolly which is perfect for the design I have in mind...

 

Next we have some gorgeous yarns from Anzula. I met them for the first time last year, and used their Oasis yarn in North Lyme. This year they were very happy for me to take a few skeins for different projects, which was very generous of them. These shown above are also earmarked for the book *after* PWT (I guess at some point I'd better tell you what that one is called...?) This is their Kern yarn, which is 100% Huacaya Alpaca and has the most amazing texture and halo. I can't wait to see it knitted up.

 

And more Anzula! The pink and green will be used in Playful Woolly Toppers, and that gorgeous grey will be a single design. The pink and green are both 'Dreamy' which is a 75% merino/15% cashmere/10% silk blend, and the grey is their 'Sebastian' which is a superwash merino/sea cell blend. Nice stuff!

 

Here we have a lovely selection from Shibui Knits. Their yarn range and colour palette are very subtle and wearable, and the yarns they generously gave me last year were used for Corella and the forthcoming Imagiro in Classic Woolly Toppers. Lovely, lovely stuff. The dark pink and grey, both Baby Alpaca, will be used for a Playful Woolly Toppers design, and that rich brown, the Merino/Alpaca, will be a single design.

 

Before heading to TNNA, Dream in Colour contacted me about the possibility of a collaboration, so whilst there, I popped over for a chat. We still need to discuss a few things and see what's on the horizon, and in the meantime, they gave me this skein of their Groovy chunky to play with. I can see this one being a single design, a design that let's those colours shine. I'll keep you posted as to how this develops.

 

Valley Yarns were also sponsors of the Yarn Thing Designer Dinner, and I very much liked the woolly-ness of this yarn. This is another yarn earmarked for the book *after* PWT, and you may have noticed that most of the yarns for this book are structured, plied, and subtle in colour. Those properties are pretty important; that and the fact that they're in quantities greater than 100g...

 

And finally! A skein of Alisha Goes Around Cracks of Bison fingering, which will be a single design. One skein of their yarns that they kindly gave me last year has been used in Annula in Classic Woolly Toppers, and I was happy to show them the finished design.

The 2nd two balls there also came to me via the Yarn Thing Designer Dinner. Normally, oddballs are intended for swatching and then following up after the show, but as I've said previously, that isn't always a practical option for single skein designs. These two though I felt I could use with other yarns, as I think they'll mix well. Both are possum/merino blends - the green Heron worsted weight and the red is Rimu DK, both from Zealana. I particularly like the tweed in the green...

Phew! That's a lot of yarns, yes? And that's barely the tip of the iceberg. Lots of ideas are flowing, I'm itching to get going with some of these! But book work awaits... Classic Woolly Toppers is almost done...

PS/ Non US readers - fret not, as I know many of these yarns aren't available to you. As always I'll be designing with a mix of yarns from UK/Europe/US etc, indies and bigger yarnies alike - I do try to be fair and consider everyone!

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AuthorWoolly Wormhead
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