My baby got married to an absolutely lovely and wonderful young lady who my whole family adores. She is friendly, warm, funny and caring. She makes friends everywhere, remembers people that she met at conferences and places in previous years and just made everyone she was with feel welcomed and befriended. It was the most amazing thing to be a part of. While we already considered her family, it's now official. The only downside is that she's very allergic to cats, and my cats leave enough cat hair and dander around to make another 2 of themselves, so we go to visit them, rather than have them visit us. It's not worth risking her health for that. She is however extremely worthy of getting hand made items. It's so easy to love her and the way she fits into the family.
Odette's Obsessions
Natural Dyeing, Spinning, Weaving, Other Fibre Arts, Gardening, Cooking, Costuming, and...
June 17, 2026
A little rant and some updates
My baby got married to an absolutely lovely and wonderful young lady who my whole family adores. She is friendly, warm, funny and caring. She makes friends everywhere, remembers people that she met at conferences and places in previous years and just made everyone she was with feel welcomed and befriended. It was the most amazing thing to be a part of. While we already considered her family, it's now official. The only downside is that she's very allergic to cats, and my cats leave enough cat hair and dander around to make another 2 of themselves, so we go to visit them, rather than have them visit us. It's not worth risking her health for that. She is however extremely worthy of getting hand made items. It's so easy to love her and the way she fits into the family.
June 13, 2026
washing and processing a new fleece
This fleece was easily cleaned. I put portions of the fleece into lingerie bags. I used my laundry tub to soak, with no agitation for any of the soaks or washes. I used a warm water soak to remove a lot of the actual dirt. Then I used a hot water wash with Orvus paste and Zep degreaser, which removed most of the lanolin. The second wash was just Orvus and a tiny squirt of Dawn dish soap in hot water. It needed 2 or 3 soaks in decreasing temperatures of hot water. As the water cooled down during the process, I used the next water bath at a similar water temperature as the previous one had as I drained it. Since the two factors for felting wool are agitation and abrupt changes in temperature, this would hopefully stop that from happening.
I tried a batch in the drum carder, but didn't like the results. The VM doesn't generally fall out in a drum carder, usually does when spinning. What I had missed was that this fleece was a bit tippy, meaning the tips were weak and were either a bit felted or they just broke off when processing, and there was a bit of a short undercoat and some felted cut ends. These caused a lot of neps to be formed in the drum carded batts. I tried combing with Valkerie viking combs, which produced a stellar result but about 25% waste, which is pretty normal. The problem that I found though was that required a lot of arm strength with the felted tips and cut ends. I ended up flick carding the locks and turning them into rolags, which resulted in minimum waste and a lovely, spinnable rolag. It's still a lot of work though.
I learned something. I'd been taught early on that flick carders work best using a tapping motion to create static electricity, which opens the lock and lets the VM drop out. This technique works exceptionally well, and doesn't take a lot of effort since it's just a gentle tap, tap that's needed. However, this works until it doesn't. With the weak tips and the bit of felting at the ends, that brushing that I've always warned people not to do, is totally required here. The tips need more effort than the tapping allows for and the felting at the cut end, despite being really slight, doesn't respond at all to the tapping. This means that I was tapping away and accomplishing absolutely nothing! So I resulted to a mixture of brushing the tips and then tapping. Takes more time and much more effort but I was able to get those beautiful rolags that I like to spin. It's going to take me forever to process this fleece at this rate.Now if only I had labelled the lingerie bags that I'd used to wash the 2 white fleeces in. They are all the same bag, as in the same colour, the same size, the same everything and when filled with white fleece, yup, they look all the same.
June 05, 2026
Beaded Dorset Buttons
All the peppers and tomatoes are in the pots. All the flowers for the deck are planted, although I just realized that I've been watering Geranium cuttings all winter, and I have an empty hanging basket that I should pop them into. I just found out why the parsley plant didn't do well last year, and not only because of the swallowtail butterflies. There is a chipmunk that likes parsley and I see him at the planter, nibbling away at the leaves and stalks! It's supposed to be rainy on Saturday, so I've planned for some time on Sunday to finish up planting the seeds. Beans, cururbits, Kale and chard on deck please!
I was playing around with Dorset Buttons a couple of nights ago and learned how to add beads to my buttons. There is a rug hooker that does Dorset buttons as well, but she uses heavier yarns and larger rings to make them. She adds all her beads after the buttons are finished and just sews them on. I didn't think that would work with my buttons. The Dorset buttons I make, are smaller and with finer threads, so I learned several different ways, including adding them while winding the spokes and sewing them on afterwards using 3 different methods. I'm pretty pleased with my first attempt. I used Perle cotton and some nice glass beads. Next time I'm at a textile store, I'll check for some beading needles with larger eyes, just to make things a little bit easier. What I had worked adequately, just not as easily as I'd hoped.This is another attempt with Perle cotton and glass bugle beads. It's smaller than the blue button. I think the ring was too small for the space the bugle beads take up, as some of them are pushed down a bit. Auto correct keeps trying to make it seem like I'm using Beagle beads, rather than bugle beads, which is kind of funny. Apparently bugle beads come in different diameters, which seem to vary by very small amounts, like .2mm, .4mm, .7 mm larger. Really, it might be fun to try, but I'm not in any hurry to source these as I can't imagine that what I made wouldn't work for most purposes for which I might need it. These work fine for me. Gina B Silkworks has some interesting button tutorials on YouTube, which are really well done.
May 30, 2026
Garden and fibre update
I've been digging in the garden. The May 24th weekend is generally the weekend that we plant our gardens. I'm usually away on that weekend so I generally wait. This year, the long weekend was early by almost a week, so I held off planting anyway. We had some coolish nights, but some early May weird frosts and I'd rather be safe than trying to find new plants. I don't usually plant cucumbers, zucchini, pumpkins and other squash until June, after having a huge problem with squash bugs from planting early.
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| Mortgage Lifter Tomato seedling |
The garlic is looking really good this year, with strong, thick, dark green stems. It's in the front of one of the raised beds. Behind it I've planted tomatoes. In the other raised bed, the front is full of lettuce, a couple of volunteer onions, cilantro and a hot pepper plant. Once I know the weather is consistently warm enough at nights, I'll plant green beans in the rest of the raised bed. Once the garlic is harvested, if I have enough time, I'll replant beans in that space, otherwise, I'll plant salad greens.
The blue gradient shawl is almost done. Because the yarn had very distinctive colour changes, I wound cakes of each separate colour and dressed the loom in stripes. The downside of this is that the weaving is all the same. I did start with the darkest grey for weft, transitioned through to the dark blues. If I can trust that the shawl will be about the length that I've actually woven, with about 2 inches wiggle room, then I've succeeded in using the remaining yarn from the weft. Otherwise, I'll have lost at yarn chicken and have to use that medium blue for the last couple of inches. My brain is telling me that I might look odd with only that little bit at the end. I'm happy to get this one off the loom though, because there wasn't a lot of interesting colour changes weaving this. That's why I like colour effects like short colour changes, log cabin and things like that. Lots of interesting things happening without a lot of effort weaving.
I've been washing more fleece. One of the new fleeces was a little musty smelling. The fleece was strong and not damaged, so I washed it all up over several days. It washed up nicely. The only issue is my own fault, because the lingerie bags I was using were fairly fine meshed and probably took an extra wash to get them clean. If I processed them with combs, all the trashy vm bits would come out, but I've run some of it through the drum carder to make batts that I've been then hand carding. Mainly this is because I'm doing a demo of spinning, possibly on a great wheel, and it's easier to make the rolags with pre-carded fibres when you have to talk with people at the same time.May 20, 2026
Busy, Busy May
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| Woad is flowering |
The May long weekend SCA Arts and Science event went well. It was fun, despite a couple of rainy hours in the middle of Saturday. We had 70 classes, many of them for 2 or more hours, and 202 people came out to play! My garb is all washed, dried and ready to put away. I have some lovely new oatmeal linen for a new tunic and some rust for an apron dress. I taught a class about using fleece processing tools, and still need to finish unpacking things. I couldn't give away enough fleece though, and had to bring some home. I'm washing up the second of the gifted fleeces today.
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| Allium beginning to bloom |
The farm next door has been putting drainage tile in the fields this week. It's a bit of a noisy endeavour so I was happy to go out for tea with my friend E today. We tend to be able to chat for literally hours. We go to a local Tim Horton's coffee shop, which kindly lets us sit in a corner with our tea and coffee for 3 hours while we catch up. You know, because we haven't seen each other in a week or two, lol.
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| unknown shrub |
The weather has gone from cool, to hot, and now back to cool with a slew of tornado and severe storm warnings in between. This meant that the lilacs, on which I hadn't even seen any flower buds, were in full bloom by the time I got home on Monday and the dandelions, that I've been trying to find time to pick and freeze for an upcoming dye day were just past their prime blooming time. There are still some out there, just more work to gather.
May 10, 2026
Colours of Mother's Day
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| Fern in our garden |
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| Washing a very nice fleece |
I also have an absolutely brilliant Icelandic fleece. It's labeled as a black/grey moorit. However moorits are usually in reference to a shade of brown from pale beige to reddish brown and this is definitely not that. However the tog is a pale grey and so very soft. The Thel is black and darker grey. It's stunning in colour and a very nice Icelandic fleece. However, I have discovered I'm not really thrilled with spinning Icelandic fleeces, so I'm donating it to the class, so we can practice dealing with double fleeces.
Finally, I had nothing long enough to comb. I asked a shepherd friend if I could purchase a fleece suitable for teaching combing, and she gave me 5 fleeces. One was given with the caveat that it was for me and not for teaching. It's almost solid black, with some weathered brown tips which will give the yarn character when processed.
What did I really do all Mother's Day? Except for the lunch break, and a trip to the dollar store on the way home to pick up lingerie bags, for washing fleece, I washed fleece. I did half of a fleece suitable for combing, and half of the Icelandic fleece. The other half of the Icelandic fleece is soaking as I write this. It has been a very fun day and having my guys cater to my need to wash fleece (the class is next weekend) has been very nice.
Yesterday I was at a crank in. That a gathering of circular sock machine knitters. We drag out all our heavy metal machines, tables, accessories and sock yarn, to socialise, watch demos and of course purchase supplies, all in a situation unconduisive to actually being productive. There is usually some sort of charity donation. The past few years it was Izzy dolls, donated to the local police department for use in kids trauma situations. I had 26 dolls hand knitted by friends and 6 I'd made myself. In the past couple of years I've made more, but they are a lot of work to finish up and I 've been spinning, knitting up that yarn, and weaving more, leaving little time for the fussy handwork of the machine knit comfort dolls. Still between my friends and I , we had the most donations! I also won a door prize, and the donated yarn wasn't taken yet, so I snagged it. It's really pretty. Despite the winning of a door prize, I think most crank-ins are really good learning situations. Crankers are very generous with their knowledge and help others. I met some really nice people and had a lot of fun.
May 06, 2026
A slow and interesting start to Spring
The farm next door to us was sold recently. It had an old bank barn which looked to be in really good condition, all the barn board siding was there and everything. . I think this was true because they started pulling it down and you could see that it was structurally in good shape. They then hacked away at fencing, pulling it down. They had a little bob cat thing with a pincer end which pulled down any branches over hanging the fields. They put all this debris right behind the old barn.
Today someone put a controlled burn sign on our property. They almost knocked our mailbox down in the process :(. For most of the morning, it was fine. The wind was blowing away from us and there wasn't a huge amount of smoke. Then, just after lunch the sirens started. In the end, the "controlled" burn had 6 fire trucks respond. I'm thinking all the old hay in the barn and that dry barn wood and fencing probably just went up in a flash. We have a couple of factory farms in the area. They rent and buy up fields to feed their cattle. Sometimes I think change in agriculture is not necessarily a good thing. A small family farm is gone to a large corporation or a developer looking ahead to sell it off as housing lots in the future.
New on the loom. I took a gradient yarn and divided it up into its various colours. They were dyed in uneven amounts, so I warped the loom accordingly. I think perhaps I should have threaded the left and right sides oppositely, but once it was on the loom, I wasn't changing it. I'm using the leftover greys and dark blues as the weft.



















