I just finished knitting my new fingerless mitts. I blogged about them about a week ago, when I was still working on the first and now they’re done, purpose made for cold outdoor sketching sessions in the 2016. Sparta Puss did her best to ‘help’ me and took it as a personal affront when I took my wool back off her 😀
My Mitts
1 Jan- Comments 9 Comments
- Categories Arty Stuff, At Home, Cat stories
- Author Rosie Scribblah
And Now For Something Completely Different!
23 DecOr a change is as good as a rest. I’m arted out! I wanted to have a break so I started knitting. I’m making some fingerless mittens, very useful for someone who does a lot of outdoor scribbling in all weathers. You can find the pattern here, from another blogger, Crafty Little Sewnsew. I’m using some lovely natural wool from the gorgeous Trefriw Woollen Mill in North Wales, which uses water from the River Crafnant to drive the turbines to weave beautiful traditional Welsh tweed. It’s been operating for nearly 2 centuries, most of that time it’s been owned by the same family. Sparta Puss has been helping me. Not!
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Tags: art, cats, crafts, fingerless gloves, knitting, knitwear, mittens, North Wales, pets, River Crafnant, Rose Davies, Tortoiseshell cats, traditional, Trefriw, water turbines, Welsh artist, Welsh tweed, wool, woollen mills
- Comments 1 Comment
- Categories At Home, Cat stories
- Author Rosie Scribblah
To buy my work on the Swansea Print Workshop site please click the image to the left.
Inspired by drawings of the taxidermy collection at Swansea Museum. I have given these antique artefacts a modern twist by combining them with images of rubbish – old fruit nets, bubble wrap and plastic – highlighting the problem of human pollution and how it affects wildlife.
20 percent of the cost of each screenprint sold goes to support Swansea Print Workshop, which receives no public funding.Hunting The Wild Megalith
Pasta Machine Printmaking, The Movie (with added cat)
Rosie Scribblah RSS
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