Archive for the ‘Inspiration’ Category

Paper out of Linen

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Habu Textiles A-60

I am not sure how did it start for many of you, but my first Habu Textiles yarn was Shosenshi Linen paper that I purchased back in 2006 from Knit Purl store online. How do I remember? I have just found my receipt the other day. It was funny that I was actually looking for a raffia like yarn.. and I really didn’t know what I was getting myself into. When it has arrived it took me 3 hours to gently wind it by hand, as at that time I didn’t own yet a swift or a ball-winder. The feel of it really surprised me, it was much thinner and more fragile than I would want from this “raffia” to be. So my crochet swatch of it really didn’t do what I needed. I put it in the basket thinking what a fiasco… Only later to find out what a treasure I had acquired for my stash.

I know I have heard many stories later that people had purchased yarns like that from Habu textiles and not knowing what to do with it. But with time I have learnt – you can pair that yarn with anything or knit by itself and get an amazing result. This is what yarn from Habu Textiles was all about. Create your own with an array of their yarns to find one in particular you love.

Swatch above made using 4 different colors of A-60 on 4mm needle knit only with a single strand of it.

This season starts with a linen paper additions. Thinner (2mm) version of Shosenshi Linen N-67B has joined the team, it is still rustles as you knit with it and still has all the features of the A-60, but now you can incorporate it with with lots of other tiny threads or work it on its own as shown in a charcoal swatch below, knit single-stranded on 3.25mm needle.

And a thicker addition of Linen paper has also made appearance in a face of N-70, which represents 3 linen paper strands individually twisted, then plied together to create one yarn. It gives it rather chunky weight and can certainly suit those who love quicker results on bigger needles. Swatch in brick color below is made using 5.5mm needle and is also held single-stranded.

While doing some research one can find out that traditionally paper, linen paper has been used in kimono weaving in Japan for centuries. Paper has this amazing feature of heat insulation (for a laugh, bums on the street stuff their jackets with newspapers to keep warm, too literal, but it has a point). And on the subject how is it made.. flax is ground into cellulose-like mass and then strung into a flat tape that is later re-enforced with sizing/starch like glue. Garments created with this yarn are air light, if handled wrong this yarn can give you couple paper cuts, so be careful. But overall it is an amazing experience to try knitting with this one-of-a-kind material. You feel like a part of some secret club. It would sing in your hands, just give it a tune and listen.

Japanese Influence::Part II

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Among private collections that are open to public are Mary Baskett and Gene Sherman collections that are available out there to see. These ladies have started collecting Japanese designers’ clothing (rather works of art!) from around 1970-80ies and wearing every day and later retiring it, so it is now displayed to public.

This Fall Textile Museum in Washington, D.C. has presented us with an amazing opportunity to view their current exhibit Japanese Contemporary Fashion: The Mary Basket Collection. When my friends were over in DC from Ohio for a visit we managed to see it and it is truly breathtaking, the exhibit is still on till April 2010. So if you are going to be in DC, you have to go see it for yourself!

images courtesy of Cubistliterature and Olga Buraya-Kefelian

Now that I live in Japan, I honestly can’t wait for Kyoto Costume Institute to announce some amazing new exhibitions to explore! They are the biggest source of inspiration for me as I have grown up around fashion, but a different kind of fashion. And now I see fashion everyday from streets of Harajuku to peripheral residences of real Japan or at least where it all started….