From Camilla Valley Farms in Canada.
(a few came in the old skein-style)
A group of Philadelphians who get together about once a month to talk, eat, and enjoy the fiber arts.
I'm sold on this yarn. These socks turned out really, really nice and looked great on her feet (worn with wool Birkenstock clogs).
I know I posted this picture before, but I thought I'd include it again. The socks, done in a modified spiral pattern, remind me of peppermint sticks. The scarf, in the same colorway, I've wrapped and left for her to open on new year's.

Here's my bro modeling his socks. Below, the first pair I knit him, in "Mineral." He says they're kind of baggy. I think maybe I'm making my heel flaps too long. Or his feet are too small. Or both.
Notice it's still in the original packaging? That's because it's technically a present from my mother to me and so I need to wait until Christmas to look at it. There's no way I'd be able to resist if I took off the plastic. Thank you Amazon, thank you Santa, and thank you Mom.
Here's a gratuitous dog picture. All creatures great and small:


The colors look nice together, I think. And the yarn is really wonderful to work with. A beautiful color. The only thing is. . . the ball is totally effed up. Above, you can see a big wad of tangled yarn from the center. This happened with the other ball as well and after spending -- no joke -- about two hours trying to untangle the mess, I realized that a good length of the yarn had wound around itself so much that it felted together. A total soup sandwich, as some of my people say. So now I'm knitting from the outside of that ball and expect I'll have to do the same with this one. What's going on?? Could it be that I was the one steering the ball winder? I'm hopeless.






Close-ups so it's easier to see the pattern. I still need to block the crap out of it -- John, I need my T-pins back -- but the knitting's done.




So the Koigu can make at least 5 of these babies. I still have enough to make one more big one and then I have some Koigu sock weight that I'll work on smaller needles. My goal is to knit 15 altogether (adding a third size that's even bigger, maybe) and be able to give them away in sets of 3 different sizes. (Three seems like a good number, better than 2, which is weird, and 1, which seems stingy.)
On the left, a finished tree. On the right, the skein of Koigu just waiting to be made into 5 trees, with green beads on. Oh A.C. Moore and your 40% off coupons. How I love thee.