Workshop sneak-peek

I don’t know about you guys, but even (or maybe especially) as an organizer, I can’t stop staring the beautiful goodies our vendors are preparing for YarnCon this year! But, as we all know, YarnCon is not just about the wonderful fiber goodness our vendors have for sale, it is also about learning new ways to put that fiber to use, and we have some great workshops lined up for you.

We are hard at work getting the registration system ready (new and improved, go Team YarnCon!) and we will let you know in the next few days when it goes live. Perhaps you would like a hint of what is in store? OK!

Miriam Felton (http://www.miriamfelton.com/) will teach you how to fix mistakes in your lace knitting, and how to make footie socks everyone can wear and enjoy.

Maybe you are just about done knitting a lace shawl, but you want a really special bind-off for it. Corrina Ferguson (http://picnicknits.com/) will be teaching a variety of ways to bind off lace shawls and shawlettes, to make that project extra special.

We are so pleased that Theresa Schabes (http://woolly-wits.blogspot.com/) will be joining us again this year to teach four classes, with something for everyone. You can learn ways to recycle yarn, entrelac, how to weave in ends, and how to block your finished projects.

If you are interested in learning how to spin yarn, you can’t go wrong with a class from Vera Videnovich! She will teach you the basics of both drop spindle and wheel spinning. You can show up not knowing the first thing about it, and leave with hand-made yarn. Trust me, I was one of her students!

If you already know how to spin, and want to take it to the next level, we have you covered. Emily Wohlscheid (http://www.bricolagestudios.blogspot.com/) will be teaching how to spin from fleece and locks (and then you will know what to do with those amazing locks you saw the vendors selling,) and how to add enhancements to your hand-spun yarn. And Renée Jones (https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheBunnyBadger) will be teaching a class on corespinning! The possibilities are endless!

Maybe you know some kids who would like to learn to spin? Susan Levitin will be teaching kids how to spin yarn, on both Saturday and Sunday.

Spinning is not the only thing you can do with all of that fiber. Renée Jones will be teaching kids and adults how to make hand-felted soaps, and will be teaching about animal fibers in the process.

Speaking of felt, Denise Handwerker (http://www.feltwerker.com/) is back with brand-new classes on how to recycle wool sweaters into lovely and useful felt creations, and a class on how to take that old sweater and turn it into a warm pair of felt slippers!

So much talk about knitting, spinning and felt, but what about crochet? Kathy Kelly has you covered with two classes about Tunisian Crochet. In her first class she will teach you how to do it, and in the second class you can learn how to make a three-color Tunisian lace cowl.

Speaking of color, our workshop line-up would not be complete without classes that teach you to use color. Susan Levitin can teach you to play with color and learn how to make colors work together. And if you want to dye that yarn yourself, you can’t go wrong with Samantha Lynn’s dyeing workshops! She teaches two workshops, one with Kool-aid dyes (yes, you read that correctly) and one with traditional acid dyes. They are always a hit, and fill up quickly.

So, while you plan your fiber shopping budget, leave some room for some mad new skills to take your crafting to the next level.

 

YarnCon: Past and Future

As I excitedly added the link to the Request for Workshop Proposals application to the front page of our website today, I got to thinking about how every year I tweak the process just a bit (thanks to the great feedback from our teachers!) and just how far we have come since our first show in October of 2007. That’s right, for those of you who have not been with us since the beginning, we used to be a one day show in October. Although you won’t really see it if you attend YarnCon, there have been some big changes recently behind the scenes. I want to tell you about those changes and where we are heading, but I feel like talking about how we got started should come first. I can get really chatty when it comes to talking about the past, (just ask my adviser about my Master’s thesis! Yikes!) so I will try to not overdo it.

Past:

In the Summer of 2007, Sara came to me with an idea. Let’s start a yarn craft fair, like Renegade, but just for yarn. She already had a name for it: YarnCon, like the comic-cons, but again, for yarn. I thought it was just crazy enough to work, and said yes. That summer we started an LLC called Yarny Goodness to be YarnCon’s parent company, and to give us room to grow. I think that before we even had the first show under our belts, we were already looking ahead for what else we could do with this idea of gathering fiber artists. We talked about magazines, online market places, other events throughout the year, and dreamed while we got our first show up and running. That October, we held our first YarnCon at the Pulaski Park Fieldhouse, with 25 vendors, a couple of free workshops run by friends who volunteered, and a photography project in the corner which was the idea of a local knitter and blogger named Franklin Habit. It was the 1000 Knitters Project, and we gave him a corner to set up his photobooth. We also had a book signing (Susan Strawn’s Knitting America) and the author sold out of her books before the day was over. At least 2 of our vendors were yarn stores, one of which has since closed, and the other has changed hands. We broke even, and in our minds it was a huge success, and the reviews were very positive. I think we had almost 300 shoppers that day.

YarnCon 2007 at the Pulaski Park Fieldhouse

YarnCon 2007 at the Pulaski Park Fieldhouse

With the exception of 2012, we’ve hosted YarnCon every year since 2007. First in October, then  in April after the move to the new location. It has grown from a one day show in a park district auditorium to a two-day affair in the Plumber’s Union Hall, with a large parking lot and loading docks and elevators. We quickly brought on one of our first volunteers, Lindy, to help us run the show (she was already helping so much it only made sense to make it official!)

Our first year at the Plumbers Union Hall

Our first year at the Plumbers Union Hall

But, we never stopped thinking about what else we could do.

Future:

Still with me? Excellent! As I mentioned earlier, we had created an LLC to manage the show. But, we still had this desire to do more throughout the year. YarnCon does a good job of paying for itself, but not much more, since we try hard to make it affordable for both our vendors and our community (what other yarn show has free admission?) So, what to do? Last Summer, Sara and I started looking for a location to work out of, and hopefully share with other fiber artists. A place where we could hold workshops and events all year long. In the process of figuring this out, we came to the conclusion that the best way to approach this is as a not for profit. We talked to Lindy and some other very smart yarny people in our community and decided to create a new non-profit: The Society for the Lost Arts (or SLA for short.) Now we can use this new organization to raise funds not only to host more programming during the rest of the year, but also to host YarnCon! After so many years of being first a 2 person and then a 3 person team, we now have a Board of people who care about the fiber arts community in Chicago as much as we do, and who love learning and teaching about some of the older art forms we all love. Let’s face it, knitting, crochet, weaving, spinning, this stuff is not new. And if we don’t keep sharing it, learning about it, doing it out where people can see us and get excited, it can be forgotten. Right now the fiber arts are hot, and we love it! We want to contribute with shared knowledge, and a shared space to spread the knowledge, and to share the tools we need to make the things we love.

Exciting, right? How can  you help? One way to is share this (lengthy) post and spread the word. The other is by contributing to the Society for the Lost Arts. We want to keep YarnCon as it is, an affordable venue for talented fiber artists, so in order to add programming and a shared space we need to make money in other ways. We will soon be sharing all kinds of sponsorship opportunities, and upcoming programs. But, in the meantime, if you can, please head over to http://societyforthelostarts.org/support-our-work/ and contribute whatever you can. We have a tiny space now to hold our looms, spinning wheel, sewing machines, and even antique printing presses, but we want to move into a space that we can share with all of you. Please help make this a reality for all of us. Thanks!

The show maybe months away, but planning is underway!

With the Winter Holidays upon us, even imagining Spring seems like an exercise in futility (have I mentioned I am not keen on Winter?), but as far as team YarnCon is concerned, April is right around the corner.

The deadline for Workshop proposals is this Friday, December 12, so if you would like to teach at YarnCon, please head over to https://www.yarncon.com/?page_id=313 and get us your proposal post haste.

We are already taking vendor applications, and it is never too soon to apply. We are taking applications until February 1, 2015, which is sooner than you think, so head on over to https://www.yarncon.com/?page_id=125 and show us what you make! And please spread the word to anyone you might think has some yarny talents to share.

In the meantime, happy crafting, and happy holidays!

Shopping and teaching, oh my!

Hey yarnies, I’ve got a couple of quick updates for you! First of all, Vogue Knitting Live comes back to Chicago this weekend, and you can get a 50% discount on the admission to the Marketplace and for any classes that still have space left. If you want the discount, head over to https://www.eiseverywhere.com/ereg/newreg.php?eventid=90619&discountcode=FB50MP. A number of our regular YarnCon vendors will be selling their lovely wares at the Vogue Marketplace, so go and show them (and all of the vendors) some love!

Next, and even more exciting to me, is that we have put out the Request for Proposals for workshops for YarnCon 2015, which means that serious planning has begun! If you, or someone you know, is interested in teaching at YarnCon in April, all the information you need is right here: https://www.yarncon.com/?page_id=313. We can’t wait to see what you have in store for us, and please feel free to spread the word! As always, if you have any other questions, you can always contact me at natalia@yarncon.com.

Happy crafting!

A sense of community

I’ve been thinking about communities and what they mean to us a lot this Summer. In June I was all excited about World Wide Knit in Public Day; I had been picking out my projects to take to the park for days, coordinating with people, heck, even choosing what to wear. When that Saturday morning rolled around, I woke up with a migraine of epic proportions. There was no leaving the house that day. What to do? I was the coordinator! I grabbed my phone and contacted a couple of people in our community of stitchers, and in a few minutes, I had the whole afternoon covered. (Thanks Lindy and Karen!!)

Later this Summer, I was hanging out at Sifu Design Studio (as many of you know, I spend some time there helping my buddy, Lisa, out around the store, and you know, fondling the yarn) figuring I would give her a hand preparing for the Yarn Crawl. But, when I came in, I was in for bad news: Lisa was in danger of losing the shop over some shifty accounting by her previous accountant. When Kim from Chicago Knits Magazine heard the news, she jumped into action and started a Go Fund Me drive to save the store and pay off those back taxes. The outpouring of love (and money, in donations and purchases) was overwhelming. Sifu, like every yarn store in the area, is much more than a yarn store. It is where we go for knit nights, classes, help with our projects, and to meet up with our friends. These are more than stores, they are our club-houses where we gather with like-minded people and make new friends. It is where we share news, plan new projects of a variety of scales, and take a break from our everyday routines to create something new.

I feel honored to be a part of this community of makers. YarnCon is one way in which Sara, Lindy and I get to contribute to the larger community in the Chicago area, and throughout the Midwest. My life is richer because of the connections I have made with so many of you. Thanks for saving the day, in so many ways.

June equals playing with yarn in public!

I will admit, there is no time of year I won’t knit or crochet in public.  But, given the seasons here in Chicago, most of that public time in spent indoors; waiting rooms, cafes, etc.  However, once the weather gets warmer, my thoughts turn to knitting and crocheting in parks, and especially to World Wide Knit in Public Day.  It might be my favorite holiday (OK, it is not officially a holiday… yet)!  My only obligations include remembering to bring sunscreen and a water bottle, and of course planning which projects I will bring.  Fun, but not so challenging I can’t be social, which is important because it is a very social event.  Every year I meet new people, make new friends and see old friends, not to mention the hordes of tourists who come by and look, and occasionally ask questions.  And that is great, since we are there to be seen.  Now, you don’t have to feel obligated to talk to anyone, but for some reason I enjoy being a yarny ambassador, which is why I help arrange this little get together every year.

Speaking of this little event, you might want to know the whens, wheres and whats, right?  Of course!

http://www.wwkipday.com/millennium-park-stitch-in-public-day/

Where: Millennium Park in the Boeing Gallery North (it is the North West corner of Millennium Park, at Michigan and Randolph.  We are in the area in from the columns sitting in the shade.)  In case of yarn-threatening weather (rain) we will meet in the main reading room of the Chicago Cultural Center near the Randolph entrance.

When: Saturday, June 14 from 11am to 4pm.  Of course come as early or late as you like.

What: Bring you crafts (we are not strict about this, sure I would rather we mostly be playing with yarn, but everyone is welcome), something to sit on, sunscreen, and food and water if you would rather not buy those in the area.  There are public restrooms nearby, and it is downtown, so there are plenty of places to go for food and drinks.  There are water fountains near the restrooms if you want to refill your own water bottle.

You can find these details along with a link to the map of the park in the link posted above.

And here is a little blast from the past, WWKIP Day, 2007:

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Please help us spread the word, and join us!

Tomorrow is the big day!

Who’s excited for YarnCon??  I know we are.  Our vendors started setting up today, and although only about half have set up, we are already drooling (but we are careful to not get the yarn wet, we promise.)

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The doors open at 10am, and the first 50 people each morning get a goody bag!  And in case you are still not convinced, or would like to know more than that there is a place full of handmade yarn, fiber, tools and accessories galore, check out the lovely article Amy Kaspar wrote for the Examiner. Thanks, Amy!  We’ll see you at the Plumbers Union Hall at 1340 W. Washington tomorrow and Sunday!

Vendor set-up times

Hi Vendors!  We’re getting the set-up email out to you, but we all know spam filters love mass emails, so we thought we’d share the information here as well.

We’re happy to announce that we have Friday set up times this year, hooray!  You can set up on Friday from 1-4pm, then starting at 8am on Saturday, and you can show up as early as 8am on Sunday.

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact us at info@yarnygoodness.com.  See you soon!

6 more days to Register for Classes!

Ah, if only I could clone myself so I could take all of the classes being offered at YarnCon this year!  We have everything from spinning and dying your own yarn, color theory and planning your projects so that you choose the right yarn for the job, fixing those inevitable mistakes, knitting techniques (socks, cables and lace, oh my!), crochet techniques, creating with felt and felting, wow!  Sign up now at before classes fill up! https://www.yarncon.com/?page_id=14

A little note for tablet users: EventBrite, our ticket service, is working hard to get a mobile site working, but they are not there yet.  So, if you visit our page and can’t see the classes, don’t panic!  If you can get to a computer and register, that’s great!  If you can’t, please just email us at info@yarnygoodness.com with the classes you want to register for, and I will add you manually, and send you an invoice.

See you in six days at YarnCon!

 

Winter is ending, let’s plan for Spring!

I know it has been a long, long Winter here in Chicago, and throughout the region, and I for one and glad to see it be on its way out.  One of the things that has sustained me this Winter is wrapping myself and my family in hand-knit and hand-crochets hats, gloves and scraves.  Not to mention the projects I work on each night adding a little warmth as they rest on my lap as I stitch away.  But now Spring is coming!  That does not mean an end to stitching for us, especially not in Chicago.  We can now work on transitional pieces, cottony Summer accessories, and start hoarding buying yarn for when the weather starts to get chilly again.  That’s one of the joys of working with yarn, we can create our own comfort.

Now is the time to plan for those future cool days, by buying yarn, tools, patterns, and learning new skills.  You can do all of those things at YarnCon!  We have our biggest ever line up of classes this year, and a terrific set of vendors.  We even have a masseuse lined up this year, and a fix-it clinic at our lounge.  Come in with plan (or a blank slate), and leave with the ideas, skills and goods you need to make it happen.  We hope to see you on April 5-6 at YarnCon!