Drum roll please! Here are the winners for our three big giveaways.
1 bar of sheep's milk soap goes to:
- Brooke
- Natural Garden
- Susie
- Ackermari
- Daneen
- Sleepypinesaz
And last but not least, the hand spun, hand knitted scarf goes to:
- Zoe
Restoring a historic farm. Raising Icelandic sheep, Guinea hogs & Orpington chickens. Trying not to go broke.
Drum roll please! Here are the winners for our three big giveaways.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
11/01/2010 12:22:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: crafts, fiber arts, giveaways, soap, wool
Time is running out to enter our three big giveaways! To enter, all you have to do is go to the appropriate blog post for the prize you want to win and comment on that post. Only one entry per giveaway, but you can enter all three giveaways if you want:
Free Sheep's Milk Soap Giveaway <---Click on this link, then post a comment.
I said I'd give away free bars of sheep's milk soap to five people if my soap making project on Kickstarter met its funding goal. The project met its goal in just over a week, so this giveaway is definitely happening. I'll give everybody one more week to enter, then I'll announce the winners on November 1.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
10/25/2010 03:56:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: crafts, Facebook, fiber arts, giveaways, promos, sheep, soap, spinning, wool
I'm very pleased to announce that my Kickstarter project reached its funding goal in just over a week, so my soap making project WILL be going forward. Hurray! Many thanks to our generous backers!
I won't receive the actual funds for about another month (who knew we'd reach the funding goal so quickly?), but I want to get started on the project as soon as possible because I'm going to try to have all the backers' soap finished and cured in time to mail before the holidays.
Knowing that the project money will be coming in, I was able to advance myself some money from my hay-buying fund and spend the weekend shopping. Saturday we went in to town and got most of the soap making equipment. Sunday I went online and ordered the supplies. I only have a few more minor items to pick up while I wait for the supplies to arrive. Then I'll be ready to make my first soap!
Here's what I have so far:
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
10/25/2010 03:15:00 PM
5
comments
Here's giveaway #2:
When the farm's Facebook page reaches 1,000 fans, I'm also going to give away this handspun, hand knitted scarf.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
10/13/2010 12:31:00 PM
26
comments
Labels: crafts, Facebook, fiber arts, giveaways, promos, wool
Okay, so here's giveaway #1.
When the farm's Facebook page reaches 1,000 fans, I'm going to give away this beautiful Icelandic fleece:
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
10/13/2010 12:29:00 PM
27
comments
Labels: crafts, Facebook, felting, fiber arts, giveaways, promos, spinning, weaving, wool
Have you seen? I've been a very, very busy girl lately, with several big projects to help promote the farm.
First, I finally finished doing a total redesign of the farm's web site. Not only does it have a whole new look, it also has more than twice as much information about (and pretty pictures of) the farm. The address is still the same: http://inglesideicelandics.com/.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
10/13/2010 12:21:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: crafts, Facebook, farm, fiber arts, giveaways, milk, promos, sheep, soap, spinning, web site, wool
As I mentioned in an earlier post, I'm making a handspun, handwoven quilt for a customer, doing all the steps myself, from sheep to finished product.
After finalizing the design and selecting which fleeces I will use, the next step is to prepare the wool for spinning. This is the most time-consuming and tedious of all the steps, but it's crucial, because the wool doesn't exactly come off the sheep all clean and ready to spin.
Sheep live outside. They lie down on the ground. They rub up against trees. They stroll through patches of tall grass and weeds. So naturally, their wool picks up some dirt and debris: seeds, twigs, bits of chaff, dust, thorns, etc. The same lanolin in the wool that helps protect the sheep from the weather also helps small bits of debris stick to the fleece.
So, it's important to prep the fiber thoroughly to remove all the debris, so none of it ends up in the final product.
For the past few days, I've been working on preparing Urbana's lamb fleece, which is truly luscious. Very soft and rich, with a beautiful luster. Here's what it looked like while Urbana was still wearing it. This photo was taken about a month before she was sheared. From a distance, she looks pretty clean, right?
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
8/26/2010 12:08:00 PM
4
comments
Labels: crafts, fiber arts, quilt, sheep, spinning, weaving, wool
I'm starting a new, major project today!
A friend of mine has placed an order for a custom-made, handspun, handwoven quilt. I'm pretty excited about doing this because it will be my first of what I hope will be many more large projects creating beautiful, practical, and durable goods from my farm that are 100% factory-free. I've done lots of other smaller projects (jewelry, purses, etc.), but nothing approaching the scale of an entire queen-sized quilt.
By factory-free, I mean that EVERY material used has been grown on my farm, and EVERY step of the processing, from raw material to finished product, has been done by me, here on the farm, by hand. How often do you have the opportunity to own an entire quilt that has never, at any point, passed through a factory?
The quilt will be made of wool from my own flock of Icelandic sheep. I shear the wool myself, then wash, dry, pick, card, spin, ply, weave, and stitch it. I estimate that this quilt will contain more than 3 miles of double-ply yarn (which means that I spin 6 miles of single-ply yarn, then spin it back on itself to make it two-ply, a total of 9 miles of spinning).
The quilt squares will be individually woven by hand on my set of Quilt Weaver looms from Hazel Rose Looms. Then the squares will be assembled into the Maple and Oak Leaf pattern I designed. The colors will be the natural colors of the sheep, so no dyes will ever be used on this quilt.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
8/20/2010 03:02:00 PM
3
comments
Labels: crafts, fiber arts, quilt, sheep, spinning, weaving, wool
I'm a little embarrassed to admit this, but I raised sheep---and sold their wool to hand-spinners---for four years before I tried washing one of the fleeces for my own use. I'd somehow gotten it into my head that washing fleece was HARD, that in my ignorance I would inevitably ruin the precious locks of wool, and end up with an ugly, matted mess.
Eventually, after my flock had grown large enough that I had surplus fleeces piling up, I figured that it wouldn't be a tragedy even if I did ruin one when I washed it. So I gave it a try. And here's what I discovered:
WASHING FLEECES IS EASY! What a revelation!
So, just in case you, too, suffer from wool-washing anxiety, let me show you an easy method for doing it.
You will need:
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
6/10/2010 03:14:00 PM
4
comments
Labels: crafts, fiber arts, sheep, wool
I am deeply honored to be "Artist of the Week" on Hippie's Creations blog this week. Here's her interview with me.
Petra, the woman behind Hippie's Creations, is a very creative woman herself. She makes a wide variety of lovely craft items as well as her own line of bath and body supplies. And I was delighted to discover that she lives only a couple of towns away from me.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
2/23/2010 08:41:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: blog, crafts, fiber arts, interview
Here's a little project I just completed last night.
This beautiful, cobalt-blue wine bottle was too pretty to throw away, so I decided to dress it up with crocheted cotton lace.
The wine bottle, incidentally, was from Tomasello's Raspberry Wine, which was absolutely heavenly! :-)
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
2/22/2010 04:17:00 PM
3
comments
Labels: crafts, crochet, fiber arts, glass
Ever since I posted my tutorial on How to Make Felted Soap, lots of people have been contacting me, all asking the same question:
"WHY make felted soap?"
Oops! I guess I didn't explain that fully in the tutorial, did I? Sorry!Wool felted around a bar of soap forms a natural scrubby, with pleasant, gentle exfoliation, like a good washcloth.
It also makes the soap easier to grip. As the soap is used, the wool shrinks to fit what is left, so you can use the whole bar, avoiding those slippery little end bits of soap that are hard to hold, slip down the drain, and are wasted.
When the soap is gone, you can even cut a slit into the remaining felt "jacket" and use it as a small pouch! Or fill it with catnip for an all-natural cat toy.
Also, if you've never tried felting before, felting around a bar of soap is a quick, easy project, perfect for a beginner.
It's easy enough for kids to do, so it makes a fun craft activity for them. They may even enjoy bath time more if they get to use the results of their project! :-)
If you would like to try it, Soap Felting Kits and finished Felted Soaps are available here.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
2/22/2010 01:01:00 PM
2
comments
Labels: crafts, felting, fiber arts, soap, wool
Since one of the options in my current giveaway is a Soap Felting Kit, I thought I'd make an instructional video and post it here, so everyone can see how easy it is to make your own felted soap.
Prefer written instructions? No problem! Below are the basic soap-felting instructions that come with our kit:
Felted Soap Instructions
Felting over a bar of soap is easy and fun. Besides the soap and wool included in this kit, the only things you need to provide are a bowl of hot water and about 15 minutes of your time.
Your hands will get wet and soapy while you’re doing this, so you’ll want to work on a counter or tabletop that won’t be harmed if it gets damp. You may want to set out a clean towel to wipe your hands on, and to set your finished soap on to dry.
Ready to get started? Let’s go!
1. Fill a medium sized mixing bowl with hot water. The water should be as hot as you can comfortably put your hands in. Don’t make it so hot that you burn yourself!
2. Remove the wrapper and label from your soap.
3. Take the wool out of its bag and set it nearby so you can reach it easily, but where it won’t accidentally get wet before you’re ready to work with it.
4. You’ll find that your wool separates naturally into fist-sized lumps because of the way that it has been carded. Take one lump and gently unroll and spread it so that it is fairly flat and even. Wrap this pad of wool gently but snugly around your bar of soap.
5. Take a second lump of wool, spread it out, and wrap it around your soap in the other direction. If you wrapped the wool lengthwise the first time, wrap it around the width of the soap this time. Try to spread all the fibers around so that all surfaces of the soap are covered.
6. Repeat the previous step, always alternating the direction that you’re wrapping the wool, until your soap is thoroughly covered. I usually find that 3 lumps of wool are about the right amount. You will probably have some wool left over when you’re done, so don’t feel like you need to use all of it just because it’s there.
7. Once your soap is thoroughly covered with wool, cup it in both hands to hold the wool firmly in place, and dip it into the hot water. Still holding the wool in place, lift the soap from the water.
8. Gently begin to pat and press the wet wool against your soap. Don’t use too much pressure at first, or you’ll slide the wool out of place and expose the bare soap (If that happens, slide the wool back into place before you continue). The soap will start to lather. Just keep patting, being sure to show equal attention to all sides.
9. As the wool starts to felt, you’ll feel it begin to hold together on its own, without you having to hold it in place. At that point you can begin rubbing the wool more vigorously. If you need to, you can wet your hands or dip the soap in the water again. Slide the soap through your hands over and over, flipping it frequently so that you’re rubbing in all directions. Keep doing this for about 10-15 minutes or until the wool has formed a solid felt pad all around your soap.
10. You’re done! Rinse the soap in the bowl of water one final time to wash off the suds, then place it on a towel to dry.
UPDATE: If you've read all this and you're asking yourself, "Yes, but WHY would I want to make felted soap?" read my followup post.
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
2/17/2010 04:21:00 PM
4
comments
Labels: crafts, Etsy, felting, fiber arts, sheep, soap, wool
Today is my birthday, and I want to give YOU a present!
Starting today, I am accepting entries for our big Felted Soap Giveaway. On March 15, I'll choose one winner at random. The winner will receive his or her choice of the following prizes:
(1) Deluxe Felted Sheep's Milk Soap Collection: Five bars of our fabulous felted sheep's milk soap, one in each of our five natural colors. Click the link above for details.
or (2) Deluxe Soap Felting Kit: Everything you need to felt your own soap. You get five bars of our fabulous sheep's milk soap, five 1-oz. bags of pure Icelandic sheep's wool, and a set of instructions. All you need to provide is a bowl of hot water and a few minutes of your time. Click the link above for details.
There are multiple ways to enter:
1. Become our fan on Facebook (If you're already a fan, that still counts).
2. Tweet about this giveaway on Twitter, with a link to this page.
3. Write a relevant post about this giveaway to an appropriate online forum or group (Please don't spam your forums with inappropriate posts!)
4. Write about this giveaway on your blog, with a link to this page (you may use any of the photos above, if you like).
5. Post a link to this giveaway on your web site (you may use any of the photos above, if you like).
By doing more than one of the above activities, you can earn multiple entries, but only one entry per URL, please.
You must send an email to keepingthefarm@aol.com with details of your entries. Put "Felted Soap Giveaway" in your subject line.
Don't forget to include your name and an accurate email address, so I can let you know if you win!
Posted by
Nancy Chase
at
2/15/2010 07:32:00 AM
7
comments
Labels: blog, crafts, Etsy, Facebook, felting, fiber arts, promos, sheep, soap, web site, wool