
 I've 
                                      been knitting for about a month now, 
                                      but for the record, I really, really 
                                      did not want to knit. First of all 
                                      it's so, you know, cool now. 
                                      Not that I personally know anyone 
                                      who knits besides my mom, my aunt, 
                                      and my grandmother, but I get Bust 
                                      magazine. I've heard about the trendy 
                                      yarn cafés opening up in the 
                                      cities, and, yes, I've seen all the 
                                      swanky little yarn shops popping up 
                                      here and there.
I've 
                                      been knitting for about a month now, 
                                      but for the record, I really, really 
                                      did not want to knit. First of all 
                                      it's so, you know, cool now. 
                                      Not that I personally know anyone 
                                      who knits besides my mom, my aunt, 
                                      and my grandmother, but I get Bust 
                                      magazine. I've heard about the trendy 
                                      yarn cafés opening up in the 
                                      cities, and, yes, I've seen all the 
                                      swanky little yarn shops popping up 
                                      here and there.Secondly, 
                                      I tried knitting once, and it did 
                                      not go well. And last year, even after 
                                      I found my childhood stash of large 
                                      needles (10, 10.5, 13, and 15), dutifully 
                                      stored by my mother "just in case," 
                                      I knew I would never need them. Still, 
                                      I couldn't bring myself to throw them 
                                      out. 
                                    Besides, I 
                                      was needle-felting at the time. Now 
                                      there was something not everyone 
                                      was into. It involved dangerous-looking 
                                      little tools for poking fibers together, 
                                      required no patterns, and allowed 
                                      lots of room for whimsy and/or error.
                                    But alas, there 
                                      was knitting in my future.
                                    
                                    It's my mother-in-law's 
                                      fault I had llamas on my mind in the first 
                                      place. And it's the llamas' fault I began 
                                      to knit.
                                    Here's how it happened, 
                                      starting with the llamas. Well, beginning 
                                      a little before the llamas.
                                    My NYC born-and-raised 
                                      spouse and I had just moved to Michigan 
                                      (to a 20-acre farm, no less) from a fourth-floor 
                                      walk-up in Hoboken, NJ. My in-laws were 
                                      visiting from Queens for the first time 
                                      and we took them to visit a small wool mill.
                                    Our tour guide, 
                                      brimming with enthusiasm, ushered us through 
                                      two floors of bustling activity, and we 
                                      watched wooly locks wash, drip, dry, card, 
                                      spin, and spool. On the top floor of the 
                                      little mill, a cadre of women stitched fluffy 
                                      batting into colorful quilts and comforters. 
                                      I was mesmerized.
                                    So was my mother-in-law, 
                                      who, I should mention, is an inveterate 
                                      crafter. Not only did I marry into a crafty 
                                      family, I come from one myself. One grandmother 
                                      quilts, paints, and crochets; my other grandmother 
                                      was a brilliant knitter and seamstress who 
                                      made most of my clothes when I was growing 
                                      up. 
                                    My mother 
                                      also sews and knits, but her one attempt 
                                      to teach me, when I was in my early 
                                      teens, resulted in a shabby (yet definitely 
                                      not chic) sleeveless sweater patched 
                                      together from two big, saggy squares. 
                                      Instead of yarn, I'd chosen some sort 
                                      of gauzy cotton strips that were the 
                                      color (and nearly the texture) of 
                                      ace bandages. The end result, clumsily 
                                      knitted on size 15 needles and full 
                                      of unintentional holes, looked like 
                                      something from Pat Benatar's "Love 
                                      is a Battlefield" video. Not in a 
                                      good way.
                                    Though I liked my 
                                      ace bandage sweater, and wore it until it 
                                      completely disintegrated from poor craftsmanship, 
                                      it had taken me endless months to knit, 
                                      and I didn't have that kind of patience. 
                                      I racked knitting up on that list of "Things 
                                      I've Tried Once and Am Not Good At," along 
                                      with bowling and tying flies. (Admittedly, 
                                      I now enjoy the occasional bowl, and the 
                                      latter is something I might try again someday.)
                                    I recalled this 
                                      story at the fiber mill when our guide asked 
                                      if was a knitter. "Oh, no, I'm not, but 
                                      someday, I'd love to have some sheep. My 
                                      aunt and uncle have a big flock of sheep, 
                                      and my aunt spins, and knits from her own 
                                      fiber."
                                    I paused, lost in 
                                      the lanolin smell of the mill and my shepherdess 
                                      fantasy. "But I can't knit. I tried it once, 
                                      and just don't have the patience for it."
                                    By this point 
                                      our guide had led us into the mill's 
                                      small gift shop at the tour's end. 
                                      It was replete with handspun yarns, 
                                      knitted items, quilted comforters, 
                                      and felted bags and hats. I'd never 
                                      seen needle felting done before.
                                    "Oh, it's so easy!" 
                                      our enthusiastic guide-cum-salesperson assured 
                                      me, showing me the keenly sharp needles 
                                      tipped with tiny barbs that interlock fibers 
                                      into felt. "Anyone can do it."
                                    Here is the crucial 
                                      point at which I might have missed fiber-artisthood 
                                      altogether: the point at which my mother-in-law 
                                      bought me a small felting kit. Although 
                                      I had no inkling of it at the time, it was 
                                      one of those truly life-altering moments. 
                                      And here I stumbled not only into a future 
                                      with fiber, but with llamas. And I was soon 
                                      to cross the threshold to knitting.
                                    

                                    As we were leaving 
                                      the mill, the guide handed me a slim magazine 
                                      for the Michigan Fiber Festival. "It's coming 
                                      up in August. They have fiber animals, workshops, 
                                      lots of exhibitors -- it's fantastic."
                                    Now, not only do 
                                      I come from a family of crafters (and one 
                                      full of carpenters and cabinet-makers and 
                                      handymen as well) but I've always been an 
                                      artist in search of a medium. In high school 
                                      I tried drama, dance, and creative writing. 
                                      In college it was sculpture, graphic design, 
                                      textiles, architecture, photography -- just 
                                      one or two courses in each, until the head 
                                      of the art department told me I had "no 
                                      focus." With senior year looming, I half-heartedly 
                                      invented my own major, somehow explaining 
                                      to the faculty (and myself) that the smattering 
                                      of courses I had taken constituted a "coherent 
                                      body of study."
                                    After graduation 
                                      I worked in art museums and art galleries 
                                      -- becoming what Julia Cameron calls 
                                      a "shadow artist" in The Artist's 
                                      Way 
                                      -- in other words, someone who works 
                                      with and for artists, but not allowing 
                                      herself to be an artist. I was even 
                                      in a band for a while. But nothing 
                                      felt quite right; nothing seemed quite 
                                      like me.
                                    I had been dreaming 
                                      of sheep, but when I went to the Fiber Festival, 
                                      it was the llamas I fell in love with. Conveniently, 
                                      the Fiberfest was soon followed by East 
                                      Lansing's annual Lamafest. And soon after, 
                                      we visited a nearby farm and came home with 
                                      two handsome young llamas.
                                    Llannie is a bittersweet 
                                      chocolate color, and Graty is an appaloosa, 
                                      whose fleece spins up into a beautiful heathery 
                                      color. But what I didn't know about llamas 
                                      is that they are extremely intelligent, 
                                      watchful animals, with enormous, soulful 
                                      eyes. Much like cats, they cooperate if 
                                      and when they feel like it. But they do 
                                      enjoy being walked around the farm on leads, 
                                      like big shaggy dogs.
                                    Everyone's first 
                                      question is, "Do they spit?"
                                    Well, yes, they 
                                      do, but ours spit but only at each other. 
                                      Actually, Llannie spits at Graty, and I've 
                                      never seen Graty spit. Neither of them have 
                                      ever spit at us (although you can get caught 
                                      in the crossfire, if you're not careful).
                                    They spend most 
                                      of the day grazing their pasture, and in 
                                      the evening they kush down on their knees, 
                                      just like camels. They need to be sheared 
                                      once a year, and then you have all of this 
                                      gorgeous fleece!
                                    
                                      
                                        |  | 
                                      
                                        | Graty 
                                          and Llannie's fleece, a felted Graty-bag, 
                                          and llama yarns | 
                                    
                                    Unlike sheep's wool, 
                                      llama fiber has virtually no lanolin or 
                                      grease, so it doesn't need to be washed 
                                      before use. (People with wool allergies 
                                      generally find llama and alpaca fiber hypoallergenic.) 
                                      It is a hollow fiber, and that's why it 
                                      is so unbelievably warm (and light!). In 
                                      fact, due to its hollow core, llama fiber 
                                      is technically considered hair, not wool 
                                      at all. Because of its limited elasticity 
                                      (hence, little "memory"), llama is often 
                                      blended with sheep's wool for felting or 
                                      spinning. 
                                    Like alpaca, llama 
                                      fiber is in the luxury/specialty fiber class. 
                                      It is measured in microns, a system that 
                                      passes fibers through a laser cell to determine 
                                      their diameter. A micron is 1/25,400 of 
                                      an inch, or 1/1,000 of a millimeter. The 
                                      average human hair can measure from anywhere 
                                      from 60 to 100 microns. Alpaca fiber is 
                                      a mere 22 to 28 microns in diameter; similarly, 
                                      llama averages 25 to 30 microns. 
                                    (For further 
                                      comparison, mohair measures 25-45 
                                      microns, merino wool 12-20 microns, 
                                      cashmere 15-19 microns and angora 
                                      rabbit 10-12 microns.)
                                    Alpaca is 
                                      a popular luxury fiber, but don't 
                                      discount llama as a beautiful fleece 
                                      to work with. Llamas come in 22 natural 
                                      colors, and their fiber is strong, 
                                      extremely soft, and offers an excellent 
                                      weight-to-warmth ratio. And as you 
                                      can see, it can be just as soft as 
                                      alpaca.
                                    
                                    So the llamas 
                                      joined our family, and I began needle-felting. 
                                      My first project was a pair of mittens 
                                      (I used my hands as the pattern), 
                                      then a pair of slippers, then two 
                                      purses, then a basket. More slippers, 
                                      more baskets.
                                    But inevitably, 
                                      when I told people I was working with fiber, 
                                      they asked if I spin or knit.
                                    And I'd launch into 
                                      the story about my Pat Benatar sweater.
                                    "Oh," the knitters 
                                      would gently reassure me, "I bet if you 
                                      tried knitting again it would come back 
                                      to you."
                                    (I see now that 
                                      knitting is a program of attraction, not 
                                      promotion.)
                                    In my defense, I'd 
                                      explain how much I love having llamas, how 
                                      I'd finally found my medium in fiber, how 
                                      much I enjoy needle-felting. "It's the perfect 
                                      medium," I'd tell anyone who would listen. 
                                      "I love soft furry things, I love animals, 
                                      and you can do anything with it!" (And this 
                                      without yet being able to spin or knit.)
                                    This fall, 
                                      my 87-year-old grandmother decided 
                                      that she wanted to learn to spin, 
                                      and my mother and I agreed to take 
                                      a few spinning lessons with her. (How 
                                      cool, a three-generational spinning 
                                      class, we thought.)
                                    So I began learning 
                                      to spin. 
                                    And then, there 
                                      it was: I had yarn.
                                    My spinning instructor, 
                                      kind and very wise soul that she is, insisted 
                                      that we each make something with the first 
                                      skein of yarn we spun. 
                                    
                                       
                                        |  | 
                                       
                                        | My 
                                          first scarf and hat, with Graty and 
                                          Llannie yarn | 
                                    
                                    She expected me 
                                      to actually make something with my lumpy, 
                                      patchy, puffy skein of what I'll very politely 
                                      call "novelty" yarn. But hey, I spun that 
                                      skein of lavender yarn my very own self, 
                                      and I was insanely proud of it.
                                    Well, I decided 
                                      I was going to knit a scarf.
                                    Me, knit?
                                    Well, I had to! 
                                      I couldn't let that fantastic skein of spun-by-my-own-hands 
                                      yarn go to waste, could I?
                                    And so my patient 
                                      mother showed me how to knit again, just 
                                      as she had twenty years ago.
                                    The needles felt 
                                      oddly familiar in my fingers. My brain didn't 
                                      quite remember, but my fingers did.
                                    Cast on? Doesn't 
                                      that go like this? Oh! Oh yeah, this goes 
                                      like this...the yarn does this...and suddenly, 
                                      I was knitting.
                                    Now I can't spin 
                                      fast enough to have sufficient yarn to knit 
                                      with. I admit I'm sticking to relatively 
                                      simple projects (yes, I'm still easily frustrated, 
                                      and not terribly patient) -- but then again, 
                                      I've only been knitting for a month. But 
                                      in a month I've knitted a scarf (yes, from 
                                      my crazy lavender yarn!) and five hats -- all 
                                      from my self-spun yarn.
                                    And proudly, I can 
                                      cross knitting off the list of "Things I've 
                                      Tried Once and Am Not Good At."
                                    
                                    SOURCES/RESOURCES
                                    Michigan 
                                      Fiber Festival:
                                      http://www.marrhaven.com/mff.html
                                    Lamafest:
                                      http://www.lamafest.com/
                                    Information 
                                      on the micron system and comparative 
                                      micron diameters:
                                      http://www.llamapaedia.com/wool/testing.html
                                    http://www.llamapaedia.com/wool/evaluation.html
                                    (from the New South 
                                      Wales Department of Education and 
                                      Training/Curriculum Planning Framework 
                                      and Programming Support Site, "Stage 
                                      5: Agricultural Technology, Measuring 
                                      Wool Fibre Diameter")
                                    Basic information 
                                      on llama fiber garnered from: "Storey's 
                                      Guide to Raising Llamas," by Gale 
                                      Birutta (North Adams, MA: Storey Publishing, 
                                      1997), esp. pp. 246-9,
                                    and
                                    http://www.llamapaedia.com/wool/character.html
                                    Note: 
                                      There were minor discrepancies between 
                                      the two micron charts I consulted, 
                                      but neither gave sample sizes for 
                                      each breed or described their data 
                                      collection (i.e. fiber from hind quarters 
                                      would vary from finer belly hairs). 
                                      Given that these charts both gave 
                                      ranges, I averaged them together.
                                    An interesting 
                                      point for spinners and knitters is 
                                      that any fiber measuring over 30 microns 
                                      is considered to have "prickle" factor, 
                                      or the scratchy quality associated 
                                      with coarser fibers. (See http://www.ymccoll.com/micron_reports.html)