Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Market Research

I took my bags to the coffee shop when I joined my friends for tea last week. I thought of it as Market Research.

I asked them to tell me what they thought.

Everyone told me they needed to be lined. I knew this, but I was resisting - my excuses ranged from "they are softer if you don't hide the hair with lining, to "then I'll have to pay for materials" or "it will take too long" to mostly "I'd rather knit than sew" - which is true.

But I listened. This weekend I went to the fabric store and came home with an assortment of very cute dog and cat print cottons.






I lined the bags and they are much nicer now - and more practical as well.




So thanks to Mary Ann and Linda for your suggestions.




Thanks also to the young woman at the next table who overheard our conversation and suggested that if the smaller bag was lined it would be perfect as a chalk bag for climbers. It would!




Tuesday, May 24, 2011

And a few more.....

Nudge and I spent some time this afternoon enjoying the perfect spring day to photograph a few more "doggy bags". I will put them in my Etsy shop later in the week.

Nudge is not a sun worshiping dog. As soon as the bright sun comes out he squints his eyes and makes a beeline for the shade. I suspect that blue-eyed dogs are more sensitive to the sun. So while I ambled around in the sunny garden, taking pictures, he napped under an apple tree.
Here are a few of the bags:


A lacy pattern, from very soft Great Pyrenees hair




Scottish Deerhound hipster bag



The bag is from a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel and the handle is Goldendoodle


And another Cowichan Inspired Bag - this from Border Collie and Golden Retriever





Now it is time to work on some bags from cat hair - stay tuned.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Cowichan Inspired Doggy Bags


Most Canadians are familiar with Cowichan Sweaters – the beautiful, banded, heavy woolen sweaters knit by the First Nations women on Vancouver Island. These sweaters are perfect for our cool, rainy west coast weather.



Recently our Guild had a talk given by Sylvia Olsen. Sylvia is the author of a fabulous book called Working With Wool – A Coast Salish Legacy and the Cowichan Sweater. http://www.sylviaolsen.ca/ It is a fascinating read – I bought a copy for myself. I hadn't realized how central these sweaters were to the economy of our First Nations people. Many women were able to put food on the table only because of their knitting.

But what intrigues me even more in the lore of the Salish people is the type of fibre they worked with long before Europeans arrived and introduced sheep and knitting needles. Heavy mats and blankets were woven from both mountain goat hair and dog hair. The Coast Salish people raised a small, white, woolly dog for its hair. I'm sure other cultures must have used dog hair, but I am not able to find information about it. It seems that these wool dogs were unique to this part of the world.They actually may be one of the earliest examples of dog breeding – selecting dogs for desirable qualities.

There are many stories about these dog. In Sylvia's books she says “the little white dogs whose hair complemented the goat wool were trained in magic and imbued with skills and traits not common to just any dog”. I love this, not only dog hair but magic dogs! And right here, where I live.

So thinking about both the magic dogs and the beautiful Cowichan knitting and I tried blending some different colours and breeds into my bags. I started with the hair of one of the most magic looking dogs I know – Maxine.




Maxine is an Australian Shepherd whom I met when she was a small puppy – I did her first set of vaccinations while she was still with her breeder. A year or so later, I saw the most beautiful dog ever, standing outside Walmart. I introduced myself to her person and gushed about how pretty she was and how I was enchanted with blue-eyed dogs. During the conversation, we realized that she was the same dog I'd met as a puppy! I convinced her people to save her hair for me.

The gray in these bags is from Maxine. The white is from a local Great Pyrenees and the red belongs to a Golden Retriever. I believe these Cowichan inspired bags hold a bit of dog magic.