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Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival 2008 Sunday 





So, OK I have already posted (maybe) too many photos of the Sheep to Shawl competition which does, technically, happen on the Sunday of the MD Sheep & Wool Festival but I thought that event merited its own entry. Since I've had a booth at the Festival in previous years, I have not gotten to watch the entire event before.

Maybe you don't agree that it warrants all that obsessive interest but, to people like me, who like to grow the fleeces, shear the fleeces, card or comb the fleeces, spin the fleeces into yarn and then make the garments ourselves, there is so much meaning in the wholeness of that creative process. It's not the same when you buy the yarn!

Polartec and combed cotton are OK, but does each plastic bottle or scratchy plant pod have a name and a beautiful face like our sheep, alpacas, bunnies and goats? Nah. We take care of each other. We feed them, they clothe us. Oops! I'm gushing again.


So AFTER the Sheep to Shawl on Sunday, I got to see something ELSE at the Festival that I have always missed, the Working Sheep Dog Demo !!! It was thrilling. The sheep were so prim in their manner that I couldn't help imagining them with fancy, church lady hats and white gloves on.








The sheep dogs, though, were wolfy and super-smart.









The dogs raced around so fast that I could barely get the camera to focus on them and, just as quickly, they'd stop for a moment and crouch menacingly at the sheep who got the message all right! They didn't like that crouch one bit.







Whatever cues were given by the actual humans were not obvious to me at all but the dogs read them loud and clear, herding the sheep around obstacles, into pens and finally, into the waiting trailer. The rest of the crowd seemed to love it as well. People were mesmerized.









I managed to get a quick walk through the main barn with my family, looking at the vendor booths but it was my daughter, Cassandra, who found something she just couldn't live without. While Nick and I waited to hand out the ribbons and trophies to our Sheep Poster Contest winners,







Cassandra, ever the teenage princess, used her cellphone to photograph herself wearing her new Lord of the Rings-style cape so she could send the picture to her friends' cellphones.









The poster kids were excited with their winnings. This one turned out to be the daughter of my next-door neighbor from 11th & 12th grade. She got $3 and 2 ribbons. Not bad for a 5 year old!








We share our space with the, aforementioned Skein and Garment Competition, Sheep Photo Competition and Fine Arts Competition and all weekend long I had been admiring the banjo playing sheep that had won best children's entry in the Fine Arts Competition









So, when the creator himself showed up, I asked him to pose for a photo, which he cheerfully did. What a talented kid.










Speaking of good kids, I found out on Mother's Day that my nice boy Nick, had bought me a super-cool pair of deliberately mis-matched socks at the Festival as my Mother's Day present. Good boy! If you're wondering whose booth he got them in, it was Delly's Delights.









Nick admitted to me that another member of the Festival Committee gave him the idea by showing him her socks. Yet another perk of hanging out with the Sheep & Wool Festival Committee gang, personal Mother's Day shopping assistance for your kids!



Seriously though, as much as I love the Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival, I love the committee members even more. It's very hard to move and leave them behind. It's far too mushy to say to their faces, but I will say it here. You have all been so special and precious to me. Thank you for making me part of your family.





Random sampling of committee members I happened to photograph at Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival 2008.





















































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Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival 2008 - Sheep to Shawl Competition 




Now that I have a nice digital camera, I fear that I may be going a little crazy with the photo-taking but, who doesn't think that the Sheep to Shawl Contest at the Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival is the coolest thing ever? It's hard to not want to post a bazillion photos of it because every part of it is so amazing!

It starts with the shearing of the sheep, to get the fleeces that the Sheep to Shawl teams will use in making their shawls.




Unfortunately, I got to the Festival too late to photograph the shearing at 8 a.m. I took the photo above at Sheep to Shawl 2007.



Each Sheep to Shawl team gets their own fleece to work with:








The teams have to then card the fleece, spin the fleece into yarn and weave the fleece into shawls. The looms are already warped but that's the extent of the preparation. The teams competing this year were:


Fiber Friends
3 Wheels Shy of a Loom
Chesapeake Spinners & Weavers
Mount Vernon’s Tidewater Treadlers
Butler County Pedalers
Waterford Weaver’s Guild
The Wool Fools
Springwater Fiber Workshop




Here, Wini Labrecque (alpaca fleece judge extraordinaire and, owner of Starweaver Farm) in Pennsylvania, cards while other members of the Butler County Pedalers spin.







Here a member of the team from Mount Vernon, the Tidewater Treadlers, winding a bobbin for the weaver while her teammate cards:





Fiber Friends (the eventual winners) had matching chef's outfits and the cute gimmick of using a Mixer to wind their bobbins in keeping with the cooking motif:







How adorable are the outfits of the Mount Vernon ladies? I want one to wear next time I do a spinning demo!:










The weaver from Springwater Fiber Workshop in Alexandria got going almost right away.








Gotta give it to the 3 Wheels Shy of a Loom team, they don't take themselves TOO seriously. It takes a real man to hand spin AND wear bunny ears! Where'd they find this guy?










The Waterford Weavers Guild also had beautiful costumes and I loved their gray fleece!










The Chesapeake Spinners & Weavers team wore beachy outfits and created an, appropriately-beachy, seafoam/sand colored shawl.









The spinning got pretty serious as the teams tried to get their shawls done as quickly as possible:










The Wool Fools worked away:






And so did the Butler County Treadlers but Wini found time to politely answer the questions of many of the onlookers. People LOVE this event and kids seem to be fascinated by it too.









A FEW HOURS LATER, IT'S TIME FOR THE PUSH TO GET THE SHAWL FINISHED, CUT FROM LOOM,
















Rush it to the table to be examined:








Clip any loose threads:






Make one final examination:







Then rush out behind the Fair Office, where Mr. Sheep to Shawl himself, Ed Hyland, waits with the hot water still, to wash the shawl.








The crowd was delighted by the happy, shawl-wringing-dance done by the team from Springwater Fiber Workshop:





The Waterford Weavers pat their shawl dry:





Then, a break for judging. The teams get a well-deserved rest before the announcement of the winners and the annual auctioning off of the shawls to the public.



Close up of the winning shawl:





photo of winning shawl - Sheep to Shawl Contest - Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival 2008




If you, also, think this contest is one of the seven wonders of the Fiber Universe, you can see live footage of Sheep to Shawl 2007 on Let's Knit2gether's Video podcast, which I found here:



Video of Sheep to Shawl 2007


For information about the entry rules and judging criteria, go here:



Sheep to Shawl Contest at MD Sheep & Wool Festival



Next entry, Sunday at the Festival starring.....Working Sheep Dogs!




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Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival 2008 - Saturday 
Saturday at MD Sheep & Wool Festival 2008 and the crowds were HUGE!!! The weather was also, pretty near perfect.







I dragged my son Nick through the Sheep Breeds Display barn like I do EVERY SINGLE YEAR (as he is quick to point out!) But I don't care, I never get tired of sheep, big sheep, little sheep, white sheep, black sheep, brown sheep, gray sheep, horned sheep I love them all and, also as usual, I took a picture of every single breed that I could get a shot of. I wish I could post them ALL here but, accepting that others may not be quite as obsessed with sheep as I am, I have chosen just a few:



Who doesn't love Jacob sheep with their crazy horns and multi-colored coats?








A lot of people don't seem to realize that Shetland sheep are not boring little, white blobs but actually pretty funky looking. And they are little when compared to the meat breeds.







Horned Dorsets are super cute! I wanted to steal these two.












Hey, Clun Forest, Ewe are adorable! And, since you have 2 lambs,
can I please have 1 ? PLEASE!!!!











Nick pretended he was soooo bored with all the sheep admiration but then I turned around and caught him petting a Blue Faced Leicester.







Of course, I did also visit with alpacas, bunnies, angora goats and llamas. This little alpaca from DAFI alpacas was adored by many little girls (and some big girls!) over the course of the Festival.










And, here is a cute little goat that might look nice in MY backyard in Florida









When I was finished adoring all of the sheep, I cruised through the skein and garment competition to see how the judging had gone. This year there was so much amazing felting!











Then, since I had no booth this year, I got to visit the booths of my
friends! I was both admiring and jealous of Greg Thorne's hand spun
yarns complete with adorable photos of the spinner himself. He blamed
his wife for the genius idea of including these photo labels.

Greg was nice enough to do a spinning demo for me a couple of years
ago when I was running the fiber arts tent at the Great Frederick Fair
and I still use him as an example when guys claim that hand spinning is a woman's thing. I hope he sold LOTS of skeins.









I went into Jane's Thistledown Alpacas booth to catch up with Jane and ran into my favorite alpaca fleece judge, Wini Labrecque. Jane was selling tons of alpaca and angora yarns, and products including 1 pair of alpaca socks that I bought for my sister.





Left to right, Jane, Jane's daughter, Wini Labrecque




Got around to Michelle Reilly's booth, Tripel R Farm in time to get a
photo of Carol Kopp (with a name like Kop, how could she NOT be a hand spinner?!) working there and admire Michelle's beautiful Kromski spinning wheels.









I told myself very sternly that I was not allowed to try out any spinning wheels at the Festival, since I finally own only one wheel (down from a high of 6.) But I may have glanced at just a couple with a look of pure wheel lust in my eye.













My husband was naive enough to point out the Golding wheel (above) to me! He actually thought I had never noticed this hand-carved wheel before, much less tried it out on several occasions. Men are so cute!





Speaking of spinning. I used to run the Jr. Handspinner's Contest at the Festival but this year I was promoted to judge while my friend Toni took over as boss lady. She did a great job and so did the kids.




















Here's the gang who ran the JR. hand spinners contest this year. In front is Roseann, the Uber Knitter, who's blog is linked from this one above at right under "Roseann's Amazing Knitting Blog." The two on the left in row two of this photo are SuellaC & Tonilee - those are their ravelry.com names.




I always visit the T-shirt booth even though I do not really NEED
more Festival Gear. It's amazing how many famous fiber arts authors
you run into there, including the one in this photo, the Anarchist
Knitter herself, Anna Zilboorg.






I took class with her at the Festival a few years ago and she found
me to be unbearably dumb about understanding her techniques, but I still had fun and think she's a genius.


However, If I had read her "Knitting for Anarchists" book BEFORE the Festival, I may not have signed up for her class. It's all about not needing instructions to knit. I'm not an anarchist, I'm a computer programmer. We LOVE instructions!



Sometimes the outfits you see at the Festival are as interesting as the exhibits themselves. I saw a lot of political T-shirts and buttons this year including this one which I'm not even sure I get:









But I like this outfit a lot better including the accessory sheep.









The last thing I did before leaving was check out this year's showcase event, run by the Society for Creative Anachronism. These people did a stupendous job and were demo-ing all kinds of fascinating fiber crafts from a warp weighted loom with rocks as weights to this one, which I am embarrassed to say I did not figure out the name of. Is it nallbinding? What ever it is, it's to-die-for beautiful!














Next blog entry --- Sheep to Shawl & Working Sheep dogs!


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Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival 2008 - Friday 

pretty Coopworth ewe & lambs




Friday is the day when we take the entries for the MD Sheep & Wool Festival. I was taking entries for the Sheep Poster Contest in the Bingo Hall where they also take entries for the Skein & Garment Contest, Sheep Photo Contest and Fine Arts contest.


I have to admit to feeling a little bitter this year because I went begging all over my own neighborhood as well as the Internet for kids to enter the poster contest and still got only 5! Look at these ribbons and trophies!!! I want one myself they are so cute.







Skein & Garment has no such problem. Every knitter, spinner, felter and weaver in the entire world wants to win there because they are the Mecca of the fiber arts world. So I was like the wallflower, loser who get excited every time a new exhibitor strolled in - hoping, hoping that they wanted to enter MY contest only to have them say, "Is this where I enter the SKEIN AND GARMENT contest?" Their voices would tremble with reverence when they said it. And I would say, "THEY DON'T EVEN HAVE TROPHIES!!!" No, of course, I only thought that.



Aside from the constant rejection, I was pretty bored so I amused myself by taking photos of the skein and garment entries and photographing their judges, even though it got on their nerves.
















Of course all of their entries are amazingly perfect but this one really touched me:









I also bugged the Fine Arts workers. If I could have stolen one of their entries, it would have been this one:









Whoever you are painter person - Your painting is To Die For!



Finally, my poster-taking duty was over so I cruised the fairgrounds checking up on the other activities. Down the hill in the main exhibition hall, my friends at Sheep Fleece Show and Sale were working their butts off. They took 596 fleece entries!!! and later I found out that, on Sunday, they sold over 300 fleeces in 3 hours! Are you listening alpaca people? Now THAT'S a fleece show and sale! This is my old pal, Phil Shane.








Meanwhile, my husband Tom, Mr.-Large-And-In-Charge of Grounds, was really working hard:









Ok, I shouldn't begrudge him his fun because gave me a ride to the vendor dinner in the show ring. Since we gave up our booth this year, we did not have to do the dreaded booth set up - Yay! We met up with friends, listened to good music and rested up for dun dun duh (suspenseful music here) ..... SATURDAY at the Festival......

(see next entry)










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