Tuesday, May 23, 2023

 Here's the perfect project for your Memorial Day weekend - start a simple, garter stitch seafaring pullover...generously sized from adult XS to XL, the Crew Sweater is easy to knit as well as wear. Knit in worsted weight, it is gauged for myriad yarns, but is really wonderful for Lily Brook Farms un-dyed Cormo worsted yarn.  Many farm-to-knitter yarns can be scratchy and rough, both to knit and against the skin, but Lily Brook Cormo has a lovely hand, soft and pliable, similar to the more familiar Merino wool. The pattern is available on my Ravelry shop, and find the yarn on instagram @ninavfuller . Give it a try -  you'll be genuinely hooked!


Thursday, May 18, 2023



 


Not all sheep are created equal, and the Lily Brook Farms wool is harvested from well-loved, heritage Cormo and Scottie sheep in Hollis, Maine. The yarn is spun in small batches at a local mill, Underhill Fibers in Gorham, Maine, where hand-crafted care brings out the unique qualities of the wool. Here's another gorgeous Nina Fuller foto...This particular Farm-to-Knitter yarn is a treat to knit with - give it a try!

on instagram@NinavFuller for yarn, and for patterns check out my Ravelry shop...

     Happy Knitting!





Thursday, May 11, 2023

 




The Wooly Turtleneck...


Although the temperature in Maine today has risen to a toasty springtime 80, it's never too late to think about knitting for the cooler months...start soon and your wardrobe will be complete by the time autumn appears. Here is another pattern designed for Lily Brook Farms gorgeous farm-to-knitter yarn...a bulky weight, soft and loosely spun delight. The Wooly Turtleneck is one of my true QuickKnit patterns...you can find these patterns and more in my shop at www.ravelry.com/patterns/search#query=jil%20eaton, and the yarn on instagram @ninafuller

Enjoy!




Wednesday, May 3, 2023

 


It's the month of May, and lambs are frolicking in the fields...specifically at Lily Brook Farms in Hollis, Maine. Nina Fuller, my fabulously talented photographer (the author of these charming images), has a bucolic farm where she raises a variety of sheep, and is producing gorgeous farm-to-knitter yarns. Her Cormo sheep produce wool that is similar to Merino, prized by handknitters everywhere for its lovely fibers. Cormo sheep are an original Australian breed, a cross of Corridale and Merino sheep developed in the 1960's and brought to the US in 1976. Cormo sheep are a resilient breed that thrive in a variety of conditions, and their wool is a white, fine, long fleece with quite a unique degree of fiber consistency that results in yarn that is soft and wearable, and delightful to knit with. Raised on Lily Brook Farm, and spun at a local mill, Nina's wool is available in both worsted and bulky weights, from Cormo and Cormo-Scottie blend wool; contact her at @ninavfuller on instagram for purchasing information. I have designed a collection of patterns for her sumptuous yarns, now available at 


Happy knitting!