Birthday Celebrations

Congratulations to The Workroom in Toronto who celebrated their birthday on the weekend.

For those of you who haven’t heard of The Workroom, it’s a great place to sew, knit, quilt, and make new friends.

Karen, the owner, had a little party to celebrate full of great food and fun prizes. We included a fun raffle prize that included a Carrie basin, some fun yarn (thanks to Louet for the contribution), a bottle of Unleash, a travel pack, and some great knitting books. If you didn’t win the Soak prize but still want to get your hands on a Carrie basin, you can purchase one from our online store.

 

Thanks Jean for taking these great photos!


Business’S cool- The Context of Business

Author: Jacqueline

The Design Strategy course at George Brown is neatly divided into three sections. First, we look at the context of business, then we get into the details of marketing and finally we end with integrating the design process into the business process.


This week we’re going to talk about the context of business. We all interact with a variety of businesses on a daily basis. Whether you pick up your morning coffee at a Starbucks, local independent coffee shop or by fresh beans at the grocery store to brew at home, by 9am, you have interacted with a wide variety of businesses. Someone made the coffee maker, someone pays rent and hires people at the coffee shop and someone hooked up the electrical outlets in your home. Each of those functions comes from a different business and each business has a history, vision, strategy, core competencies and operational plans. Each business is also affected by what is happening in its specific industry, the economy and the external environment.

We start with giving the students an understanding of how businesses operate and why they operate the way they do. We look at the driving forces of the organization. Then, we look at the businesses strategy, core competencies and operational functions. From there, we analyze the internal strengths and weaknesses, relative to the above mentioned strategic plan. Finally, we explore the external forces affecting business- the economy (how many of you buy less coffee on the go since the recession?), the environment and other social and regulatory factors affect and influence the business.

Essentially, we can all go on designing stuff, based on client briefs, because our bosses told us to, or because we just feel like creating new products. If we take the time to understand the business environment of our client, our industry or our own company, we bring an entirely new perspective to the design process. We not only design, but design in relation to the functioning business which gives us greater capacity, knowledge and insight that ever before. If we work from the corporate vision, focusing down through the organization and then widening back to the industry and external environment we can get an all encompassing view of what is really going on in business, allowing us to produce and manage stronger designs.


New from Soak | Heel- foot cream for feet worthy of hand-knit socks.

Our unique combination of ingredients restores the skin and soothes tired feet. Cucumber extract, Vitamin E and the soothing powers of menthol work together to form a luxuriously rich treat for sock worthy feet. Go ahead. Indulge.

 

Not a knitter? Heel– is perfect for all feet. Whether you are walking the mall in search of holiday gifts or treating your feet after a run, Heel is for you.

 

We’ve launched this great product with a few of our favorite knitting friends. If you are part of the Loopy Ewe sock club, you were treated to the first batch of peppermint infused foot cream. 

 

We were proud to launch Heel with the Loopy Ewe.Heel - Loopy Ewe

  

Jimmybeanswool.com devotee? Get a customized tub of soothing scentless with menthol to match the Lorna’s Lace limited edition yarn Goblin. We’ll feature a new limited edition tub each month. There’s also a lovely basic Jimmybeanswool.com batch as well.
Heel - Jimmy Beans Wool GoblinHeel - Jimmy Beans Wool
Soak is also new to JBW. Check out the two-packs on their site.

2 pack mini-soaks for Jimmy Beans Wool

 

Along with our scentless Heel, you can also choose from our delicate and cooling cucumer or rich and soothing spearmint.

Heel TurkeyHeel YarnHeel - Holiday

These delectable treats can also be customized! With a minimum order of 24 units, we can customize the label to your heart’s content. Got a sock club, we can make a label for you. Are you a yarn retailer looking for special holiday gifts for your top customers, Heel is perfect. Knitting retreat? Yoga store? Shoe shop? Even if you have a great group of lucky friends (showers, bridal parties or charity runs) we can personalize Heel for you.

 

Email us for a quote and conversation on custom designs.

 

Another brilliant creation by the experts at Soak Wash Inc. Like Soak, you’ll wonder how you ever lived without it.

 


It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 30. The Purple Purl.

Author: Ngoc 

Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!


Sometimes it’s nice to celebrate the wonderful shops in your own neighbourhood. This weeks bag was aquired at the knitters frolic in Toronto a few months ago. This great purple reusable bag belongs to the Purple Purl on Queen st East in Toronto.

This is a photo of their busy booth during the frolic.

Fun Purple Purl fact: Last year, Owners Jenn and Miko put together a Naked Stitcher’s Calender 100% of the proceeds going to the Princess Margaret Hospital Foundation to support cancer research.


It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 28. Recycled juice box tote

Guest Submission: Nicole from a Darn good Yarn

Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!


Nicole Snow, owner of A Darn Good Yarn, fell in love with recycled sari silk yarns and ribbons (which wash fabulously with Soak) when she started knitting. This lead to the creation of A Darn Good Yarn, a fabulous yarn shop that offers cool, unique and exotic yarns, accessories and kits.

We found some fun eco-friendly bags on their site and invited Nicole to tell us about them.  

“Who are we kidding? Knitters, crocheters, crafters we all have the best intentions to downsize our “project bags”.  But really, after the pattern, sets of needles (because you have to check the gauge), yarn, cell phone, wallet and the list goes on.  

Yup, it all goes into that oversized tote bag. It’s ok. It’s who we are by nature. We laugh to ourselves when we have to sit in a waiting room. Alas, I can finish a couple of rows while others are forced to read Highlights! 

If your small tote isn’t cutting it anymore, then perhaps it’s time to upgrade and up-cycle to a Recycled Juice Tote Bag from Darn Good Yarn. These wonderful bags are made in women’s co-ops in the Philippines. Metallic, flexible juice boxes are saved from the landfill with this wonderful tote. These containers are non-biodegradable, clutter landfills, fields and the streets of the Philippines. These bags help cut the clutter and help make you even more fashionable!

  

A substantial tote that holds plenty because it measures 12″ x 15″ x 8″ and has a divider on the interior. The construction is great and I’ve field tested mine (i.e. knocked the daylights out of it!) and it’s held up great. And really now… admit it, sometimes you like having that one accessory that makes you stick out a little bit. 

So, when I saw these fantastic tote bags made out of landfill-bound juice boxes I knew there were Darn Good Yarn-ers out there who would fall in love with them like I did.”

 


It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 27. Summer Fling.

Author: Jacqueline

Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!


It’s an innocent fling. I’m not having an affair. I am loyal and trustworthy. It’s just a bag. I just needed a break. A break from the love and devotion towards the two giant quilts I’m currently working on. One is cut out and part way through assembly, the other, a sexy pile of fabric, staring longingly for attention, much like my cats at dinner time.

As you know from last week, I decided to work on a Frenchy bag, by Amy Butler. I’m working towards a specific (top secret) project so for now, it’s practice bags, for myself. I’ve diverged a bit from the pattern, made some discoveries and decisions in new directions, but generally am going with the original design.

First off, more pockets. My current purse is an endless pit. I rarely catch my phone before the last ring and I always have open pens floating in the bottom. Needless to say, open pens and fine Echino fabrics are not an ideal match.

I attached the newly created pockets on the ‘pocket panels’. Once in place, these pockets are really centre dividers, rather than ‘pockets’ as they are full width. While the pockets turned out to be the perfect size, their location left something to be desired. The bag is rather floppy, the pockets have no structure. The phone and pens are still hard to find. Next time, the secondary pockets will attach directly to the side panels for structure and stability. Lucky for me, I’m making more bags. Yes, I am aware the pattern calls for a variety of great interfacings. I used decor weight fabric and consciously made a soft and floppy summer bag.

I used several different prints for the interior pockets. If you’ve seen my quilt backs, you’ll know that I don’t believe in one side being more important than the other, so my lining has as much energy as the exterior. 

I also extended the shoulder strap length. It is really important to dry run shoulder straps before making any bag.  I am tall, so I typically need a few extra inches. It is also important to take seasonality into consideration.  In the summer, I wear lighter, more form fitting clothes; the straps have more room to move. In the winter, over a sweater and coat, I need longer straps.

I finished my first bag the Saturday after I bought my fabrics and I have to say, I am in love. I’ve been using it all week. It’s lighter in colour than I usually make for bags (who tend to live on the floor). All the fabrics were prewashed with Soak, so the bag is safe for machine washing when it starts to show signs of love, dirt and probably pen stains. I’m going to keep working on a couple of more bags, experimenting with interfacings, surface detailing and adding some piecework to the patterns. 

I’m sure my affair with Frenchy will be short lived. I’ll come back to her in the fall for some wintery bags. For now, it’s just summer fun. Fear not little quilts, I’ve got a full week’s holiday booked in August for quilting at the cottage and before you know it the days will be short and full of quilting again.


101 things to do with Soak | 018 Fabrics. Quilting. Pre-washing.

Author: Jacqueline

Truth be told, I love it more than yarn. I love looking at it, cutting it, designing with it, wearing it and resting under it. My mom was a clothing designer. I grew up with fabric. I’ve recently acquired an exceptional stash of Liberty of London fabrics from a recent trip to England.


My first thought was to introduce these limited edition fabrics from the V&A collection to my stash immediately, so the various prints, colours and textures could get to know each other. My fabric stash enjoys new friends. I also had a few select acquisitions from the Liberty store itself but I wanted to include some of them in my summer quilting projects. I knew what had to be done. They all needed to be unfolded from their neatly packed pile and given a good Soak.

There are some basic rules to pre-washing quilt fabrics. We’ve talked about pre-washing fabrics for textiles in general, but here, we’re talking quilting specifically. The liberty fabrics I bought at the V&A suggested cold water wash, and discouraged drying, ‘do not tumble dry’.

First, if you are making a quilt that is going to be used, like this one which was a wedding present for my cousins in the UK, at some point it is going to be washed.
Quilt1

Second, if a giant quilt gets wet, it is likely to end up in the dryer, regardless of instructions. So, I recommend pre-washing and drying all fabrics.

I did wash and dry my liberty prints, fear not, I’ll share my secrets.

First, unfold all your fat quarters, yardage and fabric.

fabrics

It is essential that the pieces be loose and relaxed when they go into the wash.

unfold fat quarters

If you have (or have access) to a front loader, I would suggest using it. The agitation caused by the upright machines does add a bit of roughness to the washing (and it tends to increase fraying).

Use cold water, and of course, Soak.

Nothing too crazy happens in the washing machine. Sometimes, you get a bit of fraying at the edges, but mostly you just end up with a tangled bunch of fabric swatches. It is imperative to separate and loosen all the pieces again, before they go in the dryer.

Drying is an important part of the washing process, arguably, the most important. For my machine at home, 6-9 minutes on medium heat is enough to dry cotton. I highly recommend not leaving the room during drying. Your goal, when drying fabric is to remove most of the moisture, while leaving the fabric slightly damp so you can take it out, flatten it and keep it from wrinkling. Clearly I left my liberty print too long, it wrinkled. I am not looking forward to the arduous ironing that will follow. Every fabric and every machine commands different drying times. Once again, grab your favorite craft magazine, say, the summer issue of Studio magazine, featuring Soak and hang out in the laundry room. Your fabric will love you for it.

wrinkles

I remove a few pieces at a time, fold them in half and flatten them out. The continuous movement and heat from the dryer keeps the cotton soft and wrinkle free. If the dryer finishes and the cottons remain still, they will wrinkle. I suspect Liberty suggests not drying, to avoid wrinkling and the countless hours that follow, should one choose to try to iron the wrinkles out.

Here is my stack of fat quarters after I took it out of the machine. Note the small amount of fraying that occurred along the edges.

fraying

When I get my fabrics back upstairs, I drape them over chairs and other firm objects, to air dry.

drying

Once dry, my fabrics were transferred to the stash where they took great comfort in all the other prints. Some were cut up for my summer project, as I mentioned, and more importantly, the rest are ready to go on a moments notice. There’s nothing worse than wanting to start a new quilt and knowing you have to do laundry first. That’s how unwashed fabric ends up in quilts. It’s never pretty, so wash new fabrics immediately for safe keeping.

Distracted by the liberty prints? Find them in Canada at Hyggeligt. Your local home for liberty prints. Both online and in a store front in London, Ontario, Hyggeligt is a haven for fantastic prints. I’m grateful that some of my chosen prints can be found there. I will never be without liberty again. Oh, and if you pass through, they also now stock Soak!
libertyend

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It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 17: Mission accomplished. Well, the first half.

Author: Jacqueline Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!


I’ve travelled across the Atlantic to see the Quilt Exhibit at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England. This morning, we started off at Quilts 1700-2010. What a way to start the day. The exhibition includes historical work created in the UK from eighteenth century patchwork through to modern times. My favorite piece was a quilt made entire of wool by a tailor, James Williams, of Wrexham, Wales, 1842-52. He, yes he, used left over pieces of wool from his tailor shop and spent over 18 years making innovative quilts.  Following the exhibit I went to the shop to secure a stash of limited production, reproduction fabrics made especially for the show. Needless to say, my bag was full. 

 

I bought fat quarters galore, and don’t worry dear quilting friends, you know who you are, I bought fat quarters and treats for you too.  We bought one copy of the show catalog, which I’ll surely bring to the next Quilt Sunday

Incidentally, I’ve also been photographing inspirational patterns as I come across them on my travels. A new sketchbook is surely in the works… but that’s another story. 

 The second half of the journey you ask? Liberty of London, on Thursday. 


It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 16: Have hat, will travel.

Author: Jacqueline

Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!


It is a hectic Friday at the Soak office. I leave tonight for the UK. While the main purpose of our trip is pleasure (fantastic family wedding in a castle!), I’m also meeting up with Alice Yu our new National Account Manager, UK for the yarn market. We’re really excited to have Alice join us as part of our team.

While there, we’re planning on a visit to Loop, where we’ll be hanging out with owner Susan Cropper. We’ll be bringing treats for the grand opening of their new shop on June 12- on Camden Passage, in Islington, London. Their new address, in case you are in town after June 12th, will be 15 Camden Passage, Islington, London N1 8EA.

I’ll also be meeting Robynn, of the extraordinary shop Purlescence, as well as the ladies from the make lounge. How exciting! I’m sure there will be many other stops (Liberty of London, V&A museum) that will delight my senses and satisfy my need to rummage through textiles and other fun finds.

Speaking of rummaging, back to the above mentioned wedding. I’ll be sporting my favorite navy and white dress and shoes, only this time adding a bit of British flair to the outfit with my new (and lovely) hat.

I found this and other fine works of millinery last weekend when Karyn, Chris and I trekked to Brimfield Massachusetts for the Brimfield Antique Market. We walked through miles of antiques, textiles and treasures to find unique items and treats.

Sometimes a hat box is better than a bag. This striped one is the perfect way to protect my new hats, one of which is already packed away for travels.


Week 7 | Finished or frogged?

Author: Jacqueline

I was hoping to feature a finished wrap before this post. Alas, I think my next session of knitting time will be spent frogging.


I knew the wrap was coming out too long as I was knitting, but as a novice knitter I didn’t want to take it upon myself to redesign mid-pattern. I finished the wrap, late last week, leaving only the collar when I realized, with no uncertainty, that it was just too long. I contacted the designer to just check in on my situation, in case it was supposed to be long and then somehow magically becomes shorter when the collar was added, but sadly, my wrap is just too long. FYI, I am Captain of team ‘follow the pattern and keep knitting’.

Week 7 Wrap

Chris, our resident knitter (and Captain of team ‘frog it’), pointed out the simple fact that if it doesn’t fit right, I wouldn’t wear it. She also said that there was no way the collar, no matter how tight, would bring in the wrap as short as I need it. ‘Sorry Jacqueline, wishful thinking’ was how she put it. Actually, she’s a colourful talker but we can’t use those words here.

After measuring, stretching, thinking, pinning, measuring again and having some coffee before work Tuesday morning, I decided that giving the collar a fair shot to do its thing was the right thing to do (Go team, ‘keep knitting’). I figured that three rows in and 45 minutes later I would know if it was in fact lifting up the collar enough to continue on. Last night, sitting in the car off Dundas street, before a 7pm meeting, I added the collar and knit three rows. Sadly, while the collar did life the wrap and bring in the top side, it was not enough to avoid the dreaded frogging festivities that will occur at lunch today (2 points to team ‘frog it’).

Week 7 Wrap

Let the record show that I did complete the wrap and begin the collar, just in case I don’t finish it a second time before TNNA. While I’m okay and on board with the idea of making the wrap fit so it gets the wearing and love it deserves, I have no idea where I am going to find the four hours of knitting time to redo what I’m about to rip out. Wish me luck.