Showing posts with label made in the U.S.A.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label made in the U.S.A.. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Boneta Farm Fights On

Forwarded almost simultaneously by Karen Bracken and Patricia Evans, here's the e-mail from farmer-turned-activist Martha Boneta, containing links and a sample e-mail Virginians should be able to use to support the ideas behind the stalled Boneta Bill. Since you will have to edit the e-mail in order for it to be honest or relevant, I'm posting it as it came in, quirky formatting and all, and warning anyone who uses it to do their own editing.

"
From Martha Boneta

Dear Friends of Liberty!

ACTION ALERT: In response to the overwhelming tsunami impact of our efforts and the efforts of thousands of liberty loving Virginians, Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services ( VDACS ) has formed a committee to explore what can be done to help Virginia's small family farmers. VDACS has asked for comments from Virginians about what you would like to be done.


Please help Virginia's small family farmers keep government from taking away our economic freedom and property rights! Do you have ideas or suggestions to share with this Work Group?  Please send VDACS an email to:


I want to thank you all for your unshakeable dedication to protecting the economic freedom and property rights of Virginia's small family farmers. Many of you drove many hours and miles to Richmond during the general Assembly in support of the Boneta Bill and I am forever grateful for all you have done and continue to do for freedom!


A sample email is below:

Subject: Boneta Bill VDACS Committee

Dear Commissioner Lohr:

I am writing in response to your request for citizen comment.

I am president of the Virginia Patriot Freedom Coalition and am writing on behalf of myself and my organization. We support the Boneta Bill- Freedom to Farm Without Fear.

Below please find several points I ask that you consider in your decision making process: 

- Virginia has the opportunity to be a national leader in the local food movement.

-this is about property rights, economic freedom and farming rights

- Farmers are being forced off the land because of heavy handed over regulation that is over burdensome and costly for small family farmers.

- farmers must have the right to sell what they produce on their own land Like fiber from sheep.

- Virginia must embrace agriculture as a way of life in our communities as our society continues to demand the freedom to choose.

-In Fauquier County, the government is harassing small  family farmers over their farm buildings requiring all kinds of burdensome restrictions that are unreasonable, costly and that ultimately will force farmers off the land.

- Fauquier county is imposing unbearable setback requirements. requirements are stifle economic freedom and take away the property rights of small family farmers. These setback requirements were imposed after small farmers had already been engaging in commerce often for years.

- small farmers must be able to sell not only what they produce but also value added ancillary items in order to be viable off season and continue to farm like being able to sell a glass of lemonade at a peach orchard on a 100 degree hot summer day without being in fear of being fined and arrested!


VICFA
VICFA to Participate in On-The-Farm Workshop
Looking Ahead to 2014...

VICFA has been invited to participate in an On Farm Activity Work Group. As a result of several bills considered by the 2013 session of the Virginia legislature, a working group has been formed to discuss the on-farm activities that should be protected as well as how local governments can assist farmers.

The purpose of this group is to facilitate discussions and ideas and to formulate recommendations for the 2014 legislative session. This group has no authority to change current policy or regulations. A report will be made to the House Committee on Agriculture, Chesapeake and Natural Resources and to the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Conservation and Natural Resources.

VICFA's participation will help to focus on what other counties have or have not done to promote on-farm activities and how we can better ensure that our legislature protects and assists working farms throughout the nation.

We encourage you to help us!  Do you have ideas or suggestions to share with this Work Group?  Please click here to visit the VDACS website and share your comments and suggestions.

For more information on VICFA as well as information on our upcoming Annual Meeting, please be sure to visit www.vicfa.org.
 
VICFA
P.O. Box 6838
Charlottesville, Virginia 22906-6838


--
"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people. They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty."  - Thomas Jefferson   Virginia Tea Party Patriots  www.virginiateapartypatriots.com Danville Patriots   http://danvillepatriots.com/


Karen Bracken - I WILL NOT COMPLY - WILL YOU?

Monday, May 13, 2013

Mark Fitzgibbons on the Right to Farm

From the Southern Virginia Tea Party:

"
Action Alert from Mark Fitzgibbons:

 
The “VIRGINIA SMALL FARM AND FOOD FREEDOM RESOLUTION” will be considered by the Republican Party Virginia Resolutions Committee at the 2013 Virginia Republican Convention that will take place May 17 – 18 in Richmond.
 
Please call and email your Republican District Chairman and email your District’s representative on the Resolution Committee listed below, and ask both to pass this important resolution to protect freedom so that it may be approved by the entire convention delegation.  (Chairman Eric Herr of the 1st District has committed already, so no need to contact him.)
 
Also, email your message “I support the Virginia Small Farm and Food Freedom Resolution” to Resolutions@RPV.org.
 
We must get farm and food freedom right in the home state of Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, George Mason and other great farmer-Founders, or we won’t get it right anywhere in America!
 
A copy of this important resolution to protect freedom is below the contact information.
 
2nd District          Gary Byler          gbyler@garybyler.com                    757-331-4400
Chairman  
 
Resolution          Jessica Abbott             (no email available)
Committee
 
3rd District          Chris Stearns          Christopher.stearns@me.com              757-513-8232
Chairman
 
Resolution          Lori Carlson                loricarlson@remax.net                  
Committee
 
4th District          Jack Wilson          jack@jackwilsonplc.com              804-796-6813
Chairman  
 
Resolution          Judi Lynch                   (no email available)
Committee                                      
 
5th District          Senator Bill Stanley          William.Stanley@birdandstanley.com           
Chairman                                                                                                        540-721-6028
 
Resolution          Jim White                   nelsoncountygop@gmail.com
Committee
 
6th District           Wendell Walker          wendellwalker2@yahoo.com                434-944 4008
Chairman                                                                     
 
Resolution          Georgia Alvis-Long           (no email available)
Committee
 
7th District          Linwood Cobb          gophenrico@aol.com                     804-346-2096
Chairman
 
Resolution          Kristi Way (no email available)
Committee
 
8th District           Mike Ginsberg          va8gopchairman@hotmail.com 703-850 5017
Committee
 
Resolution          Evan Draim                   evandraim13@sssas.org
Committee
 
9th District          Jack Morgan          itmatterswithjack@yahoo.com      276-724-6283
Chairman
 
Resolution          Adam Tolbert             atolbert@smythgop.org
Committee
 
10th District          John Whitbeck          Jwhitbeck@whitbecklegal.com    703-777-1795
Chairman                                                                              
 
Resolution          Mark Berg           berg@comcast.net
Committee
 
11th District          Terry Wear           terry@terrywear.org             703 569-0084
Chairman  
 
Resolution          Mike Giere                    mike4chairman11th@gmail.com
Committee
                                                                           
VIRGINIA SMALL FARM AND FOOD FREEDOM RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, farmers, farms and farming have historically played a vital role in the economy, traditions, culture, art and literature of Virginia, and are entitled to protection under the supreme American law guaranteeing certain unalienable rights such as life, liberty and pursuit of happiness; and
 
WHEREAS, each farmer has the right to determine in his or her own estimation what best constitutes farming, farm life and the best uses of their farm land, and farmers have the right to just remuneration for their labor, capital, ingenuity, services and products so long as they respect their neighbors’ rights; and
 
WHEREAS, farm life may constitute more than just production agriculture, and farmers have the right of commerce, the right to the pursuit of happiness, the right of quiet enjoyment of their land, the right of peaceable assembly on their private property, the right to exercise religious freedom on their private property, and other rights reserved to all people by America’s supreme law; and
 
WHEREAS, Virginians deserve access to wholesome and locally produced foods, and small farmers should be able to supply these products without burdensome government regulations; and
 
WHEREAS, government may not restrict the rights of farmers or their guests from the community, or categorize farmers, farming or farmland in any way that diminishes their freedoms, based simply on the fact that they engage in commerce; and
 
WHEREAS, government must not use laws or the color of law, regulations, zoning ordinances or the dictates of permits to violate or trespass on the rights of farmers and their guests, and farmers are entitled to fair, reasonable and full remedies from government agencies or subdivisions that violate or trespass on their rights.
 
Therefore, be it resolved that the Republican Party of Virginia supports repeal of state laws and local ordinances inconsistent with this Resolution;
 
Be it further resolved that the Republican Party calls upon the General Assembly and the Governor to advance legislation in the 2014 Session of the General Assembly to make the Code of Virginia consistent with the provisions of this Resolution;
 
And be it further resolved that the Virginia Republican Party immediately publish this Resolution and disseminate it to the Chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia, members of the State Central Committee, and to the Republican members of the Virginia General Assembly, and post it to the RPV website in a publicly accessible area, with a link to that page on the home page.

--
"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people. They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty."  - Thomas Jefferson  Virginia Tea Party Patriots       www.virginiateapartypatriots.com   Danville Patriots http://danvillepatriots.com/   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyqTlje8RxQ "

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Boneta Farm Under Vindictive Attack

Remember Martha Boneta, the family farmer whose persecution by local bureaucracy inspired the "Boneta Bill"?

For those who don't, here's the original Boneta Bill, as co-sponsored by four of the Delegates this web site has identified as The Team...a promising beginning.

http://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/legp604.exe?131+ful+HB1430

Here's what the House of Delegates left of it:

http://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/legp604.exe?131+ful+HB1430H1

Thus declawed, the Boneta Bill died in the State Senate. And meanwhile, what's happening at the Boneta family farm? Donna Holt reports:

""The UN objective of Agenda 21, to extinguish private property rights, is met when wealth and power (property) is transferred to, and accumulated in the hands of the modern ruling elite: government agencies and trusts which form an unholy alliance to defraud rural landowners, like Martha Boneta, of their inherent right of lawful ownership and use of their land."

Piedmont Environmental Council’s One-Two Combination on Boneta Farm Shows Easement Abuse

Conservation Easements: A Vehicle for Land Confiscation

By Donna Holt, Virginia Campaign for Liberty http://fauquierfreecitizen.com/pecs-one-two-combination-on-boneta-farm-shows-easement-abuse/

Martha Boneta’s small 70-acre farm, previously the center of the famous “pitchfork protest”, is once again under attack.

2000 Tomato Plants at Paris Farms, VA.2000 Tomato Plants at Paris Farms, VA.

She purchased the farm with a Conservation Easement from the Piedmont Environmental Council. http://www.pecva.org/about/our-strategic-plan Conservation Easements are touted as a means to protect resources such as productive agricultural land, wildlife habitat, historic sites or scenic views. They are used by landowners (“grantors”) to authorize a qualified conservation organization or public agency (“grantee”) to monitor and enforce the restrictions set forth in the agreement. Federal and state governments grant vast sums in tax benefits to the grantor in exchange for relinquishing all or part of the development rights and meeting the specified terms of the agreement.

Mrs. Boneta was not the grantor of the easement on her property nor was she awarded any tax benefits or subsidies. She bought the property with the easement and is bound by the terms of the original agreement that are passed on to any subsequent owner permanently. She had a reasonable expectation that the easement on her farm would assure that the land would be preserved for her intended purpose – farming.

What could possibly go wrong?

One minute she is a responsible organic farmer with the required license to sell her vegetables and fruits; the next, she is bullied and fined for contrived violations by Fauquier County Administrators.

They never obtained a warrant nor set foot on her property to gather actual evidence. Instead a county bureaucrat relied on unscrupulous, unlawful methods to bring charges against Mrs. Boneta. They ignored due process of law which is a common practice used to intimidate citizens into forfeiting their rights and ultimately their property.

One would think the PEC would be in her corner and stand up for her right to farm per the conservation agreement.

But it wasn’t enough for the PEC that Martha was bullied into shutting down her farm out of fear of further uncertain charges by Fauquier County carrying possible criminal penalties. The PEC has now put Mrs. Boneta on notice that they intend to inspect the Barn Complex and Smithy “for the purpose of determining if improvements have been made to accommodate residential use”.

The conservation easement agreement authorizes the Piedmont Environmental Council the authority to monitor and enforce the terms of the agreement but the notice completely ignores that the agreement allows 1600 sq. ft. of residential space in the Barn Complex.

PEC Vice President, Heather Richards, further believes she can ignore the law by prohibiting Mrs. Boneta from photographing or video recording anyone entering her private property, even to inspect, while asserting the PEC’s right to do so.

In essence, Fauquier County Administrators and the PEC are attempting to pull the land right out from under the feet of Martha Boneta without due process of law and totally ignoring the terms of the conservation agreement.

Their position assumes they are above the law and Mrs. Boneta is but a mere serf or tenant on what is her land, while she is still burdened by taxes and other expenses, and subject to the whim and will of Fauquier County Administrators (the king) and the Piedmont Environmental Council (the privileged lords and nobles).

The UN objective of Agenda 21, to extinguish private property rights, is met when wealth and power (property) is transferred to, and accumulated in the hands of the modern ruling elite: government agencies and trusts which form an unholy alliance to defraud rural landowners, like Martha Boneta, of their inherent right of lawful ownership and use of their land.

Donna Holt is the Executive Director of the Virginia Campaign for Liberty.

"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people. They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty." - Thomas Jefferson Virginia Tea Party Patriots www.virginiateapartypatriots.com Danville Patriots http://danvillepatriots.com/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyqTlje8RxQ "

Sounds as if Fauquier County needs a whole new set of administrators...and the P.E.C. needs to be disbanded.

Friday, March 1, 2013

Cornerstone Communications: the Vision

For about a year now I've been talking to people about the store, or computer center, I want to open. Local people may need to put a memory out of their minds; I didn't make enough money selling secondhand junk in flea markets to be willing to sell secondhand junk in a full-sized store. Mountain Treasures is a good place to look for secondhand junk in between Friday Markets. What I want to do next is to benefit all of Scott County, as well as me.

Although someone else got the building, the name "Cornerstone Communications" was handed to us, along with several hundred books--about 40% Christian, 30% serious nonfiction, 30% fiction and poetry. A vision of what we can do with this has been evolving as I've talked with people who want to be part of it in one way or another, and now I'd like to share that vision with you.

Cornerstone Communications is actively in search of a physical store. I won't bore you with the details of this search; since I'm neither the construction expert nor the electronics expert nor the one with the down payment sitting in the bank, I've not been the one primarily doing it. We may still get the building that's actually on the corner; we may still get the building that was originally named "Cornerstone," which is not on the corner. There are conflicts with both, and I like the look of the building Oliver's got last year (they've moved). Then I want Gate City to have a computer center right on Jackson Street, and another member of the organization would rather work with Weber City or somewhere up in the county, and although I'd like to see sibling computer centers in Weber City, Yuma, Hiltons, Duffield, Dungannon, and Nickelsville eventually, I also want the one where I work to be within walking distance from my home, which probably means Jackson Street. You get the idea. Unless there's a surprising demand for it I won't post any more of this kind of "news." I can show you a clearer picture of what the store will look like once I know where the store will be.

What we want to do is offer online access in a completely different way than the Gates Foundation has decreed for the local libraries. We're not trying to sell people on the idea that they need the Internet in their homes; that's not working for Scott County. We're encouraging people to use the computer center for business and serious research--as it might be coming in for one full day a week, rather than being forced to pop in for frustrating timed sessions every day.

We will also display and sell books, new and used, and other local products, and offer a forum for local people to connect and communicate...with schools, publishers, writers, politicians, and others who want to share their messages with the public. We will be the place where people can physically browse and buy Fair Trade Books.

We will not seek licensing as a restaurant or coffeeshop. Gate City already has enough places that have paid for that extra licensing. We will allow people to bring in food from existing restaurants or coffeeshops, and will distribute coupons for those, especially if the owners sponsor work spaces.

Politics makes strange bedfellows and my vision for Cornerstone Communications, and for this web site, is actually "The stranger the better." I have the right to my opinion on issues about which I know enough to form an opinion, and youall have the right to know what that opinion is. Youall also have the right to know what other people's opinions are, and why they hold their opinions and what they have to say for themselves. This web site opposes all censorship. Although I see much more need for a sympathetic forum for conservatives and libertarians in cyberspace, because George Soros is doing so much to provide forums for left-wingers, in real life I want to offer to bigotry no sanction.

That's why, as local lurkers remember, although it's my idea and I'm the Tea Party, last summer Cornerstone Communications was represented by a person who claims to be a Kilgore supporter like everyone else in Gate City but is, otherwise, a Democrat. Would we really have hosted Democratic Party headquarters? Yes--if we'd had the space in the time, we would have displayed both Democratic and Republican literature, and that of other parties, and hosted all (sane, nonviolent) parties' meetings as well. We don't see one party as all good and another as all bad. I personally see good things coming from an exchange of views.

"Even letting people display a Kaine campaign sign?" (eye roll). Yes. I voted for George Allen, but I think exposing the public to more than a TV sound bite from politicians I don't personally favor may well boost the campaigns of the ones I do. Tim Kaine has as much right to be heard as Mark Warner, whom many Gate City residents like, or Rick Boucher, whom Gate City residents kept reelecting for years, or anyone else. We're not so much about boosting one politician or party (however much I personally may want to do that) as we are about holding all of them accountable for what they say. I post material with which I disagree on this web site, and would host speakers with whom I disagree in the store...that's a skill we learn in Washington.

And I'm committed to a similar approach to religious material. I am a Protestant, and I've been accurately described as conservative, liberal, and radical on various questions that have been used to divide denominations. If anybody manages to get into Gate City without knowing what Christians believe and why, I'm prepared to teach a course on that topic, with diversions to study denominational differences if requested. However, the purpose of Cornerstone Communications is not to impose any religious position on anyone. We've inherited a tremendous supply of Christian books, including some Catholic and Mormon books. We will display Jewish, Buddhist, Humanist, and possibly also Muslim and Pagan books (if we think the authors have something reasonable to say). We will consider hosting study groups led from any religious or philosophical perspective. The unifying idea is that in America everybody has the right to be heard, and everybody has the right to choose how long they want to listen.

I see the computer center as a place where work spaces will be separated by shelves containing ads, books, recordings, and other merchandise, but where each work space will be primarily about what the individual using it wants to do and say in it. As a user you'll be reminded, by an unobtrusive sign and selection of other things you may or may not take time to check out, that your work space is being sponsored by some generous person or group. Then you'll be free to use the Internet as you see fit.

People who sponsor a work space will be able to display their sign, decide which books they want on the shelves, and put in other merchandise if they're selling merchandise that fits onto the shelves, for a month at a time. I see this as a venue for farms, musicians, entertainers, crafters, web designers, and other local entrepreneurs whose enterprises don't really fit into a flea market or antique-boutique setting and aren't suited to a full-sized store. (Some things local people want to sell don't mix well with computers. Preserves in sealed jars could be displayed, but fresh fruit couldn't. Hunters' calendars could be displayed, but rifles couldn't. Pictures of fireworks shows could be displayed, but fireworks couldn't. However, signs, phone numbers, and directions to any licensed local business could be displayed.) If the computer center works, we'll be able to set up enough sponsored displays to cover building payments and utility bills, at prices people like Amanda McCracken, Dwain Reed, or Gena Greene could pay with a reasonable expectation of profit.

Scott County is where all of my paternal-line ancestors have been for almost two hundred years, some longer than that. We will promote Scott County businesses first. If Scott County businesses fail to keep all work spaces sponsored, we will then offer sponsored displays to businesses in Kingsport, Wise County, and then other jurisdictions in order of physical proximity. However, since Grandma Bonnie Peters still pays property taxes in Scott County and uses the name of one of Gate City's founding families, into which she married, we will count her as an honorary resident of Scott County.

Reusing and recycling are hobbies of mine...I don't want to ask anybody to donate sets of identical new computers or furniture, as we've seen in Gates Foundation computer centers. I want to reuse vintage furniture and used computers...to keep start-up costs low, and to promote the idea of using up and wearing out things before we buy more. Restoration, renovation, and recycling are good for the local economy too.

If you want to see a genuinely liberal, not left-wing, computer center slash bookstore slash small-community-group meeting place slash local-marketing place in the real world, watch this space...and feel free to contribute money, computer parts or supplies (we want to reuse and recycle electronics as long as possible), and sturdy tables, chairs, and shelves.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

True Greens Will Love HB1430

Here it is, Gentle Readers: the Boneta Bill. You'll love it. It specifically preserves neighbors' right to complain about farm activities that do pollute, and thus do cause material harm to others--but it puts some teeth into the concept of property rights:

http://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/legp604.exe?131+ful+HB1430

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Granny Squares Liberal and Conservative

Hand Crocheted by Anonymous

Photo by Victoria Cooley


In real life, the yellow squares in this pet blanket are a bright crayon yellow, and the blanket is a square rather than a trapezoid.

Size: About 2' x 2'

Material: Acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: This pet blanket consists of granny-square patches crocheted by what might be described as a liberal and a conservative approach to crocheting. (The outer squares have smaller, tighter stitches.)

Click here to buy it for $20 + $5 shipping.

Baby Bootees

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



In real life they're black.

Size: 6-12 months

Material: Acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry carefully (in a bag--don't let them get caught in the machinery!)

Credits: "These are just basic baby bootees knitted in blanket-weight yarn. The pattern is in Leslie Linsley's Quick and Easy Knit and Crochet."

Click here to buy the bootees for $5 + $5 shipping, or Quick and Easy Knit and Crochet for $5 + $5 shipping.

Cabled Vest

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



Oops! You can tell Tori's not a knitter...she photographed the cables inside-out! In real life this seamless waistcoat has deep armholes and ordinary-looking cables. The color is charcoal grey.

Size: Fits up to 40", up to 5'8"

Material: brushed acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: "This was a Knitter's quick-and-easy project."

Click here to buy it for $20 + $5 shipping.

Chickens Cardigan

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley




In real life the sweater is a bright, glossy, Christmas-y green. (It would be easier to wear year-round if it were the color I'm seeing on this computer.)

Size: 34-36" bustline, 5'3"-5'6"

Material: base yarn acrylic, contrast colors mixed

Care: machine wash and dry

Credits: "This is a version of the famous Chickens Cardigan from Maine Island Classics by Chellie Pingree and Debby Anderson. Since I used a slightly lighter yarn, and the armholes on these sweaters tended to be designed for slim people anyway, I widened the armholes and dropped the shoulder line. There aren't any more of those buttons--someone insisted on them, then didn't buy the sweater presumably because three buttons weren't enough. I can substitute plain buttons for an extra $5."

Click here to buy the sweater for $36 + $5 shipping, or to buy Maine Island Classics for $5 + $5 shipping.

Brother Turn Around Pullover

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



In real life this one's beige and brown, even if it looks gray on your screen.

Size: 34" chest, 5'2"-5'6"

Material: Wool-Ease, a wool and acrylic blend

Care: Hand wash and dry flat for best results; manufacturer says it can be machine-laundered carefully

Credits: "This was one of many variations Lily Chin suggested on a pattern she called 'Family Turn Around' in Knitter's magazine for Winter 1996. Requests for a selection of things boys could wear prompted me to use neutral colors and more 'traditional' styling. A girl or woman could wear it too, but in that 'family' of patterns this is the brother."

Click here to buy the sweater for $50 + $5 shipping.

No Smoking Jacket and Stocking Cap

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley


In real life the sweater and cap are a bit more colorful than they look on this browser. The yarn is a creamy white with red, blue, and yellow flecks.



Size: Large (fits size 48", 6' or taller)

Material: Acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: "The jacket was a variation on a Knitter's pattern called a 'Smoking Jacket.' The idea behind the name was that, about a hundred years ago, a 'smoking jacket' was an actual man's style. Since this sweater is acrylic, which melts at high temperatures, it's definitely recommended for NONsmokers. The cap is just a basic, longish stocking cap to roll up to the length and fit you like."

Click here to buy the jacket for $50, the cap for $5, plus $5 for shipping either or both.

Sheaf of Corn Jacket

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley





The color of this one shows up differently when I look at the screen from different angles. In real life it's what Lion Brand called "sienna"; it's as close as I've seen in the fashion world to the color of red cedar heartwood.

Size: 36" bust, 5'3-5'8"

Material: Brushed acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: "This jacket is a substantially altered version of the 'Sheaf of Corn' sweater from Pat Menchini's Beatrix Potter Knitting Book. (If you don't get the title, remember that in the U.K. 'corn' means 'grain,' usually wheat or barley.)"

Click here to buy the jacket ($45 + $5 shipping) or The Beatrix Potter Knitting Book ($10 + $5 shipping includes $1.50 for Pat Menchini).

Peacock Pullover

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley




In real life the main color of this sweater is a vivid peacock blue. The contrast yarns at the edges are variegated. The sleeves are standard full-length sleeves. The borders are meant to roll.

Size: Medium woman's (38-42" bustline, 5'6"-5'8")

Material: Cotton

Care: Machine wash; dry flat to preserve shape and color

Credits: "This is a variation on one of the designs in Lorna Miser's Faith, Hope, Love, Knitting. It's been out for a year or two but is still in print, so let's steer people to Amazon to buy it new, to show respect."

Click here to buy the sweater for $45 + $5 shipping.

Pastel Tabard

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



In real life the colors might be a little brighter than they look in this browser, but not much; they're a mix of beige, cream, white, and baby pastels.

Size: One size fits all (adults)

Materials: Mixed fibres with about 50% natural fibres; lots of mohair

Care: Hand wash and dry flat recommended; machine wash at your own risk

Credits: "The stitch pattern here comes from the 'Hudson's Bay' super-chunky wool tunic in Kristin Nicholas' Knitting the New Classics. Of course, a tunic is not a tabard. The difference is that the tabard is drapey, like a shawl, rather than chunky, and is open at the sides. You'd throw it over your head like a poncho."

Click here to buy either the tabard ($120 + $5 shipping) or a copy of Knitting the New Classics ($5 + $5 shipping, including a $1 payment to Kristin Nicholas).salolianigodagewi@yahoo.com

Bramble Stitch Pullover

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley




The colors show up pretty true in this browser--cool, muted shades of rusty red, denim blue, leaf green and white. Cool enough tones to wear with a white shirt and denim jacket.

Size: Up to 40" bust, 5'3"-5'8"

Material: Acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: "This is a variation on a design from Annette Mitchell's Country Diary Book of Knitting. It's made in a bunchy, lacy stitch, on the same principle as thermal-textured underwear--it 'breathes' yet also traps warm air when worn under a windbreaker, denim jacket, or trench coat."

Click here to buy either the sweater ($ + $5 shipping), or (if available) a copy of The Country Diary Book of Knitting ($15 + $5 shipping).

Basic Vest

Hand Knitted by Gena Green

Photo by Victoria Cooley


Size: Medium, unisex Knitting Made Easy

Material: Acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: "This was a sample of the easy beginners' projects in Barbara Aytes' Knitting Made Easy. If you're not a raw beginner, you can make it in one day."

Click here to buy either the vest ($20 plus $5 shipping) or the book ($5 plus $5 shipping) from this site.

Scallops Cardigan

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



Size: oversized--up to 50" bust/chest, 5'6"-6'+

Materials: base wool, contrasts mixed fibres

Care: hand wash and dry flat

Credits: "The stitch pattern was printed as a Tahki ad supplement in Vogue Knitting, Winter 2000-01. I used vintage Berroco Curlama wool yarn, discovered at a charity store, as the base and lots of leftover yarns as the contrasts."

Click here to buy the jacket for $120 + $5 shipping.

Pastels Jacket

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



Size: Fits up to 36" petite; recommended for size 30-32"

Materials: Mixed fibres, 75% natural fibres

Care: Hand wash and dry flat

Credits: "This is a variation on a pattern that appeared in Knitter's magazine, K46 (Spring 1997)."

Click here to buy the jacket for $60 + $5 shipping.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Middle School Girl's Jacket (Update)

Hand Knitted by Gena Greene

Photos by Victoria Cooley



The color on this browser is just a little more grey than the sweater is in real life. It's two shades of a color most women would describe as a greyish green rather than a greenish grey...recommended for drawing attention to green-grey-blue "Irish" eyes.

Size: Girl's size 12 or petite woman's size--30-32" bust, 5'-5'4"

Material: Acrylic

Care: Machine wash and dry

Credits: "This is a version of a girl's jacket shown in Alice Starmore's rare classic, Children's Knitting from Many Lands. Differences in the finished look were created by using a different yarn. Acrylic doesn't 'block' flat, so this version flares slightly below the V-shaped yoke."

Click here to buy the jacket for $18 + $5 shipping. If you want to buy Children's Knitting from Many Lands, currently it's available only for collectors' prices: $35 + $5 shipping includes a $4 payment to Alice Starmore.

(Update: It's been sold.)