Monthly Archives: October 2011

Take Two

It’s the first day of preschool! Jump for joy!

jumping in striped legs

Check out those stripes!

You thought we already did that? She spent a total of eight days at the old place. The third Friday morning, she told me she would rather stay home and clean the house with me than go to school and have birthday cupcakes with her class. We were already REALLY unhappy with the place (our choices are few) but sticking with it as long as she seemed to be enjoying herself. We called the Montessori place a couple towns south (it’s a drive or she would have been there already). They said “Sure we have room, but if you aren’t in a hurry, we’re opening a new school down the road from you!” We weren’t in a hurry and school started today.

And she was not shy.

The Official Pattern of Dish Rag Tag V: V is for Victory is up and ready for download on Ravelry and in my Free Patterns (it’s at the very bottom). Incidentally, the Free Patterns page has been spruced up a bit and now has pictures.

If you’ll excuse me, I need to get started on Ellie’s Halloween costume! I am so glad school opened this week – I had no idea when I was going to find the time to get that done.

DRT: Delayed Results

When you want to have a fireworks extravaganza, first you have to wait for the dark of night when Ellie is asleep (she has a fire thing that extends to any sort of spark, we don’t have candles at birthdays or anything).

light em up

But once you have that…

Congratulations, Knitrageous! Captained to Dish Rag Tag Glory by Susan, these fireworks are for you!

woooo

Ooooooh!!

Then you have to wait for sunshine and Ellie to be awake to open the package! Don’t worry, last leg Lila, nothing was singed but the corner of the box.

yummy yarn

There have been some really great colors in the return yarn this year!

That’s a great dish cloth from Lila, but the thing that just really sums up Dish Rag Tag for me is this.

Thanks.

Thanks.

Thanks to each of you for another year of Dish Rag Tag. Thanks for one more year with 100% participation (three out of five! woo!). Thanks for one more year of enthusiasm, joy and support. Thanks for being willing to make new friends, work toward a common goal and just being all around wonderful people. Thanks for making my year brighter.

Thanks.

I’ll have the V is for Victory pattern available tomorrow!

Dish Rag Tag V Final Standings
A-NINE-ILATORS……10/7/2011
3x the Charm……10/8/2011
Purls Gone Wild……10/8/2011
Eight’s Great……10/11/2011
11th Round Knockout……10/11/2011
Knit 1, Win 1……10/13/2011
Round Tuit……10/14/2011
Lucky 7s……10/15/2011
All Four One……10/17/2011
Perfect 10……10/17/2011
Knitrageous……10/20/2011

CPSIA: Handmade Needs Your Help

December 31, 2011 will be the last day toys can legally be sold in the United States unless they undergo mandatory ASTM F963 testing. ASTM F963 testing must be performed by an independent lab and is used to determine if a toy is safe for children to play with: seams are sound, no flammability issues, little fingers can’t poke into holes, the toy doesn’t shatter into a million sharp pieces when it’s dropped. This sounds like a great idea. Safety first, right?

If you are a large company, and your toys are stamped out with a machine by the thousands at the cost of about $1.50 a toy, this is not a big deal. If you are a small toymaker who spends hours on a single stuffed animal, this is the end of your business.

I hand knit soft toys from natural materials. Each toy takes an average 6 hours from start to finish. I have a three year old and precious little time so I produce around 200 stuffed animals a year. My toys aren’t small batch, they are micro batch. My yarn and filling choices (cotton, wool, cashmere, angora, alpaca) are typically organic and often purchased directly from the farmer. Each type of toy is produced with the same techniques and solid construction. Each is produced with my own hands so there is no question about variation in quality or in craftsmanship.

My ‘Cotton Companions’ are available as eleven different types of animal. In order to be in compliance with mandatory ASTM F963 testing, I will be required to submit each animal design (model) for individual testing. If just one copy of each model is required for ASTM F963 testing, I will need to make and send eleven toys. That represents 66 hours of work and about $45 in materials. Add to that testing fees of $500 per toy – $5,500 in testing fees for the eleven Cotton Companions. That’s more money than Yarn Miracle makes in a year. If more than one copy of each model is required for testing, the cost in my time alone is absolutely overwhelming. Lab testing can require as many as ten copies of a model. For the Cotton Companions that is 110 toys – more than half my annual production!

I also have six designs for larger toys, make eleven styles of Itty Bitty Animals and at least a dozen varieties of Itty Bitty Birdies. To test every design in my shop would cost a total of $19,500 in testing fees, 160 hours of knitting time and I haven’t even done the math for materials cost – and that’s only to submit a single copy of each toy design.

For my ‘luxury’ companions, I use handspun yarns, hand dyed yarns, special blends of fiber and cashmere. If each fiber type needs to be tested, that’s more than a dozen additional toys and a staggering materials cost. Many of the luxury toys are one of a kind. To send a one of a kind toy in for ASTM F963 testing would leave me with no toy to sell!

Not only is ASTM F963 testing ‘overburdensome’, it is impossible. Impossible not just for me, but for every other small toy manufacturer in the United States. There will be no more hand made blocks, no wooden teethers, no waldorf dolls, no bendy dolls, no more made-to-order plush monsters, no more unique, no more original, no more handmade toys with exemplary safety records. But the big toy companies, whose negligence sparked this law, will be just fine. In an already damaged economy, mandatory ASTM F963 testing means the end of even more jobs.

There is a CPSC hearing on October 26 to determine if there should be alternative testing requirements or exemptions for handmade toys. The Handmade Toy Alliance will be there to lobby on behalf of small batch manufacturers. Here’s how you can help:

Write your Senator.
Write your Representative.
Every email makes a difference. Every letter shows the public cares about what happens to the people who make handmade toys.

If you feel inclined: join or donate to the Handmade Toy Alliance.

Buy handmade for the holidays. It may be your last chance.

DRT: The Other Day I Went to the Mailbox

Ellie says “I love Dish Rag Tag! We never know what is in the mailbox!” So true! A couple days ago we found…

9 and 10

..boxes 9 and 10!

Box Number 9 belongs to All Four One!

packed with little things

It’s packed full of little things!

Ellie is already planning what to put the buttons on, insists that the stitch markers with the crochet flowers belong on a necklace and is REALLY excited about playing tiny Uno! I am excited about the beautiful dish cloth from Sara and the really pretty sunshine yarn. Such great colors! Thanks for bringing sunshine into my day All Four One. Congratulations to all of you and to your Team Captain Natalie! (Natalie: love the Tiered Coat – and the toddler in it!)

A small amount of sleuthing was required to deduce the Team Affiliation of Box 10. Is it coincidence or some sort of eerie foreshadowing that the tenth box to finish the race belongs to team Perfect 10? Meredith knits a great dish cloth!

yummers

And packs a great box!

Ellie and I (and the five girl cats) appreciate “Girl Power” philosophy! We also appreciate M&Ms, but for different reasons. I tell you what I really like though, that little fluff of a yarn! It’s got a subtle variegation of blue and grey – like the Gulf before a storm. Really lovely – it is always a treat to try new fiber.* Many thanks to Perfect 10 and Team Captain Jessica! (Ah! Tulip Cardigan! What is with all the great baby sweater pictures this morning? It’s like I need to finish my own kid’s sweater or something! I haven’t told you about that? Just one Dish Rag Tag box to go and then I’ll share!)

Dish Rag Tag V Final Standings
A-NINE-ILATORS……10/7/2011
3x the Charm……10/8/2011
Purls Gone Wild……10/8/2011
Eight’s Great……10/11/2011
11th Round Knockout……10/11/2011
Knit 1, Win 1……10/13/2011
Round Tuit……10/14/2011
Lucky 7s……10/15/2011
All Four One……10/17/2011
Perfect 10……10/17/2011

*Which, incidentally, gives me an idea for a swap. But I have a lot of ideas for swaps and no time to host them. It would be a drop of something you enjoyed from your stash and pattern for a small object that can be made from it. (bookmark, wee tiny sock, ornament, etc). And perhaps an uncommon/local/weird candy, recipe or something edible like that to try. If anyone does a “Try it, You’ll Like It!” yarn swap, just go ahead and sign me up.