![]() ![]() A 2019 study found that 73 per cent of employers perceived that it was “very or somewhat difficult” to find qualified candidates for jobs. Unfortunately, employers are increasingly reporting that it’s difficult to find career-ready candidates. Or tossing out the playbook and coming up with an entirely new game plan when their industry suddenly has to pivot.īut these-and other impossible-to-predict workplace scenarios-will be the reality for today’s students as they grow into adults and enter an ever-changing workforce. Or collaborating with colleagues to solve complex problems that can save lives on a global scale. When you think of career readiness, it’s hard to imagine looking into the cherubic face of a kindergartener and imagine them leading a meeting about third-quarter numbers. Here’s why (and how) you need to think about bringing career readiness into your classroom. (Note the smile on Sydney’s face!) The merino wool in the Green Line yarn is really soft and wonderful.Ensuring students are equipped with career readiness skills starts at school. Then cut off the loom, wash the fabric (gently in warm water with gentle agitation and hang to dry), sew the two ends together, twist the fringe, and smile…Sydney has a new cowl! To make the cowl…Leave fringe at both ends and hemstitch to hold the weft yarns in place before you take the fabric off the loom. ![]() Otherwise, you would need two skeins of your favorite color to complete both cowls. Always have an extra to give to a friend! After weaving one cowl, there isn’t enough of the Starry Sky and Dark Lilac to make the same cowl: the second cowl has to have more of the Pebble in it. To make a cowl, it only takes 30″ of weaving. Sydney started with Starry Sky, then used the Dark Lilac interspersed with a bit of Pebble to make an accent. Changing Colors of weft yarn to please your tastes. Repeat these 8 steps for whole cowl, weaving at about 8 ppi. On the rigid heddle loom using a pickup stick to get the extra patterning: Greenline Scarf on the loom–Detail We sett the scarf at 8 epi, 83 ends at just over 10″ wide on the loom. And even took pictures as it was going on! Just remember like any knitting yarn, it is stretchy, so when you are measuring your warp, don’t pull too tightly or you will stretch the yarn. This was her third warp on the Cricket Loom, and she was able to warp it all by herself. Once the plan was made: Sydney was off to the warping peg. Here is the draft that we created to go with this scarf. We started with the Warp Floats in groups of 3 pattern out of Jane Patrick’s book: The Weaver’s Idea Book: Creative Cloth on a Rigid Heddle Loom. It saves all kinds of trouble with calculating ends and planning how the repeats are going to be arranged with the colors. We have Weaveit Pro on our shop computers, and it is so much fun to play with colors and the pattern before you actually get to the loom. Draft for Sydney ScarfĪfter picking the colors we introduced Sydney to the magic of weaving software. She used one 50 g skein each of the colors. Sydney picked 3 colors of wool (Starry Sky, Dark Lilac and Pebble)…this was no easy task with all the colors that are available! Starry Sky and Dark Lilac would be the main colors (replace the yellow and black in the “Inspiration Scarf”) and Pebble would be the accent color (to replace the white in the “Inspiration scarf”). In the “Inspiration Scarf” the simplicity of the three colors, with yellow and black as the two main colors and one accent color makes it an attractive and timeless scarf, and we thought it would work well on the Cricket Loom. We found a scarf that we liked, and called it “Inspiration Scarf”. We found a pattern for a scarf by browsing through Pintrest and Google images. Happily, Sydney had just finished with the Seashore version of the Seaside towels on a Cricket loom, and was ready to do some colorful weaving. The race to the loom was on! Cowl made from Greenline Wool ![]() All of us around the Lunatic world were brimming with ideas of what to do with this lovely yarn and what colors we would we weave first. We received a big box of Jaggerspun, Organic Green Line yarn on luscious 50 g skeins a couple weeks ago. ![]()
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